Saturday, December 3, 2011

RIM writes off value of tablet inventory (AP)

NEW YORK ? Research In Motion Ltd., the struggling maker of the BlackBerry phones, is writing off much of its inventory of PlayBook tablets, since it has to sell them at a deep discount.

The Canadian company on Friday said it's taking a pre-tax charge of $485 million in the just-ended quarter to account for the declining value of the tablets. The model originally priced at $500 now costs $200.

A year ago, co-CEO Jim Balsillie said pent-up interest in the PlayBook was "really overwhelming." Companies are looking for an equivalent of the iPad of corporate use, he said.

In March, Balsillie said "The launch of the PlayBook may well be the most significant development for RIM since the launch of the of the first BlackBerry device back in 1999."

But when the tablet went on sale in April, reviewers puzzled over the lack of email software, saying the device seemed half-baked. RIM now promises updated software in February.

RIM said it shipped 150,000 PlayBooks to stores and distributors in the fiscal third quarter, which ended Nov. 26. "Sell-through," or the number actually bought by users, was slightly higher, reflecting sales of tablets shipped earlier. It shipped 500,000 in the first quarter and 200,000 in the second.

RIM also said it sold 14.1 million BlackBerrys in the quarter, slightly better than analysts expected. Revenue and profit figures were lower than previously projected, but in line with analyst expectations.

RIM shares fell 98 cents, or 5.3 percent, to $17.60 in pre-market trading Friday. The stock hit a seven-year low of $15.98 last month.

The company is also taking a charge of $50 million for an embarrassing October outage of email and Web services that lasted days for millions of overseas BlackBerry users. It briefly spread to the U.S. and Canada before the company was able to contain the damage.

RIM reports fiscal third-quarter earnings on Dec. 15.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/personaltech/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111202/ap_on_hi_te/us_research_in_motion_tablet

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Friday, December 2, 2011

Nokia Siemens Networks looks to unload WiMax division onto NewNet Communication

WiMax expansion isn't exactly all the rage as of late, and so it comes as no surprise that Nokia Siemens Networks is shedding itself of the extraneous baggage. Following its recent whopping round of layoffs, the move is a continuation of the company's efforts to bring stability to its bottom line. NewNet Communication Technologies has agreed to bring the castoff WiMax technologies into its fold, along with approximately 300 NSN employees -- all for an undisclosed price -- in a deal that's expected to be finalized before year's end. A full press release follows the break.

Continue reading Nokia Siemens Networks looks to unload WiMax division onto NewNet Communication

Nokia Siemens Networks looks to unload WiMax division onto NewNet Communication originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 30 Nov 2011 18:57:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Ricoh's modular GXR camera getting new 16 megapixel APS-C unit with 24-85mm lens

A new lens for your DSLR or Micro Four Thirds camera may make you feel like you have a whole new camera, but that's really the case with the interchangeable units for the Ricoh GXR. The latest addition to the modular camera's bag of tricks a new 16 megapixel unit with an APS-C sensor, which comes paired with a 24-85mm zoom lens (f3.5-5.5 aperture). Unfortunately, Ricoh isn't getting specific with a price a specific release date (saying only early 2012), but photographer Cristian Sorega reports on his blog that Ricoh will make an official announcement at CES in January, with a release set for January 20th.

Ricoh's modular GXR camera getting new 16 megapixel APS-C unit with 24-85mm lens originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 30 Nov 2011 09:03:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/11/30/ricohs-modular-gxr-camera-getting-new-16-megapixel-aps-c-unit-w/

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Tips from Santa training school: Managing kids' gift expectations (The Week)

New York ? Times are hard, and old St. Nick is having to learn what to say when kids ask for a pricey gadget ? or a job for mom

Even Santa Claus isn't immune to the effects of the recession. The New York Times reports that students and alums of the nation's largest Santa school are adjusting their act for our troubled economic times. Here, a brief guide:

First, what is this Santa school?
For the last 75 years, the non-profit Charles H. Howard Santa Claus School has working to "uphold the traditions and preserve the history of Santa Claus." It's goal is to help students to "further define and improve their individual presentations of Santa Claus." Teachers cover the history of Santa Claus and Saint Nicholas, real-live reindeer habits, the correct dress and make-up for the job, building a social media presence, and saving for Santa retirement.

SEE ALSO: Homes with great fishing: A slideshow

?

Who goes to Santa school?
All kinds, though many are portly, bearded, and older. This year's session, held in October, had the largest class yet with 115 students. Some of those in attendance had fallen on slim times. The Class of 2011 included an accountant, an aerospace engineer, and a 28-year-old making do with odd jobs. All paid the tuition ? which will be $415 in 2012 for new students, $365 for returning ? hoping to land a $50-an-hour job wearing the red suit at the local mall for extra income.

How is Santa's job different in a recession?
One Santa, Fred Honerkamp, recalls a little boy asking for "a pair of sneakers that actually fit," saying "it's hard to watch sometimes because the children are like little barometers, mirrors on what the country has been through." Other Santas note that more and more often, they're hearing kids ask Santa to bring their parents a job. At the other extreme, there are, of course, plenty of kids requesting shiny new toys and expensive gadgets when it's clear that their family can't afford them.

SEE ALSO: The Macy's Thanksgiving Day parade: A visual history

?

How are Santas dealing with these situations?
They say they feel it's more important than ever to keep kids' expectations in check. "I try to guide the children into not-so-unrealistic things, and I do tell them that Santa's been cutting back, too," says Tom Ruperd, a Santa from Michigan. Another St. Nick, Rick Parris, says he tells children with long Christmas lists flat-out, "hey, look, Johnny, you ain't getting all that." Others have come up with special routines for talking kids out of wanting an iPod. As for less tangible requests, Santa have to get more creative. "If they asked for something that's totally impossible ? a job for daddy, say ? I usually tell them, 'Santa specializes in toys, but we can always pray on the other,'" Ruperd says. "'Is there anything in toys that you'd like?'"

Sources: Charles H. Howard Santa Claus School, NY Times

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Barnes & Noble's Q2 earnings reveal Nook to be a $220 million business, Nook Tablet said to be fastest-selling yet

Barnes & Noble's second quarter earnings weren't all good news for the company -- it reported a net loss of $6.6 million and an ever-so-slight dip in total sales from $1.90 billion to $1.89 billion -- but it did have a fair bit to boast about on the technology side of things. Sales on its B&N.com website increased 17 percent year-over-year, totaling $206 million for the quarter, and the value of the company's Nook business (including devices and content) now stands at $220 million, up a full 85 percent. The company also revealed that its new Nook Tablet has been the fastest-selling Nook device to date, although it's not providing any specific sales numbers, noting only that it expects to sell "millions of devices" during its third quarter. Additional figures can be found at the source link below.

Continue reading Barnes & Noble's Q2 earnings reveal Nook to be a $220 million business, Nook Tablet said to be fastest-selling yet

Barnes & Noble's Q2 earnings reveal Nook to be a $220 million business, Nook Tablet said to be fastest-selling yet originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 01 Dec 2011 14:06:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/12/01/barnes-and-nobles-q2-earnings-reveal-nook-to-be-a-220-million-bu/

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Thursday, December 1, 2011

India's retailers, farmers face uncertain future

In this Saturday, Nov. 26, 2011 photo, a porter holds up his basket and makes his way through a crowded market in Mumbai, India. The arrival of modern retailing would hasten a cultural transformation in the way Indians shop and work. The debate now raging, which has shut down Parliament and may rip apart the ruling coalition, hinges on competing visions of what foreign retailers will bring for India's two largest sources of jobs: agriculture and retail. The existing retail landscape is an intricately evolved tangle of shops and bazaars, which has been forged by ideas that date back to India's earliest religious texts. (AP Photo/Rafiq Maqbool)

In this Saturday, Nov. 26, 2011 photo, a porter holds up his basket and makes his way through a crowded market in Mumbai, India. The arrival of modern retailing would hasten a cultural transformation in the way Indians shop and work. The debate now raging, which has shut down Parliament and may rip apart the ruling coalition, hinges on competing visions of what foreign retailers will bring for India's two largest sources of jobs: agriculture and retail. The existing retail landscape is an intricately evolved tangle of shops and bazaars, which has been forged by ideas that date back to India's earliest religious texts. (AP Photo/Rafiq Maqbool)

In this Saturday, Nov. 26, 2011 photo, Indians shop at a crowded market in Mumbai, India. The arrival of modern retailing would hasten a cultural transformation in the way Indians shop and work. The debate now raging, which has shut down Parliament and may rip apart the ruling coalition, hinges on competing visions of what foreign retailers will bring for India's two largest sources of jobs: agriculture and retail. The existing retail landscape is an intricately evolved tangle of shops and bazaars, which has been forged by ideas that date back to India's earliest religious texts. (AP Photo/Rafiq Maqbool)

In this Saturday, Nov. 26, 2011 photo, a vegetable vendor waits for customers at a market in Mumbai, India. The arrival of modern retailing would hasten a cultural transformation in the way Indians shop and work. The debate now raging, which has shut down Parliament and may rip apart the ruling coalition, hinges on competing visions of what foreign retailers will bring for India's two largest sources of jobs: agriculture and retail. The existing retail landscape is an intricately evolved tangle of shops and bazaars, which has been forged by ideas that date back to India's earliest religious texts. (AP Photo/Rafiq Maqbool)

In this Saturday, Nov. 26, 2011 photo, Indian laborers push a cart loaded with fruits at a market in Mumbai, India. The arrival of modern retailing would hasten a cultural transformation in the way Indians shop and work. The debate now raging, which has shut down Parliament and may rip apart the ruling coalition, hinges on competing visions of what foreign retailers will bring for India's two largest sources of jobs: agriculture and retail. The existing retail landscape is an intricately evolved tangle of shops and bazaars, which has been forged by ideas that date back to India's earliest religious texts. (AP Photo/Rafiq Maqbool)

(AP) ? Ashok Kokane sits amid his strawberries at Mumbai's Crawford Market, a handwritten ledger across his knees and a fan of dirty 10 rupee notes at his hand. The lazy, dust-encrusted ceiling fans above are far past cleaning.

There is a sense of timelessness here, in the lurking cats, the shiny shrine to the fearsome Hindu goddess Durga and the cry "Porter? Porter?" sent up by skinny boys with frayed baskets on their heads. It is a tableau many fear will disappear after the government's decision last week to give foreign big box retailers like Wal-Mart greater access to India's huge market.

"When big man comes, small man goes," Kokane said.

The arrival of modern retailing would hasten a cultural transformation in the way Indians shop and work. The debate now raging ? which has shut down Parliament ? hinges on competing visions of what foreign retailers will mean to agriculture and retail, India's two largest sources of jobs.

The government argues organized retail will make food cheaper, liberate millions from medieval working conditions and put more money into the hands of desperate farmers. Others say it will deepen the inequities of Indian society and wipe out a merchant class whose values and skills have been passed from father to son for generations.

The existing retail landscape is an intricate tangle of shops and bazaars, forged by ideas that date back to India's earliest religious texts. But, even without Wal-Mart, small, family run shops are already under threat. With the fraying of caste ties, which often determine a family's profession, and the growing dreams of India's youth for better paid, more prestigious jobs, retailers are finding it hard to keep the next generation in the family business.

"You have different sets of people who, because of the caste system, have been involved in the same business for many generations," said Arvind Singhal, founder of Technopak Advisors, a New Delhi based consulting company. These days, he said, "A shopkeeper's son may not be a shopkeeper."

Today, organized retail accounts for just 5.5 percent of India's $470 billion retail market, according to Technopak. Food accounts for about 70 percent of the retail market, which Technopak expects will hit $675 billion by 2016.

Existing domestic supermarkets, like Reliance's Fresh, Godrej's Nature's Basket and Tata's Westside, have struggled to succeed.

Some sell, at exorbitant prices, rotten dairy goods, pasta infested with bugs and icy $12 pints of Haagen Dazs, repeatedly thawed and refrozen.

Stocking irregularities mean those last cans of Italian plum tomatoes might not be replaced for a month. Shoppers sometimes put back items because the clerk can't figure out how to get his computer to register the bar code.

"The traditional retailer in India can offer better value than some of the large, organized players," Singhal said.

The best local shops are marvels of service and quality, bundled with a nice human touch. If you're short money, you can pay next time. If you want a fistful of flat-leafed parsley or a special pan, they can get it in a day or two. Every organized urban household has a raft of phone numbers for home delivery of cat food, toilet paper, chickens and pretty much anything else.

Yet there are severe drawbacks to the system.

India's market and roadside stalls employ, at backbreaking rates, armies of slim men pedaling rusted bicycles stacked improbably high with eggs for delivery. They run up dark staircases offering fresh rolls wrapped in newspaper and carry cases of bottled water on their heads two and three at a time.

"No one benefits from this kind of employment," Singhal said. "People are hardly getting money for those jobs." Far better ? and cheaper for the retailer, he argues ? to hire one well-trained, decently paid person than five low paid workers and spur a virtuous cycle of rising productivity and increased consumption.

Many argue that retailing in India is not yet a zero-sum game: Demand is growing fast enough that big and small players can thrive side by side. The Ministry of Commerce noted that in China, more than 600 hypermarkets opened between 1996 and 2001 but the number of small stores grew too: from 1.9 million to over 2.5 million.

The ministry predicts modernization will create some 10 million new jobs in areas like food processing and transport, as well as in the new retail outlets. They say the more open policy will drive down skyrocketing food prices and help millions of farmers get more money for their crops by eliminating waste and middlemen.

Others say the changes will hurt small farmers at the backbone of India's rural economy, pushing more of them off the land with few tools to forge a better life elsewhere.

P. Sainath, who has been writing about rural India for 18 years, believes big retail won't heal the inequities of rural India which have driven over 250,000 farmers to kill themselves since 1995. If anything, he said, it will make them worse.

"One to 2 percent of farmers ? some possibly members of Parliament ? will make a killing. They are the giant farmers," he said.

Big companies tend to build on existing chains of exploitation, using wholesale agents who extract low prices from unorganized, indebted farmers, whose pricing power will erode further with multinationals, he said. Many of the demonized middlemen, he added, are actually poor women, unlikely to survive the arrival of foreign retail.

"You have no idea of the chaos you are unleashing," he said.

Reza Meghani, who runs Metro Dry Fruits ? a small stall that has been selling some of the Mumbai's best dried fruit and nuts for 22 years ? remains confident.

Mumbai's existing supermarkets haven't hurt him: They have higher overhead, compromise on quality and charge too much, he said. They can't compete with the tenderness with which he discusses the eight varieties of almonds he imports from America and Iran.

"We can compete. We will have to compromise on our margins," said Meghani, 56, who is grooming his son to take over.

Neha Sheikh, 23, says her family has been shopping at his stall for a decade. "The salesperson is really good," she said. "He's going to help you out in every little thing." She doesn't buy nuts from supermarkets because they're too expensive.

But if they were cheaper? "Yeah," she said. "Why not?"

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2011-12-01-AS-India-Retailing/id-43f3144b3b41408caa21334795b6eef0

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Abrupt permafrost thaw increases climate threat

ScienceDaily (Nov. 30, 2011) ? As the Arctic warms, greenhouse gases will be released from thawing permafrost faster and at significantly higher levels than previous estimates, according to survey results from 41 international scientists published in the Nov. 30 issue of the journal Nature.

Permafrost thaw will release approximately the same amount of carbon as deforestation, say the authors, but the effect on climate will be 2.5 times bigger because emissions include methane, which has a greater effect on warming than carbon dioxide.

The survey, led by University of Florida researcher Edward Schuur and University of Alaska Fairbanks graduate student Benjamin Abbott, asked climate experts what percentage of the surface permafrost is likely to thaw, how much carbon will be released and how much of that carbon will be methane. The authors estimate that the amount of carbon released by 2100 will be 1.7 to 5.2 times larger than reported in recent modeling studies, which used a similar warming scenario.

"The larger estimate is due to the inclusion of processes missing from current models and new estimates of the amount of organic carbon stored deep in frozen soils," Abbott said. "There's more organic carbon in northern soils than there is in all living things combined; it's kind of mind boggling."

Northern soils hold around 1,700 billion gigatons of organic carbon, around four times more than all the carbon ever emitted by modern human activity and twice as much as is now in the atmosphere, according to the latest estimate. When permafrost thaws, organic material in the soil decomposes and releases gases such as methane and carbon dioxide.

"In most ecosystems organic matter is concentrated only in the top meter of soils, but when arctic soils freeze and thaw the carbon can work its way many meters down, said Abbott, who studies how carbon is released from collapsed landscapes called thermokarsts -- a process not accounted for in current models. Until recently that deep carbon was not included in soil inventories and it still is not accounted for in most climate models.

"We know about a lot of processes that will affect the fate of arctic carbon, but we don't yet know how to incorporate them into climate models," Abbott said. "We're hoping to identify some of those processes and help the models catch up."

Most large-scale models assume that permafrost warming depends on how much the air above the permafrost is warming. Missing from the models, say the authors, are processes such as the effects of abrupt thawing that can melt an ice wedge, result in collapsed ground and accelerate additional thawing.

"This survey is part of the scientific process, what we think is going to happen in the future, and how we come up with testable hypotheses for future research," Schurr said. "Our survey outlines the additional risk to society caused by thawing of the frozen North and the need to reduce fossil fuel use and deforestation."

By integrating data from previous models with expert predictions the authors hope to provide a frame of reference for scientists studying all aspects of climate change.

"Permafrost carbon release is not going to overshadow fossil fuel emissions as the main driver of climate change" said Schuur, "but it is an important amplifier of climate change."

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of Alaska Fairbanks.

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Journal Reference:

  1. Edward A. G. Schuur, Benjamin Abbott. Climate change: High risk of permafrost thaw. Nature, 2011; 480 (7375): 32 DOI: 10.1038/480032a

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

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