Squaretrade.com

Squaretrade offers warranties for products sold on the Internet. The company began selling warranties for products sold on eBay and now offers their warranty services to web resellers and merchants of appliances and electronics on the web. Warranties can be upsold to customer with your tech products.

The company has been in business since 1999 and claims to be the largest independent warranty provider.

Phone: 1-877-WARRANTY

Reseller Information: http://www.squaretrade.com/pages/websites

The Force Field now carrying TPN coverage of CES 2009

(TheForceField.net) January 9, 2009 — The Force Field is now carrying video coverage of The Consumer Electronics Show to the public and members of The Force Field.

Through an arrangement with Techpodcasts.com and GeekNewsCentral the site will feature daily HD video coverage from the floor of CES 2009. The Force Field podcast is a member of the Techpodcasts.com Network.

The videos are hosted by Todd Cochrane of Geek News Central and Andy McCaskey of Slashdot Review. They will be joined by Jeffrey Powers of Geekazine to provide daily reports from the floor of CES 2009 in Las Vegas.

There are three separate video productions. The official video episodes will be published on the home page of THEFORCEFIELD.NET and available to the public. These are HD video feeds that will recap the events of each day.

There is also a second video production. This will be a backchannel feed. This daily video update will follow the hosts and crew and provide a behind-the-scenes look at the CES event normally only available to members of the press, including press events and insider tours. In addition to the two recorded video feeds members of The Force Field will be able to watch a third feed in real time. The feed will be streamed live from the floor of CES and will be available based on available time and bandwidth.

The backchannel and live video feeds will be available from TheForceField.Net web portal to members of The Force Field only. The backchannel can be viewed from a special menu link after login. Members can watch the live feed from the Home Page of TheForceField.Net after login.

Membership to TheForceField.Net is free but will be subject to administrator approval for the event. All fields on the membership application form must be filled out with valid information such as a valid e-mail address, mailing address and contact number to be considered for approval.

CES is an annual event held every year in January. This year the event will be held January 8-11.

 

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Microsoft releases Windows 7 beta to public

(TheForceField.Net) January 8, 2009 — Microsoft will release Windows 7 beta got public review and testing January 9. According to Microsoft's Windows 7 web site, the operating system will be available for download beginning Friday afternoon.

Windows 7, the next generation of the Microsoft Windows operating system, is purportedly leaner and faster than its predecessor, Windows Vista while retaining Vista's overall core. Windows Vista has had a slow adoption rate since it's release at the end of 2006.

Consumers have been less than enthusiastic to adopt Vista and many companies skipped an upgrade to Vista, opting instead to wait for the launch of Windows 7. Windows 7 beta can be downloaded at http://www.microsoft.com/windows/windows-7/beta-download.aspx

TheForceField.Net to carry TPN coverage of CES 2009

(TheForceField.net) January 7, 2009 — The Force Field will begin video coverage of The Consumer Electronics Show to the public and members of The Force Field beginning tomorrow.

Through an arrangement with Techpodcasts.com and GeekNewsCentral the site will feature daily HD video coverage from the floor of CES 2009. The Force Field podcast is a member of the Techpodcasts.com Network.

The videos will be hosted by Todd Cochrane of Geek News Central and Andy McCaskey of Slashdot Review. They will be joined by Jeffrey Powers of Geekazine to provide daily reports from the floor of CES 2009 in Las Vegas.

There will be three separate video productions. The official video episodes will be published on the home page of THEFORCEFIELD.NET and available to the public. These are HD video feeds that will recap the events of each day.

There is also a second video production. This will be a backchannel feed. This daily video update will follow the hosts and crew and provide a behind-the-scenes look at the CES event normally only available to members of the press, including press events and insider tours. In addition to the two recorded video feeds members of The Force Field will be able to watch a third feed in real time. The feed will be streamed live from the floor of CES and will be available based on available time and bandwidth.

The backchannel and live video feeds will be available from TheForceField.Net web portal to members of The Force Field only. The backchannel can be viewed from a special menu link after login. Members can watch the live feed from the Home Page of TheForceField.Net after login.

Membership to TheForceField.Net is free but will be subject to administrator approval for the event. All fields on the membership application form must be filled out with valid information such as a valid e-mail address, mailing address and contact number to be considered for approval.

CES is an annual event held every year in January. This year the event will be held January 8-11.

 

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Vinyl record sales up, CD sales down and here’s why

Computerworld reported today that vinyl record sales doubled in 2008 , setting a record for records that hasn’t been broken since the turn of the century. In contrast, CD sales are down. Way down. According to the article, the primary reasons for this are two-fold: vinyl records have better sound and the album art is in great demand.

This article went on for three pages quoting “industry observers” about how music enthusiasts are rediscovering vinyl records as a source of warmer sounds and cover art that “you can hold in your hands”. They tout how a new generation is discovering vinyl for the first time for the same reasons.

Sure, there is some validity to the two reasons given. The music does sound warmer, fuller, and richer, an argument many purists have given to justify their resistance to the more sterile sound of a digital recording on CD. This is also why a few recording studios still use older equipment to capture the sound.

No doubt album cover art is just that – art. I will admit I purchased an album or two in my day more for the cover than the music enclosed within.

However, nowhere in this article does anyone mention the most obvious reason for the uptick in sales of analog recordings.

Oh, come on now, seriously. I think everyone knows the REAL reason vinyl is making a comeback. It’s DRM free.

You can say what you will about the reasons CD sales are down and the big labels can believe what they want, but the primary reason CD music sales are dying is because of DRM. People pay through the nose for music these days and for all the money they pay they want to feel as though they really own them, not like they are standing at a Jukebox every time they want to hear their favorite tunes.

Which MP3 tunes sell better, those with DRM or those without? Apple knows this. Independent artists know this. The RIAA still doesn’t get it. They think everyone is a criminal. In reality it is the recording industry cartel who are the criminals, because they are trying to squeeze every penny they can from music fans in the name of the copyright and in so doing are choking themselves.

Until the recording industry figures out a way to lock down music on vinyl records sales will continue to rise.

If that does happen, don’t be surprised if the 8-track makes a comeback.

 

 

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A New Year’s Resolution: Diversify

I was reading a post in the computerbusiness group on Yahoo! this morning by Brad at Aspen Computer Services called The Economy and Elephants. He was discussing Steve Kaplan’s book Bag the Elephant!: How to Win and Keep Big Customers. The “elephant” in this respect is the large client. The concept is that obtaining a couple of these big spending accounts will provide a steady revenue stream for your business, allowing you spend less on administrative overhead such as marketing to new clients, invoicing and collections.

In the past this was every small computer consultant’s dream: land a couple of big ones and your business is set. But times have changed.

The current situation with the economy has created uncertainty in the marketplace; even the largest elephants are no longer immune to its effects. Layoffs are occurring everywhere within large corporations and many companies in the enterprise are scaling back or cutting tech spending in 2009. If you rely on two or three large companies to keep yours profitable and you lose revenue from one, how would that impact your business? Unless you have alternate streams of revenue, it could be a serious blow to your bottom line.

This is where the old adage of “putting all of your eggs in one basket” rings true. While ‘bagging the elephant’ is always a great boost to your business, to rely solely on the elephants to make your hunt a success is risky business.

This is how a lot of investors lost their life savings. They relied solely on the stock market, their 401(k) or their pensions for their retirement nest egg instead of diversifying their savings in a number of different venues. When the stock market took a nosedive and the banking industry began to meltdown, many of them lost it all. Those who diversified were hurt as well, but they were able to take the blow.

In these uncertain economic times, we need to be ready for anything. Bagging the elephant won’t necessarily help much anymore. If the elephant is becoming lean it could be more trouble than its worth and if it is sick, lame or even dying, instead of an asset, it could even become a liability.

In his post, Brad considered this himself and suggested that diversification may be a better alternative. I agree.

We are currently running a four part episode of The Force Field podcast on The State of the IT Industry. While the discussion primarily centers on how the current economic situation is affecting IT service providers and how they think it will impact their businesses in the coming year, we do talk about how to deal with the prospect of a downturn in business.

In Episode 29 Patrick Palmer told us what he was doing to market his services to a broader client base. In Episode 30 Kris Crispell stressed the importance of keeping up with the latest technology with continuing education in IT. The guests made suggestions in each interview that I think are good ideas to consider, but the one thing they all mention is the possibility of diversifying.

There are many new and emerging technologies entering the marketplace and  this translates into new opportunities for staking a niche in the delivery and support of new products and services, and possibly creating a niche in new areas of IT.

Even if you are not particularly interested in entering these new arenas, it is still advisable to check them out for possibilities. The truth is that in this day and age, under current circumstances, sticking to business as usual may not carry you through the rough spots to come. Sure, the more clients you do have for a specific product or service the better, but as the economic climate changes and consumers react to it, their needs and priorities may change as well. If you are not prepared to meet them, they will find someone who can.

 

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