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Last year, I decided to become a “late early adopter” by taking the jump to high-definition entertainment. I upgraded my equipment, including a Toshiba HD DVD player. While cognizant of the HD format wars, I went ahead with HD DVD because the equipment was better priced for the mass market. I thought thought that due to pure economics, this format would win despite its technical inferiority to Blu-Ray. I decided to hedge my bet and asked my girlfriend for a Blu-Ray player for the holidays.

Recently, more movie studios have agreed to support Blu-Ray exclusively, so despite HD DVD’s connectivity and interactivity features — none of which were ready on Blu-Ray — people seem to be declaring that Blu-Ray has won the format war. Shortly after this announcement, the Blu-Ray camp announced that players on the market now (except for the one built into the Playstation 3 game console) will not be able to play most future Blu-Ray discs thanks to technological advances that won’t be backwards compatible. Even though I thought I was covering all my bases, I lost the format war. The consumers always lose.

Here are some articles I’ve enjoyed recently: Read the full article →

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Consumption Is Investment

This article was written by in Consumer. 22 comments.

This is a guest post from Mrs. Micah, who maintains the blog Mrs. Micah: Finance and Life, in which the author is starting to deal responsibly with her $100,000+ debt.

Every purchase you make is an investment.

Too often we think of our purchases as consumables. Some are, like food, but even those should be adding to your quality of life. Food, for instance, is an investment in your health and gives you energy for doing better stuff.

We may not think of it that way, but it’s like buying stock. Not that the purchase increases in value, but that it proves valuable to us over a long period of time or it loses all its value because we don’t use it and don’t (or can’t) resell it.

If you see your consumption as an investment, then it takes on a purpose–the purpose of improving your current and future situation for as long as possible. That allows you to ask whether you could have gotten more value by consuming something different that would have lasted longer, been more practical, more helpful, etc.

One good investment I made recently was a winter coat. My old one, bought cheap at a thrift-store (well-used), lasted me for 4 years. Now, it’s beat-up from some hard Pennsylvania winters and some rough treatment. It wasn’t in great condition to start with, but just fine for college.

I spent $83 on the new coat but don’t regret a penny. On the way to work, I no longer feel frozen (my old coat was not workplace appropriate anymore, so I was braving the cold with a light suitcoat) nor do I get wet in the rain (umbrella helps too). In fact, I feel comfortable as I slog up the hill. Plus it looks appropriate at work and good on me.

The style is pretty classic (and I’m not very fashion conscious anyway), the material seems good, and I’ll take care of it, so I expect it to last for years.

A smaller but excellent investment was an oversize latte mug Mr. Micah bought. He uses it every morning to make his oatmeal and every night for his tea. It cost about $10 (more than I’d normally spend on a mug) but he’s had it for years and uses it so much that it was a great choice.

As investments go, it’d be like buying stock at $10 and having its value shoot up to $100 and hold. Great ROI!

On the other hand, my friend Katie likes to buy electronic gadgets but doesn’t end up using them, making her purchases a very bad investment. For example, she spent a couple hundred dollars on a PlayStation 2, thinking it’d be a lot of fun in the evenings. The PS2 never made it out of the packaging. Instead, it remained in her closet until recently, several years later, when her now-husband discovered it and was thrilled.

In the end, he got some value out of it. But if she and her husband had bought it now (even unused) they could have had it for half the price or less.

It was as though she bought stock for $250 and it immediately dropped to $0 (not counting resale value, since she didn’t think about that). Then it rose to about $100 and now it’s worth something to her again because she can use it with her husband. Not a total loss, but not a good choice either.

She had an unused digital camera (for which I offered her $20) but she ended up giving it to her dad for nothing. Again, over a hundred dollars spent with practically no return.

Fortunately, Katie learned from this. She’s decided not to buy an iPod yet (or if she does, to buy a refurbished one for less) because she might use it for a week and then put it in a drawer. Now that she’s identified which purchases she shouldn’t make, she’ll have much more money to either save or put towards things she’ll actually use.

What you’re consuming (buying) isn’t simply being used up. It’s an investment. Your job is to make sure that it’s a good one!

Read more from Mrs. Micah on her blog, Mrs. Micah: Finance and Life.

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Here are some of the more interesting items from the past on Consumerism Commentary. Check these out if you have some time to read. From May 8-15, 2006:

* May 8: Americans Are NOT In Bad Shape With Credit, Sort Of
* May 8: PlayStation 3 Plus Or Minus $596: My Generation Just Sighed
* May 9: Ten Tips For Cutting Car Expenses
* May 9: Sleep Well and Cheap, But Beware Melatonin
* May 10: Ten Websites I Couldn’t Live Without
* May 10: 50-Year Mortgages
* May 11: Latest ShareBuilder Promotion
* May 12: Fidelity Study Says People Need Their Service
* May 15: Looking for Apartments, Update 2
* May 15: The Cost of Raising a Teenager

Here are some from May 8-15, 2005:

* May 9: Be Aware of ATM Card Skimming
* May 11: Working Class Millionaires
* May 12: Is the MBA Worthwhile?

Don’t forget to subscribe to the Consumerism Commentary RSS feed so you don’t miss any tasty bits. If you’re not familiar with RSS, here’s more info about subscribing.

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I saw this tidbit thanks to pfblogs.org and the Japan Stock Blog, part of the Seeking Alpha Network.

Ever since the two next-generation video disc formats, Blu-Ray and HD-DVD were announced, I was pulling for Sony‘s Blu-Ray to come out on top, simply because it allowed for more storage space and fewer security features.

Sony is now counting on the success of The Da Vinci Code (produced by Sony) to propel the format. The movie will be the first major title to be released on Blu-Ray discs.

While you may not be ready to buy a Blu-Ray disc player, a large number of households will own Sony’s PlayStation 3, which is built with Blu-Ray compatibility.

On the other hand, Microsoft is getting behind the HD-DVD format. The company’s upcoming operating system Vista, will support this format. If Blu-Ray takes off in popularity before the operating system is released, hopefully Microsoft will see the need to support the Sony format as well.

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PlayStation 3 Plus Or Minus $596: My Generation Just Sighed

by Flexo

My video-game-playing friends must be hoping this is a hoax or a tease. The new Sony PlayStation 3 will reportedly cost $499 or $599, depending on the size of the included hard drive. It certainly comes packed with features: The PlayStation 3 is powered by the “Cell” processor, which Sony boasts makes the machine 35 ... Continue reading this article…

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