Archive for February, 2007



Hot Deals: Wireless Router, Webcam, Leather Chair

I came across a few hot deals at Staples. All prices are the lowest I have seen for this kind of products. Shipping is also free if you are a Staples Rewards member. If not — join now. It doesn’t cost anything. This sale expires tomorrow, February 24, 2007, so hurry up!

NETGEAR® Wireless-G router — $19.98

Netgear® Wireless-G Broadband Router Reg. price: $59.98
Sale Price: $44.98
Instant coupon: $25
Final Price: $19.98
  • Model: Netgear WGRZ614
  • Speed up to 54Mbps - 5x faster than 802.11b
  • Range up to 120ft
  • True Firewall with SPI and NAT protects your network against hackers
  • Smart Wizard - automatically detects and connects to your ISP
  • Easy set up with interactive install tutorial
  • Backward compatible

Creative Live! Ultra Webcam — $19.99

Creative Live! Ultra Webcam Reg. price: $79.99
Sale price: $69.99
Mail in rebate: $50
Final Price: $19.99
  • CCD image sensor with 640x480 (VGA) resolution
  • USB 2.0 Hi-Speed connection
  • Full-motion video at 30 frames per second
  • Included headset
  • Takes still pictures at up to 1.3 megapixel resolution
  • Comes with WebCam Center software, which includes motion detection, remote security monitoring, timelapse video capture, and much more

Staples® Belmore™ Leather Manager’s Chair — $29.99

Staples® Belmore™ Leather Manager's Chair Reg. price: $79.99
Sale price: $49.99
Mail in rebate: $20
Final Price: $29.99
  • Luxurious black leather
  • Loop arms
  • Built-in lumbar support
  • Pneumatic seat-height adjustment
  • Seat and back tilt simultaneously at the same ratio
  • Swivel controls allow user to move freely
  • 39”-43”H x 25”W x 20 1/2”D
  • Meets or exceeds(ANSI/BIFMA) standards
  • Ready to assemble
  • 15-year mfr. limited warranty

Free solar power, KeyBank promotion and more

There has been too much to write about today. I will simply list all the bits I collected during the day and give each a short summary.

Selling Homeowners a Solar Dream

Wired News writes about a startup that claims it will loan you a complete rooftop solar power system for your house, install it for free and sell you back the power it generates at a fixed rate below what your utility charges. Sounds like an interesting business model and a great money & environment saving idea!

Digital Camera Checking Account Bonus at KeyBank

Bank Deals writes about a promotion at KeyBank. Get a Canon Powershot A460 for simply opening a checking account and setting up a direct deposit. Offer expires March 30, 2007 and is available only in states that have KeyBank branches. Here are some that have: Alaska, Colorado, Idaho, Indiana, Kentucky, Maine, Michigan, New York, Ohio, Oregon, Utah, Vermont and Washington State

Buy Direct. Save Big.

I discovered this weird company offering its club members savings when they buy direct from manufacturers. The variety of products appeals mostly to young couples who recently bought a house and expect a lot of expenses in the upcoming years. There is one caveat. The 10 year membership costs $4425 (2003 data), and you only have one shot at joining. Read this detailed investigation by Wilton Online to find more strange things about DirectBuy.

Looking for Love (Online)

Andrea Dickson from WiseBread has rounded up several alternatives for online dating and reviewed each judging from her experience. I hope I will never have to follow her useful tips since I am already married, but I still enjoyed reading her objective and detailed reviews.

Domain Hacks

Are you having hard time finding a vacant domain name for your new project? Before you end up shelling out green to domain squatters check out Xona’s Domain Hacks tool. It will check the alternative domain names when .com is no longer an option. Are you a tennis lover? “www.tenn.is” is not taken yet. ;-)

Web Developers: 13 Command Line Tricks You Might Not Know

SEOmoz, the blog for web masters that I read daily, lists a few time saving UNIX commands. If you own a web site or a blog, and occasionally have to deals with UNIX command line, you will find the list very useful. I am thinking about printing it out and hanging on the wall in front of my desk.

Pump-and-Dump, Money Mules, and Penis Pills

I hate unsolicited phone calls and email offers I have not signed to. This blog receives over 200 comment submissions daily and some of my email accounts receive even more emails. Thanks to effective spam filtering software I don’t have to read most of them but that doesn’t make me hate spammers less.

All three terms above relate to spam which has become inevitable part of our daily life. I am not going to tell you about Penis Enlargement Pills. I hope you are smart enough to not engage into this type of ripoff. But who are the other two animals?

Pump-and-Dump

You have probably received emails with an embedded image inside selling a penny stock of some small company. That company is real and to make the sale pitch look convincing, the text inside that image often points to real events or a news release.

The economics of this scam is pretty simple. Spammers invest into a penny stock of a small company. Small companies have few outstanding shares and their stock price is relatively easy to sway. People receive email spam, buy the stock, and by doing so raise the stock price short term. Meanwhile the spammers sell the stock profiting from the higher price.

The important part here is “short term”. There is a very good chance the stock will go down the next day or even later the same day. But don’t take my word for it, look at this website that monitors daily stock spam activity. You can see from the charts that buying these stocks is a guaranteed way to lose money!

Money Mules

Another popular type of email spam is aimed at stealing your banking or credit card credentials. This is called phishing. The email sender attempts to obtain your sensitive financial information by impersonating a bank, credit card agency, IRS, or another financial institution. What happens after spammers obtain this data? This is where a Money Mule gets involved.

Have you ever seen ads offering stay-at-home jobs titled “shipping manager” or “regional assistant” and offering lucrative salaries with high commissions? Some of these are attempts to enlist people to transfer illegal funds obtained via above mentioned phishing scam. Many of the spammers operate out of third world countries and don’t have US banking accounts.

Money Mules are spammers’ helpers who represent the last link in the phishing chain. Without a Money Mule, spammers can’t really do anything with the stolen credit card credentials.

You can find a great deal of information about the technology behind spam and other malicious activities from this book: Botnets: The Killer Web Applications

Dine and save with Restaurant.com

DinnerI don’t dine out very often. It is simply not very budget wise. However it sounds like I can now do it at 60% discount or even more. How?

Restaurant.com is a place to buy gift certificates for more than 7,000 restaurants nationwide. Most of these certificates are significantly discounted. $25 gift certificates cost $10, while $10 certificates cost only $3. In addition, if you use coupon code DINE before February 28, 2007, you will get an extra 60% off of your purchase.

Once you buy it, the gift certificate is emailed to you. Print it and take to the restaurant with you to pay for your food.

There are certain limitations

All certificates I have tried are good for dinners only. Also, there is a minimum purchase requirement. For example, to use a $10 certificate you need to buy a dinner for the amount of $15. And don’t forget those tips as well!

There is one more issue — it can be hard to find your favorite place in the list of restaurants. However if you feel adventurous and don’t mind to try something new (and save money on the way) then Restaurant.com is the way to go.

It should be noted that they have recently teamed up with Amazon and it looks like now you will be able to buy these same certificates from Amazon. However no matter how hard I try I get “No results match your search in Restaurant.com” error message. This looks like a bug to me.

photo: “just one little bite” by Robert Terrell

Hot Deals Forum + Rewards Program = FatWallet

This post continues the weekly series of website reviews which I started last week with SlickDeals. The bargain hunting site of this week is FatWallet, the second popular site in my list. In fact it held the first position for a long time and gave it up to SlickDeals just recently.

Just as in case of SlickDeals, most of the popularity comes from very active community forums, which bring a lot of visitors to FatWallet.

The major difference between FatWallet and SlickDeals is the fact that FatWallet offers a cash back program that visitors can participate to sweeten all the deals they find in the forums (to get the cash back you need to be a registered FatWallet user and to follow certain steps when you make the purchase). Based on November 2006 data the cash back percentages FatWallet offers look pretty competitive compared to other similar rewards programs. FatWallet’s strength compared to other programs is the fact that they offer their rewards in the context of very popular deals forums. The forums community is generating hundreds of bargains a day and it is very hard to compete with the combined intelligence of hundreds of thousands of people.

In addition to the forums, FatWallet offers plenty of other tools aimed at helping you with bargain hunting. Let’s go over each and see what they are worth.

Stores

This page lists stores and the current cash back percentages for each. When you click on a particular store link you get to a page dedicated to that store which lists current promotions applicable to that store and also usually has a few links to specific parts of the store (e.g. different departments). This is very convenient however I wish the deals themselves were also integrated so when I choose to shop in a particular store I could do it all from one page. And hey, where is the Best Buy store page?

OfficeDepot by Fatwallet

Hot Deal News

Hot Deal News is a sort of a blog where a person by the name K. Sebring hand picks deals from forums posts and summarizes them in a more readable format (as well verifying that all the links are accurate and nothing is missing). This is the place to come if you don’t want to swipe crowdy forums. The big problem with this blog is that deals often get here after a week or more since they are posted in forums. I am not sure who K. Sebring is but he should cut on those 4 hour lunch breaks. ;-)

Forums

Forums is ultimately where all of the action takes place. Functionality-wise the forums are inferior compared to those at SlickDeals however this simplicity may appeal to some (too much functionality may look overwhelming). In addition the forums are more restrictive. You will not find fancy avatars or long signatures. In fact you will not see any signatures ever since they were found inappropriate. On one side it takes away individuality from posters, on the other side it eliminates clutter. Pick what you prefer.

Store Ratings

This is in essence an aggregation of ratings for all stores. I don’t see much value in doing it since you can see the same information from the individual store pages (see above). The only case when this could be useful is if you decide to compare stores by their rating side by side (I wish I could pick individual stores and compare them separate from the rest).

Store Ratings

It should be noted that FatWallet has built their own user feedback database which may not be as comprehensive as that of ResellerRatings but which still looks very impressive (for example Amazon has 467 reviews at FatWallet and 1002 at ResellerRatings).

Prices

Prices page is a price comparison engine co-branded with PriceGrabber and it doesn’t represent anything significant. It would be much more useful if it was better integrated with FatWallet store rating and cash back information.

Wiki

Wiki is the company’s attempt to aggregate the static information from forums into a more structured format. The forums are very well suited for limited time deals and promotions but they don’t work well as a reference for longer lived information (for example shopping tips or product specifications). In addition, since Wiki is much more search engine friendly, this can also be looked at as an attempt to monetize on FatWallet’s high Page Rank by bringing all those visitors that don’t land on the site forums pages.

FatWallet Wiki

Wiki is currently in Beta stage and doesn’t seem to be very active. There are some interesing pages (mostly ripped from forums) but it is still a long way before it becomes useful. If I were Tim Storm I would hire a couple of full time technical editors and would start filling in the content.

Big Fat Deals

Big Fat Deals is where FatWallet lists all the new promotions they collect via affiliate channels. These same promotions are available at the individual store pages and Big Fat Deals simply offers another way of looking at this information: chronologically and by category. They also bring together “popular” promotions to a separate list but God Chief Mucky Muck only knows what is considered popular. Are these the ones that bring FatWallet higher commission?

Conclusion

FatWallet offers a greater variety of tools for bargain hunters compared to SlickDeals. Store pages look impressive and Wiki is a step in the right direction. Forums is still the most popular part of the website and functionality-wise they are inferior to SlickDeals.

The main FatWallet strength is integration of a rewards program with active user forums. This is probably what appeals most of the FatWallet’ers and this is what makes them come back.

I think the best way to improve the site is by adding a price comparison engine (similar to JellyFish) integrated with store ratings and cash back information.




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