Bangladesh Factory Fire Leads To Protests As Workers Demand To Return To Work Or Get Paid

DHAKA, Bangladesh — Hundreds of garment workers protested Friday outside a Bangladeshi factory where 112 people were killed by a fire, demanding compensation for their lost salaries.

About 300 workers chanted `’Want Justice” and `’Want Compensation” in front of the closed Tazreen Fashions Ltd. factory in a Dhaka suburb. The factory was making clothes for Wal-Mart, Sears, Disney and other major global retailers, though the companies said they did not know there clothes were being made there.

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Fiscal Cliff: 10 Ways Obama, Congress Could Trim Without New Income Taxes, Entitlement Cuts

WASHINGTON — Just about every policy lawmakers are considering for a deal to avert the so-called fiscal cliff would involve either raising individual income taxes, or cutting benefits in Medicare and Social Security. But there are a host of other avenues available for reducing the federal budget deficit that are rarely talked about, despite their mathematical merit.

There’s an old axiom in the investment business that applies to the federal government, as well: You have to spend money to make money. Paradoxically, the U.S. fiscal position would likely be better off if the government simply spent more money. When the economy is booming, government spending can easily be wasteful. But when the economy is not meeting its capacity, the government needs to step in to give it a boost, according to several schools of economic thought. At a time when there are more than four job applicants for every job opening, the economy is clearly not meeting the demand for work, and the government can productively step in by spending money to hire people and get things back on track. By boosting long-term economic growth through short-term spending, the government could actually ease the deficit by ponying up money right now.

That’s probably not going to happen, because most lawmakers and think-tankers in Washington are more interested in cutting various social insurance programs than in stabilizing the nation’s fiscal position. Nevertheless, even if the government abandons the “spend more” approach, there are at least 10 ways to cut the deficit without raising income taxes or slashing important programs for senior citizens.

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Staples announces “Staples Easy 3D” printing services in the Netherlands and Belgium

While getting your documents or photos printed at your local office supplies center such as Staples is pretty common, we’re not sure if going to Staples to get objects printed in 3D is. Perhaps it could be in the future and Staples appears to be interested in being part of that future with a newly launched service called Staples Easy 3D. Unfortunately this service is launching in 2013 and appears to be limited to the Netherlands and Belgium, but we expect that if it were to take off the way Staples has in mind, we could see it stateside in the future.

So how does this service work? Well, all a customer would have to do is upload their file to the Staples Office Center where the object will be printed in 3D. The object can then either be picked up at a nearby store or have it sent to the customer’s home. This is possible thanks to the partnership with 3D printer manufacturer, Mcor Technologies. We’re not sure how much these prints will cost, but we expect the more complex and detailed it is, the more expensive it will get. We’re not sure what sort of customers Staples is hoping to attract, but off the top of our head perhaps design students who might need to print 3D models for class projects.

By Ubergizmo. Related articles: Volume And Noise Invention Reads Out Tweets, StickNFind lets you attach Bluetooth stickers to objects that you can locate with your smartphone,

Nice Try: 25 Attempts To Get Away With It (PHOTOS)

When your back is against the wall, it’s either try something that has no chance of succeeding or give up. And giving up is for losers. Forgot to get your homework signed? You can write. Really don’t want to do those dishes? You’ve got a printer. Your business got a terrible health rating? Guess what, lots of words start with C. You just have to be willing to think outside of the fail… even if you’re going to fail anyway.

Here are 25 people who very nearly got away with it. Nice try, everyone. Keep fighting the good fight.

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GAME sells Steam vouchers in its UK stores, sees no dramatic tension in that whatsoever

GAME starts selling Steam Wallet Codes in its UK retail stores

GAME is certainly up for trying new things after getting a second chance at life, and today it becomes the first store in the UK to offer Steam Wallet Codes for purchase. You can buy £5, £10, £20 or £50’s worth, and until December 7th, you can get a 33 percent bump in trade-in value, should you put the credit towards codes. Customers can also browse the entire Steam catalog on tablets dotted around the shop floor. While the vouchers will obviously make good gifts this holiday, and also appeal to those who don’t want Steam knowing their card details, we’re not sure how smart a move this is. We imagine there are still a few keyboard-and-mouse gamers out there who don’t use Steam, but once GAME shows them the light, will they ever set foot in a physical game store again?

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Via: VideoGamer

Source: GAME (Twitter)

Two Reasons For RIM To Be Cheerful: U.K., Spanish Teens Still Love BlackBerrys (Well, They’re Cheaper Than iPhones)

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RIM’s global market share dwindled to just 4.3 percent in Q3 (IDC’s figure) but BlackBerrys are still wildly popular with a certain cash-strapped sub-set of mobile users in parts of Europe: namely teenagers. The latest data shining a light on a rare RIM stronghold comes from a wide-ranging research report looking at mobile users’ habits in France, Spain and the U.K. The annual report, commissioned by carrier Orange, suggests advertisers “must not write off BlackBerry if they are to successfully engage with a younger audience”.

The report found that BlackBerry penetration amongst teenagers in the UK and Spain was two and three times higher respectively than the overall “mobile media user” population. The researchers use the term “mobile media user” to refer to people who use a mobile device for rich media and communications, such as IM, social networking, streaming video, email, browsing the internet and location-based services, rather than just talk and text.

In Spain, the research indicates that RIM’s devices are in a healthy majority of teens’ back pockets, with 64 percent of 11 to 17 year-olds in the country owning a BlackBerry. While, in the U.K., RIM’s grip on the youth market is also strong, if not quite as fuerte as in Spain — with close to half (46 percent) of U.K. teens owning a BlackBerry.

RIM’s French fortunes are not so fair: just 14 percent of teens in the country own a BlackBerry. An Orange spokesman suggested this could be down to the device not being directly marketed to teens in the country. Meanwhile, iPhone penetration was “unsurprisingly low” in the teen age-group across all the surveyed countries — doubtless owing to the relatively high cost of Apple hardware.

The research was conducted by TNS for Orange’s annual Orange Exposure consumer study looking at the usage and habits of mobile media users in France, Spain and the U.K. Three hundred teenagers (in the 11 to 18 age range) were surveyed in each country, in addition to 1,000 mobile mobile users per country. The research also involved a “calibration phase” consisting of 2,000 face-to-face interviews per country. Research was conducted in three waves, between March and August this year.

In a device breakdown by age, aggregating the data from France, Spain and the U.K., BlackBerry also makes a strong showing in the 16 to 24 year-old age group, with close to half (47 percent) of BlackBerry owners falling in this age bracket — but less than a third (28 percent) aged 25-34 and a mere 12 percent aged 35-49. The 50-65 age group also makes up just 12 percent of BlackBerry owners.

The age distribution of the iPhone is more even, according to the research, with a third (33 percent) falling in the 16-to-24 age group versus a similar proportion (27 percent) in the 25-34 bracket, and 28 percent aged 35-49. iPhone ownership in the 50-65 age-bracket stands at just 11 percent.

Samsung mobile device owners have a similarly even age spread as the iPhone, albeit with the largest proportion (33 percent) falling in the 35-49 year-old age bracket. A quarter are aged 16-24, according to the research, and just over a quarter (26 percent) are 25-34. The Korean mobile maker has also managed to push into the 50-65 age range, with a relatively high 16 percent of Samsung-owning mobile users falling in this range — perhaps down to the company’s strategy of offering an extensive portfolio of devices at a wide variety of price-points.

Of all the brands listed, Nokia has the largest proportion of device owners in the 50-65 year old range, with just over a fifth (21 percent) of Nokia users falling in this age.

Aggregating the data across the age ranges, but breaking it out by country, just over a fifth (22 percent) of “mobile media users” own BlackBerrys in the U.K. and in Spain, while in France the figure is just 12 percent. In the U.K. 31 percent are iPhone owners (up from 26 percent last year), while in Spain 20 percent own iPhones (up from 13 percent last year). In France, the iPhone figure stands at 28 percent.

In all three countries the generic category of “other smartphones” accounts for the majority of devices owned — the vast majority of which will be Android-based devices, such as Samsung’s Galaxy range of smartphones

Tablets

The research also polled respondents on tablet ownership — finding that tablet penetration in the U.K. has grown from seven percent of the population last year to 17 percent this year. In France it’s grown from three percent last year to seven percent this year. In Spain this year’s figure remains unchanged at nine percent.

Unsurprisingly, Apple’s iPad dominates the field — taking a majority of the market in all three countries, and accounting for a whopping 79 percent of the tablets owned in the U.K. In Spain, the iPad also dominates, with 52 percent of the tablet market, but Samsung’s Galaxy Tab series has carved out a sizeable slice — taking 17 percent of the Spanish tablet market.

Here’s the report’s breakdown of tablet type by country

[Image: arrayexception via Flickr]


Bacon shaving cream coming from the makers of all things bacon

Bacon. The food of the gods. Tasty, crunchy, bacon. Bacon, bacon, bacon. Just saying the word BACON is enough to make stomachs growl the world over. Most of us probably limit our bacon intake to breakfast, lunch, dinner, snacks, and any day that ends in the letter “Y”.

If you love bacon as much as I do, you may feel the understandable desire to shave with it. Seriously, you really can shave with bacon. I’m not talking about having to try to embed blades in a strip of greasy, yummy bacon. That would be wasteful and might be a sin. A company called J&D Foods has announced Bacon Shaving Cream. I want it.

The company owners want to assure people that this is a real product. However, it will only be available for a limited time because they have created only 2500 jars of what is described as a “pork-scented lather of the gods.” I just cried a little bit.

The bacon-scented shaving cream went on sale November 28. The company makes even stranger bacon products under the heading “Ridiculous bacon products.” The most ridiculously awesome of those products- Baconlube. Yes, this is a bacon-scented personal lubricant allowing you to combine two of the greatest things in the history of everything- sex and bacon.That sort of brings new meaning to the word porking. Win. They also make a product called Bacon Flavored Mmmvelopes that taste like bacon when you lick the sealing strip. These guys are geniuses and deserve a Nobel Prize.

[via WPTV]


Bacon shaving cream coming from the makers of all things bacon is written by Shane McGlaun & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Mazda to offer diesel engine in new Mazda6 for the US

The Los Angeles auto show is in full swing and automotive news is coming at a frantic pace. A new bit of information from Mazda has surfaced at the auto show having to do with the new mid-sized Mazda6. The car made its US debut at the Los Angeles Auto Show and Mazda has confirmed that the vehicle would be offered with a diesel engine in the US.

Buyers in the US typically shun diesel engines in anything other than large pickups. That fact makes diesel-powered cars relatively uncommon on the US market. However, a greater concern with fuel efficiency has more US buyers considering the diesel option.

The 2014 Mazda6 will go on sale in January with a 184 hp 2.5-liter gasoline-powered four-cylinder engine. Later in 2013, a 2.2-liter diesel engine will be offered. Mazda offered no pricing details on the vehicle or engine options during the debut. The addition of the diesel engine for the Mazda6 will make Mazda the second US automaker to offer diesel in a passenger car.

The other automaker offering a diesel engine is Volkswagen. VW says that diesels make up more than 20% of its sales in the United States. Even more interesting for fans of auto sports is that Mazda will be racing a diesel-powered 400-horsepower Mazda6 in the Rolex 24-hour endurance race next year.

[via USA Today]


Mazda to offer diesel engine in new Mazda6 for the US is written by Shane McGlaun & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


iPhone 5 Now Cleared For Sale On China Unicom’s Network, Too

Image (8) china_beijing_Apple_store_evening_2.png for post 335697

The iPhone 5 received its final regulatory approval, the crucial “network access license” from China yesterday, but the original report from the Wall Street Journal only found approval for the China Telecom version of the device. Now, however, Chinese news sources report that the iPhone 5 variant which works with China Unicom has also received network access approval.

That means that the iPhone 5 will likely hit both networks by sometime in mid-December, if Apple sticks to the timeline of putting its device up for sale around 2 to 3 weeks after receiving this final necessary approval from the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology. China Unicom uses a WCDMA network, and China Telecom uses a CDMA-based network, and now versions for both (codename A1429 and A1442, respectively).

A simultaneous granting of licenses should indicate neither provider will get a head start on the other, despite comments earlier in the month from the chairmen of both companies that seemed to indicate different levels of confidence in being able to launch the iPhone 5 before year’s end. It should also mean Apple will be launching the iPhone 5 to as broad an audience as possible when it debuts the smartphone in December, though subscribers on China’s largest network, China Mobile, will still have to get the device unlocked and off-contract to be able to join in on the fun.

Still, the launch should be impressive. Apple had to actually halt the iPhone 4S launch in China as crowds became unruly when it made it available to China Unicom customers in January. Then, when the 4S went on sale at China Telecom in March, Apple racked up an impressive 200,000 pre-orders for the device. That was China Telecom’s first introduction of the iPhone, making it the largest carrier in the world by subscribers to offer the CDMA version of the iPhone.


New iMac Teardown: There’s Still Spare Room in This Skinny Frame

The skinny new iMac goes on sale today. But before anyone in the US has even had a chance to touch it, an enterprising Japanese blogger has already managed to tear one to pieces. More »