понедельник, 15 июня 2015 г.

uWalmart Marks Defunct Multiplayer Game Down To Only $15r


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  • tabula_rasa_2015Back in 2010, we pointed out something kind of silly and unfair that happened at one reader’s local Walmart: there was an old computer game on the shelves. This happened to be a multiplayer game, which required access to servers to play. Those servers were shut down in 2009, making the game completely useless if purchased in 2009, or in 2013, and it’s just as useless now.

    Yet reader Kristen, brave explorer for the Raiders of the Lost Walmart, reports that her local Walmart found six copies somewhere in their warehouse, dusted them off, and marked them down to $15. While the game box itself has some value to collectors, it’s not $15.

    The problem is that someone could theoretically buy this game off the clearance shelf, take it home, and try to actually play it. Imagine their reaction when they learn that their new game has been shut down for six years.

    That scenario is pretty unlikely, though, since we have trouble imagining that anyone would buy this game at all. Even at 50% off.



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  • by Laura Northrup
  • via Consumerist


uCourt Allows Utah To Ban Price-Fixing Of Contact Lensesr


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  • Contact lens companies have been working together to create price floors for their products, prohibiting retailers from offering competitive discounts and removing consumers’ ability to shop around for savings. Legislators in Utah recently passed a bill that would outlaw this practice but in May a federal appeals court temporarily blocked it from being enacted. But on Friday, the court vacated that injunction, allowing the new law to move forward.

    A quick refresher course for those coming to this story late.

    While most healthcare professionals are not allowed to be in the business of selling medication directly to patients, optometrists can — and many do — sell eyeglasses and contact lenses to their patients. But retailers like Costco and 1-800-CONTACTS have been selling lenses at a discount, taking away some business from optometrists.

    Starting in 2013, the largest contact lens manufacturers (Bausch & Lomb, Alcon, and Johnson & Johnson), accounting for some 80% of the market in the U.S., began establishing price floors for their products to help protect the optometrists they depend on to prescribe their lenses.

    Because there are generally no generics for contact lens prescriptions, and there aren’t things like exclusive frames that could give a shopper a reason to look elsewhere for their lenses, the price floor takes away any incentive to shop around.

    Utah’s Contact Lens Consumer Protection Act [PDF] is intended to prohibit contact lens companies from any practice that “has the effect of fixing or otherwise controlling the price that a contact lens retailer charges or advertises.” Lens companies would also not be allowed to discriminate against a retailer in the state based on its retail price for lenses.

    The three lens companies sued [http://ift.tt/1cZIyXF] to block this law, and sought an injunction against its being enforced. They alleged that the Utah legislature had overstepped its authority in violation of the Commerce Clause of the U.S. Constitution.

    Both Costco and 1-800-CONTACTS, who stand to lose contact lens customers if price floors remain in place, filed opposition briefs to the lawsuit.

    In May, a U.S. District Court judge denied the lens companies’ injunction request, stating that it was unlikely that they would be successful at trial. However, only days later, and with little explanation, the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals granted that temporary injunction while allowing all parties to file briefs on why or why it shouldn’t be made permanent pending trial.

    The appeals court has read all the filings, and last Friday, it vacated the injunction, saying the three lens makers “have not satisfied the requirements necessary for an injunction.”

    Granted, the companies can — and likely will — appeal this ruling, so it’s probably not the end of the matter.

    Price floors were effectively outlawed for nearly 100 years, because they were believed to be in violation of the Sherman Antitrust Act. But then in the 2007 case of Leegin Creative Leather Products, Inc. v. PSKS, Inc., the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that it manufacturers could indeed set price floors in some situations.

    In overturning earlier precedent, SCOTUS had pointed out that retailers facing price floors could use the money they would have ceded through discounts and invest it in “greater customer service” so as to gain a competitive edge.

    In countering this argument, Costco contended that while the contact lens price floors might incentivize retailers to invest that money in something new to win over lens customers, the optometrists didn’t have to invest anything because they already had the customer, the prescription, and the product all in one place — and at a price you’d find regardless of where you shop.



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  • by Chris Morran
  • via Consumerist


uFlorida Officials Warning Swimmers Of Flesh-Eating Bacteria Responsible For 2 Deaths This Yearr


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  • Beach season is a welcome time of the year for swimmers and sunbathers, but along with the warm weather comes warm water, and a potential health hazard: Florida health officials are issuing their yearly warning to swimmers (and diners) about the dangers of a flesh-eating bacteria that’s caused two deaths already this year.

    The Florida Department of Health said there have been eight infections and two deaths reported in 2015 from the bacterium vibrio vulnificus, which thrives in salty warm water.

    There are two ways you can contract vibrio vulnificus — through swimming in infected water with an open wound or by eating raw shellfish contaminated with the bacteria.

    “Of the two, one patient had raw seafood exposure and one had multiple exposures prior to onset of symptoms,” a Florida Department of Health spokesperson said.

    Last year in Florida there were 32 vibrio cases and seven deaths — however, officials say the disease often goes underreported.

    “Ingestion of Vibrio vulnificus can cause vomiting, diarrhea and abdominal pain,” the Florida DOH states on its website. “The bacterium can invade the bloodstream, causing a severe and life-threatening illness with symptoms like fever, chills, decreased blood pressure (septic shock) and blistering skin lesions.”

    Health officials warn people who have open wounds or a weakened immune system not to go swimming or enter the water. Though it can also make you sick if you eat undercooked or raw food, it’s especially harmful and potentially lethal when it gets in the bloodstream.

    Swimmers should also rinse off with before going home as well, officials suggest.

    Although vibrio vulnificus is often referred to as a “flesh-eating” bacteria because of the way it breaks down the skin and causes blistering lesions when people with open wounds come into contact with it, it doesn’t meet the official classification of a flesh-eating bacteria, UPI notes, citing health officials.

    Health officials: Rare sea bacteria kills 2 in Florida [UPI]



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  • by Mary Beth Quirk
  • via Consumerist


uHonda Confirms Seventh Takata Airbag-Related Death Involved A Civicr


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  • (Jackie Vance-Kuss)

    (Jackie Vance-Kuss)

    After a lawsuit filed last week claimed a seventh death was linked to the ongoing recall of defective Takata airbags in millions of vehicles from nearly a dozen manufactures, Honda confirmed over the weekend that the latest fatality did indeed occur in one of its automobiles.

    The New York Times reports that Honda – which has been linked to the other six fatalities – confirmed over the weekend that a 22-year-old woman driving a 2005 Civic was fatally wounded by a ruptured airbag inflator following a collision in April 2015.

    The car company says the vehicle was part of a “safety improvement campaign” initiated in June 2014. However, the car’s owner at the time didn’t receive a notification. So when it was sold to the Louisiana woman in October 2014, it hadn’t been repaired.

    A safety notice from the manufacturer was sent to the new owner just three days before her death, the Times reports.

    “Honda deeply regrets that mailed notification appears to have not reached [the owner] prior to her crash,” Chris Martin, a spokesman for the automaker, said in a statement.

    The company said that mailed notifications first went to owners of recalled vehicles in areas with high humidity such as Florida, Hawaii and Puerto Rico back in September. Other areas – where ruptures were once thought to be less likely – including Louisiana, received notices later.

    Martin tells the Times that the prioritization of notices was a result of the magnitude of the recall and a lack of available replacement parts.

    The seventh death related to the defective Takata airbags was first revealed last week when the woman’s family filed a lawsuit against the Japanese auto parts maker and Honda.

    According to the complaint [PDF], when the driver’s Honda Civic struck a utility pole, the Takata airbag didn’t deploy as it should but instead “violently exploded and sent metal shards, shrapnel and/or other foreign material into the passenger compartment.”

    The plaintiffs say the driver sustained a penetrating injury to the right side of her neck, resulting in a loss of blood. The woman passed away four days later as a result of injuries sustained in the collision.

    The lawsuit alleges that Takata has known about its exploding airbag problem as far back as 2001 – including performing secret tests of the safety devices. Additionally, the suit purports that Honda has been aware of the issue for more than a decade but failed to report some airbag-related incidents to that National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. The regulator has since levied a record $35 million fine against the automaker.

    “Since at least 2004, both the Honda Defendants and the Takata Defendants have had a growing and continuing awareness of the subject defect through consumer complaints, claims, and lawsuits, and of the grave safety dangers associated with the exploding airbags,” reads the complaint.

    The first vehicles with Takata-produced airbags were recalled in 2009. However, the vehicle included in the latest fatality wasn’t recalled until June 2014.

    In all, seven deaths and more than 100 injuries have now been linked to the airbags. Takata finally caved to regulator pressure last month declaring some 34 million safety devices as defective, initiating one of the largest auto recalls in U.S. history.

    Soon after the massive recall was announced, Takata gave confirmation that hundreds of thousands of already-replaced Takata airbags will need to be fixed again.

    While automakers have continuously added models to their roster of affected vehicles, regulators say it could be months before a final list is completed.

    Honda Links a Rupturing Takata Airbag to a 7th Death [The New York Times]



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  • by Ashlee Kieler
  • via Consumerist


uTurns Out Deep-Fried Coffee Tastes Exactly How It Soundsr


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  • (Courtesy of San Diego County Fair)

    (Courtesy of San Diego County Fair)

    Last week the Internet was temporarily afire with the news that someone had decided to deep-fry Starbucks coffee and serve it up at the San Diego County Fair, and we wondered what fried balls of coffee grounds might taste like. As it turns out, it tastes exactly as awful as one might expect a mouthful of coffee grounds tastes like.

    Consumerist reader Renee writes in to say she’s tried the new fair fare, and it sounds like she regrets it.

    “We are idiots and got the fried coffee just to see what it was like,” Renee says. They ordered three donut sized balls for about $7, $7 their mouths will never get back again.

    Photo from Renee's visit to the deep-fried coffee booth.

    Photo from Renee’s visit to the deep-fried coffee booth.

    “They are horrible,” she writes. “Dry and grainy coffee grounds like that mouthful you get at the end of the last cup of a pot. No one would ever get them twice so clearly it’s just a novelty meant to get a lot of mildly adventurous people like us to give them $7.”

    There you have it, folks — just because something is out there and crazy and just so happens to be deep-fried, it might not be delicious. If you start out with something delicious — like a candy bar — and then fry it, sure, it’s gonna taste good. But if you take something you’d normally never eat by itself — like coffee grounds — it might taste like something you’d throw out after making your morning pot coffee fell into the deep fryer.

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  • by Mary Beth Quirk
  • via Consumerist


uReport: Google Fiber Might Be On Its Way To Portland Nextr


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  • Google’s currently hard at work on the east coast, bringing their Fiber service to a number of cities in North Carolina. And, according to North Carolinians, Google’s next move will bring them straight across the country to the west coast: namely, Portland.

    That’s what some Google employees apparently said in North Carolina this past week, at any rate.

    Oregon Live reports that after an event in North Carolina, a Google manager — apparently inadvertently — mentioned that the company was next going to be announcing fiber service in Portland, OR.

    Google has been hard at work in North Carolina for the past several months: back in January, the tech giant announced that it was officially going to plop down cables and sign up customers in the Charlotte and Raleigh metro areas. An event related to that rollout was where the Google employee made their apparent oops.

    A local entrepreneur told Oregon Live, “We were talking afterward and they came right out and said Portland is going to be the next city. It kind of caught me off guard. I almost thought one of them told me something they weren’t supposed to.”

    Oops.

    Portland has been on the expansion shortlist for over a year and, as Oregon Live points out, signs have been pointing for nearly as long to an eventual likely “yes.” Google has already secured a franchise agreement and certain tax law changes it was looking for. The company has also posted Portland-area job listings and sent representatives to meet with town and city leadership in Portland’s suburbs.

    In a statement to Oregon Live, Google merely said, “It’s great to see people excited about what’s next for Fiber, but we don’t have any announcements for now.”

    Google Fiber coming to Portland? That’s the chatter in North Carolina [Oregon Live via DSL Reports]



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  • by Kate Cox
  • via Consumerist


uPassengers On Diverted United Airlines Flight Recall Sleeping On Cots At A Canadian Military Baser


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  • From time to time a fight is delayed, canceled or diverted for unforeseen reasons, leading to often annoying and unanticipated disruptions for travelers. Such was the case over the weekend when a United Airlines flight was diverted to a Canadian military base. But it wasn’t the unplanned change of course that left passengers unhappy with the airline, it was their only option for accommodations: a cold military base.

    The Wall Street Journal reports that 176 passengers on the Chicago to London flight spent the evening in the barracks of a Goose Bay, Canada military airport after the plane experienced a mechanical issue.

    A spokesperson for the airline says that the flight, which also included 11 crew members, was diverted to the base in the province of Newfoundland and Labrador because of an unexplained vibration in the aircraft.

    Instead of providing passengers with hotel vouchers as one might expect in such a situation, United said that because hotel space wasn’t available for all 176 travelers, they were accommodated overnight and provided meals at the barracks.

    “They put them in cots,” the United spokeswoman tells the WSJ. “It was not ideal.”

    Indeed, the accommodations weren’t greeted with enthusiasm from some passengers who voiced their displeasure on social media, the Toronto Sun reports.

    Many recounted an evening in unheated barracks and denied access to their checked luggage.

    To make matters worse, passengers later found out that the United crew from their flight was put up in a local hotel.

    The United spokesperson tells the WSJ that a new flight crew and aircraft arrived at the military airport on Saturday. The company also sent gate agents to the small airport, which is only capable of handling general aviation flights of no more than 15 passengers.

    The new plane was then flown to Newark, NJ, where they continued to London, landing Sunday afternoon.

    Passengers’ one-way tickets to London will be refunded and other compensation provided, the company says.

    United Airlines Passengers Forced to Chill Out Overnight in Canadian Military Barracks [The Wall Street Journal]

    Upset passengers of diverted flight spend night in Goose Bay, N.L., barracks [The Toronto Sun]



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  • by Ashlee Kieler
  • via Consumerist