DEBRIS.COMgood for a laugh, or possibly an aneurysm

Monday, June 25th, 2007

CDs are finally getting cheap

I’ve been on a music binge lately, picking up over a dozen new releases over the past two months.

As an inveterate comparison shopper, I use the fact that I’m equidistant from any number of online music stores to my advantage, even if it sometimes means I spend 10 minutes saving $1. (It could be worse. In fact, it used to be.)

So I’ve noticed a surprising downward price pressure on CDs, even new releases. Not only does Amazon offer significant discounts on most new CDs, the same products show up on Half.com within days of release for even less money. Some examples:

Artist, TitleRelease DateList PriceAmazonHalf.com
Rush
Snakes and Arrows
2007-05-01$18.98$12.99$8.49
Chris Cornell
Carry On
2007-06-01$13.98$9.99$6.98
Dream Theater
Systematic Chaos
2006-06-05$18.98$12.97$6.95
Queens of the Stone Age
Era Vulgaris
2006-06-12$13.98$9.99$5.99

What would cause CD prices to drop below half of MSRP within a couple weeks of release?

We know that CD sales have been in decline since 2000 (or maybe earlier) — down 25% by 2005, at least another 14% in 2006, and at least another 20% this year, according to The CD Is Dead! (Long live the CD!)

Torrent search traffic is on the riseMeanwhile, digital music sales are way up — e.g. Apple is now the 3rd-largest music retailer in the US — and peer-to-peer filesharing is gaining popularity (despite being illegal).

Remember the CD price-fixing lawsuit of 2002? Here’s a great quote:

Former FTC chairman Robert Pitofsky said at the time that consumers had been overcharged by $480 million since 1997 and that CD prices would soon drop by as much as $5 a CD as a result.

Meanwhile, Barnes & Noble still charges $18.99 for Systematic Chaos.


Tags: itunes, cds, bittorrent
posted to channel: Music
updated: 2007-06-26 04:13:39

Sunday, June 24th, 2007

Lazarus confirms my assessment of the new CAFE standards

David Lazarus of the SF Chronicle agrees with my assessment of the recent CAFE mileage-standards revision in the Senate:

“This is a good day for American consumers and the environment, since we finally have gotten on the right path to better fuel economy,” said California Sen. Barbara Boxer.

Joan Claybrook, president of Public Citizen, saw things differently. “This is not a win, nor is it a step forward for fuel economy, consumers or the environment,” she said.

Claybrook was former administrator of the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. Read more of her comments on the new CAFE standards.

There’s more of the Lazarus piece that’s worth reading:

Dave McCurdy, president of the Alliance of Automobile Manufacturers, an industry group, called the goals of HR6 [a more aggressive version of the bill that finally passed] “wildly extreme,” and said such ambitious fuel-efficiency standards “would eliminate some of the most popular vehicles on the road today and devastate both consumer choice and the auto industry.”

Probably not. What they’d do is compel Detroit to produce vehicles that reflect this nation’s increasingly precarious energy security and send a message to overseas oil producers that we no longer intend to dance to their tune.

Significantly higher fuel-efficiency requirements would also prompt engineers in Detroit and in universities nationwide to do what this country has always done better than all other countries — innovate.

In more positive news about reducing oil consumption, Google .org (the philanthropic arm of Google, Inc) has given $1 million in grants to promote use of plug-in hybrids. Here are the grant recipients.

Google.org has pledged another $10M to to fund development, adoption and commercialization of plug-ins, fully electric cars and related vehicle-to-grid (V2G) technology.


Tags: hybrid, mileage, google, cafe
posted to channel: Conservation
updated: 2007-06-24 16:45:17

Saturday, June 23rd, 2007

mystery fruit

It’s a fruit year. Every tree in the orchard set fruit this year — lemon, peach, apricot, apples, asian pear, persimmon, plum, fig, and whatever this thing is.

I was walking near the bottom of the property with Raphael. This is sort of a novelty because we just had the grass cut (using the term “grass” charitably here); for the first time in three months we can actually walk across the yard without a machete to hack our way through the overgrowth. At two and a half years, Raphael likely has no memory of what our back yard normally looks like.

At age 40, I don’t either. But then I don’t get out much.

Anyway we found three trees we’d never seen before. All three are covered in small yellow-orange fruit. We don’t know what it is.

If you recognize it, let me know. Maybe I’ll send you a pie.

Update 2007-07-05: We figured it out.


Tags: fruit, orchard, mystery
posted to channel: Personal
updated: 2007-07-05 18:27:36

Friday, June 22nd, 2007

CAFE standards: the sad state of things

Excerpt from a campaign update from my favorite eco-charity, the Union of Concerned Scientists:

Late last night the Union of Concerned Scientists and our allies won a major victory on fuel economy! Thanks in part to your numerous emails and phone calls, the Senate voted yesterday to substantially increase the corporate average fuel economy (CAFE) standard of America’s cars and trucks for the first time in over 30 years — setting a target of 35 miles per gallon by 2020.

I’m all for raising CAFE standards, but this sounds like a pretty feeble compromise. I drove a car in 2004 — nearly 3 full years ago — that measured 53.9 mpg over a 4-5 hour commute. Yet in 13 more years, the best average our politicians are willing to demand is 35 mpg?

I suppose what makes this newsworthy is, as noted above, that the numbers have moved at all. The original CAFE standards were proposed in 1975 (when the average fleet mileage was apparently a dismal 14 mpg) and never amended, except for a period in the late 1980s when mileage minimums were lowered. Detroit, you go girl!


Tags: mileage, congress, bah
posted to channel: Conservation
updated: 2007-06-22 23:34:33

Thursday, April 26th, 2007

pizza upgrade

Just need to say that this is blowing my mind, and I’m seriously thinking about disabling the locking mechanism on my oven door.


Tags: pizza
posted to channel: Food & Cooking
updated: 2007-04-28 12:51:27

Search this site


< June 2007 >
          1 2
3 4 5 6 7 8 9
10 11 12 13 14 15 16
17 18 19 20 21 22 23
24 25 26 27 28 29 30


Carbon neutral for 2007.