Engadget: T-Mobile G1 coming to Walmart for $148.88

Posted by on under walmart stores, wally world, company spokeswoman, eligible customer, iphe, customer price, best buy, walmart, o brien, t mobile, sourced, early bird, 3g, mob, handset, nbsp |

Filed under: Cellphones


Well, now isn't this something? Best Buy has its fancy little iPhone 3G, but it'll be Wally World offering up the G1 outside of official T-Mobile outlets. As we'd heard yesterday, 550 Walmart stores across the country will begin selling the Android-powered handset beginning tomorrow, and folks who opt to pick one up here versus a traditional T-Mob store will save $31.11. Yep -- according to company spokeswoman Melissa O'Brien, the new / upgrade-eligible customer price for a Walmart-sourced G1 will be just $148.88 with a 2-year agreement. Wait, what? You already purchased your G1 at the full price? They always said the early bird pays the premium... or something along those lines.

EngadgetT-Mobile G1 coming to Walmart for $148.88 originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 28 Oct 2008 11:58:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Tagi: walmart stores, wally world, company spokeswoman, eligible customer, iphe, customer price, best buy, walmart, o brien, t mobile, sourced, early bird, 3g, mob, handset, nbsp

MobileScrobbler 1.4.3

Posted by on under new radio, opti, bug fixes, hud, french german, new features, norwegian, crash |

New Features
  • New radio player HUD contributed by Smooquai
  • New radio icons contributed by CompC
  • Add an option to queue tracks while device is asleep
  • Updated French, German, Italian, Norwegian, and Russian translations
Bug Fixes
  • Fix a crash that can occur when playing a non-existant playlist
  • Fix a crash that can occur when the last.fm server is unreachable
  • Stop caching playlists
  • Improved detection of duplicate scrobbles
Head on over to the MobileScrobbler website for installation instructions, screenshots, and more!
Tagi: new radio, opti, bug fixes, hud, french german, new features, norwegian, crash

Reddit: I got tackled at Walmart :(

Posted by on under walmart, wtf |

submitted by FDL1 to WTF
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Tagi: walmart, wtf

Boing Boing: TSA subpoenas, threatens two bloggers who published non-classified airline security directive

Posted by on under kim zetter, airline websites, john enright, thomas cain, lger, nigerian man, google, walmart, gmail account, portis, hardball, subpoenas, december 26, december 29, wednesday morning, blogger, tsa, bloggers, tactic, hard drive |

(Courtesy of Wired: "TSA Special Agent John Enright, left, speaks to Steven Frischling outside the blogger's home in Niantic, Connecticut, after returning Frischling's laptop Wednesday." Photo: Thomas Cain/Wired.com) (Update post here, Dec. 31, 2009.) On Friday, December 25, following the incident in which a Nigerian man attempted to blow up a US-bound flight, the TSA issued an urgent, non-classified security directive to thousands of contacts around the world—airlines, airports, and so on. On Saturday, December 26, airlines and airports around the world further circulated that emailed document and began implementing the procedures described. On Sunday December 27, two bloggers published the content of the TSA directive online (some portions had already been showing up on airline websites). And on Tuesday, December 29, Special Agents from the TSA's Office of Inspection showed up at the homes of bloggers Steven Frischling and Christopher Elliott, and interrogated each on where they obtained the document. Both bloggers received civil subpoenas. Snip from Wired piece by Kim Zetter: "They came to the door and immediately were asking, 'Who gave you this document?, Why did you publish the document?' and 'I don't think you know how much trouble you're in.' It was very much a hardball tactic," [Frischling] says. (...) The agents then said they wanted to take an image of his hard drive. Frischling said they had to go to WalMart to buy a hard drive, but when they returned were unable to get it to work. Frischling said the keyboard on his laptop was no longer working after they tried to copy his files. The agents left around 11 p.m. but came back Wednesday morning and, with Frischling's consent, seized his laptop, which they promised to return after copying the hard drive. Here's Frischling's post. He says he received the document from an anonymous source known to be a TSA employee, who uses a gmail account (will Google be subpoenaed?). "I received it, I read it, I posted it. Why did I post it? Because following the failed terrorist attack on the 25th of December there was a lot of confusion and speculation surrounding changes in airline & airport security procedures." Here is Elliot's post about his visit from a friendly TSA Special Agent named Flaherty. "[T]he TSA wants me to tell them who gave me the security directive. I told Flaherty I'd call my attorney and get back to him. What would you do?" Here at Boing Boing, I linked to Frischling's leak post on Monday, December 28. Two days earlier, I'd flown home to the US on an international flight during which I personally experienced the procedures detailed in the directive. I tweeted what I experienced of those procedures before, during, and after my flight on the 26th. Thorough physical patdowns and secondary hand luggage screening pre-board, no leaving your seat or electronics or putting anything on your lap during the final hour of flight, and so on. Attendants on my flight explained that the stepped-up procedures came from a just-issued TSA security directive. As soon as airlines and airports began implementing the directive—and that began before the bloggers posted their copies—the contents of the directive were no secret. So why the strong-arm tactics? Read more: New York Times story, Wired News story, and Huffington Post. Related: Just weeks ago, a TSA contract worker posted an improperly redacted sensitive screening manual on a government website. Previously: Yo dawg, I heard you like TSA security restrictions, so I put some ...Pantsbomber psyche laid bare in messageboard archives (corrected ... Do new post-pantsbomber TSA security directives kill inflight WiFi ... Word cloud of underwear-bomber's posts at Islamic forum Fruit of the Boom...


Tagi: kim zetter, airline websites, john enright, thomas cain, lger, nigerian man, google, walmart, gmail account, portis, hardball, subpoenas, december 26, december 29, wednesday morning, blogger, tsa, bloggers, tactic, hard drive

Digg: Walmart's Grand Plan to Reduce CO2: Make Someone Else Do It

Posted by on under greenhouse gases, growth curve, fashi, walmart |

Today, Walmart made its first major commitment to reduce greenhouse gases -- but in typical fashion, rather than set a tough goal that might affect its own growth curve, the company plans to turn up the pressure on its thousands of suppliers to reduce



Tagi: greenhouse gases, growth curve, fashi, walmart