Wednesday, March 18, 2009

Save money with your iPhone

By Etan Horowitz

The Orlando Sentinel

(MCT)

Yes, the iPhone is an expensive gadget, but if you already have one (or have an iPod touch), there are lots of applications you can download to help save money. Here are five of the best, which can all be found by visiting the iTunes store and searching for each one by name. Once you download the applications, you may be able to customize settings for each application.

1. Mint.com _ This free app is a godsend for managing your money. It's the companion to the Web version (Mint.com), which will automatically pull information from your online banking accounts and display graphs tracking how much you spend on different items each month. You can set a budget and quickly see if you are close to going over. It's a great way to quickly assess your financial situation when you're about to buy something. Create a free account at Mint.com before downloading the app.

2. Cheap Gas _ Free app that displays cheap gas nearby.

3. KidsEatFree _ A 99-cent app that tells you the closest restaurants where kids eat free. Restaurants are organized by distance, and when you tap on one, you are given the details of the special.

4. Amazon Mobile _ Free app that lets you quickly look up items on Amazon to see how much they cost, read reviews, etc. A great way to see if the price at Best Buy or Costco is a good deal. You can also order merchandise directly from the app.

5. Fring/Truphone _ These two free apps use the iPhone's Wi-Fi connection to allow you to make free and low-cost international calls. You have to create an account, and some setup time is required. The apps automatically display your iPhone contacts. If you have a Skype account, you can make Skype calls through Fring, and calls from one TruPhone member to another are free, regardless of where you are. TruPhone also allows low-cost international calls over the cellular network.

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(Etan Horowitz is the technology columnist for the Orlando Sentinel. He can be reached at ehorowitz@orlandosentinel.com.)

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© 2009, The Orlando Sentinel (Fla.).

Visit the Sentinel on the World Wide Web at http://www.orlandosentinel.com/.

Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

Internet TV may be new mass medium

By Steve Alexander

Star Tribune (Minneapolis)

(MCT)

Movies, TV shows and other entertaining video are now so plentiful online that "Internet TV" may become mass-media entertainment. And much of it is free or relatively inexpensive from Hulu.com, TV.com, Netflix or Apple's iTunes.

But to become mainstream, Internet video needs to be viewed on the TV, not the PC. Fortunately, that's becoming easier. Several new products offer to bridge the PC-to-TV gap (see news.cnet.com/8301-1023(underscore)3-10189658-93.html.)

But many people don't need those products; they can simply plug an Internet-connected PC into the TV and watch. This is easiest if you have a home Wi-Fi network because you can just set your laptop PC next to the television.

The best picture and sound come from a digital connection between a new laptop and an HDTV, said Phil Leigh, an analyst with Inside Digital Media in Tampa, Fla. Both PC and TV need a plug-in for an HDMI (High Definition Multimedia Interface) connecting cable, which costs $20 or more.

"People that haven't done it are locked into thinking it's complicated," Leigh said. "But it's no more complicated than using a TV remote." Watch a video of his demonstration at www.futureofpodcasting.com/downloads/howto(underscore)ipod.mp4.

But you can get an acceptable, VCR-quality TV picture using older technology. PCs like my 3-year-old HP laptop often have an analog video plug-in called S-Video. My analog TV, a five-year-old JVC 32-inch model, also has one. (For more about PC-to-TV connection cables, see www.amazon.com/gp/video/ontv/connect/ref=atv(underscore)ontv(underscore)connect(underscore)info.)

Setup was simple. I plugged in the cable, turned on the Windows Vista PC and answered "yes" when asked if I wanted the same image to appear on both PC and TV screens.

Because the S-Video cable transmits only video, I used the speakers on the laptop for sound. But I could have used a $20 audio cable to shift the sound to the TV or to external speakers.

While watching the streaming Internet movie "National Treasure Book of Secrets" (from the Netflix Web site, $9 monthly subscription required) I got an image that my wife described as "pretty good and certainly watchable." Videos from YouTube and TV shows from the NBC and CBS Web pages were equally clear.

In all cases, I was able to view the video in full-screen mode. And while Internet video will sometimes become jerky or freeze, I had few problems.

Although the TV picture wasn't as sharp as the digital image on my 17-inch laptop, it made online video available to family members who weren't going to watch movies on a PC. I expect that watching Internet video on the TV is going to catch on in a big way.

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(Steve Alexander covers technology for the Star Tribune. E-mail your technology questions to steve.j.alexander@gmail.com or write Tech Q&A, 425 Portland Ave. S., Minneapolis, MN 55488-0002. Please include a full name, city and phone number.)

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© 2009, Star Tribune (Minneapolis)

Visit the Star Tribune Web edition on the World Wide Web at http://www.startribune.com

Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

New iPod Shuffle a delight, despite flaw

By Eric Benderoff

Chicago Tribune

(MCT)

Apple solved one problem with its fun, new iPod Shuffle: With the push of a button on its headphone cord, it can tell you what song is playing.

But it created another problem if you want to use a different pair of headphones than those shipped with the Shuffle.

Otherwise, the $79 iPod Shuffle is a delight and the most interesting music player I've used in some time. It holds about 1,000 songs on a 4-gigabyte flash drive.

Strikingly small, the size of a thumb but much thinner, the gadget elicits wonder from those I've shown it to. It could pass for a USB thumb drive, and there's a chance you'll lose it one day.

Shrinking the Shuffle required controls to be built into the headphone cord. That means you can use only Apple headphones with this product, at least for now. And the controls take a little practice to learn.

In the past, if you had a decent amount of music on your Shuffle and a spotty memory, you often didn't know what was playing.

The magic with this version is that it can tell you what's playing. You press and briefly hold the center of the controls on the headphone and the song title and artist's name are spoken. The voice is clear and generally accurate. It can speak in 14 languages.

Sure, the voice makes mistakes. It struggles with Lupe Fiasco, for example, but the feature is far more useful than annoying.

Also, if you keep holding the center control button, it will scroll through your playlists.

At first, I found the playlist function frustrating. It reads the playlist names from the beginning, in alphabetical order, not from the last playlist you picked. I sort my playlists primarily by artists _ others do it differently. So if I stop at Lou Reed, listen to a few songs and then want to move on, I would like to start at the next playlist, which would be Luna. It doesn't work that way.

Frustrated, I went online to read the full Shuffle instructions at Apple.com _ the first time I've done this with an iPod _ and learned that if I hit the controls for volume up or down, I can quickly move through playlists.

Much better, but I still would prefer to start from where I stopped.

Having the controls on the headphone, as handy and as easy to use as they are, are also the Shuffle's biggest flaw.

The iPod headphones are adequate but there are many third-party products that sound better. Currently, they don't work well with this Shuffle.

That is being addressed, and at least a half-dozen third-party headphones are already in development, said Greg Joswiak, Apple's vice president of iPod and iPhone Product Marketing.

Other headphones do work with the Shuffle, Joswiak said, but you can't control volume, hear song information or change playlists.

That criticism aside, this iPod is a remarkable little device, and Apple has once again raised the bar for how to create a fresh music player.

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(Eric Benderoff writes about technology for the Chicago Tribune. Contact him at ebenderoff@tribune.com or at the Chicago Tribune, 435 N. Michigan Ave., Chicago IL 60611.)

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© 2009, Chicago Tribune.

Visit the Chicago Tribune on the Internet at http://www.chicagotribune.com/

Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

Tuesday, March 17, 2009

78-Year-Old Woman Helps Police Nab Man Who Stole Pocketbook at Gunpoint

EAST NORTHPORT (Suffolk County Police Department) - Suffolk County Police today charged a man with robbery after he robbed a mother and daughter at gunpoint at an East Northport Mall parking lot this afternoon.

The women, ages 49 and 78, were sitting in their vehicle in the parking lot of the Huntington Square Mall when a man opened the door, pointed a gun at them and demanded cash. The 49-year-old woman in the vehicle struggled with the robber and grabbed his gun. She subsequently let go of the gun and gave the robber her pocketbook at 1:45 p.m. The suspect, Christopher Norowski, fled on foot toward Route 25. The 78-year-old woman followed Norowski across Jericho Turnpike, where Norowski got into his minivan at a PC Richard & Son parking lot.

Suffolk County Deputy Sheriff John Hornick, on patrol in the area, was approached by a witness who said he saw a man with a pocketbook walking along Route 25 and thought it looked suspicious. Deputy Sherriff Hornick drove to the location and spotted the 78-year-old woman pursuing a minivan. The woman told Deputy Sherriff Hornick that the man in the minivan just stole her daughter’s pocketbook. The Deputy Sherriff stopped the van and arrested Norowski.

Further investigation revealed Norowski, 20, of 45 Meridian Ave., Kings Park, committed two similar robberies on March 8.

Second Squad detectives charged Norowski with robbing a man at gunpoint at the Huntington Square Mall, and MTA Police detectives charged Norowski in connection with a robbery that occurred at the Kings Park Long Island Rail Road station, where two people were robbed at gunpoint.

Norowski was charged with Robbery 1st Degree for each of these incidents. Norowski will be arraigned at First District Court in Central Islip on March 18.

Nine-Year-Old Seriously Injured in Northport Crash

NORTHPORT (Suffolk County Police Department) - Suffolk County Police Second Squad detectives are investigating a Northport crash that injured two drivers and two 9-year-old passengers, one seriously, this afternoon.

Michael Melnyk was driving a 2003 Mazda westbound on Route 25A in Northport at 3:53 p.m. when his vehicle crossed the double yellow line and struck the side of a 2008 Mercury traveling eastbound. The Mazda then struck, head-on, a 1992 Honda traveling eastbound behind the Mercury. Melnyk’s twin 9-year-old sons were passengers in his car.

Centerport Fire Department Rescue and Northport Fire Department Rescue transported the occupants to Huntington Hospital for treatment of their injuries. Melnyk, 51, of 20 Harbor Ridge Drive, Centerport, was treated and released. One of Melnyk’s sons was in serious but stable condition and his other son was treated for minor injuries.

The driver of the Honda, Luke Bishow-Semevolos, 21, of 34 Norwood Ave., Northport, was treated for a broken leg. The driver of the Mercury, Mary Lou Rousseau, 50, of 302 Van Buren Drive, Centerport, was not injured.

The Mazda and the Honda were impounded for a safety check.

Facebook, Twitter and other social media are more used than e-mail, surveys suggest

By Scott Kleinberg

Chicago Tribune

(MCT)

Here's today's big news in fewer than 140 characters: Social networking is now more popular than e-mail.

That's the official word from a new round of Nielsen research, which shows "member communities" such as Twitter and Facebook have overtaken personal e-mail to become the fourth-most-popular way people spend time online (after search, portals and software applications).

While there are plenty of facts and figures to back up the claim, it seems a little like old news. As fast as e-mail is, it's just not immediate enough. Seeing a message pop into an inbox just doesn't compare to receiving a tweet on Twitter or even a comment on Facebook.

And social media is good for you. It forces you to get to the point. We don't read e-mail, we scan it. Why unleash a 1,000-word diatribe when you can sum it up in 140 characters?

And what would a Nigerian scam be without e-mail? "My father was a very wealthy cocoa merchant in Abidjan, the economic capital of Ivory Coast before he was poisoned to death ..." just wouldn't have the same impact posted on a Facebook wall.

E-mail is still king at the office, but we're all embracing social media and other forms of communication. Sometimes, we still actually talk to each other!

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© 2009, Chicago Tribune.

Visit the Chicago Tribune on the Internet at http://www.chicagotribune.com/

Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

During lean times, more shoppers reach for coupons

By Barry Shlachter

McClatchy Newspapers

(MCT)

FORT WORTH, Texas _ Gwen Martinez is buying more groceries and health and beauty products than ever before _ but spending less.

Like a growing number of Americans in this economic downturn, 29-year-old Martinez is a relatively recent convert to clipping coupons from newspapers and in-store circulars and finding them online.

"I am saving about 69 percent overall," said the Arlington, Texas, medical secretary, who began in August after a fellow customer at a Walgreens checkout gave the cashier a handful of coupons, immediately saving her $10.

Martinez was hooked, and she's far from alone.

"Coupon clipping is definitely up," said Mark Adamcik, 45, an Albertsons store manager who's worked more than two decades for the chain and its predecessor, Skaggs.

"As the economy tightens up, it makes coupons more appealing."

Coupon use rose 15 percent in the last three months of 2008, compared with the same period of 2007, said Charlie Brown, vice president of marketing at NCH, the redemption unit of Livonia, Mich.-based Valassis, which invented the Sunday newspaper coupon sections and owns Red Plum, one of two big coupon companies.

And in a typical year, Americans redeem $3 billion worth of coupons, with fewer and fewer finding themselves too embarrassed to pull out wads of coupons or lug in baseball card albums choked with coupons for breakfast cereal and canned soup.

"There's less negative stigma attached to coupon use during slower economic times," said Ron Larson, a marketing professor at Haworth College of Business at Western Michigan University in Kalamazoo.

A recent survey bears that out.

Nearly 57 percent of 3,013 consumers surveyed nationwide in December admitted that they were once self-conscious about handing over grocery coupons but no longer care because of the money they're saving, according to a study by ICOM Information & Communications, a provider of marketing data. Twenty-two percent said they were still uncomfortable using the coupons.

Forty-three percent said they've used coupons more in the past six months, it said.

Manufacturers of brand-name food products, under pressure from supermarket chains' cheaper private-label items, bought about 5 percent more coupons in the fourth quarter of 2008 to promote their goods at a time when cost-conscious American families are eating more home-prepared meals, said Suzie Brown (no relation to the NCH executive), chief of marketing at Valassis.

On a recent Thursday evening, Martinez entered an Albertsons in Hurst, Texas, with a shoebox-sized, purple plastic box containing more than a thousand coupons sorted by category, and picked up the weekly store circular with a front-page of more coupons.

Less than 30 minutes later she wheeled her cart toward cashier Cinda Atkins' checkout lane with $103.08 worth of groceries.

After her coupons were scanned, Martinez said, "This is my favorite part."

Atkins calls out that the cost was reduced to $61.49 _ a savings of $41.59 or slightly more than 40 percent. The customer next in line, who waited patiently as 40 coupons were scanned, shook his head in amazement.

Martinez does even better on health and beauty items at two major drug chains, CVS and Walgreen, bringing her monthly average overall savings close to 70 percent.

(EDITORS: BEGIN OPTIONAL TRIM)

On Jan. 10, a receipt showed that she paid just $1.05 for $45.45 worth of goods at Walgreens, having combined store coupons providing credits for the entire price of an item with coupons clipped from the newspaper for the same product.

The savings allow her to spend more on food and healthcare goods than before, and to pay down some credit card bills.

(END OPTIONAL TRIM)

Stephanie Nelson of couponmom.com claims that a family of four can save $100 a week on groceries by clipping coupons. Since 75 percent of grocery coupons come from the Sunday newspaper, she recommends buying two or three copies to save dramatically, then scan the Internet for more.

And some manufacturers are sweetening the deal.

Last year, multiple-purchase requirements on health and beauty coupons dropped to 6 percent, from 11 percent in 2007. Moreover, expiration dates were lengthened, the average period rising to 2.8 months from 2.6 months, said NCH's Brown.

But the opposite was true for grocery coupons, which saw expiration dates reduced to 2.3 months in 2008 from 2.4 the year before. Multiple-purchase requirements decreased, but only by a tad, to 35 from 37 percent.

The average value of a coupon distributed today is $1.29, NCH's Brown said.

Coupon use and private-label purchases tend to rise during tougher economic times because many people look for ways to save money, said Larson, adding that consumers might also have more time on their hands to clip and sort.

Larson rattled off the grocery coupon's various effects: They draw attention to a product, lower its price for past buyers and attract new ones, generate consumer "pull" during soft sales periods, remind even nonclippers of the product's existence, create a marketing synergy benefit when coupled with in-store specials, and they limit growth of private-label competitors.

Despite the manufacturers' desire to snare a steady buyer with a coupon offer, Martinez says she no longer becomes loyal to a particular brand.

"I'm a sale kind of girl," she said.

(EDITORS: STORY CAN END HERE)

Her grocery cart included a mix of national and private-label brands, including a loaf of Albertsons budget Good Day sandwich loaf.

The Minnesota-born Martinez alternates between Kroger and Albertsons, depending on the weekly specials. Both are convenient on her commuting route. And both double and triple the value of many coupons. Typically, the big-box discounters like Wal-Mart and Target discount only the face value.

Although some coupons carry fine print saying they cannot be combined with other offers, she learned from Internet couponing forums that most stores don't mind.

On Thursday, Albertsons staff said they had no objection if the computerized scanning system accepted them.

"Cheese was a really good deal," Martinez said.

Combining offers allowed her to apply an in-store flier coupon putting a $5 sale price on three 8-ounce packages of Kraft-brand cheese along with a newspaper coupon and another won in an online contest.

The combination reduced her cost to 50 cents apiece. The usual retail price of an 8-ounce packet at Albertsons is $2.50.

While few supermarkets make much, if anything, on savvy coupon users like Martinez, she wouldn't be there without the tiny slips of paper.

Before August, most of her groceries were purchased at Sam's Club.

"But I stopped after I began couponing, and find I get better deals at supermarkets with coupons," said Martinez, noting that coupons don't help much in the large bulk quantities at a wholesale club store like Sam's.

"Frankly, I used to hate grocery shopping," she went on. "It was my most dreaded chore until I started coupon-clipping.

"Now it's an adventure and a challenge."

(EDITORS: STORY CAN END HERE)

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TIPS ON SAVING BIG WITH COUPONS

Savvy shopper Gwen Martinez shares some of her strategies for saving big:

_ Double up. Purchase multiple Sunday newspapers for extra coupon insert sections.

_ Join reward programs at all the stores and learn how they work.

_ Read the fine print. A coupon may exclude trial sizes or you may grab an item not included in the offer.

_ Don't toss that coupon. You never know when that item will go on sale and become a great deal.

_ Stock up. Buy multiples when items are on sale.

_ Be adventurous. Don't stay loyal to a brand when you can get a far better deal on something new.

_ Share the savings. Think of a neighbor or someone in your community and pick up the item to donate.

_ Ask. Even veteran coupon users get useful advice from others, so join an online forum or a local coupon club to maximize savings. (Martinez is a member of www.hotcouponworld.com.)

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© 2009, Fort Worth Star-Telegram.

Visit the Star-Telegram on the World Wide Web at http://www.star-telegram.com.

Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.