Best Buy Offers to Buy Back Your Old Gear

Best Buy is expanding a buy-back program so customers can sell their old electronics back to the retailer.

The catch: You need to buy into the Buy Back Program when you first purchase your gear.

Starting Monday, Best Buy will offer customers the option to purchase the Buy Back Program when picking up a product in one of five categories: laptops, netbooks, tablets, post-paid smartphones and TVs.

It’s a bit different than the usual trade-in programs that already exist, which usually don’t let you know how much you’ll be getting for your old stuff until you bring it in. In the new Buy Back program, Best Buy lets you know up front how much you’ll be getting back when you decide to sell, based on the amount of time you’ve owned the product. The longer you’ve owned it, the less you get back when you return it to the store.

“We’ve learned from our customers that they do have a fear of new, greater technology to come,” Best Buy Senior Vice President of Services George Sherman told Wired.com in an interview, “and we’ve found it has led to hesitancy to buying. Our program protects against that.”

For example, say your folks bought you a shiny new Galaxy Tab for Christmas. That’s great, until you hear that Samsung will be releasing a new line of Verizon-carried 4G Galaxy Tabs sometime in 2011. If the folks purchased the Buy Back program and you return your now obsolete tablet within 6 months of the original purchase date, you’ll get up to 50 percent of your purchase price back when buying the new piece of hardware.

Not a bad deal for the early adopters out there, although there’s always the Craigslist route.

The price of the Buy Back program varies depending on the price of the gadget you’re buying it for. In other words, get ready for the sales clerk to offer you yet another option along with the useless extended warranty.

Photo: Ian Mutoo/Flickr


4G at CES 2011: AT&T, Verizon, and T-Mobile make big moves

Traditionally, CES isn’t a huge mobile event — the biggest phone news has historically been saved for MWC in February and CTIA in March — but that changed in a huge way this week. Looks like 2011 is shaping up to be the year of 4G, and both carriers and manufacturers alike wasted no time jumping on the hype bandwagon with a variety of announcements that promise to make the next few months exciting… and really, really fast. AT&T kicked things off early in the show, but it was just the beginning of a relentless torrent of mobile news that lasted for days and ultimately left us with a pile of devices and network upgrades that should take us at least through the middle of the year. Read on for the recap!

Continue reading 4G at CES 2011: AT&T, Verizon, and T-Mobile make big moves

4G at CES 2011: AT&T, Verizon, and T-Mobile make big moves originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 10 Jan 2011 15:51:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Light-up cereal boxes a huge turn-on

AT CES, Fulton Innovation showed off light-up cereal boxes and self-cooking soup powered by the magic of induction.

Windows Phone 7 performance boost shown on video

Microsoft talks about some of the changes its made to Windows Phone 7 to improve performance.

Originally posted at Dialed In

California Supreme Court says warrantless searches of suspects’ text messages are legal

Planning on getting arrested in California any time soon? You’d better make sure your text archives are free from any incriminating information as the state’s Supreme Court has now ruled it legal for police to check your missives folder without the need for a warrant. The justification for this privacy intrusion is that a phone search is “incidental” to a lawful arrest and its contents, much like the contents of your pockets or bags, fall within the realm of reasonable search. Two of the judges in the case did dissent, with one noting that “never before has it been possible to carry so much personal or business information in one’s pocket or purse,” which she argues should afford your iPhone, Droid or BB a higher level of privacy protection than, say, the packet of gummy bears you have in the other pocket. What do you think?

California Supreme Court says warrantless searches of suspects’ text messages are legal originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 10 Jan 2011 15:27:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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ThinkGeek and Atari’s iCade Retro iPad Arcade

thinkgeek-icade-gaming-console-for-ipad.jpgIf you don’t already own an iPad, you have about three months to get one before the iCade is available to retro-gaming nerds everywhere. Let’s face it, the old-school arcade games are admittedly cool looking, but they’re heavy, and extremely expensive. Thanks to the good people at ThinkGeek, you can pretend you’re living the dream.

ThinkGeek teamed up with ION and Atari to create the iCade. ION is helping in creating the arcade-style body that connects the iPad via Bluetooth. Atari will be offering a huge suite of its classic arcade games, like Asteroids.

Gearlog got some hands-on time with a prototype at CES. We learned that the buttons were far from arcade quality, but what do you expect for a product that was originally an April Fool’s Day product from ThinkGeek? The iCade is estimated to be available April 15 at ThinkGeek for $99.99. You can sign up to be e-mailed when the product is ready to purchase. Game on!

Ion iCade turns your iPad into a tabletop arcade

What began as an April Fool’s joke has turned into a real product, one you’ll be able to buy this April. Could be the ultimate iPad accessory for retro-arcade fans.

Originally posted at iPad Atlas

Billions of Dollars Lost to Email Scams

This article was written on August 07, 2007 by CyberNet.

ScamsmartIf you haven’t ever gotten an email from a scammer, consider yourself lucky. These scams are all over these days and take multiple forms, like the emails explaining that there’s a big chunk of money that you can claim if you pay a fee first. More dangerous and threatening are the phishing emails in which you’re directed to click a link so that you can verify information for a bank account, or other account like PayPal or eBay. The page you’re directed to is a spoof, designed to look just like the company they say that they’re from (like your bank), except it’s not.

A recent survey indicates that consumers in the United States have lost over $7 billion to online scams. That is an insanely high number for a problem that I thought was well exposed by now. According to the survey, around eight percent of people respond to the phishing scams that they receive in their email, giving scammers access to all kinds of sensitive information. There are also those that respond to the bogus offers for money, like the one shown below:

Dear Partner, Good day, Firstly, I apologize for sending you this sensitive information via e-mail instead of a Certified mail/Post-mail. This is due to the urgency and importance of the information. I humbly crave your indulgence to read this e-mail with all seriousness of purpose , because this project is based on Trust and Confidentiality in order to have an acceptable meeting of the minds. I am forty five(45)years old American established Lawyer. One of my clients Engr.Michael Keogh (Now deceased) hereinafter shall be referred to as “My Client.”

Four years ago, My Client successfully executed a contract for the Federal Government of Nigeria worth US$14.7 million dollars. A part payment of US$7million dollars was paid to my client, while the balance of US$7.7million Dollars was still unpaid before my client died in a ghastly Car crash. However, all my efforts to locate the possible next of kin proved abortive. Until his sudden demise, He was not married and was 44years old.NOW THE CRUX OF THIS E-LETTER is that the Federal Government is fully paying all Contractors who have successfully executed their contracts. My client is among those due to be paid in this first quarter payment schedule. As his personal attorney before his sudden death, I have been officially notified and instructed to forward particulars of my client’s next of kin so that he/she can be paid the outstanding US$7.7 Million dollars.

I know he did not leave any valid WILL because He died intestate. This funds will therefore be paid to whosoever I present to the government or his bank as the possible next of kin . In a nutshell,I intend to channel this funds to the account of a clever but reliable person who upon successful payment of the money, will earn 40% thereof, while 40% will be for me the remaining 20% will be for charity. Your nationality does not matter as all modalities have been perfected and put in place to pay whoever I present as the next of kin.

Hopefully when you read that, you realized that there was something not quite right with it. The problem is, not everybody realizes that there’s something wrong, and people actually go through the process of trying to retrieve the money. In the process, they end up losing money.

The lesson to be learned here is simply be careful! $7 Billion dollars alone in the United States is a lot of money lost to something that is easily preventable. While we all think that everybody knows by now that emails like the one above are a scam, they don’t. Be sure to tell those who may not be quite as tech savvy as you to take extra precautions when something sounds too good to be true, or when they receive a request through email to verify account information.

Source: 901am

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The Nabaztag Gets New Life at CES as The Karotz

KarotzRemember Nabaztag? He’s the adorable digital rabbit that sits on your desk, changes color with the weather, reads your RSS feeds aloud to you, and can even let you know when there’s new e-mail or messages in your inbox waiting for you. 

At CES this year, the makers of Nabaztag unveiled a new sibling for the rabbit called Karotz, which has most of the same features, but this model can communicate directly to other Karotz rabbits elsewhere in the world via phone call. 
Karotz also has an app store so you can add new features to him, and an open API that you can use to develop your own apps. He’s not available just yet, but when he is he’ll set you back $130 list price.
 

Cambridge Unveils the iD100 iPhone and iPad Dock

Cambridge iD100

CES 2011 may be over, but the product releases are still going strong, with new products slated to hit the market later in the year making their appearances. Among them is the new Cambridge iD100 iPhone and iPad Dock, which Cambridge can “transform the iPad into a true audiophile device.” 
The iD100 is a docking station that will support the iPad, iPhone, and iPod Touch when it’s released later this spring, and is designed to provide clear audio and video out from your device to your home theater or HDTV. 
The iD100 will feature S/P-DIF outputs, optical audio, and digital audio outputs, and component, composite, and S-video video outputs on the back, as well as and IR input for remote controls and a USB port to sync your docked iOS device with your PC or Mac. When it’s available, Cambridge says it will retail for $279.