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Walmart Begins Selling Caskets and Urns Online

Walmart, America's most sprawling and infamous retailer, is now attempting to corner the death market. The discount warehouse has recently launched a line of caskets and urns on its online store, Walmart.com. The caskets run anywhere from $895 to $3,199, but for the moderate price of $1,699, for instance, you can get the Executive Privilege casket for your business-class loved one. Although difficult to find via the menu navigation, the caskets are curiously listed under the 'For the Home' category. We'd hope that's not where they're going to stay.

Of course, planning your interment online is nothing new. Costco has long sold burial boxes, urns, pet urns, and funeral flower arrangements on its site. What's more, Costco even offers next-day delivery when you're really in a pinch. That said, can we compare the two retailers' funerary wares? Walmart allows you to pay for your casket over twelve months with no interest, while Costco's with-interest plan could, in this economy, put you in a financial hole along with an earthly one. Costco's price floor is a bit higher than Walmart's, but then again who couldn't justify paying a little extra for the blushing Kentucky Rose casket?

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Web

Can Artificial-Intelligence 'Ninjas' Find the Best Price on the Web?

Fixed-price shopping is for the birds, especially on the Internet. How do you know if you're really getting the best deal possible? Well, a new Web service hopes to take care of those worries.

Aroxo, a shopping site, will debut a program called 'Negotiating Ninjas' this Fall, BBC News reports. Designed by researchers at Southampton University, the 'Ninjas,' which will be fully operational by Christmas, function as artificial-intelligence 'agents' for shoppers and sellers, negotiating the best prices possible for both. In order to reach a middle ground, a shopper and seller answer a number of questions -- from how much they're willing to pay to how eager they are to sell a product. Then, an 'agent' uses heuristics -- a set of rules used to find the best answer in situations where there's no single 'correct' one -- to make offers until the item is sold or someone leaves the negotiations.

Aroxo says the service is free, but users must pay the site .3-percent of the buyer's original asking price just to contact someone about a sale. So, in a roundabout way, you're still paying for the 'agent.' It'll be interesting to see if folks really do get some great bargains, or if this is more trouble than it's worth. [From: BBC News]

Computers

Despite Economic Slump, Online Black Friday Sales Up

Online Holiday Sales Up 2 Percent vs. Last Year, Down Overall
Okay, so you don't need us to tell you that the economy is in dire straights at the moment. But, perhaps we can be the bearer of a wee bit of good news on this Cyber Monday. While online holiday sales have been down this year compared to November of 2007, sales on Thanksgiving day and Black Friday were actually up -- just not enough to offset the decline.

Online sales for the period covering November 27 and 28 were up two percent over last year, a combined $822 million. But, the preceding days in the month were down four percent, $10.4 billion this year compared to $10.8 billion last year. Interestingly, according to the report from comScore, online Black Friday shoppers tended to sleep in, being most active at Noon-4pm in the afternoon. That's a stark contrast to the average buying experience most associate with that holiest of shopping days -- getting up at 2:00am to stand in the cold in a long line of bargain hunters. [From: comScore]

Strong Online Sales Predicted for Holiday Season



While experts foresee little to no increase in overall retail sales this holiday season, they do expect a 12-percent growth in online sales, Time.com reports.

In light of the economy's downswing, there are any number of reasons behind these predictions. First off, while gas prices are momentarily down, logging on to a Web site is still significantly cheaper than driving to a store (even when you factor in shipping), let alone driving all around town to find the best price.

Also, some experts posit that online shopping provides a more direct route to a desired purchase, offering less temptation to make impulse purchases. (While that sounds plausible, we beg to differ. Just try buying one album on iTunes.)

Another reason offered up for these predictions centers on the newfound popularity of sites that meld the functions of online stores and social networking sites. Sites like Etsy -- where folks can set up profiles for their cottage industries and hawk their handmade products -- have seen their traffic consistently increase over recent months, providing hope to businesses with a strong online presence.

Now that we know many of us will be shopping from home and not the sidewalk this year, all we need are some online Salvation Army Santas. Oh, wait. [From: Time.com]

Cell Phones

Buy Real Cookies With Fake Money Earned From Mobile Gaming

Buy Pretend Things with Fake Money From Your Phone
With government stimulus checks starting to hit the mail, Americans are being encouraged to go buy things. Many will do just that, taking any excuse to run to the mall to buy something extravagant, but these days many will need that money to pay a few bills down. If you're in that latter group, fear not, because a new program from Cellufun will let you go shopping at a virtual mall and buy all you like -- without spending a dime.

Cellufun offers over a dozen free games available for download to mobile phones. Most are simple, like checkers or sudoku, and most have some sort of social aspect to them, enabling gamers to play with friends. By playing certain games, particularly the casino-style ones, gamers already earn Cellupoints, a fake in-game currency, but so far they haven't been able to do much with them. There have been small pretend stores in the system for months, but the company is now formally launching the CelluMall, an in-game shopping center that will eventually be stacked with virtual wares from real companies.

Right now the mall is somewhat underwhelming, with the only "real" store being a bakery from franchise Geoff & Drew's, where you can buy cookies and the like. There are a few other non-branded stores from which you can buy virtual toys, but nothing all that exciting, so it probably won't be too hard to resist spending those hard-earned virtual bucks. But, if things go according to plan, before long there will be a raft of virtual wares to peruse and purchase, all without worrying about the budget. [Source: CelluFun]

Audio/Video, Car Tech, Cell Phones, Cameras, Computers, Video Games, Gift News, Holiday Gift Guide

Shoppers Spending More Online than Ever

Shoppers Spending More Online than Ever Before

If you watched the news before Black Friday, the busiest shopping day of the year for American retailers, you surely heard tales of doom and gloom with predictions of downward trends in consumer spending and all that jazz. As it turns out, sales in-store were just fine, and according to reports about online shopping, many chose to wait and do their shopping on the following "Cyber Monday," buying an impressive $733-million in goods online.

More impressive is that those sales levels were maintained for the next three days, each seeing more than $700-million in online sales. Okay, so maybe that's a drop in the bucket compared to the over $10-billion spent by consumers in stores on Black Friday, but where retail sales grew somewhere between five and eight percent, depending on who you listen to, online shopping over that week rose a far more impressive 17-percent compared to 2006.

From PC World

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Computers, Reviews

Online Clothing Shopping on the Rise

Clothing Shopping Online

When it comes to shopping, it's much easier to find a computer that fits than it is to find the perfect pair of jeans without trying them on. It's surprising, then, that new statistics show more people are shopping online for clothes and shoes than for computers.

Last year online clothing, accessory, and footware sales beat computer sales for the first time, accounting for $18.3 billion for clothes compared to $17.2 billion for computers. Most attribute this shift to the availability of odd sizes online. If you know you're an odd size (like most people seem to be), clicking through a Web page is a lot easier than rifling through rack after rack of normal-sized garments. Plus, you don't have to drag your significant other along and make him sit around and wait. Husbands and boyfriends around the world thank you.



From 'USA Today'

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