Poll: do you plan to buy an electronic items over 'Black Friday' weekend?
Posted by Dennis SellersIn this week's Macsimum Poll, we're asking if any of you plan to buy electronics items on “Black Friday” (the Friday after Thanksgiving) or over the long holiday weekend. The poll is located on the right hand side of the home page under the Macsimum Opinion.
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Macsimum Poll: will you buy Snow Leopard this weekend?
Posted by Dennis SellersMac OS X 10.6 (“Snow Leopard”) goes on sale this Friday, Aug. 28. So, in this week's Macsimum Poll, we're asking if you plan to buy the operating system update this weekend.
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The Complete History of the Macworld Expo
For anyone who attended the very first Macworld San Francisco and then skipped the next 24, this year’s event might seem awfully similar to that very first show. Hot on the heels of the runaway success of the Mac and its own successful launch, Macworld magazine tapped event coordinator Peggy Kilburn in 1985 to develop a conference that “will bring (attendees) in contact with the people who best understand the far-reaching effects the Macintosh will have in business, schools and at home.” It was held in Feb. 21-23 and Steve Jobs didn’t even step foot in Brooks Hall, let alone address the crowd. Similarly, this year’s event won’t take place until February--abandoning its traditional January time slot held since 1986--and Jobs won’t be attending. But there’s something fitting about Macworld returning to its roots for its 25th anniversary. Before Steve turned it into his personal showcase and the Apple booth had to be draped in black curtains, Macworld was a place for fans and professionals to share ideas free from the prying eyes of PC users, where product announcements were welcome but not necessary, and the keynote was the least interesting part of the show. Macworld Expo the 1980s - The decade of the Mac Macworld Expo San Francisco 1985: When the doors closed on the first Macworld, which shared exhibit space with a boat show double-booked for the same weekend, more than 10,000 attendees had walked through its doors, and the bad taste from the Super Bowl XIX “Lemmings” ad was all but washed away. Hot items for the fledgling Macintosh included the Lotus Jazz office suite (but surprisingly, not Macintosh Office), MacPrompter for scrolling text, and a slew of video and imaging apps that leveraged the Mac’s powerful graphics capabilities. Macworld Expo Boston 1985-86: While Apple kept a decidedly muted presence at the first two Macworld Boston Expos, the east-coast show quickly became cemented on the calendar of Apple fans and developers. With more than 500,000 Macs in circulation and the resignation of Steve Jobs fresh on their minds, attendees had more than enough to talk about at that first event, held Aug. 21-23, 1985, at the Bayside Exposition Center, and touted as a chance to see “all of the elements of the Macintosh Office. ... The 512K Macintosh, the LaserWriter, and AppleTalk, as well as Jazz from Lotus, are just a few of the products you’ll get to see.” MWE SF 1986: After observing such a successful inaugural show, Apple CEO John Sculley--who reportedly credited Macworld for reinvigorating Apple after a disappointing end to 1984--took full advantage of the second annual expo, which expanded to the Civic Auditorium to accommodate larger crowds. While not quite worthy of Stevenote status, Apple’s less-than-charismatic leader unveiled the SCSI-equipped, 8MHz Macintosh Plus and pricey LaserWriter Plus during his keynote presentation. MWE SF 1987: A heavy focus on desktop communications and networking brought the long-awaited AppleShare file server software and AppleTalk PC Card, and delivered effortless, cross-platform file sharing long before IBM developed its own solution. A major component of the floundering Macintosh Office, AppleShare survived long after Apple’s desktop publishing suite was sent to the junkyard. MWE Boston 1987: Apple landed in Boston ready to show off HyperCard and script language HyperTalk, one of the first apps to utilize the hotlinking hypermedia concept that would become the cornerstone of the World Wide Web. Also making their debut were MultiFinder 5.0, the AppleFax modem and ImageWriter LQ.MWE SF 1988: With some 350 exhibitors and 25,000 attendees, MacWorld kicked off its fourth annual San Francisco show with an emphasis on the Mac’s business capabilities. In his keynote speech, Sculley stressed Apple's commitment to networking and connectivity advancements, and introduced the zippy Laserwriter II family, with up to 8 pages per minute of printing power. MWE Boston 1988: Apple CEO John Sculley may have landed in Boston to show off the Apple Scanner, but the buzz on the trade floor was all about the Macintosh II, as developers showed off an array of drawing, writing and CAD tools to leverage the power of Apple’s newest Mac.MWE SF 1989: Breaking a pattern of adding an “X” to Macs fitted with a Motorola 68030 processor (maybe Sculley didn’t want to announce the Mac SEx to a raucous convention crowd), Apple used its biggest stage to release the SE/30 upgrade, a Mac that would be as popular as it was long-lasting. Among the show favorites was the streamlined Claris MacWrite II, one of the last times a Claris product would be among the show favorites. MWE Boston 1989: For the fifth anniversary of the Macworld Expo, Sculley opted to keep the anticipated Macintosh Portable (which would make its debut a month later, on Sept. 20) under wraps, and instead showcased the Mac’s educational possibilities with the Visual Almanac, an interactive multimedia demonstration kit for the classroom that utilized Apple’s groundbreaking HyperCard.NEXT: Macworld Expo: The 1990's Macworld Expo the 1990's - On the brink MWE SF 1990: The 40MHz Macintosh IIfx made a big splash at the first Macworld of the 90s, despite its six-figure price tag. One of the reasons for all that speed was the launch of a Mac-only graphics-editing program by a little company named Adobe, which generated quite a bit of interest on its own. MWE Boston 1990: HyperCard 2.0 was all the rage at the subdued summer Macworld, but even Apple’s own booth had a hard time competing with the DTS’ dogcow buttons inscribed with her famous catchphrase, “Moof!” MWE SF 1991: Developed to optimize the 68000 line of Macs, the slick, streamlined System 7 was the co-star of Macworld, sharing the limelight with Apple’s new multimedia app. Sculley’s keynote was its usual shade of dull, save the impressive QuickTime tour of Ben & Jerry’s Vermont factory, which roused the crowd from its slumber. Also unveiled were a series of networking products, including the Macintosh LC Ethernet card. MWE Boston 1991: While PowerBook rumors were flying and many Mac users were getting their first glimpse at System 7, the trade floor was still buzzing about a bombshell announcement just weeks earlier. Industry rivals Apple and IBM (and Motorola) put aside their differences and entered into a unique partnership that would eventually produce the microchip that would power the Mac for more than a decade. Macworld Expo Tokyo 1991-1992: Just because Apple didn’t bother to release any new products (although CEO John Sculley did cut the ribbon on opening day) doesn’t mean Macworld Tokyo had a hard time filling the Makuhari Messe convention center when it opened its doors on Feb. 13, 1991. A rabid overseas fanbase was eager to get their hands on the latest and greatest in Mac apps and accessories, and Apple embraced its new audience with open arms. MWE SF 1992: Continuing the theme of the prior year’s conference, Macworld 1992 featured hundreds of new applications using QuickTime and an astute prediction from Sculley: “I believe pervasive networking will be the driving force of the information industry during the 1990s.” The Mac may have been this crowd’s “ideal multimedia machine,” but an ex-Apple employee’s latest OS was making some noise up the road as the NeXTWORLD Expo opened its doors to those who wanted to think slightly differenter. MWE Boston 1992: After a successful PowerBook launch the prior October, Apple used Macworld Boston to upgrade its best-selling model with more RAM and a lower price point, setting the stage for a series of dockable PowerBook Duos that would be released in the fall. MWE SF 1993: Held entirely at its now-permanent Moscone Center home, Sculley used his final Macworld San Francisco keynote to unveil a host of imaging products, including ColorSync, LaserWriter Pro workgroup printers, StyleWriter II personal printer, Apple Color Printer and Apple Color OneScanner. Making all those projects that much easier were the Apple Adjustable Keyboard and ADB Mouse II, Apple’s first teardrop-shaped clicker. MWE Boston 1993: The best product Steve Jobs didn’t have a hand in, Sculley finally rolled out the Newton MessagePad at Macworld Boston, more than a year after publicly demonstrating its prototype. Unlike anything on the market, Newton was a bold device with a brilliant interface that ought to have been as popular as the iPhone. Instead, only a few hundred thousand were sold over its four-and-a-half-year reign. MWE Tokyo 1993: Apple’s first product launch outside the United States brought a slew of new hardware, including the Macintosh Color Classic, Macintosh LC III, Macintosh Centris 610 and 650, Macintosh Quadra 800, PowerBook 165c, and the LaserWriter Select 300 and 310 laser printers. All those new products paid off, as the expo attracted nearly 100,000 attendees in just its third year. MWE SF 1994: With more than 70,000 attendees on hand to celebrate the 10th anniversary of the Mac, the sprawling Apple booth didn’t disappoint. Visitors were met with a slew of new products, including a walking tour of its online service, eWorld, along with the recently released Macintosh TV and Powerbook Duo 270c. But buzz on the floor was mostly surrounding the upcoming PowerPC transition, which promised faster, more powerful Macs for the next decade. MWE Boston 1994: The critical, if not commercial, success of Newton brought some 70,000 attendees to the following year’s Macworld Boston, forcing Apple to set up its booth across the street from the World Trade Center. It was worth the trip, as new Power Macs showed off the capabilities of the first PowerPC chips and System 7.5 introduced users to Stickies, WindowShade and the Control Strip. MWE Tokyo 1994: Instead of showing off OS 7.5 for umpteenth time or adding another PowerPC model to its Power Mac line, Apple took the wraps off the QuickTake 100 digital camera. Designed in association with Kodak, the QuickTake looked more like a pair of binoculars than a camera but made an instant splash with the expo crowd. Also introduced was Color StyleWriter printer, to make sure all those photos looked their best. MWE SF 1995: As expected, the chip transition was in full swing, with PowerPC Power Macs drawing attention at the expo, but the most excitement centered around Power Computing, the first company to take advantage of Apple’s licensing program. MWE Boston 1995: Trying to steal some of the thunder from the forthcoming Windows 95 release, Apple demoed Copland in all its buggy, crashy glory on brand-new AppleVision displays. Be thankful it failed; if not, Steve might never have come back. MWE Tokyo 1995: Apple welcomed a new clone manufacturer to its ranks, Japan-based Pioneer Electronic, and proudly took the wraps off the active-matrix PowerBook 5300c, which thankfully didn’t explode on the stage. The same can’t be said about the Singapore plant that was manufacturing them. MWE SF 1996: Sinking revenue and executive board shake-ups cast a dark shadow over Macworld’s 12th annual event, which saw a continued push away from Apple’s proprietary platform with the release of the PC compatibility card, capable of turning any Power Mac into a dual micro-processor system capable of running Windows 95. MWE Boston 1996: The first U.S. keynote by CEO Gil Amelio made some attendees long for John Sculley, but the 20 percent across-the-board price cut on the Performa line was certainly welcome, as was the Performa 6400’s new InstaTower case. Before dousing the Copland project with a giant bucket of cold water, Gil got the crowd riled up by declaring Apple was “transitioning from a dialogue that has centered on survival to a dialogue that’s going to center on excitement.” We think the excitement he was referring to had something to do with the imminent launch of the first issue of MacAddict magazine. That, or the return of Steve Jobs, we’re not sure. MWE Tokyo 1996: CEO Gil Amelio announced the fruits of its partnership with Bandai in the form of a gaming console based on Apple’s Pippin technology. Officially called Pippin Atmark, the device was supposed to combine the best parts of each company into a super-computer-video-game-machine, and if you had stopped by Apple’s booth, it certainly seemed that way. Sadly, we know how the story ended. MWE SF 1997: Steve Jobs’ first appearance on a Macworld stage was preceded by a lengthy, rambling Gil Amelio, whose three-hour, teleprompter-plagued speech may have inspired Jobs to take over speaking duties. Amelio was supposed to rev up the crowd by showing the stunning Twentieth Anniversary Mac and outlining Apple’s NeXT-based OS strategy, but botched the whole thing up, effectively ruining Steve’s big moment. MWE Boston 1997: As late as July 2, Amelio was planning to deliver the keynote address at Macworld Boston, so when he was abruptly forced out July 5, all eyes turned to the new kid on the block. The excitement was palpable when the lights finally dimmed, and when Steve stepped out on stage to a 30-second standing ovation, a new era in Apple had clearly begun. And then he announced a partnership with Microsoft, drawing boos. MWE Tokyo 1997: Before Steve killed the project later in the year, Apple teamed with Fujifim for its last attempt at a digital camera, the QuickTake 200, which used removable cards to store pictures but was lost in a sea of cheaper, smaller entries. Also introduced at the show were the Power Macintosh 4400, 7300, 8600 and 9600, and the Powerbook 3400c, which immediately assumed the short-lived position of the world’s fastest laptop. MWE SF 1998: Just months before the iMac would turn the industry on its head, iCEO Steve’s first full Macworld San Francisco keynote brought no new products, but still had the crowd in awe with a surprise “one more thing” announcement: Apple’s profitable again. Macworld Expo New York 1998: Making the move south to the Big Apple could have been disastrous for Macworld, but diehard Mac fans would have jumped a motorcycle onto a speeding train to catch a glimpse of the iMac. Attendance dipped noticeably from the prior year’s Boston show, but enough shows up to give Macworld East a permanent new home in New York City’s Jacob K. Javits Convention Center.MWE Tokyo 1998: The Macworld Tokyo crowd cheered politely for the debut of the first Japanese-language Think Different ad, but went absolutely wild when Steve Jobs appeared on stage (via a taped message). He didn’t show off any new products, but assured the audience that Apple wouldn’t be leaving them out of their new OS strategy: “Apple is committed to having the best kanji (Chinese characters) systems in the world, and we're pouring even more into R&D toward that end.” MWE SF 1999: A rainbow of iMacs greeted visitors to Apple’s booth, but all eyes were on “the world’s most open-minded personal computer,” a sleek tower dressed in blue and white with a hinged door for easy access to its G3 processor. And the color-coordinated Apple Studio Displays weren’t too shabby either. MWE New York 1999: Say hello to the iBook. But first, say hello to Noah Wyle, star of “Pirates of Silicon Valley,” who fooled the crowd momentarily with his nearly-spot-on Steve Jobs impersonation (though he forgot to unscrew the cap to his water bottle). After a demo of the imminent OS 9, the real Steve unveiled Apple’s newest laptop, a candy-colored clamshell book that had a handle and looked strangely like a potty seat. MWE Tokyo 1999: Steve’s first keynote at Macworld Toyko was basically a rewrite of January’s Macworld San Francisco presentation, with the exception of an untimely crash of the Power Mac G3 during Microsoft’s Internet Explorer demo. But all anyone really cared about were iMacs. NEXT: Macworld Expo: The 2000's Macworld Expo the 2000's - Apple's return MWE SF 2000: With the renaissance in full swing, Steve announced Apple’s next-generation operating system in earnest at the first Macworld of the new millennium. With “state-of-the-art plumbing,” “killer graphics” and a 12-month, “gentle migration,” Steve introduced the masses to the blue-tinged world of Aqua of the Dock and kept his promise: A public beta was in our hands by September. MWE New York 2000: Indigo, Ruby, Sage and Snow iMacs, dual-processor Power Macs, optical mice, translucent keyboards, iMovie 2, and 15-, 17- and 22-inch displays. None stood a chance against the star-crossed star of the show, the jaw-dropping Power Mac G4 Cube. Everyone wanted to take one home, but strangely, few people actually did. MWE Tokyo 2000: After an quiet debut in 1999, Steve pulled out all the stops in 2000, unveiling brand-new portables and Power Macs, including the iBook Special Edition and Pismo PowerBook. Steve also made good on his ’98 vow to include the highest-quality Japanese fonts in OS X. MWE SF 2001: One of Jobs’ shining moments (even by his standards), the 2001 Stevenote featured a shipping date for Mac OS X, two more pieces of the digital hub (iDVD and iTunes), SuperDrive-equipped graphite Power Mac G4s, and the piece de resistance, the “mega-wide,” one-inch thick Titanium Power Mac G4. Suddenly, all was right-side up with the world (including the Apple logo on the case). MWE New York 2001: A preview of Mac OS X Puma (and a few lengthy third-party demos) brought scarcely any new features, but faster iMacs and Quicksilver Power Macs promised an all-around zippier experience. MWE Tokyo 2001: The final aesthetic flourish for the iMac brought the trippy Flower Power and Blue Dalmatian patterns and added CD-RW drives to accompany iTunes 1.1 Joining the art-deco all-in-ones were new Power Mac G4 Cubes, which also added the elusive CD-RW drives. MWE SF 2002: A 14-inch iBook joined the wildly popular 12-inch “ice-book” family and iPhoto rounded out Apple’s digital hub vision, but the show-stopper was the flat-panel iMac G4, an overdue update that was well worth the wait. Part-computer, part-sculpture, the “Sunflower” iMac firmly cemented the Stevenote as the greatest show on earth. MWE New York 2002: A notably lackluster presentation eliminated Apple’s free e-mail in favor of a paid service and delivered a rehash of the Jaguar demo Steve gave two months earlier at WWDC. No killer new products to speak of, but iSync, iCal and iTunes 3 made their debut, along with solid-state iPods (with Windows support) and 17-inch iMacs, but attendees couldn’t help but notice the spring was missing from Steve’s step.MWE Tokyo 2002: Steve crammed another 5 gigabytes into the diminutive iPod music player as the Macworld Tokyo expo was moved to the more spacious Big Sight convention center for Apple’s last overseas splash. Turned out the switch was prophetic, as Steve took the wraps off the stunning 23-inch Cinema HD display, Apple’s largest to date. MWE SF 2003: Final Cut Express, Airport Extreme, iLife, Keynote and Safari would have been enough for most company’s trade shows, but not Apple. After nearly two hours of nonstop announcements, Steve saved the best for last: The largest (17-inch) and smallest (12-inch) PowerBooks ever, dressed to the nines in classy aluminum. MWE New York 2003: After Steve bailed on his annual keynote to protest IDG’s plan to move to the expo back to Boston the following year, the show, now known as Macworld CreativePro Conference & Expo, found itself in a tailspin. Apple fulfilled its commitment to exhibit--and even announced the availability of Soundtrack as a standalone product--but the thrill was most definitely gone.MWE Tokyo 2003: On the heels of the east-coast shake-up, Apple abruptly pulled out of the Japan show, too, and IDG cancelled the event altogether. MWE SF 2004: A somewhat disappointing keynote delivered Garageband and way too much John Mayer, but still finished on a high note as Steve unveiled the product no one knew they needed: a smaller iPod in a rainbow of flavors. MWE Boston 2004-2005: A pair of intimate Boston expos closed the book on Macworld East for good, as IDG vowed to focus its efforts on the sole remaining show in San Francisco. MWE SF 2005: Also known as the keynote that brought down ThinkSecret, Steve took to the Moscone stage in 1995 looking to capitalize on all the attention Apple was getting. Along with a new iLife and a surprise successor to the defunct AppleWorks, two low-priced products sought to dispel the notion of Apple as a high-priced niche company: the $99 iPod shuffle and $499 Mac mini. MWE SF 2006: Apple kicked off the Intel transition by fitting its two most popular Macs with Core Duo processors. Little was changed from the new iMac aside from its new brain, but the PowerBook underwent a series of tweaks and refinements, including the retirement of its famous name “because we’re kind of done with Power and we want Mac in the name of our products.” MWE SF 2007: The last great Macworld keynote ever. Nuff said. MWE SF 2008: With the near-impossible task of following the launch of the iPhone, Steve took the stage for his last Macworld San Francisco keynote with a bag full of assorted treats--cheaper Apple TVs, iTunes movie rentals, iPod touch and iPhone software updates, Time Capsule--and one big trick. Steve’s lasting image as the master of Macworld ceremonies: sliding the Macbook Air out its plain manila envelope. MWE SF 2009: Apple’s final Macworld appearance was preceded by letter from Steve explaining his “nutritional problem” and “decision to have Phil deliver the Macworld keynote,” so attendees were prepared for a lackluster event. Apple surprised some with the new 8-hour, 17-inch Mac Book Pro, iLife ’09 and iWork ’09, but it just wasn’t the same without the man who made it all happen. Macworld Expo elsewhere Building off the success of U.S. shows, a number of expos around the globe tried to capitalize on the Macworld name, to limited success: 1989: Macworld Canada 1991: Macworld Mexico, Hong Kong, Stockholm and New Zealand 1992: Macworld Barcelona, Paris (cancelled due to popularity of Apple Expo) 1994: Macworld Expo Summit (Washington, D.C.) 1996: Macworld Taiwan 2004: Macworld UK 2005: Macworld on Tour (only schedule date, in Kissimmee, Fla., cancelled)
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50 Rad Firefox Add-Ons
Sometimes, one-size-fits-all doesn’t really fit, and this is especially the case on the Internet. It’s a wonderful place out there on the World Wide Web, full of sites for every purpose we can think of (and some we’d rather not). That’s why, we’re glad there’s Firefox. No Mac browser is nearly as flexible, nor as customizable. With the right--or the raddest--add-ons installed, you can transform Firefox from a tool to surf the Web into an Internet wrangling toolbox you can tweak to your heart’s content. We’ve collected fifty Firefox add-ons to help you get the most from your visits to the Worldwide Intertubes. Some aren’t for everyone, but that's okay. Read on, and you may discover ways to work a little easier and play a little harder. For those about to restart Firefox to complete your changes, we salute you.AppearanceAging TabsHow do you know when you’ve been browsing too long? Your musty old tabs can tell you. Aging Tabs makes them change color as they sit on the page waiting for your scrutiny. Naturally, colors and aging speeds are customizable. Should tabs fade to grey or yellow like newsprint? It’s your call, but you better hurry; those tabs aren’t getting any younger.Looks like our tabs could use a little Botox.Colorful TabsNeed a little more color in your life? Or maybe you just need to get organized? Try Colorful Tabs, the add-on that lets you apply colors to coordinate groups of tabs, make important tabs stand out, and make Firefox look pretty. Tabs can have random colors as you create them, one color specific to a site’s domain name, or you can apply colors to individual tabs with a context-click. You’ll have to keep up with the latest tab fashions from Paris, but that’s the price of progress.Colorful Tabs are cute and useful.GreasemonkeyDon’t like the way a Web page works? Don’t get mad, get Greasemonkey. With it, and hundreds of scripts available at the official website and third-party sites, you can make pages perform the way you want them to. Want Google Reader to look like a Mac app? There’s a script for that. Want to strip the ads out of Facebook? There’s a script for...you get the idea. Simply locate the script you're looking for, install, and...there is no step three! Just enjoy your favorite sites customized to your liking! Greasemonkey can make YouTube look like Google Videos.History TreeFirefox’s History browser is so...linear. And so yesterday’s news once you install History Tree. It displays your browsing history as a branching tree complete with screenshots, page names, and the time you visited each page. History Tree also enables you to search your pages’ descriptions to find a past page, view pages as a Cover Flow-ish series of screenshots, and open old pages in new tabs. You won’t look at browsing the same way again.We’ll take customizable browsers for $100, Alex.Multirow Bookmarks ToolbarKeep your favorite sites close and your bookmarks closer with Multirow Bookmarks Toolbar. Simply choose how many rows of bookmarks you want to appear beneath your toolbar--from 2 to too many--and get your freaky bookmark on. You may never need to click the Bookmarks menu item again! You’re not seeing double, you’re seeing Multirow Bookmarks Toolbar.ReadabilityReadability is as simple as it sounds: it strips away almost everything but an article’s text and links to maximize, well, readability. Instead of the original Web page, you get something closer to a book or newspaper’s layout (or even a Terminal window). It’s great if your screen is a little smaller than you’d like, and easier than futzing with menu items to change a page’s font size. If a story is worth your time, it’s worth Readability.A more legible Internet is here today with Readability.RSS TickerThis just in! RSS Ticker scrolls your Live Bookmarks below your toolbar or at the bottom of the page. When an item catches your eye, mouse over it to see a pop-up that offers more information, then right-click to open the article in a new tab or window. You’ll never be at a loss for cocktail party conversation again.RSS feeds keep on tickin’ into the future with RSS Ticker.Split BrowserYou’ve got a shiny new Mac with a honkin’ big screen, so why view just one web page in your Firefox window? Split Browser lets you divide your windows into multiple panes with a Menu Bar or context-command. Keep your web mail or calendar at the ready, compare multiple versions of the same page, or just create modern art with your panes.Two panes are better than one with Split Browser.StylishStylish lets you transform the way the Web looks, one site at a time. Just visit a page you’d like to re-theme, click the Stylish icon in your status bar, and view all available styles for that page. Installation requires just a click, and most effects occur after refreshing the page in your Firefox window. If you get tired of your new style, or if it causes problems displaying a page, you can turn off the theme (or switch to another) just as easily.Every day is Lego Google logo day with Stylish.Tab Mix Plus Tab Mix Plus puts you in charge of how tabs are displayed, made, and manipulated. Protect tabs so they can’t be closed, lock tabs so they don’t load new pages, and add these and many more commands to Firefox’s contextual menu. Got too many tabs? No such thing--just scroll right or left through your tab bar, add additional rows of tabs to your window, and keep track of unread tabs by styling their titles to stand out from the pack. Now you’re playing with power...tab power. Tree Style TabTabs rock, but wouldn’t it be great if the relationship between them was clearer? It can be, with Tree Style Tab. Once installed, tabs branch off from their parent tab, so you know where in the Interweb you are at a glance. Better still, an entire tab-tree can be closed or minimized with a context-click. Tabs’ appearance and position onscreen (left, right, or below the toolbar) can be extensively customized, as can their behaviors when opened or closed.Tree Style Tab and a misspent youth can explain how we got here. VertTabbarVertTabbar isn’t a lovable French children’s book character, it’s an add-on that makes your horizontal tab bar vertical to make the most of your fancy widescreen monitor. It’s a new look for the same tab bar you know and love, and you can even control tabs’ widths, placement of their icons and close buttons, and which side of Firefox’s window tabs appear on. It works well with Tab Mix Plus, too, letting you really VertTabbarMix things up.Let’s get vertical...vertical….Add-ArtAd blockers are nice, but what to do about all those empty spaces they leave on Web pages? Add-Art works with AdBlock Plus to replace static ads with artwork, populating your pages with online art shows that refresh every two weeks with new works of art. Most of Add-Art’s showcase isn’t the usual soothing stock image fare, but rather just the thing to spice up sparse, ad-free pages.The image on the left isn’t an ad, it’s art. Next Page: Daily Browsing >> Daily Browsing1-Click YouTube Video DownloadThe Internet made celebrities of the Dramatic Look prairie dog, a sneezing baby panda, and Rick Astley, but that doesn’t mean these lovable critters have to stay on the Web. With 1-Click YouTube Video Download (and, duh, one click) you can snag videos from YouTube.com as FLV, M4P, 3GP, or HD downloads to play offline. 1-Click, we’re never gonna give you up.That’s gotta hurt. Let’s see it again, and again….Adblock PlusSomeday beer will be free and Adobe will release a Mac version of Flash that doesn’t suck. Until then, there’s Adblock Plus to keep your browsing free of annoying Whack-a-Mole banners and other unwanted ads. Just install, subscribe to an ad filter unique to your country, and you’re good to go--no more ads on any site you visit. Or you can control-click on specific ads to keep them from loading, and allow certain sites to keep displaying important messages from its sponsors. MacLife.com, for instance….Those white spaces were ads before Adblock Plus.Auto CopyIf you regularly mine the Web for text and images to copy and paste into other documents, give Auto Copy a try. Once installed, merely selecting something copies it to the Clipboard. Auto Copy’s contextual menu commands also let you paste selections directly into Firefox’s address or search fields and reload previously copied items into memory. These and Auto Copy’s other time-saving tricks will give your mousing fingers a well-deserved rest.To copy with Auto Copy, just highlight, paste, and you’re done.Converter You know those currency and measurement converters all over the Internet? Forget ‘em...if you’ve got Converter. Just plug in your preferred units of time, currency, temperature, and measurement into Converter’s settings and it translates most Web pages to whatever you think is normal with a single click. Now you can plan that trip to Europe with confidence (we’re totally free to come with in the spring).Converter’s conversions appear right with the text.DownThemAll!You spend a lot of time surfing the Web, but how much is spent downloading application updates, movie trailers, and other vital stuff? If your answer is ‘too much,’ DownThemAll can help. Not only does it accelerate up to 10 simultaneous downloads, retry stalled downloads, and give you live statistics about each file as it zips to your Mac, it lets you grab all a page’s images and links at once with a few clicks. Oh, and that acceleration? Our demo download crept along at 40 kbs a second until DownThemAll gobbled up the same file at more than 150kbs. If you gotta download, you gotta get DownThemAll.Down the hatch with DownThemAll.Download StatusbarSay goodbye to moving the pop-up Downloads window out of your way. Download Statusbar replaces it with, well, a status bar at the bottom of your Web pages that’s there when you need it and gone when you don’t. Despite its small size, the status bar boasts plenty of information about your files, and it even lets you pause and resume downloads between sessions.Discreet downloads are yours with Download Statusbar.ErrorZilla PlusWhen a page’s server can’t be found, ErrorZilla Plus replaces the standard Firefox error page with a battery of tools to help you find what you’re after. Peek at a Google Cache version of the page and use Ping, Whois, the Internet Archive’s Wayback Machine to see what’s what. ErrorZilla is like a utility belt that magically appears when trouble strikes.ErrorZilla Plus lets you do more than just click the Reload button.FEBE (Firefox Environment Backup Extension) Sure, add-ons are rad, but applying your favorites to every computer in your life isn’t. Enter FEBE to back up and restore your add-ons, themes, bookmarks, passwords and more with a single click or on a schedule you define. You can backup your extras to a local disk or send them to the cloud with FEBE’s Box.net integration. Did we mention that FEBE plays wacky sound effects, too? Don’t worry, they’re optional.Want all your add-ons on multiple machines? You want FEBE.FlashBlockFlash gives us Web games and YouTube, but it’s also responsible for processor-hogging pop-up ads and annoying site intro movies. Try FlashBlock--it replaces embedded Flash with a generic box you can click to see the Flash file do its thing. If you don’t, you and your Mac’s processor can go happily about your business. FlashBlock also lets you leave your favorite sites unaffected if they always deliver Flash files you want to see. Ming the Merciless wishes he could block Flash like this.Quick DragIn a world of Multi-Touch pinches and swipes, we’re happy Quick Drag puts a new spin on the O.G. gesture control, the venerable drag and drop. Just select text and drag and drop it anywhere on a page to kick off a Web search, or drag and drop images to save them to your Downloads folder. Modifier keys let you mix things up, and you can even drag and drop partial URLs to open them in new tabs. Who says you can’t teach an old dog new tricks?Quick Drag doubles your drag and drop prowess.WeatherBugIf you organize your life around the weather, why not bring weather reports to you with WeatherBug? Just plug in your location and WeatherBug adds the temperature, weather alerts and up to three days of forecasts to your Firefox pages. Additional forecast details, radar information, and weatheriffic news items open in a pop-up with just a click. You may not need a weatherman to know which way the wind blows, but for everything else, there’s WeatherBug.Looks like Saturday is a good day to stay in.XmarksThis may sound like science fiction, but someday people will use multiple computers to get their work done. If that future is now, you need Xmarks. It syncs your bookmarks and passwords across multiple computers and browsers (Firefox, Safari, IE, and Chrome), and lets you add tags to your bookmarks that help other Xmarks users find interesting Web pages. And hey, their tags help you, too! Maybe this brave new world won’t be so bad after all.Xmarks the spot and syncs your bookmarks, too.Yet Another Smooth ScrollingYou visit a lot of Web pages. That means a lot of scrolling, and if the iPhone has taught us anything, it’s that the right kind of scroll can make navigating lengthy pages a breeze. That’s why YASS is so nice--its settings apply only to your Firefox windows, giving you as much (or as little) smooth, accelerated scrolling as you like. You can set three custom scrolling presets and switch among them on the fly with an icon in the status bar.We nicknamed our presets First Gear, Second Gear, and Krazy Nitro.Next Page: Search & Communication >>Search & CommunicationCoolirisEver wonder what the Web would look like with a dose of Cover Flow? Then you’ve imagined Coolris. It turns the results of searches on YouTube, Facebook, Google Images, and other sites into a scrollable, zoomable, 3D gallery even Steve would dig. If you feel like keeping closer to home, Coolris also recognizes your iPhoto library and can display its pictures in the same slick style. That’s one giant leap for Google Images.FastestFoxWhich would you rather have, a fast fox, or the FastestFox? We thought so. After all, FastestFox throws up a tiny pop-up that puts a search for your selection on Google, Wikipedia, YouTube, and Twitter (among other sites) just a click away. FastestFox also adds instant Google search results to the address bar as you type, as well as a bookmark launcher you can call up with a key command to access your favorite sites on the fly. Searches are never far away with FastestFox.GlubbleThink of Glubble as your family’s private Facebook. Once parents add accounts for their kids and trusted relatives, everyone can log in to the family’s main page and send text messages, share photos, and schedule activities. Kids can explore the Web safely through Glubble’s browser. It takes over a Firefox window and limits Internet access to games, activity pages, and sites declared safe by Glubble (or mom and dad). Better still, Glubble is so simple and streamlined, even adults can use it.Glubble’s kids browser offers plenty to see and do.IMDb PreviewThe IMDb is the best way to settle bets about which actor starred in the original version of the remake you just saw, and IMDb Preview just may help you win your next dispute. Hover over an actor or movie’s IMDb link--in any site, not just IMDb.com--and a configurable, scrollable pop-up window appears sporting a relevant picture and links to related films and performers. The add-on also drops a link to IMDb’s My Movies feature on any movie’s IMDb page, letting you add flicks to your My Movies collections as you browse...er, settle the next score.Bring IMDb data to you with IMDb Preview.Integrated GmailAre you a Gmail junkie? Then you probably use Google’s other services on the regular. Why not put them all in a single window with Integrated Gmail? Just install, log in to Gmail, then access Google Calendar, Maps, Notebook, Picasa, and more in through unobtrusive, collapsable icons. Integrated Gmail is so good, you’ll wonder why Google didn’t do it first.Get mail and much more with Integrated Gmail.InterclueWhat’s behind that next link? Interclue can tell you. Click the Interclue button that appears when you hover over a link, and a pop-up window shows you--with a screenshot and selectable text--the page the link will open. Without even going to the page, you can add it to your bookmarks, open it in a new tab, post a link to Facebook, and more. That’s right--now you can share Web pages you haven’t even seen yet with all your friends. We’re through the looking glass here, people. Interclue knows what’s new.ShareaholicIf you can’t get enough shareahol, we’ve got the add-on for you. Shareaholic adds a button to your toolbar that lets you easily broadcast pages to a zillion blogs and social networking sites, squash long Web addresses with URL shortening services like TinyURL, and even simply e-mail links to people with your default mail client. Don’t worry about running out of things to share. Shareaholic puts in your status bar links to the latest dirt on Twitter, OneRiot, and Buzzster--you heard it here first.New Sonic Youth in 2010? Gotta tweet that.SimilarWebEveryone wants to find cool new sites, but nobody has time to scour the Web for them. Enter SimilarWeb. As you browse, its sidebar suggests other pages related to whatever you’re looking at. You can approve or reject these suggestions to help fine-tune SimilarWeb’s topic matches, but what if you think you know better than SimilarWeb? No problem--just suggest your own site matches for other users to discover and vote on.SimilarWeb puts sites you may have missed right in your sidebar.Simple MailIf you want all your mail in one place, you want Simple Mail. It supports POP3, IMAP, and SMTP accounts, and lets you compose WYSIWYG messages with multiple fonts, colors, and other formatting options. Create mail folders, color-code messages, and set up filters to apply to incoming messages. It’s your mail, simplified.Simple is no sin when there’s work to do.YoLinkYou could search for text on pages like Craigslist or CNN.com the old-fashioned way, or you could use YoLink. Install it, load your page, then search with the new YoLink field in your toolbar. Instead of just finding and highlighting matched text, YoLink splits your Firefox window in two and lists summaries of all matches ranked by significance from within the site. Results can be saved to be read later with a free YoLink account, shared via social media sites, or plain-old bookmarked...but that’s so last-decade. YoLink finds links that lurk beneath the surface.YoonoBetween work and play, you’ve got enough to do online without making all the new tabs and windows your digital lifestyle demands. Yoono can help. It lets you log in to multiple social networking and media sites (all the usual suspects and more) so you can flit among them in a collapsable sidebar in your Firefox window. There you can also search for YouTube videos, Wikipedia articles, and bargains on Amazon while sharing them all with your friends. Why open another window again?Yes, we feel smug when we tweet we’re browsing the Smithsonian.Next Page: Work & Productivity >>Work & ProductivityEvernote Web ClipperOh, you smug Evernote junkies. You’ve got a Mac app to stay organized, an Evernote iPhone app to take your notes on the go, and the Evernote Web Clipper, a Firefox add-on that lets you easily add Web pages, links, or selections to your Evernote account. Bet you think you’re pretty tough. We’d show you a thing or two, if only we could find them! Never forget important sites with Evernote Web Clipper.FirebugIf you spend as much time making Web sites as you do browsing them, you probably already have Firebug installed. If not, what are you waiting for? Firebug puts a Web development toolbox in a new Firefox window or a split screen below the page you’re working on. You can edit HTML, fine-tune CSS, zero-in on JavaScript errors, and much more in a simple, easy to read interface that lets you get to work quickly. Now you’ve no excuse not to write the next great American Web page.If you’ve got the development bug, get Firebug.iCyteWhen you need to collaborate on Web research, or just keep all sites that interest you readily at hand, don’t copy and e-mail links...use iCyte. It lets you “cyte” pages or selections--saving the link and a snapshot of the page as you found it--and include them in projects to share with people you know, or total strangers. You can add tags and notes, too, and once you create an account, the iCyte sidebar keeps your projects and saved cytes in view as you surf...er, research.iCyte, therefore I remember.LeechBlockLeechBlock isn’t something to pack on your next camping trip, it’s a productivity booster that blocks access to distracting sites while you work. It lets you create 6 sets of rules to apply to troublesome sites, including what days and times sites are blocked, which sites users are redirected to, and more. LeechBlock works great for individuals, but its password-protected controls and ability to export and import settings can keep everyone on a network on the job. That’s a good thing, right?Get back to work with LeechBlock.Morning Coffee We admit it, we’re hooked on our morning coffee and on Morning Coffee. It lets us quickly add sites to lists for each day of the week (and weekends, or every day) to quickly access sites at those times. Gotta check out the news sites first thing each morning, or launch all your favorite sites that update every Thursday? With Morning Coffee, they can be launched together with just a click. Its even easier than adding cream and sugar.If it’s Friday, we must be reading the Onion A.V. Club.Read It Later We’re always doing things later...writing thank-you notes, meeting deadlines...so its no surprise we dig Read It Later. Just click a checkmark in your address bar to add the current page to your list of things to read later. When you have spare time--on a commute, say, with the Read It Later iPhone app--you don’t even need an Internet connection to access your list and catch up on your reading. Install it today...or, y’know, later.Procrastinate effectively with Read It Later.ToodledoDo you use Toodledo, the service that lets you manage your schedule and send it to an online calendar to share with others or read on the Toodledo iPhone app? Then you’re way more organized than we are. You’ve probably already scheduled time to install the Toodledo add-on that lets you quickly add Web pages, text selections, and general to-dos right from your Firefox window. Well...good for you!You have your to-do list, we have ours with Toodledo.ZoteroResearchers, rejoice. Zotero lets you surf news sites, academic databases, libraries, even Amazon and YouTube to save citations, links, snapshots of pages, and PDFs in a pop-up mini-app that lives in your Firefox window. There you can tag and add notes to your finds and organize them according to just about any parameters you can think of. All this can be synched to other computers running Zotero to follow you and your research across campus or the world. It even exports bibliographies and citations in almost any style you can think of when you finally get around to writing your dissertation.Zotero’s iTunes-like interface is easy to use.Next Page: Workplace Security & Shopping >> Workplace SecurityTab RenamizerAre you goofing off or hard at work? With Tab Renamizer, no one knows but you. It changes the names of closed tabs to something safe for work while leaving their contents intact. A few innocent looking substitutions--Wikipedia, Google, a 404 error message--are built in, but you can add your own. Then change individual tabs as the need arises, or set and forget Tab Renamizer to automatically rename tabs as you, ahem, “work.”Nothing shady going on here, no sir.PanicImagine you’re at looking at a site you don’t want your boss to see. Don’t panic, you’ve installed Panic. It puts an unobtrusive icon in your status bar you can tap to make any naughty tabs in your frontmost window disappear, replaced by the inoffensive page of your choice. The default page is a Google search for “increasing workplace productivity”...nice.Who’s panicking? We weren’t doing anything wrong!ShoppingCamelizer Like to buy things at Amazon, Newegg, or Overstock.com? Yeah, us, too--that’s why we installed Camelizer. It adds a button to items on those sites (and others) that delivers price histories courtesy of the camelcamelcamel service.Sign up for e-mail or Twitter updates when an item’s price drop to a figure you set, and you’ve got no excuse for paying too much for that USB-powered backscratcher Uncle Frank has been hinting about for his birthday.Hey, that price isn’t much higher than it was on Black Friday!GlueGlue is all about you--or more specifically, the things you’re interested in. Just install, sign up, and start letting Glue get to know you by rating movies, books, gadgets, and more with a simple thumbs up or thumbs down. Then visit the sites you already use (like Amazon, Wikipedia, Apple, and many, many more), and Glue reminds you of what you like and suggests new stuff you might like to like. Glue’s the good friend you always take shopping, if your friend was a pop-up banner at the bottom of your Firefox page.The more you let Glue know about you, the more accurate it is.PriceTrace ToolbarAttention, Kmart.com shoppers--and shoppers at Amazon, Macy’s, B&H, and many more online stores. The PriceTrace Toolbar add-on puts a PriceTrace.com search bar on your pages for instant comparison shopping on supported sites. You can compare past and current prices and subscribe to price drop alerts with a click, but the coolest feature is quick access to searches for fillers--items you buy to qualify for special offers--based on price range and other criteria.Shopping? Put PriceTrace on the case.
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Macsimum Poll: do you plan to update to Snow Leopard?
Posted by Dennis SellersMac OS X 10.6 (“Snow Leopard”) goes on sale next month. So in this week's Macsimum Poll, we're asking if you plan to upgrade to it. The poll is located on the right hand side of the home page, below the Macismum Opinion column.
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Macsimum Poll: do you plan on buying an iPad?
Posted by Dennis SellersAt long last the mythical iPad has been announced. So in this week's poll, we're asking if you plan on buying one. The poll is located on the right hand side of our home page, below the Macsimum Opinion column.
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Macsimum Poll: are you planning on attending Macworld 2010?
Posted by Dennis SellersIn this week's poll we're asking if you plan on attending Macworld Expo 2010 will take place Feb. 9-13, 2010, at the Moscone Center in San Francisco, The poll is located on the right hand side of the home page beneath the Macsimum Opinion column.
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Poll: do you plan on purchasing one of the Apple notebooks?
Posted by Dennis SellersIn this week's Macsimum Poll, we're asking which, if any, of Apple's new notebook products you'll purchase. The poll is located on the right hand side of the home page under the Macsimum Opinion.
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Poll: when do you plan to purchase your next Mac?
Posted by Dennis SellersIn this week's Macsimum Poll, we're asking when you plan to purchase your next Mac. The poll is located on the right hand side of the home page, below the Macsimum Opinion column.
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Wall Street Breakfast: Must-Know News
Top AIG execs threaten to quit over pay. Five top AIG (AIG) executives are reportedly ready to quit over worries about the government clipping their pay packages. Pay czar Kenneth Feinberg has already reduced compensation for AIG's top 13 employees by 57%, and is currently working on the next 75; sources say some Fed and Treasury officials have urged Feinberg to ease up. The uprising was apparently initiated by AIG general counsel, Anastasia Kelly; she's joined by the heads of one of AIG's international life-insurance businesses, its financial-services division, its international property-and-casualty-insurance businesses, and its U.S. property-casualty business. A key point of contention is the so-called golden-parachute severance payments executives are currently eligible for. Citi, Treasury at odds over TARP exit. Citigroup (C) may have to wait before shaking itself free of the Treasury's 34% stake, because the Treasury is concerned such a sale might weaken the bank's cause with investors should it need to raise capital. Citi is trying to convince the government to allow it to repay its remaining $20B in TARP loans within the next ten days, short of which it will be forced to wait until mid-January, but the Treasury wants to wait until the bank and regulators agree on a broader plan to repay all obligations under that plan, including government guarantees on $301B of devalued securities and other assets. Treasury sees smaller TARP loss. The Treasury has done such a good job in stabilizing the U.S. financial system that the projected long-term cost of the TARP is now at least $200B less than previous estimates, according to a Department official. The administration had estimated that taxpayers would have to shoulder $341B in costs under the program, but higher-than-expected returns on the Treasury's investments to stabilize the system have more than halved that number. In a speech Tuesday, President Obama is expected to talk about using leftover TARP funds for job creation, although he may hit resistance from Republicans who want to use such funds for deficit reduction. Publishers look to close digital ranks. In an effort to exert greater control over their financial futures, five print publishers have teamed up in a new digital venture, sources say. The venture, to be announced this week, will create a digital store and common technology and advertising standards to sell titles on electronic readers. The venture is spearheaded by Time Inc. (TWX) and includes News Corp. (NWS), Conde Nast Publications, Hearst and Meredith (MDP). The partners are all paying an initial ante, but are as yet unclear on a number of key issues. "Now that this transition is underway, the big thing is to figure out what is going to work for consumers, how you make the best offerings and get them out there, and underneath that how it is delivered," one executive said. BIS sounds risk alarm. The Bank for International Settlements stated in its latest quarterly report, published over the weekend, that banks may once again be lured to take big risks because of rock-bottom interest rates. The study found evidence of a significant link between an extended period of low interest rates prior to the financial crisis and banks' risk-taking, which it said could consequently fuel new asset price bubbles. BIS also noted the volume of international debt securities issued in Q3 fell 16% from Q2, to $1.998T while net issuance almost halved to $475B. Total turnover in exchange-traded derivatives was stable at $425T, which is about 60% of the volume seen before the financial crisis. BHP, Rio ink iron ore JV. Mining giants BHP Billiton (BHP) and Rio Tinto (RTP) signed an agreement over the weekend to combine their iron ore operations in Western Australia, a deal they say will save them $10B a year. But the deal faces significant regulatory hurdles due to concerns about excessive dominance of the iron ore market. Originally outlined in June, the deal was formalized Saturday; the companies anticipate completion of the deal in the second half of 2010. The statement made no mention of any payment from BHP to Rio Tinto, which has the larger iron ore production, but a figure of $5.8B had been proposed in earlier negotiations. Under the plan, each company would own 50% in their combined Western Australian iron ore assets, but would continue to market the ore separately. Chevron makes 'clean' push in Australia. Chevron (CVX) entered an agreement worth $82B to supply liquid natural gas to Tokyo Electric Power Co. out of Australia, where its Wheatstone venture is based. Chevron and competitors are investing heavily in Australia as they angle for a larger slice of the LNG market. The deal will help vault Chevron up 14 notches in 2016 to the No. 6 spot in global rankings. Payback time for U.K. banks? While U.S. politicians grouse about bank ingratitude, the U.K. government is contemplating more direct action: making banks pay taxes that could raise anywhere between several hundred million pounds over one year to more than 1B a year for 2-3 years in taxes. The measure, which could be announced as soon as Wednesday, would apply to U.K. banks such as Barclays (BCS), HSBC (HBC), Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS), as well as the British arms of overseas firms, such as Goldman Sachs (GS), JPMorgan (JPM) and Deutsche Bank (DB). However, timing of such a move remains uncertain amid "formidable practical obstacles." Intel cans Larrabee. Intel (INTC) said it's yanking plans to sell a consumer version of its much-touted, much-delayed multi-core graphics chip - Larrabee - which was meant to establish a new area of competition with Nvidia (NVDA) and AMD (AMD). Intel said it had decided not to offer the chip at all as a conventional product, though it will make it available as a platform to help programmers design new applications that can carry out computing tasks in a parallel fashion. "The silicon and software development are behind where we hoped to be at this point in the project," an Intel spokesman said. Intel said it will provide an update about future versions some time next year. Amazon denies store report. Amazon.com (AMZN) said it has no plans to open walk-in stores in London or anywhere else, contrary to a report over the weekend that said the internet e-commerce giant was looking to cash in on so-called "click and collect" shopping. Kuwait turns profit on Citi. The Kuwait Investment Authority, the Gulf country's sovereign wealth fund, said it sold a $4.1B stake in Citigroup (C) and that it made a $1.1B profit (37.7% return) in the process. The authority converted its preferred shares to common shares after working out a deal with the bank, selling all of the shares for $4.1B. The KIA invested $3B in Citi and another $2B in Merrill in 2008 as Wall Street lenders turned to outside investors to replenish capital hit by subprime-mortgage losses. SWFs have been unwinding their investments in Western banks after stocking up on big names when share prices hit rock bottom during the global financial crisis. Hershey gets sweet with Nestle. Hershey Foods (HSY) has been in contact with Switzerland-based Nestle (NSRGY.PK) about teaming up to buy Britain's Cadbury in a counter-move to Kraft's hostile offer, sources say. As expected, Kraft launched a formal unsolicited 10.2B ($17B) bid on Friday. Hershey said in a Nov. 18 regulatory filing it was “reviewing its options.” In a statement this morning, Cadbury said it will formally respond to the Kraft offer on December 14. GM cedes JV control to SAIC... In a trade-off it hopes will give it a higher stake in another China JV, General Motors said it has agreed to let China's SAIC take control of their JV, where SAIC will now have a 51% stake. GM said the transfer was necessary to help SAIC consolidate earnings from the Shanghai GM joint venture, which local financial regulations barred as a 50/50 partnership. In return, GM hopes to get a higher stake in the producer of Wuling micro minivans, a JV owned by GM, SAIC and the government of Guangxi province in southwestern China. GM, which has a 34% stake in the venture, is planning to expand in Hong Kong and then India early next year. ...and hires recruiter for CEO job. As GM scrambles to find new growth models, it has hired a recruiter, Spenser Stuart, with orders to find a permanent CEO who has extensive global, manufacturing and turnaround experience. Importantly, the automaker is hoping to attract someone with operating experience in Asia because "next year, GM expects to sell more cars in Asia than North America," a source said. Sources said GM also wants someone who can work well with U.S. government agencies and prepare the now private manufacturer for an IPO. Early Monday, GM appointed Tim Lee as president of GM International, succeeding Nick Reilly - thought to be the beginning of a major overhaul to the carmaker's ranks. Apple adds Lala to iTunes list. Apple (AAPL) confirmed it bought Lala Media, the fast-streaming online music company that lets users pay just $0.10 to access music. While terms were undisclosed, one report said Apple got away with a big discount. The technology gives users permanent access to web songs that can be streamed but cannot be downloaded to a user's computer hard drive or to portable players like iPods. The three-year-old company is developing an iPhone application that would greatly expand the service's reach, by making Lala web songs available on the go via the phone's wireless internet connection. Geithner: Goldman would have failed. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said Goldman Sachs (GS) executives were wrong when they claimed in an interview the firm would have survived without government help at the peak of the crisis. "None of them would have survived," Geithner said over the weekend. He also directed more barbs at Wall Street's compensation culture, saying: "We have to end that era of irresponsibly high bonuses." Today's MarketsOverseas markets were mixed Monday. Stock futures have moved lower overnight, while Treasurys are poised to carry significant gains into the week's first session.
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Poll: do you plan on buying an Amazon Kindle?
Posted by Dennis SellersAmazon.com has released the Kindle 2, the latest version of its digital book reader. So in this week's Macsimum Poll, we're asking if you plan to purchase one of the devices. The poll is located on the right hand side of the home page under the Macsimum Opinion.