Archive for June 25th, 2008

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TripItAll of us could use a personal assistant every now and then, especially when it comes to planning your itinerary for a trip where you’ve to put together reservations for restaurants, entertainment, and rental cars into something you can follow once you reach your destination.

TripIt is a site designed to take confusion out of trying to organize all your reservations by doing it for you. The service takes all the plans you’ve made for your trip such as plane reservations, rental vehicles, and restaurant reservations and organizes them, adding important things like directions to get to where you’re going and a projected weather forecast for your trip. Your TripIt itinerary can then be printed out and taken with you as well as forwarded to friends in email, synced with your personal calender, or viewed on your mobile device.

TripIt grants you to add information to your trips manually or if you schedule events with one of TripIts supported websites you can just forward your reservations to the site via email and have them added to your itinerary for you. Currently TripIt supports a slew of airline websites, restaurant reservations through OpenTable.com, and they just added support for a variety of event sites such as Ticketmaster.

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TripItAll of us could use a personal assistant each now and then, especially when it comes to planning your itinerary for a trip where you have to put together reservations for restaurants, entertainment, and rental vehicles into something you can follow once you reach your destination.

TripIt is a site designed to take confusion out of trying to organize all your reservations by doing it for you. The service takes all the plans you’ve made for your trip such as plane reservations, rental automobiles, and restaurant reservations and organizes them, adding important things like directions to get to where you’re going and a projected weather forecast for your trip. Your TripIt itinerary can then be printed out and taken with you as well as forwarded to friends in email, synced with your personal calender, or viewed on your mobile device.

TripIt allows you to add information to your trips manually or if you schedule events with one of TripIts supported websites you can just forward your reservations to the site via email and have them added to your itinerary for you. Currently TripIt supports a slew of airline websites, restaurant reservations through OpenTable.com, and they just added support for a variety of event sites such as Ticketmaster.

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Let’s be honest here. How many of us have gotten on stage to do a bit of karaoke. Don’t worry no one is gonna laugh at you. Because when you did get up there, it was only for that moment never to be repeated again. Well that would be true unless you decided to sing it up at Red Karaoke.

Red Karaoke gives you the ability to sing your favorite songs and have it hosted on their site to share with others. Depending on how good you are at karaoke, this could be a good thing or a bad thing because members can comment and do vote on your performance.

The quality of the music reminds us of general midi files, but then again the accompaniment isn’t the star here you are. If you want to give your performance a tiny more pizazz connect your web cam for some video karaoke action! The service itself is fun and easy to use. And Red Karaoke does offer a decent selection of songs ranging from the 1950’s to the present in a variety of genres.

But try as we did, we couldn’t find any NKOTB.

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TwitterCounter has one simple purpose in life, to give you a counter to display the number of people that follow you, from Twitter, on your website.

Just enter your user name and TwitterCounter will display the number of people following you over a seven day period. To display the updating counter on your website simply copy the available code and paste it to your site for all to see.

If you’re really into your Twitter stats, enter your email address to receive daily updates. Because we all know you’re only a few followers short of that elusive number one spot!

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Nobody needs a home to fall on them (any more) to know that taking out a subprime mortgage is a lousy idea.

But car title loans — there doesn’t seem to be a lot of attention paid to these yet.

And so I just thought I’d mention that automobile title loans — which are illegal in some says like Florida — are a rotten idea. Sure, this is my thought, but if you know nothing about them, read on, and see what you think.

It can sound nice at first, because if you take out a vehicle title loan, you have open-ended credit, and credit, these days, is kind of hard to come by. At least for some people, it is. (You read enough articles about the economy, and it’s easy to forget that there are many Americans who are doing just fine, the price of gas notwithstanding.) Anyway, automobile title loans do offer you open-ended credit, yes, but that’s the only selling point, which is a good way to put it, I guess, since in a way you’re selling your automobile to these financial companies that issue them.

What happens is that a company will offer you a loan that you can pay back within 25 days and not owe any interest. So far, so good. But what if you don’t pay it in 25 days? What if you pay it in 26?

In theory, you can lose your vehicle. In reality, too.

But that’s not what happens. You don’t want to lose your car, so you’re talked into rolling over the loan, and so your interest gets higher. By law, you can roll over the debt six times, in which case the interest and payments are extremely high, and then since, of course, you still can’t pay, the repossession process begins. If you don’t want to lose your car, you generally stick your car in the garage, where it can’t legally be repossessed, provided the garage door is shut. Not that it does you much good. You’ll be afraid to drive your car, for fear that when it’s out of the garage, you’ll have it taken away. That’s the fate of 30-year-old Joseph Ledford, who gets by on disability payments and bravely told his story in last week’s Chicago Tribune.

According to that article in the Tribune, of 16 says that grant these loans, Illinois is the only one that doesn’t regulate the loans. They tried to back in 2001, putting rules in place that covered loans up to 60 days. But most lenders, the Tribune reports, shifted the loans to 61 days or longer to avoid the rules. Adorable. Meanwhile, the say hasn’t changed the law to reflect those changes.

The auto title lending process typically shakes down this way: You give your car’s title and a copy of the keys to a lender. They then give you a loan up to half the car’s wholesale value. The borrower then concurs to repay the loan plus a tiny extra for the trouble — generally 300% annual interest — as well as other fees. You often have to pay the loan back within a month or two, or in Illinois’s case, 61 days or a bit longer.

And, of course, in the end, almost always, you lose your car, and you’ve forgotten why you initially took out the loan in the first place.

So if you’re thinking of taking out a car title loan, don’t. Find another way. If you need the money that badly, you already have enough problems.

Geoff Williams is a business journalist and the author of C.C. Pyle’s Extraordinary Foot Race: The True Story of the 1928 Coast-to-Coast Run Across America (Rodale).

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