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Are We Oversnacking Our Kids? PDF Print E-mail
Written by 3K Admin   
Monday, 06 December 2010 22:10
By Matt Gross/DadWagon.com Thursday, December 2, 2010


Yesterday, I thought I was being really smart. In the late afternoon, I'd happened into a chic, newish Park Slope coffee shop, Venticinque, and as I was ordering a little pick-me-up, I spotted something on the counter: chocolate-chip cookies, $1 apiece.

Now, I wasn't particularly hungry, but they might be just the thing to give to my 2-year-old daughter, Sasha, when I picked her up from daycare in an hour. Three stops on the subway may not seem like much, but that kid can get jumpy and cranky fast. A cookie, however unhealthful, could keep her occupied. Maybe. (More on Time.com: "Mompetition": Why You Just Can't Make Mom Friends)

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Oops, your money has been 'phish-ed'! PDF Print E-mail
Written by 3K Admin   
Saturday, 23 January 2010 05:35

 

Yu Kin Len | Jan 22, 10 4:11pm

Recently, I have received a number of e-mails from different banks that asked me to update my personal details to reactivate my online banking account which had been frozen due to certain reasons.

Some e-mails asked me to do a certain survey for which they would reward me with RM200 and some even requested to use my bank account for money transactions for which I would be paid some substantial amount of money. All those e-mails needed me to key in my personal details such as my online banking account user name and password. I realized that these are those phishing e-mails which try to ‘phish away’ my money.

Last Updated on Saturday, 23 January 2010 05:38
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Hoping for a good deal out of a taxing issue PDF Print E-mail
Written by 3K Admin   
Saturday, 23 January 2010 01:25

 

Saturday January 16, 2010
By CECILIA KOK


SINCE the idea of implementing the goods and services tax (GST) in Malaysia was revived by the Government two months ago, many questions have been raised by various industry and consumer groups as to how the new regime will affect their interests.

Apart from the information in the GST Bill, few details of the new tax have been announced, but the Government has made a commitment to make the GST system a win-win solution. The tax will likely be enforced about 18 months after the second reading of the bill scheduled for March in parliament.

Last Updated on Saturday, 23 January 2010 01:34
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Report: Fast-Food Chains Increase Targeting Our Kids PDF Print E-mail
Written by 3K Admin   
Thursday, 11 November 2010 04:01

(Nov. 8) -- You might have thought that with all the finger-pointing and concerns over childhood plumpness, America's fast- food industry would be trying to reduce the gut-busting, calorie-loaded, fat-filled offerings on their menus and the kid-targeted advertising.

Not so, say researchers from Yale University's Rudd Center for Food Policy & Obesity who released today what they say is the "most comprehensive study of fast-food nutrition and marketing ever conducted."

The researchers studied marketing efforts of 12 of the nation's largest fast-food chains, and examined the calories, fat, sugar and sodium in more than 3,000 kids' meal combinations and 2,781 menu items.

Last Updated on Thursday, 11 November 2010 04:06
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The Most Cyber-Sociable Country: Malaysia PDF Print E-mail
Written by 3K Admin   
Thursday, 21 October 2010 04:26

 

By: Frances Perraudin

An American may have invented Facebook, but when it comes to social networking, we can't touch Malaysia.

A new study, conducted by the research firm TNS, interviewed 50,000 consumers in 46 countries to investigate their cyber-socializing habits. The results showed that where Malaysians have the most friends on their social networks, Japanese people have the fewest. In Malaysia the average number of digital friends is 233, closely followed by 231 in Brazil and 217 in Norway. This is compared to just 12 friends in Japan, and 68 in China. The results could suggest “a culture that embraces fewer but closer friendships,” said TNS's chief development officer Matthew Froggatt, reported the BBC.

However, as well as having most friends, Malaysians were also the heaviest users of social networking sites, spending a whopping nine hours per week on average communicating with their hoards of online friends. Russia came a close second, with its people spending an average 8.1 hours per week online, and Turkey third with 7.7 hours a week.

So, perhaps being cyber-sociable doesn't necessarily mean you're particularly sociable in real life.


Source: http://newsfeed.time.com/2010/10/11/the-most-cyber-sociable-country-malaysia/?artId=?contType=?chn=#ixzz12t2CIliM

Last Updated on Thursday, 21 October 2010 04:29
 
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