Tuesday, July 1, 2008

The Dark Knight Got A New Poster




Reader's 'Santi, Peter and Alfredo' sent us a new poster for Christopher Nolan's epic upcoming film The Dark Knight. According to the readers the poster is from the films viral marketing campaign for the film.




The poster:








The Dark Knight opens July 18th.




The Dark Knight Limited Edition




The Dark Knight reunites director Christopher Nolan with star Christian Bale, who returns to continue Batman’s war on crime. With the help of Lieutenant Jim Gordon (Gary Oldman) and District Attorney Harvey Dent (Aaron Eckhart), Batman sets out to destroy organized crime in Gotham for good. The triumvirate proves to be effective, but they soon find themselves prey to a rising criminal mastermind known as the Joker (Heath Ledger), who thrusts Gotham into anarchy and forces the Dark Knight ever closer to crossing the fine line between hero and vigilante.


 


The Dark Knight Limited Edition


List price: $30


Pre-order price: $15


How Californians See America


Travel: The great hotel deals in top destinations.

California is too big on that map.It should only encompass LA and the inner Bay Area + maybe wine country.The rest of the state is considered 'fly-over.'

AT&T announces iPhone 3G pricing plans


New Apple iPhone 3G - In Stores July 11th

Finally, a piece of news we can actually do something with. AT&T today announced its pricing structure for the next iteration of Apple's iPhone -- which you can plunk down money for come 8 am, July 11th. There's not much that's surprising here -- new customers and those eligible for an upgrade will be able to nab the phone for $199 (8GB) or $299 (16GB), while "early upgraders" will have to fork over $399 or $499, all with a two year contract and $18 upgrade fee, of course. The telco says a no-commitment version of the phone will be available for $599 and $699, though it looks like that will come after the initial launch. AT&T appears to be leaning pretty heavily towards the all-in unlimited plans, but there are options if you don't want to go that route. We've sorted out the basics after the break, and included AT&T's "iReady" video -- certainly good for a few chuckles.


Get 50% off on iPhone Accessories


Notes:


Related:

Refurbished iPhones on sale at AT&T

Tesla's Elon Musk promises sub-$30k all-electric car in less than four years



Yes -- more breaking electric car news! Just after Tesla CEO Ze'ev Drori announced Telsa's plans to build the Model S, Elon Musk began discussing its development of electric car tech to get the price of future cars to (and below) $30,000. When asked when that technology would be commercially available, Musk said that it shouldn't be any more than four years from now. Granted, a $60,000 car is affordable but still quite steep for most buyers -- but a vehicle mass-produced at half the price is essentially mainstream, which could have a substantial impact on the automotive world.

GoDaddy VP Caught Bidding Against Customers

When a GoDaddy customer forgets or otherwise fails to renew a domain, GoDaddy sells it off to the highest bidder through their TDNAM subsidiary. Some registrars--even Network Solutions--give the domain owner a percentage of the proceeds of such auctions. But GoDaddy keeps all the spoils to themselves. Anyway, it was recently discovered that the Vice President of TDNAM has been bidding on (and sometimes winning) TDNAM's own auctions. This drives up the prices for normal customers and also leads to conflict of interest issues since normal bidders need to trust TDNAM to keep various information secret, such as their proxy bids, bidding history, the domains on their watch list. Also, GoDaddy doesn't tell you when your bid price was inflated due to TDNAM executives bidding against you. They are one of the few auction services which don't even give you the nicknames of competing bidders.




Are you planing for a travel?


Here are the great hotel deals in top destinations.



DomainNameWire contacted other domain auction services, and none allow unrestricted employee bidding on their own auctions like GoDaddy does. Enom (a patner in NameJet) notes that "We definitely do NOT let employees compete in auctions. Even if controlled, that practice has bad news written all over it." Yet GoDaddy seems to think it is fine for executives to inflate their auction prices by bidding against customers. They responded to DomainNameWire that they allow this. There is a big risk that these employees have access to private information of the normal bidders, that they get special discounts, or that they may sometimes shill bid to increase prices without trying to actually win.

The More You Play With it, the Harder it Gets [PIC]



Old Sega ad using sexual innuendos. Never seen this one before...