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  • Wednesday, 19 December 2012

    TONERNEWS.COM FOR TODAY / 12- 19 -2012

    Thank's to Clover, Here's Why There's a War Over Your Empty Cartridge

    First came gold and then came clunkers. Now there is cash for cartridges.
    Clover Technologies Group LLC, the world's largest remanufacturer of printer cartridges, can no longer rely on places like OfficeMax Inc. and Staples Inc. to collect and supply it with used cartridges. So Hoffman Estates-based Clover recently launched Evolve Recycling, a company with the sole purpose of gathering secondhand cartridges directly from consumers...Read More

    Former HP CEO Throws Chairman Ray Lane Under The Bus

    The furor over HP's $8.8 billion writedown of its $11.1 billion acquisition of Autonomy refuses to die down.
    HP blamed $5 billion of the writedown on accounting fraud at Autonomy. CEO Meg Whitman also singled out two HP executives for blame, former CEO Apotheker and former chief strategy officer, Shane Robison.
    And now Apotheker is joing the fray, trying to clear his name.
    In email to a reporter, he says you have to start the blame game at the top: with HP's board and its executive chairman, Ray Lane....Read More

    Apple Suddenly Spending Billion$ On Secret Projects ...

    In the quarter ending June 2011, Apple spent less than $1 billion on property, plants, and equipment.
    By March 2012, the number had spiked beyond $2 billion, beyond $3 billion, and approached $4 billion.
    Horace Dediu thinks that number will zoom past $4 billion in 2013.
    Here's a chart he made to show what the spike looks like so far:                                
    Here's the the interesting part about all this massive spending.
    No one outside of Apple knows where it's going....Read More

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    S.Korea Says Samsung Chip Plant Causes Cancer

    By YOUKYUNG LEE
    AP Business Writer
    SEOUL, South Korea (AP) -- A South Korean government agency said Friday that working at a Samsung Electronics factory caused the breast cancer of a worker who died earlier this year, only the second time it has recognized a link between cancer and Samsung's chip plants.
    The Korea Workers' Compensation and Welfare Service, which is part of the labor ministry, ruled earlier this month that there was a "considerable causal relationship" between the woman's cancer and her five years of work at a semiconductor plant near Seoul. The ruling didn't become public until Friday when the agency announced compensation for the woman's family....Read More

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