Nov 30
Nu-Kote
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Nu-Kote

Nov 30


CH44X126-450546 Range Oven Elements (GE/Hotpoint)

List Price: $10.49 Publisher: GENERIC
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  • Ge

    Nov 30


    LAB-LLP-IA - LABOR LAW POSTERS

    List Price: Publisher: Dawg, Inc.
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    Nov 29


    Xbox 360 Controller Mod Set - Ring of Light, “X” Button, and AXBY Button Mods - Wireless and Wired - Core & Premium

    List Price: Publisher: Xboxmodstores
    Salesrank: 5398
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    Platform: Xbox 360
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    Features:

  • XBOX 360 Controller FULL KIT SET!!!!! “Ring of Light”, “Button”, and “X” Button Mod!
  • PACKAGE INCLUDES
  • 1) Controller “X” Button — 4 LED’s, wire, and resistor
  • 2) Controller “Ring of Light” (Surrounding “X” Button)
  • 3) Controller “Button” Mod (A,X,B,Y)

  • Nov 29


    Anti-Racist Action Benefit
    by V

    List Price: $12.98 Publisher: Asian Man
    Salesrank: 290089
    Released: 1999-02-10
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    Tracklisting:
    1. minutes

    Customer Reviews:
    GREAT
    GREA

    Nov 29


    Oregon Scientific BAR998HG Voice-Activated Weather Station with Self-Setting Clock

    List Price: $259.95 Publisher: Oregon Scientific
    Salesrank: 162047
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    Features:

  • Weather station; displays data on voice command
  • Crescendo alarm with snooze function
  • Sunrise, sunset, moonrise, moonset displays
  • Displays 24-hour weather forecast with graphical icons
  • Wireless, long-range, voice activated, talking weather station

    Customer Reviews:
    Nice aesthetics, so-so functionality
    I looked for a long time before selecting this unit because I wanted something that combined a lot of meaningful data in an appealing way. Many of these recently popular weather gadgets are junk and almost all are techie plastic eyesores. While this is not quite a professional instrument is appears to be very accurate as checked against local weather sources and other instruments I have. When I adjusted the altitude setting to our exact 245 feet, thank you online USGS, it nailed the barometric pressure.

    The number of features is huge and of course while that may help sell product you won’t use them all — for example, although my kids found the voice commands feature hilarious while yelling words sort of like what the box wanted, I won’t we using it much (on the other hand, for some people if may be just great). The manual is not always very clear, voice commands and setting the clock in particular took some head-scratching. (The clock is controlled by the remote which senses atomic time broadcast signals and relays them to the base.)

    The pictorial weather prediction feature appears to be only vaguely helpful (the time frame is short anyway) but is appealing. It can run off a battery for almost all features.

    Complaints: The station supports five remote sensors, and annoyingly you have to step through even the channels you aren’t using to read the one — and only one — you probably have. There are a half dozen buttons on the unit and it is tricky to use them. Although the system can calculate many things such as sunset and moonrise, it is too cumbersome to use this way often.

    Compared to the other low-price competition this is a very nice all-in-one unit, especially at a price about that I paid for a very nice analog Lufft thermo-hygrometer. I don’t expect it to last forever, but for now find it a very useful teaching tool and entertainment. And it met my primary criteria of a serious instrument that wasn’t horrible to look at. At the moment it is on loan to my son’s fourth grade class for their meterology segment — I wouldn’t have lent an expensive analog instrument!

  • Nov 28


    Peaceful Breeze Auto Air Purifier, Peacock

    List Price: $23.99 Publisher: Peaceful Breeze
    Salesrank: 133982
    Released: 2006-01-30
    Our Price: $20.22
    Availibility: 1

    Features:

  • Removes smoke and odors from your vehicle
  • Uses only 3 watts of electricity, making it highly efficient and environmentally conscious
  • Simply plug into the cigarette adaptor or 12 volt adaptor for use
  • Purifier runs whenever car is in use
  • Attractive silver shell and peacock shape looks great in any car interior

  • Nov 28


    Fray Block 1 1/2 Ounces

    List Price: Publisher: Jo-Ann
    Salesrank: 99657
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    Features:

  • Great for preventing fraying on fabric and ribbon
  • Great for sealing surged thread ends
  • Dries quick, clear, soft and flexible
  • Ultra-fine precision tip.
  • Washable and dry cleanable

  • Nov 28


    Quickie Flip Lock Dustpan & Broom #429

    List Price: $19.99 Publisher: Quickie
    Salesrank: 7120
    Our Price: $19.99
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    Features:

  • flip-lock system on dust pan
  • broom nests within dust pan for hide-away storage
  • convenient swivel hang-up feature
  • oversized dust pan captures large debris

  • Nov 27


    2001: A Space Odyssey
    by S
    starring Keir Dullea, Gary Lockwood, William Sylvester, Daniel Richter, Leonard Rossiter

    List Price: $19.98 Publisher: MGM (Video & DVD)
    Salesrank: 15577
    Released: 1993-06-30
    Theatrical-Release: 1968-04-06
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    Customer Reviews:
    A classic
    2001 - A Space Odyssey, sets that standard in realism for science fiction films. The physics of the space craft and station, rotating in perfect coordination, illustrates how much attention was payed to keeping the ’science’ in science fiction.

    Perfectly scored with Copeland’s “Fanfare for the Common Man,” and filmed with dramatic and yet somehow understated camera work (a halmark of director Kubrick) it combines the hardest of science with the fanciful portrayal of humanity’s first (and ultimately meaningless) interaction with intelligence greater than our own.

    It also introduces Hal, the murderous, strangely passive super computer, represented by a simple, blinking red light that is able to portray more malice than most human actors.

    A triumphant film, boned up on real ’science,’ and with one of the most memorable villains in sci-fi film, Kubrick once again demonstrates his dominance as a director. A true classic.

    PERFECT! As good as it gets and then some
    This is, IMO, nearly a reference Blu-Ray disc.

    Okay, because the movie is 40 years old, it lacks some in the surround audio department, but it’s still very good. The Blu-Ray video rendering is absolutely stunning - deep, pure blacks in the star fields, wonderful color and contrast, very little graininess — perfect.

    This movie hasn’t looked this good since I saw it in the theaters (way back) in 1969.

    The special features (documentaries) are extensive and easy to access. Also, no “forced” movie previews when loading the disc; you go right to the main menu (still bummed on my “Pirates of the Caribbean: Black Pearl” experience).

    Buy this disc now (you know you want to).

    Honestly … Didn’t Like It
    Recently I’ve been on an old-school science fiction kick. Unbelievably, I’d never seen what some critics have called one of the greatest movies of all time–2001: A Space Odyssey. I can honestly tell you it was with great enthusiasm I put it into the DVD player.

    To say I was unimpressed would be a gross understatement. I found the movie with its lack of dialogue and ambiguous plotline rather dull. Even the score, utilizing the work of classic composers, irritated me as it didn’t seem to fit the overall mood.

    I am rationale enough to recognize that for a film made in 1968, it was probably visionary with its use of frame and special effects. Even the narrative style was probably unlike anything else out there. And, compared to most of the science fiction B-movies that were so popular near that era, it had to be a breath of fresh air. Finally, yes, the storyline was greatly open to interpretation that may lead to immense philosophical debate, but when viewed simply as a self-contained story in and of itself, it left me unsatisfied.

    I admire director Kubrick for his experimental genius and dedication to originality, but I’d be lying if I told you I enjoyed 2001: A Space Odyssey.

    ~Scott William Foley, author of Dr. Nekros: Phantasms and Chicanery (Volume I, Episode II)

    The First Truly Great Science Fiction Movie!
    There are few movies that have hooked me as much as this one. It’s such a classic that for some reason that I cannot pin down I keep returning to it at least once each year without fail. I feel strangely drawn to it from the eerie opening overture music and pure black screen meant to signify the dawn of creation on earth to the first bars of Strauss’ “Also Sprach Zarathustra” to the early humans seque-ing brilliantly to man in space, the trip to Jupiter and the super computer gone mad to the final mysterious ending signifying the wonders of the undiscovered and the awesomeness of it which would leave our jaws dropped just as this film does for me each time I watch it.

    If you are an intelligent film lover who looks beyond the quick thrill quick fix movie ala “The Mummy” and its countless sequels but look instead at good storytelling and character development as well as innovative, inspired directing so that the whole becomes a work of art to be admired and to stand the test of time, there are really not that many films in existence; this film happens to be one of those that stand the test of time to remain a work of film art to inspire and to entertain serious movie-goers for decades to come.

    Directors of note since the film’s release such as Spielberg, Lucas among many others have already heralded the genius of this film and copied elements for their own work but you don’t have to be a student of film to see just how brilliant this work of art is. You don’t simply watch this you experience it and I know each time I do, I take away something new from it and I always look forward to the next installment each year.

    Some have claimed that there is no clear story in this film but that is clearly false; there is one constant theme of the monolith and how it affected the various stages of human development suggesting it was the catalyst that got our civilisation going along the path it finally took. There are a few different mini-stories such as the early man, sickness and discovery of the monolith on the moon, the technology gone mad HAL story on the way to Jupiter and the final quest for the still unknown mysteries of space and hence the future of man i.e. the Starchild story at the end. A few mini-stories but all connected by the central theme of the monolith. What is the monolith? The religious among us may suggest that it is an analogy for God, for the atheists maybe some alien force that has an invisible hand in our species’ growth and development; for George Lucas, it is The Force and I’m sure many others can substitute their own theories for this as well.

    Why are so many younger people so upset at this film? Because in the old days of film, a good film like any good classic book or work of art doesn’t tell you what to think but inspires and encourages you to find the meaning to make yourself better than you are by getting you to actually look into yourself and to find out how much potential you have to improve. Films in the last couple of decades don’t do this as they tell you what to think and simply give you what you want effectively dumbing down things so that you don’t have the chance to improve yourself; the quick sugar fix that dies soon after the 2 or so hours are over.

    Some of you may say so what and still think “The David Letterman Show” is the epitome of great television; for you please give this and other films that are artforms such as “Lawrence of Arabia” a miss because you just won’t get it. For those who see film as art and the great potential it has to educate and to encourage you to use your full God-given potential to think and grow, this film certainly ranks among the top-10 ever of greats of filmdom.

    This dvd is also a real treat for fans as it has been restored very well with the Dolby 5.1 Digital Surround although the picture quality is quite good there are still some imperfections that can be improved upon. I can only imagine just how breathtaking the improved Blu-ray version must be. The Special Features also include excellent footage of the late great Arthur C. Clarke giving a speech and Q&A session at the opening of the film. By the way, widescreen is the only way to view this film and do any justice to it.

    Not only is this the best Sci-Fi movie I’ve ever seen, it is also among the Top-10 works of film art ever made. I cannot recommend this film highly enough and this dvd version is also of good quality although I’m sure the Blu-ray version would have removed the picture quality imperfections.

    Still a fascinating masterpiece!
    Here is a film which has sparked very little indifference since its release forty years ago. “The critics loved it / The critics hated it” became a familiar tag line to any review or conversation of Stanley Kubrick’s innovative science fiction epic. “2001″ was either a mind-blowing trip beyond the stars, or a mind-numbing trip to slumberland…depending on each individual moviegoer’s point of view.

    When I first saw this film in 1968, I experienced the conflicting feelings of fascination and utter confusion. I was, after all, only 14 years old. Later I read Arthur C. Clarke’s novel, which seemed to clarify much (but not all) of the film’s virtually subliminal narrative. Undaunted, I went to see the film again. Then again. And again and again…

    To date, I have probably viewed “2001: A Space Odyssey” at least fifty times, and I continue to discover new details and perceptions not considered before. Supported by magnificent special effects, and an esoteric but highly effective classical music track (all due respects to Alex North and his unused dramatic score), the film continues to evoke wonder, confusion, debate, argument, hope—in other words, all of the best elements which move viewers so profoundly in so many different ways, combining to make what we call “great”—truly great!!!

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