![]() Standard & Poor's and S&P are registered trademarks of Standard & Poor's Financial Services LLC and Dow Jones is a registered trademark of Dow Jones Trademark Holdings LLC. Dow Jones: The Dow Jones branded indices are proprietary to and are calculated, distributed and marketed by DJI Opco, a subsidiary of S&P Dow Jones Indices LLC and have been licensed for use to S&P Opco, LLC and CNN. Chicago Mercantile Association: Certain market data is the property of Chicago Mercantile Exchange Inc. Market indices are shown in real time, except for the DJIA, which is delayed by two minutes. "Word is," whispered Venture Beat, "Wired is looking at him, for potential hire." SiliconValley Watcher, for its part was magnanimous toward the axed editor: "Nick Douglas did a fine job with ValleyWag although by the time he left he had burnt quite a few bridges/contacts." One thought for publisher Denton: maybe the reason Valleywag has not commanded quite the mindshare of the other Gawker properties is simply that the supply of tech blogs far outstrips the demand. "Valleywag, now with less wag," quipped Good Morning Silicon Valley. Naturally, a gaggle of tech blogs are salivating at the news. Anyway, more money, a little less sex: that is Valleywag's new gossip mantra." "I suspect we're going to tone down the personal coverage of civilians," wrote Denton, "because they haven't done anything to seek out attention, and their personal lives aren't that interesting. Why the staffing change? Douglas dug up too much gossip for the geeks. Meanwhile, Denton has anointed himself the new, more puritan-like Nick. He also posted a Help Wanted plea for a new editor - "someone with, ideally, some background in reporting," wrote Denton. Gawker Media founder and publisher Nick Denton timed the ousting to coincide with a new design for the site. Apparently, the Valley has a limited appetite for salaciousness and Douglas, all of 22 years-old, overindulged. Actually, The Browser slightly exaggerates: One head rolled - that of Nick Douglas, Valleywag's founding editor. Amazon’s Black Friday week starts on 17 November.Heads rolled yesterday at Valleywag, the Silicon Valley gossip site that blog king Gawker Media launched earlier this year.Argos has a price promise that the prices won’t go any lower for Black Friday.Currys has up to 40% off for Black Friday.John Lewis is running Black Friday deals.eBuyer has a Black Friday Early Access Sale with up to 45% off.Laptops Direct’s Black Friday sale has started. AO.com has various Black Friday savings.KRCS has already reduced Mac prices by 10%.Walmart’s Black Friday deals have already started.B&H Photo has a Holiday Head Start sale.Best Buy’s Black Friday sale has started.Which resellers have the best Cyber Monday deals? Alogic, Alogic Clarity 27″ UHD 4K Monitor: £525 (£175 off, RRP £699) with code BK25.Alogic, Alogic Clarity Pro Touchscreen 27″ UHD 4K Monitor: £749 (£250 off, RRP £999) with code BK25.Amazon, Samsung 32-inch UHD HDR Smart Monitor M8: $400 ($300 off with coupon, MSRP $700).Alogic, Clarity 27″ UHD 4K Monitor: $599 ($200 off, RRP $799) with code BK25.Alogic, Clarity Pro Touchscreen 27″ UHD 4K Monitor: $899 ($300 off, RRP $1,199) with code BK25.If you don’t want to spend top-dollar on a new monitor, you can find one from a third-party seller that’s much cheaper-and often larger-than Apple sells. Price comparison from Backmarket Cyber Monday 2023: Best display deals in the U.S.
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