NO BRAINER
FLASH SALE

If this green logo is next to a product, you'll save even more. But hurry...the sale can end in a flash!
NoBrainerBargains Archive Page
Thursday, March 20, 2008
We thought it would be fun to show this sneak peek of what the next Elmo doll will be able to do. Clearly, this one makes the others seem, well, limiting.



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Monday, March 17, 2008
The chase is on. We're not talking about the number of golf tournament victories that Tiger Woods has now under his belt, tying Ben Hogan and surpassing Arnold Palmer. Nor are we talking about how many majors Tiger Woods needs to have the most by any golfer in the history of the sport or the fact that Tiger is the most dominating athlete in any sport right now.

The chase is on at the collectible level. While his autograph is skyrocketing on ebay and golf collectible websites such as Upper Deck, there is a collectible that is shrinking fast that still can reap rewards the more records Tiger breaks: Upper Deck Golf Cards.

About a couple of years ago, Upper Deck announced they would no longer be making golf cards. No one else produced these cards and no one has since then.

Golf cards were made from 2001 through 2005 by Upper Deck. Thanks to basic economic principles, the value of these cards have gone up. Soon after the announcement, we bought a sealed hobby box of 2001 Upper Deck SP Authentic that features Tiger Woods sequentially-numbered autographed rookie cards for $55. Today this sealed box containing 24 packs of golf cards is valued at $250.

While the packs of cards we are now offering on our website are not from this hobby box, they are from 2001 and are retail packs but have the same odds as the 2001 Upper Deck Golf hobby packs. No Brainer Bargains is offering lots of 10 sealed packs, each pack containing 5 cards at only $5.99 per lot.


2001 Upper Deck Golf is the only place to find the true Tiger Woods rookie card. This card product is loaded with inserts, great autographs and shirt cards. Not to mention other rookies such as David Duval and Sergio Garcia.

Here are the odds for the insert cards:

Tiger's Tales 1:1 pack
Stat Leaders 1:8 packs
National Heroes 1:12 packs
Golf Gallery 1:24 packs
Autographed Golf Gallery - numbered to 50
Player's Ink Autographs 1:3000 packs
Player's Ink Gold Autographs - numbered to 25
Tour Threads shirt card 1:288 packs
Tour Gear shirt and hat card - numbered to 50
Making the Cut autograph - 4 total cards made

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Friday, March 14, 2008
We are having our first flash sale right now for the Griffin Tunebuds for the 1st Generation Ipod Nano. The sale price is reduced to $1.99 for a limited time.

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During graduate school, while my dad was working on his dissertation, he would store his penciled pages in a file box that he lined with asbestos and kept the box in his refrigerator. It was the best thing he could do in case there was a fire and it gave him peace of mind.

Fifty years later, we are still trying to find peace of mind when preserving what we write in a computer. We hear horror stories of computers crashing, hard drives going awry and viruses that prevent us from accessing what we consider a daily part of our lives.

Since owning our first computers we are left to our own devices to figure out how and when we should back-up our computers so that "saving" becomes another part of our daily lives. We started with floppy disks, flimsy as 45 record sleeves followed by a smaller, hard-plastic version that boasted more memory capacity. This was followed by the CD that had even more storage capactiy for our dissertations and novels. But thanks to the ever-growing memory demands of today's software programs, even that 700 Megabyte disk can sometimes be inadequate if not confusing to "burn."


One thing is clear when it comes to backing up our data: the device needs to be easily accessible and almost fool-proof. And for the purpose of this blog entry, a "no-brainer."

Enter the flash drive memory stick. It looks like a stick of gum but thicker and and it sometimes has a cap as if it were a pen. It connects to your computer the same way most things do nowadays, via the USB port. When you insert this stick into the port, your computer quickly identifies it as an external drive and it's just a matter of copying files you want saved and using the paste command to transfer them into this flash drive.

The available flash sticks on the market have an impressive range of memory from as low as 128 megabytes all the way up to 16 gigabytes.

Remarkably, you can't tell their storage capacity at first glance. They all look relatively the same in length and width whether they are less than a gigabyte or multiple gigabytes.

No Brainer Bargains is offering a flash memory stick with 8 gigabytes. We think it will be awhile before this memory device will be left in your basement collecting dust, awhile before your computer tells you the stick isn't large enough in memory to save what you want backed-up and awhile before something the size of your molar goes on the market with the claim that it will save your entire hard-drive in under 4 seconds.

Our memory stick is black and swivels into a silver-metal casing and is attached to a keychain for your convenience.

It is compatible with Windows XP, 2000 Professional or Home Edition, Windows Me, Windows 98, and Mac OS 9 or higher.

It is probably the best and easiest external memory device you can use to save your data and get into the habit of preventing data loss.

It is available at No Brainer Bargains here.




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Thursday, March 13, 2008
When you were 9 years old, on a Saturday morning you would turn on the television in your home and flip through the dial until you found a cartoon to watch. If it was 1973, you might have found this:



If you liked dogs, this would have been a wonderful show to watch, especially if you liked the most famous American canine, Lassie.

When Lassie's Rescue Rangers aired, Lassie was already part of the vernicular of American culture to mean loyalty, friendship, helpfulness and a best friend for any boy or girl growing up.

From 1954 to March of 1973, the television show Lassie touched viewers across generations until it was taken off the air. In 1972, the ABC network aired the Filmation movie The ABC Saturday Superstar Movie: Lassie and the Spirit of Thunder Mountain. In 1973, Lassie's Rescue Rangers followed as a spin-off from this movie.

Each episode depicted the Turner family (Ben, Laura, Jackie, Susan and Ben Jr, the youngest) and Lassie saving Thunder Mountain park and its visitors with their Rescue 1 helicopter. Helping the Turner family and Lassie were the Rescue Rangers, they were a group of eight animals, including Groucho the Owl, Old Toothless the Mountain Lion, Musty the skunk, and Robbie the Raccoon. Also of great value to the Forest Force was Gene Fox, a Native American, who was Ben Jr.’s friend. Gene knew the Thunder Mountain National Park better than even most of the animals, making him a strong ally for the Turner family as they struggled to protect the environment and save lives.




While supply lasts, No Brainer Bargains is featuring more than 50 animation cels from this television show depicting a scene involving the main characters in action. Each comes with an accompanying background production page that was used in the making of the cartoon.

An animation cel (short for celluloid) is a transparent sheet in which characters or objects are drawn or painted to make a cartoon. The character is hand-painted on the sheet and placed over a scene or background. Usually a painted cel is just one of thousands that are used to make a cartoon. This process was modus operandus in animation studios until computers assisted in the process starting in the 1990s.

Each of the cels we have available for sale are 10.5 x 12 inches and the background page that accompanies each cel is approximately 11 x 17. Each purchase includes the background page with the cel. Each background page and cel remain joined together as they had been thirty-five years ago by scotch tape during production of the cartoon.

For some of the cels that have close-ups of the character or show a character in motion, there are three cels that look like one, the finished product. These layers show how a character was created in production- one for the body, one for the character's facial outline and hair and one for the facial features.

Each cel has its own certificate of authenticity in the form of a sticker that is on the cel itself. Your purchase will be shipped in a sturdy flat envelope first class.


We hope you will agree that these animation cels will make a great addition to you or a Lassie fan you know and will bring that person back, if not ephemerally, to when they were 9 years old again.

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Tuesday, March 11, 2008
Thank you for visiting our website!

We will be updating our blog to keep you up-to-date on new arrivals, reviews of new products, website improvements and a whole lot more.

We welcome your comments to our blog entries.

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