
Save more, spend less and avoid rip-offs | You know I love gadgets and computers. Read about some of the new computer-related gadgets and gizmos that are on the market today.
Remember several years ago when Internet cafes were all the rage? Over in Europe, some of these cafes were huge and occupied multi-floor buildings. The last time Clark was in London, however, he saw one formerly popular cafe that was reduced from 500 terminals to about 75. What happened? The marketplace changed. Free wifi became wide-spread and suddenly everyone could access the Internet from their cell phones. Likewise, the Internet will increasingly be anywhere you go. Delta Airlines will have high-speed connections on all its flights by 2009. The price for access will be around $10 for a few hours or around $13 or $14 on longer flights. Delta's system will not be compatible with Skype. Meanwhile, what you surf on is undergoing a transformation. A new class of ultra-lightweight mini-laptops -- called "netbooks" -- is all the rage. Many of them are Windows based. Clark recently (over)paid for one Hewlett Packard model at $599. Lenovo's S10 ThinkPad is going for $399, which is not much for a fully functional mini-computer. Expect a big marketing push for netbooks this holiday season. People will be snatching them up for themselves and their favorite road warriors. Speaking of traveling, there are new TSA-approved computer bags available where you don't have to unpack your laptop at security checkpoints. The TSA can actually check your laptop while it remains in the bag. | Oprah and Clark are on the same page about something again! First, they liked the same ice cream. Now, they've both gone crazy for a very simple technology -- little portable video cameras that are idiot-proof. Most video cameras just gather dust in homes across America. They have too many attachments; they're too hard to use; and they're not small enough to be available during spontaneous moments. They're only good for planned events like graduations, weddings and more. As a self-professed techno-idiot, Clark loves the Flip Ultra -- priced around $90. There's a built-in USB connector that pops out of the side and lets you automatically upload video to YouTube, PhotoBucket or anywhere else. Similar cameras from Creative Video and RCA are available in a comparable price range. So if you've been missing touching moments on vacations, or with your children, this could be a perfect solution. You can instantly send video across the world from an Internet cafe. | In the early days of NetFlix, no one was quite sure if the company's business model would work. Now they've become an enormous success and have practically demolished competitors like Blockbuster. The next challenge NetFlix has to face is the on-demand movie threat. So the company has come up with a $99 box that delivers on-demand flicks directly to your TV. A monthly subscription fee of about $9 is required to have access to some 10,000 movies. Netflix is hoping this device will help them counter the on-demand services from some of the cable companies. But do you really want another box on top of your TV? That's become valuable real estate. In related news, expect to see more tiny computers during the next few years. This trend should be a real boon for all the road warriors who have to lug around heavy laptops. Clark has a new Hewlett Packard mini-laptop ($599) that weighs 2 pounds and has a full keyboard. It can fit easily in a woman's purse or inside a carry-on bag -- no need for a separate computer bag. Think of it as HP's response to Clark's beloved "Triple E" PC. Clark was an early adopter of the "Triple E" and bought it for $399. Now he recently saw BJ's selling it for $274! So business travelers and others, take heart. The days of hurting your shoulder are over. You no longer need to lug a heavy laptop and create a living for the chiropractors! | He may be behind the curve, but Clark just discovered the handheld cameras that are part of the Flip Video Ultra Series. With prices starting around $100, this line of ultra small camcorders made a great gift for his wife on Mother's Day. Let's face it, most handheld video cameras are just bulky enough to be annoying. Plus they have too many buttons to operate with ease. But the Flip is simple to use and about the size of a pack of cigarettes. It even passed Clark's own "dunce cap test," which means that he didn't need to look at the owner's manual to operate it. The Flip comes in mostly feminine color schemes and is small enough to slip into a woman's purse. There is also an all-black model that may appeal to men. One feature that Clark and his wife really like is the built-in USB connector that pops out of the side. Once it hooks in to your computer, you can instantly e-mail your videos, burn a DVD and more. The real beauty of the Flip is that it ends the frustration of fumbling around for your camera at the right moment. Clark's only problem now is that he hopes his wife gives him one for his birthday! |  Clark was practically a majority of one on his staff when he got excited about the Asus Eee (pronounced "Triple E") PC. Joel and Christa were vocal during a recent staff trip about their dislike for Clark's beloved mini-laptop. The Eee runs on Linux and sells for around $299. There's also a Windows version available for a hundred dollars more. The "wundercomputer" weighs less than 2 pounds, has an 8-inch screen and is great if you have little fingers. It's designed for very basic tasks like web surfing, e-mailing, word processing and cheap VoIP service. While the original target market was schoolchildren, it's been embraced by a lot of travelers who have grown weary of breaking their shoulders with traditional bulky laptops. Asus now expects to sell about 5 million units this year. Those huge projected sales numbers have scared the big players in the market. Microsoft has reversed a decision to can XP, and now will keep it going indefinitely because it works well with the Eee. Hewlett-Packard, meanwhile, is preparing to introduce its own small, light computer for $499 with a 9-inch screen, built-in camera and more. Before the Eee, nobody wanted to serve this market -- now being called the Netbook segment. So to Joel and Christa, Clark wants you to understand that the Eee and others like it have really created a new opportunity. Travelers now can compute in a whole new way without having to lug around a huge laptop. This is the wave of the future! | Many Americans are so addicted to their Blackberry devices that they've become "Crackberry" addicts. In fact, Clark knows that he could easily become one -- but he's taken preventative steps to ensure it doesn't happen. Recently he was at the dentist when his smartphone began buzzing with incoming calls. So he actually took it out -- while the hygienist was hovering over him -- to see who called him. He'd be done in if he had a Blackberry that delivered e-mails on constant feed! A new English study finds that 1 in 3 Blackberry users show addiction signs similar to alcoholism. While out at a restaurant, Clark noticed a couple both on their Blackberries during a candlelit dinner. That's definitely not a good way to earn brownie points with your date. Some 14 million people now have Blackberries because they think it frees them up. But really it's more of a burden that makes you less productive, according to the study. You work more, but you're not necessarily more productive. While Clark likes the convenience and portability of a Blackberry, he vows never to have a portable phone device that automatically feeds e-mails as they arrive. Christa, however, has wagered $1 that says Clark will have to eat his words in a few years. She expects all handheld devices to auto-deliver e-mails as a standard feature in the near future. Clark has set his smartphone to deliver e-mail about 14 times a day. That way he doesn't get oversaturated. But Kim has already noticed that Clark is conditioned to look at his phone whenever it vibrates with an incoming call. Is he moving slowly but surely toward Crackberry addiction? Only time will tell
| If you're like Clark, you snap a lot of digital photos and then have trouble getting them out of the camera and into the real world. He's too lazy to figure out how to hook up the cable to his computer to print them or upload to a website! There's a new solution to this problem that's been getting some great reviews. A company called Eye-Fi sells a memory chip for your camera with built-in wifi. The chip, which is SD compatible, automatically uploads images to your computer or a photo-sharing site. At $100, Eye-Fi chips cost of about 8 times what you'd pay for a standard 2 GB memory chip. But prices should be dropping by the end of the year. Eye-Fi will work with most major photo-sharing sites including Snapfish, Shutterfly and Flickr. Meanwhile, the cost of developing pictures is dropping and there are a lot of value-added propositions. Clark recently received a bound, hardcover book with photos and commentary to commemorate a trip that he and his wife took with another couple. That's how advanced photo processing has become. Remember the old days when Clark would recommend having a disposable camera in the trunk so you could take pictures if you were in a fender bender? Today people would probably just use their camera phone and e-mail pictures directly to the police! | Clark wants to share news of a website that could save your life. Have you noticed how many people text or e-mail while they drive? This is a very dangerous practice. When you're traveling at freeway speeds, you can go 20 yards in the 1 second it takes you to glance down at your handheld device. There are even some states with DWT (driving while texting) laws now on the books. One day Clark nearly ran off the road while reading an e-mail. So now he only looks at his e-mails when he's come to a complete stop. But what if you're so addicted to your Crackberry that you just have to text and e-mail while driving? Try Jott.com, a free, ad supported service. Here's how it works: After registering your contact list, you call up an 800 number and say the name of the person you want to text or e-mail. Then you begin speaking your message and Jott translates it into the written word. One caveat: It might be good to mention in your e-mail that it's a voice translation. The first test that Clark sent was almost completely accurate -- except for the words "sen" (send) and "motocue" (Moto Q). Clark is very excited about Jott, but he's already wondering if it will wind up in his Internet graveyard! | What's the price of web surfing nowadays when you travel abroad? Whatever it is, Clark doesn't like to pay it! That's why he was excited in 2003 when he first heard about some vaporware from FON. This Spanish company now offers a router that allows consumers to share their Internet connection with travelers passing through their area. In return for sharing upfront, they too get free Internet around the world from other members when they travel. This is a big deal in Europe where British Telecom is installing 2.7 million FON routers across England. If you become a phone member here in the United States, you will routinely have access to free Internet when you travel overseas. So what's the cost? FON sells their router for a one-time fee of $40 -- that's it! Some cable and phone companies in the United States are hostile to this sharing model, but Time Warner is among those who have embraced it. Clark plans to order a FON router for his condo building in Florida and make his Internet connection available to his fellow residents for free. FON's routers even come with security so others can't eyeball your financial info. On a related note, The Los Angeles Times recently reported that both AT&T and Verizon reserve the right to fire customers if they say anything bad about them. Why should they monitor free speech? Clark thinks it's shameful what these monopolies are doing. | The iPhone has been a huge hit for Apple. It's also left a lot of people disgruntled because of Apple's exclusive deal with AT&T. Users of the iPhone are handcuffed to a two-year contract with the phone carrier. Apple released the iTouch to quell some of the criticism. The iTouch has the look and feel of the iPhone and all its bells and whistles. But it is not enabled for phone service! Now Verizon has become envious of the iPhone's success and done something it never does. The company has announced some vaporware in the form of competing products that are due around Christmas. They're supposed to be like the iPhone or even better, but we'll have to wait and see if they materialize. No word yet if T-Mobile or Sprint will do the same. Clark recently was in an Apple store in a mall and it was packed with people on a night when other the stores were empty. Customers were playing with Macintosh computers, iBooks, iPods, nanos, iPhones and more. The sleekness of Apple products looks like something from a science fiction movie of the future. Clark is really impressed with Apple's design sense. For example, Clark's wife has a Mac now for her business. It cost a fortune, and Clark could have bought four desktop PCs running Vista for the price his wife paid. But his wife has a connection with her Mac like it's a person. That's because Apple's Steve Jobs is a creative genius who knows how to really make products pop. Look at Pixar. Also co-founded by Jobs, Pixar combines artistry and electronics in a way that's warm, exciting, colorful and stylish. Most people are willing to pay for all the pizzazz -- but not Clark! | Have you ever parked at a big event and lost your car? One of Clark's staffers recently told him that she was at a racetrack for a concert and couldn't find her car for a full hour after the event. She eventually located the vehicle when security drove her around to look for it. Similarly, the husband of Clark's executive producer once wandered around an airport parking deck for four hours when he couldn't recall where he parked following a weeklong trip. Imagine if you could avoid these kinds of scenarios in the future. GPS maker Garmin has developed a device that can help: a car finder. Clark recently read about it in The Kansas City Star. It will electronically mark where you leave your car and walk you back to the spot later. This is one device that Clark himself could really use; he fesses up to forgetting where he parks at the radio station about twice a week. And that's after working for only six hours! If you're in the market for a basic GPS, Clark thinks we'll be seeing Black Friday sales in the $99-$129 range. And in a few years, every car will probably come standard with a GPS -- just as mostly every car has a radio. | The Apple nation is in an uproar because the computer giant has slashed iPhone prices by $200. When the iPhone first hit the market, it sold for $600; now it's selling for $400. All the Apple loyalists who stood in line and camped out to buy the iPhone on the first day feel the company owes them back their extra $200. Early adopters always get their wallet emptied out for them. They pay big money to deal with the bugs of something that's new so the rest of us can benefit from it down the road at cheaper prices. No word yet from Apple if they'll make any concessions to those who paid $600. Meanwhile, one big gripe from iPhone users has been that the whole system is built on AT&T's outdated Edge system. So now Apple is offering the iPod Touch. For the same price, the Touch features all the iPhone capabilities except for the phone service! It works on wifi networks, so savvy customers who use Skype and other VoIP providers will still be able to use it to make calls. In other tech news, there's a new product out there being marketed under the Vudu brand. Vudu is essentially a $400 box that hooks up to your TV and allows you to watch movies on demand instantly. There are 5,000 titles at your fingertips ranging in price from 99 cents for older films to $3.99 for new releases. When you hit play, the movie starts with no download delay. This is possible because the first few minutes of all the movies are stored in the Vudu box. The remainder of the film you select is then downloaded while you watch the flick uninterrupted. Best of all you don't have to leave your home to rent a DVD or wait for it to come in your mailbox. This is very convenient, but you'll be a beta tester if you buy this now. Historically, whenever you shell out for new electronics you're always at a disadvantage. Clark recalls paying $499 for his first GPS unit and now he sees sleeker models that are easier to use for $149! | Clark's gotten a couple of tips from his listeners about a new product called magicJack. This product offers unlimited local and domestic long-distance calling via your Internet connection. The cost is $40 for the first year and about $20 for subsequent years. The way it works is very simple. You plug your phone into the magicJack and then plug magicJack into your computer's USB port. It takes about a minute to load up the first time, but once it assigns you a phone number you're on your way. Clark's very happy with the service so far, but about a third of people he calls through magicJack report poor sound quality. If you're cheap and want to be a pioneer, you can buy this now. And if the company goes bust, you've lost $40 bucks -- not the hundreds some people (including Clark himself) lost on SunRocket. | The United States has fallen to around 45th in the world in Internet availability and use because our government allows the phone and cable companies to monopolize the field as Internet service providers. But there's something really good coming down the pike, according to Clark. With TV switching its signals from analogue to digital, the stations are giving back their analogue spectrums to the government. The licenses for these spectrums will soon be auctioned to new players who will use them for all kinds of new communication possibilities. So the feds will be helping to create a licensing opportunity for an open system -- a high-speed network that Google may own if it wins the auction. This open system will accommodate cell phones that surf the Internet at high speeds for extra cheap, plus it will host new devices that we can't even imagine yet. Once that day comes, we'll leapfrog from 45th place to much higher. Then the phone and cable monopolies will have to innovate or become obsolete in the marketplace. Already there's been a lot of talk in the cell phone industry about how America is one of the few places where you can't just use any brand of cell phone you want on any carrier of your choice. Verizon in particular is hostile to any open-market changes. In fact, many cell phones manufacturers have to remove factory-enabled functions in their phones before Verizon, Sprint and other will adopt their product for their systems. AT&T, on the other hand, took the opposite approach when it allowed Apple to pack all kinds of goodies into the iPhone. Maybe soon Verizon, Sprint and the others will smell the coffee and open their systems. On a related note, look for companies to offer unlimited cell phone calling for free in the future -- in return for delivering ad content to your mobile handset. Virgin Mobile is already experimenting with this business model, and it's going to be great for people on a tight budget. | Cross-country communication is very tough nowadays with generational differences in technology preferences. So how do you get emails and photos to someone who's computer challenged? A year ago, Clark read about something called "Presto," made by Hewlett Packard. It's a simple device that prints out photos and email automatically, three times a day. It's like having the mailman come several times every day. Clark got one for his 83-year old mom for her to get photos, emails and calls from family without touching a computer. This is such a wonderful, simple device. It isnt cheap ($99) but it's very helpful! It even emails you when you're low on printer ink. Check it out at presto.com. Also, here's a bonus: you don't get any spam, because you can control who's able to send you anything. | All around the country, state laws are being passed that ban teens from talking, texting and e-mailing on cell phones while driving. But what about adults who are still doing all this stuff while behind the wheel? Clark has a self-imposed rule that he tries to follow with varying degrees of success: If he needs to make or take a call, he pulls off to the side of the road. Clark is also acutely aware of the addiction some people have to their Blackberrys. He's set his Blackberry so that he only receives e-mail 16 times throughout the day instead of every time a message comes into his inbox. That helps prevent him from becoming a "Crackberry" addict. But for some people it gets to the level that they have to shut down their Blackberrys for weeks at a time to break the addiction. In fact, one in five people feels "tech gadget remorse," according to the Pew Internet & American Life Project. Meanwhile, text messaging is so much a part of our culture that there have been lawsuits against Deal or No Deal, The Apprentice and 1 vs. 100. These shows charge you roughly a dollar to text in and win prizes related to the program. Isn't that like illegal gambling? | Here on the show we always give out free advice to you, the consumer. But did you know that we also get it back from our dedicated listeners? After receiving a tip from one such person, we've put up a list of FREE software that you can download from the internet. It's divided into dozens of areas of interest, so you can surf around easily to get software, books, games, free conference calling and so much more. While the quality of stuff that's free is all over the board, you can rest assured that none of it will cost you one thin dime. Bookmark the page...it just may come in handy. | This time of year you should be outside enjoying yourself, so it is surprising to have a deal pop up on game machines. The Nintendo Wii -- a system that the experts didnt think much of, and thought would just be yesterdays technology -- has taken the market by storm. It has a unique design based on research into what would be fun to play. The Wii is way beyond a cult item; kids, adults, men, women and anyone whos ever played with the system has been pretty much excited by it. The reason is that you engage in physical effort to play the game! If you play a bowling game with the Wii, youre throwing your arm (and the game controller) as if youre in a bowling alley. If you play tennis, youre swinging the handheld console as if its a racket. So it actually gets you off your rear end and playing, which should make people happy about sedentary kids and adults. You actually have to get up and break a sweat to win the game. Because of the Wiis success, the other game machines are really now on the ropes. The Microsoft Xbox and the Sony PS3 have historically been over-priced, burdened with problems and just are not selling. Sony had been asking $600 for one of its PS3s, but now the company has cut the price so theres a model available for $399. The PS3 also doubles as a hi-definition DVD player, which uses Blu-ray technology. So theres a possibility for a twofer here, where you can get the game console with hi-definition DVD capabilities. But theres one caveat: Clark advises against collecting movies to view on your PS3 before some format issues are settled between Blu-ray and its HD DVD competitor. Instead, just rent them from Blockbuster and Netflix who both carry Blu-ray DVDs. So the opportunity is there for you that you could get a deal on a PS3, and you know Clark likes that! | Jun 26, 2007 -- iPhones will change the cell phone industry People are already lining up to buy the iPhone, even though it doesn't go on sale for a few more days. To get it, you're going to need to sign a two year contract. AT&T always claims they make you sign contracts in order to subsidize the phone, but this time, they're just lying--you're purchasing this phone from Apple! Apple's made the iPhone as sleek and easy to use as their other products, and it's packed with features. In other countries, there are no restrictions on what features a phone can have, but in the U.S., the cell phone companies control what a cell phone is allowed to do. Let's say you want GPS....U.S. phone companies want to be the ones to sell you that service, so they make cell phone makers deactivate the GPS feature. Apple has been aggressive towards these cell phone companies, and maintain that no one can say what the phone does except them. Apple has made this a true consumer purchase, letting the consumer decide what it will do, as it should be. So ultimately the iPhone is going to democratize the cell phone industry. | The Sansa Connect, which works in conjunction with the Yahoo music subscription service, has gotten great reviews by technology people. You pay for the player and a $140 2 year subscription fee. You are then able to listen to any music under the subscription service. You can put music you like directly on the player as well. One of the coolest features is that if you are in a wi-fi zone you can stream music straight to the player as well. Remember though, if you decide not to renew your subscription, you haven't actually purchased any music, so you lose it all. If this is a way that you like to listen to music though, give it a try. It's easy. | Technology is great when it works. But what about when it doesnt. Three tech-crash incidents occurred in the past week alone, causing lots of high blood pressure among users. You probably heard about the Blackberry crash heard around the world that had folks on Wall Street in a tizzy. It was a huge deal in New York and D.C. and elsewhere around the world because people are basically addicted to these devices. Secondly, Vonage admitted this week that it may go under soon, which could affect millions whove switched to VOIP calling with this company. In technology, you have to be the smartest not the first. Lastly, TurboTax the largest electronic filing company in existence crashed on tax day. Christa, Clarks EP, could not file her taxes that night because of the crash. As a result, TurboTax users got two more days to file. Intuit, the company that makes TurboTax, went to the IRS and asked for a reprieve and it worked. | Clark has wondered if there would ever be a portable computer that would fit in a purse or pocket and still have a screen big enough to read. Its always been kind of a niche product, and several companies have tried. Well, the latest one is here. Samsung has just released the Mobile Intelligent Terminal or MIT. The entire device (monitor included) weighs one pound and works on wireless networks. It was launched in Korea this week, but will probably be available in the U.S. in the next year or two. Compaq tried to build a compact, portable computer several years ago but it weighed 40 pounds and had a tiny screen. Clark thinks more companies will copy the MIT and well see lots of them on the market in a few years. But check out the MIT if you get a chance. | Dell Computers has been so successful at selling computers that the company seems to have forgotten how to provide customer service. Dell is a terrific company, but its execs havent really focused on the customer service problems theyve been having. Instead of fixing those problems, the company is trying something new that will further alienate people who are having problems already. To explain further, Dell is starting a premium line of computers that costs three times as much as the basic model. People who buy these computers will receive top-of-the-line customer service. But if you buy the basic model, you wont get much help at all. Its sort of like flying in first class versus coach. According to the Dallas Morning news, the company hopes to make 80 percent of the coach customers happy, which is pretty paltry.
In other computer news, the $100 computer is a reality. It will be able to connect to Wi-Fi networks and include all the necessary parts of a computer for much less. Clark will keep you updated on it. | A professor at the University of Pennsylvania has developed a backpack that generates energy as the person wearing it walks. It recharges all of your electronic gizmos as you walk, and that could include an MP3 player or night vision goggles. Its something the Pentagon bought into because of the benefit to soldiers. It comes at a very good time when people are discouraged about energy prices and the cost of gas and oil. People always seem to come up with innovative ideas exactly when we need them most. Thats the beauty of free enterprise. | Three people on Clarks staff have devices that combine Internet and phone devices all in one gadget. Christa and Clark both have the Treo 600, and Kevin has the Sidekick 2. So far, the Sidekick 2 is only available to T-Mobile customers, whereas the Treo is available to all cell phone users. The Sidekick is a very clever device, with instant messaging capabilities and cell phone capabilities. It costs $20 a month for unlimited e-mailing and instant messaging. For Clarks Treo, its $15 a month. Blackberry users, also known as crack berry users, are also switching to the all-in-one device. Another popular one on the market is the Ogo, which has e-mailing and instant messaging capabilities, but there is no phone feature. The issue with these gadgets as great as they are you never let go of the thing and decompress. It can hurt relationships as well. So, remember to keep balance in your life. | Clark is very cheap, as we all know, except when it comes to some new communication gadgets. Clark owns the breakthrough gadget that allows you to e-mail and talk on it as a phone. Its called the Treo 600 and it was quite expensive. But more offerings are coming on the market that will cost a lot less and do a lot more. Blackberry has created a new consumer version of its original device that will cost about $200. It will only be available to T-Mobile customers initially, but will later be available for everyone. The new gadget figures out what words youre trying to write as you type them. Treo is also coming out with a successor to its original model that will be more reliable. And the Sidekick II a scaled down version of the Sidekick - is also coming out. It will only be available to T-Mobile customers at first, as well. Some people arent that psyched about sending e-mail over the phone. But Clark thinks that by 2006 people will no longer be able to talk on cell phones in public places. The text messaging systems will solve that problem, so they are only going to get bigger. | The iPod has become a cult item. If youre not familiar with it, its a mini digital music player that allows you to hold up to 6,000 or so songs. People who are into music love these things. And, according to Wired News, people are now posting ideas online about what they hope the next iPod launch will be. Some ideas are iPod phones and iPod watches. Right now there is the iPod Spec, which are glasses that play music, and the iPod pen, which also plays tunes. The Trio 600 allows you to listen to music, check e-mail and buy stock all in the same device. What would you pay for these devices? They are out of most peoples price range right now at between $300 and $600. But they will go down in price. | There is a push going on by two musicians, Peter Gabriel and Brian Eno, to get the control of the record industry back in artists hands. The two have started a group called MUDDA - Magnificent Union of Digitally Downloaded Artists. Artists who join this organization will be able to sell their music directly to people without the involvement of the record labels. Artists have always been taken advantage of by the music industry. Contracts they sign basically allow the music label to take most of the profits from the sale of the records. The music industry spends money promoting certain bands that they think could be a hit. But if they become a hit, the label gets most of the money. And its hard for artists to get picked up by one of the five big music labels. So, if you would like to get your name out there as a musician and keep your dough, you might want to check out MUDDA. Go to wired.com to learn more.
And if you are trying to get your music to play on an MP3 player, there is a new service to help you out. At Rip Digital, you can have all of the music from your CD collection put into your MPs player. Its roughly $1.25 a CD, and about $1 a CD if you have tons of CDS. To find out more, go to ripditigal.com. | | |
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