The Daily Loper - November 16, 2008
Forgetting Sarah Palin Edition
Todays links of interest:
- The Wild Wordsmith of Wasilla
Whenever I hear Winky speak, all I can think of is Miss Teen South Carolina explaining "some people don’t have maps."
Forgetting Sarah Palin Edition
Todays links of interest:
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Sometimes his guitar sounded like a giant door creaking as it opened directly into another dimension.
It's about fracking time.
Too bad he's a bass player. Couldn't they get Andy Summers to do this?
As Kirk keeps saying, it's a make-or-break year for Blu-ray. By next year, it will all be different.
Epically, as the kids who don't read newspapers anymore would say.
Apples also caves on flexible pricing.
Sigh.
Either that, or Bill O'Riley really is gay. He really does protest a bit too much . . .
Ah, we do love a snarky column.
Okay, okay, we'll take Defamer. Or not, looks like it was sold before, well, anyone knew it was on the market (anyone being the staff).
Great, great idea. And a harbinger of the future.
Yep, this is the kind of controversy that occupied the last moments of the official (and unofficial) 'loper vacation.
Is it possible our AT&T service could get worse?!
Or, if you pay attention to (and respond to) what your customers are saying, you might come out a winner.
Uh huh: "I consider myself a casualty, one of the many casualties of the war on terror." We consider him to be reaping what he sowed.
Once again, the capacity of overpaid executives to make bad business decisions overwhelms our capacity to take them seriously as smart, thoughtful stewards of business.
Zunes everywhere are apparently committing synchronized ritual suicide.
Gamers may be drooling over this, but eBook lovers also have something to look forward to. If true, this could be a serious challenger to the Sony Reader and the Kindle.
You ever feel like the NYT isn't even trying anymore? Just keep writing the same stories with the same angle and hope nobody notices. In this edition, it turns out that musicians are making money from licensing rather than album sales.
We vote more of the same. When it comes to Ticketmaster and its competition, consumers seem to always lose.
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