Especially if you have a Sears card.

Possibly HOT HDTV deals: Sears Friends and Family/V.I.P. sale 11/11

LG 37″ LCD: 900-50-MIR = 850-85MIR = 765
Sony 37″ LCD: 1000-5%-50-MIR = 900-90MIR = 810
Samsung 40″ LCD: 1200-5%-150-MIR = 990-MIR = 891
Toshiba 42″ 1080p LCD: 1250-5%-150-MIR = 1037.50-103.75MIR = 933.75
LG 42″ plasma: 900-150-MIR = 750-75MIR = 675
Samsung 50″ plasma: 1400-5%-250-MIR = 1080-108MIR = 972
Samsung 46″ 1080p LCD: 2000-5%-150-MIR = 1750-175MIR = 1575
Proscan 42″ 1080p LCD: 900-150-MIR = 750-75MIR = 675
Samsung 61″ 1080p DLP projection: 2000-5%-250-MIR = 1650-165MIR = 1485
Sony 46″ LCD: 1500-5%-250-MIR = 1175-117.50MIR = 1057.5
Sony 50″ 1080p projection LCD: 1400-5%-250-MIR = 1080-108MIR = 972
Panasonic 26″ LCD: 650-50-MIR = 600-60MIR = 540
Samsung 19″ LCD: 330-50-MIR = 280-28MIR = 252

Doorbusters using the “after noon” price
46″ Sharp LCD: 1200-5%-150-MIR = 990-99MIR = 891
40″ Sony 1080p LCD: 1700-5%-150-MIR = 1465-146.5MIR = 1318.50
42″ Sylvania 1080p LCD: 1000-5%-150-MIR = 800-80MIR = 720
56″ Panasonic 1080p LCD projection: 1500-5%-250-MIR = 1175-117.50MIR = 1057.50
32″ Vizio ($598) LCD: 630-50-MIR = 580-58MIR = 522

I don’t know how exactly to categorize Stephen Fry. He does a bit of everything – comedian, actor, director, author – and he does them all wittily and well. He has now started a tech blog for The Guardian; here’s a sample that demonstrates his polymathic interests:

Well, people can be dippy about all things digital and still read books, they can go to the opera and watch a cricket match and apply for Led Zeppelin tickets without splitting themselves asunder. Very little is as mutually exclusive as we seem to find it convenient to imagine. In our culture we are becoming more and more fixated with an “it’s one thing or the other” mentality. You like Thai food? But what’s wrong with Italian? Woah, there…calm down. I like both. Yes. It can be done. I can like rugby football and the musicals of Stephen Sondheim. High Victorian Gothic and the installations of Damien Hirst. Herb Alpert’s Tijuana Brass and the piano works of Hindemith. English hymns and Richard Dawkins. First editions of Norman Douglas and iPods. Snooker, darts and ballet. Such a list isn’t a boast, it doesn’t make one an all-rounder to rival Michelangelo, it’s how humans are constructed. Adaptable, varied, versatile. So, believe me, a love of gizmos doesn’t make me averse to paper, leather and wood, old-fashioned Christmases, Preston Sturges films and country walks. Nor does it automatically mean I read Terry Pratchett, breathe only through my mouth and bring my head slightly too close to the bowl when I eat soup. (None of the above, I grant you, excuses a 50-year-old for saying that anything “rocks his world”; that’s just too horrid and must stop.)

As the man says, read the whole thing.

Consumer spending slows in September
(AP)
:

AP – Consumers, battered by a steep downturn in housing and a severe credit crunch, slowed spending growth in September to the weakest performance in three months.

But in actuality, spending *grew* in September by 0.3%; the *rate* of growth is what dropped, since spending grew by 0.4% in the previous month. The article later mentions that inflation was up only 0.2% for September, that the previous week’s new unemployment claims dropped more than were expected, at that the rate of growth of the economy for the July-September quarter was 3.9%, stronger than expected.

So, lots of good news, and the headline focuses where?