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Le mini PC ZOTAC de 8,5L avec une véritable GeForce RTX 5070 Ti arrive en boutique

Thibaut vous l'avait brièvement présenté en amont du Computex 2025 au mois de mai, mais nous n'avions pas eu trop l'occasion de reparler sur H&Co du ZOTAC ZBOX MAGNUS ONE EU27507TC. Il faut dire qu'il s'est ensuite fait plus que discret (on va même dire inexistant) dans le commerce et une autre...

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104° - Lot de 4 Apple AirTags (Vendeur Tiers)

27,98€ - PcComponentes

Marque Apple
Des piles sont-elles incluses ? Oui
Matériau Acrylonitrile butadiène styrène (ABS)
Nombre de batteries 1 CR5 - incluse(s)
Appar...
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Denmark Posts Its Last Letters as Hallowed National Mail Ends

Denmark's postal service, established by King Christian IV four centuries ago as one of Europe's first modern mail systems, will stop delivering letters on December 30, ending a tradition that once saw riders given a maximum of 45 minutes to cover each 10-kilometer stretch of routes running from Hamburg to Norway. PostNord, the postal service Denmark has shared with Sweden since 2009, started removing its 1,500 remaining red post boxes in June; a handful will go to museums. Letter volumes collapsed from nearly 1.5 billion in 2000 to 110 million last year. A standard stamp now costs 29 Danish kroner ($4.52). A private logistics firm called DAO will take over letter delivery. PostNord will continue handling parcels. The decision has rattled postal services elsewhere in Europe. Deutsche Post in Germany, still delivering 61 million letters daily, has warned it faces the same trends.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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How the Dollar-Store Industry Overcharges Cash-Strapped Customers While Promising Low Prices

Dollar General and Family Dollar stores have collectively failed more than 6,400 government price-accuracy inspections since January 2022, charging customers more at checkout than the prices displayed on shelves for everything from frozen pizzas to puppy food, according to an investigation by the Guardian. The review examined records from 45 states and more than 140 counties and cities. Dollar General stores failed over 4,300 inspections across 23 states, and Family Dollar failed more than 2,100 in 20 states. Error rates at the worst-performing locations reached staggering levels -- 76% at a Dollar General in Hamilton, Ohio and 68% at a Family Dollar in Bound Brook, New Jersey. A Family Dollar in Provo, Utah failed 28 consecutive inspections. Industry watchers, employees and lawsuits attribute the discrepancies to minimal staffing. Registers update automatically when prices change, but shelf labels require manual replacement, and workers often lack the time. State attorneys general have pursued settlements -- Arizona reached a $600,000 deal with Family Dollar in May, Colorado settled with Dollar General for $400,000 in October and Ohio secured $1 million from Dollar General after finding error rates as high as 88%. Both companies declined interview requests but said they remain committed to pricing accuracy.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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