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Many Pay High Investment Company Fees For Services They Don't Use, Survey Shows (consumerreports.org) 95

Penelope Wang, writing for Consumer Reports: If you are investing in stocks, bonds, or mutual funds, you have a wide range of options to help manage your portfolio -- everything from traditional brokerages to mutual fund companies to online financial firms. But as consumers search for an investment company, many pay little attention to the fees they're being charged, according to a just-released Consumer Reports survey of more than 46,000 CR members. Four out of 10 surveyed said they weren't sure what they paid in fees. And of those who knew the costs, only 60 percent rated their investment company in our survey as Excellent or Very Good on the amount charged.

"Hidden and confusing fees are proliferating across the marketplace, making it hard for consumers to know what they're getting for their money, and to comparison shop across providers," says Anna Laitin, director of financial policy at Consumers Union, the advocacy division of Consumer Reports. "It is concerning that so many investors don't know how much they are paying in fees and that many of those who do understand the fees don't appear to think they are getting their money's worth," she says.

Microsoft

Gates and MS Don't See Eye-To-Eye On CO2 288

Sam Machkovech writes "Bill Gates's speech at last week's TED Conference centered on 'moving to zero-carbon energy, and our need to reduce CO2 emissions 80% by 2050.' His choice of subject was an abrupt turn from The Gates Foundation's typical humanitarian topics, but he insisted that energy innovation is crucial to his Foundation's goals. A move by Microsoft today proves that Gates's old company has less interest in that carbon-neutral goal — Microsoft has begun campaigning against a bridge redesign that would result in more bus and transit options for commuters between Seattle and the company's homebase of Redmond, WA."

Comment Organize the Amazon-Warehouse Way (Score 1) 579

Or at least this is how I hear it works:
1) Print out a sheet of unique barcodes on sticky paper
2) Stick one to each book shelf in your house
3) Use MS Access, Fox Pro, MySQL/PHP, Postgres/Perl, whatever database and scripting languge you choose so that you can go around your house, scan each bar code and input a tag that describes its location
4) When you place each book on a shelf, scan its ISBN barcode and the shelf's location barcode
5) Anytime you want to find a book, just look it up in your database and you'll see what shelf it is on
For extra credit write a script that, given a list of books you want to read, will calculate the optimal path through your house to pick them up.

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