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LG Optimus T budget Android phone comes to T-Mobile

If this little puppy looks familiar, well, it should — it’s basically an Americanized version of the Optimus One announced earlier this year. In that regard, T-Mobile’s Optimus T is a bit of an anti- myTouch — a relatively low-end Android smartphone fit for the masses with a 3.2-inch HVGA display (touted as being fashioned of tempered glass), a 3 megapixel cam with video capture, Froyo , and Swype pre-installed. As you can see from the press shot up there, the UI isn’t quite stock — but happily, it doesn’t look like LG has done anything too egregious to muck it up. LG Optimus T budget Android phone comes to T-Mobile originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 06 Oct 2010 17:15:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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Logitech Revue and accessories hands-on! (Update: video of video calling!)

We just got some serious hands-on time with the Logitech Revue Google TV box, and it’s all pretty slick, hardware-wise. The Keyboard and Mini Controller are just as well-done as you’d expect from Logitech, and the video calling features worked pretty seamlessly. We also managed to confirm that the Dish Network DVR integration is exclusive to Logitech — it won’t work on Sony Google TV devices, which is totally strange. We’re headed back for video and we’ll have some more in-depth impressions in a bit, but check out the pretty pictures in the galleries below for now. Update : Dish and Google have both chimed in to clarify the “exclusive” deal. While Dish will exclusively sell Logitech’s Google TV hardware, any other devices, including the ones from Sony, will pair with its DVRs in exactly the same way. Fragmentation (apparently) avoided — for now. Gallery: Logitech Revue Google TV box Gallery: Logitech Revue Video Camera hands-on! Gallery: Logitech Revue Mini Controller hands-on! Continue reading Logitech Revue and accessories hands-on! (Update: video of video calling!) Logitech Revue and accessories hands-on! (Update: video of video calling!) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 06 Oct 2010 16:57:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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Californians Strongly Oppose Effort to Kill Climate Law: New Poll

Photo via Public CEO It looks like Prop 23, the oil industry-sponsored initiative to kill AB 32, California’s groundbreaking climate law, just isn’t cutting it with voters. A recent poll shows that Californians oppose Prop 23 by a margin of 12%. Which is great news — it shows that Californians aren’t buying the bogus arguments and

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Bus Roots: Public Bus Doubles as Mobile Green Roof

Image: Marco Castro Cosio Here’s some food for thought: what would you get if you combined the benefits of public transportation with that of a green roof? Well, you might end up with Bus Roots , a mobile, people-transporting green roof that could potentially add a lot more green space to New York City and beyond…. Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Sony slips out second generation TransferJet chip, partners begin to take notice

Bless its heart. Regardless of how loudly consumers yell, Sony can’t seem to understand that creating proprietary formats that no other company has any interest in adopting isn’t the brightest of ideas. The eventual fates of UMD , ATRAC , MiniDisc and countless others are proof of the outfit’s ignorance, but somehow or another, it seem as if TransferJet has a modicum of a chance to gain some traction. Nearly a year after outing its first generation TransferJet chip , Sony is using CEATEC to spring its second generation one into action. From what we can tell, the primary addition to this chip is its native compatibility with USB 2.0 and PCI Express, with hardware and software improvements credited with an effective data transmission boost to somewhere north of 300Mbps. Potentially more interesting, however, is the lower power draw, which could lead to TransferJet embeds within smartphones, tablets, netbooks and other low-cost mobile computers. Across the pond(s) in Tokyo, Toshiba has been caught showing off a TransferJet SD card that could allow a potentially wider swath of devices to support Sony’s wireless protocol, although the hardware typically has to be designed specifically to not interfere with the chip’s ultra short-range transmissions, and software drivers have to be built as well — not even all of Sony’s new Cyber-shots support its existing TransferJet Memory Stick. We’ll be digging for more details (ship date, price, etc.) just as soon as we can. Sony slips out second generation TransferJet chip, partners begin to take notice originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 06 Oct 2010 16:49:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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Spitzer: Tea Party Endorses ‘Path of Hoover,’ Will ‘Destroy Our Country’

CNN’s new host Eliot Spitzer slammed the Tea Party movement on Tuesday’s Parker-Spitzer: ” I think that that piece of the Republican Party is vapid. It has no ideas …. They’re going to destroy our country .” Spitzer also accused Tea Party members of forwarding a ” Herbert Hoover vision of government …saying, we want to take away the very pieces of government that created the middle class .” The former New York governor of “Client Number Nine” infamy launched his attack on the nascent political movement minutes into the 8 pm Eastern, as he and his co-host, Kathleen Parker, discussed Delaware Republican Senate candidate Christine O’Donnell’s new ad. After listing what he thought was positive about O’Donnell and her ad, Spitzer gave his “vapid” remark about the Tea Party and made his first mention of former President Hoover: SPITZER: Now, here’s where I completely part company with her [Christine O'Donnell]. I think that the Tea Party- I think that that piece of the Republican Party is vapid. It has no ideas. It will lead us down a dangerous road. Remember Herbert Hoover? Now, we don’t remember him- president during the Depression. That’s where they’re taking us . They’re going to destroy our country, but that is an appealing ad. Moments later, Spitzer further explained his Hoover point, continuing his attack on the movement: SPITZER: There’s also something much deeper going on here, and this is what really does trouble me. We are at a fork in the road. One direction is down towards the path of Hoover , that she [O'Donnell] represents. The other path is of a smart government that believes in markets and competition, but a government that builds the foundation, so we as a nation can compete again overseas , and that’s not what she gets…I don’t think the Tea Party has created anything meaningful , so we as a nation can build jobs and compete in this era. The two host then brought on The Nation’s Katrina vanden Heuvel and Reihan Salam of National Review. Unsurprisingly, Vanden Heuvel joined Spitzer in attacking the Tea Party. Parker, to her credit, mounted a defense of the movement, while her co-host returned to his earlier Hoover attack: VANDEN HEUVEL: …You have to look at the values these people are espousing- the Tea Party. They want to gut Medicare. They want to end a minimum wage . I think these are the real issues of our time, and not whether she’s a witch- PARKER: I don’t think they really want to do all that. I think they want to do some- yeah, they want to do some cutting, and they want to stop some spending, and they want to keep government from expanding – VANDEN HEUVEL: That is witchcraft that I don’t believe in, and that is witchcraft I will never- to my last breath. PARKER: That is witchcraft? Okay, I am a witch . (laughs) SPITZER: No- look, I’m with Katrina. I’m with Katrina, because I think the reason they need to, sort of run on the vapid claims about less government equals more freedom, is because, at its root, what they are going back to is a Herbert Hoover vision of government- pre-FDR- saying, we want to take away the very pieces of government that created the middle class . VANDEN HEUVEL: Yes- REIHAN SALAM: Eliot, I have a ton of respect for you, but I have to say- SPITZER: You can stop right there. (laughs) SALAM: I will give you a very simple, simple fact. In Western Europe, broadly understood, you have about the same amount of tax revenue generated on a per capita basis as in the United States. But in the United States, we have a much lower tax burden. So, how is it that you’re generating same amount of money in both places? And when you’re talking about Herbert Hoover and FDR and what have you, the fact is that we live in a very different world now, and this entails different economic strategies. VANDEN HEUVEL: Reihan, I wish we did live in a different world. But I do believe that the right wing today is still animated by a desire to roll back the New Deal, and those core elements which built a strong middle class in this country, and the architect of the pieces which create a middle class. And I have to say that I see nothing in the Tea Party or the Republicans today except retro, old ideas, which are about deregulating government, which are about cutting taxes for the very rich, and which would put us back in the mess we were in . In reality, Herbert Hoover was an advocate in government intervention in the areas of incomes and unemployment. UCLA’s Lee E. Ohanian pointed this out in his 2009 study of wages from the time of the beginning of the Great Depression, and concluded that Hoover’s “propping up [of] wages” and other interventionist policies ” accounted for close to two-thirds of the drop in the nation’s gross domestic product ” between 1929 and 1931. Andrew B Wilson, in a November 4, 2008 column in the Wall Street Journal , also pointed out that under Hoover, ” federal spending soared between 1929 and 1932 — increasing by more than 50%, the biggest increase in federal spending ever recorded during peacetime.” These are not positions that the Tea Party movement advocates. An earlier 2004 study by Ohanian and Howard L. Cole concluded that ” New Deal policies signed into law 71 years ago thwarted economic recovery for seven long years .” Despite all of this, leftists like Spitzer and vanden Heuvel blindly continue to mouth talking points about conservatives wanting to overturn the supposedly great New Deal and bring the country back to Hoover.

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Gloria Allred, who violated any number of ethical standards for lawyers when she exposed her illegal alien client to publicity and possible deportation, refuses to give any details about how she became involved in the jihad against Meg Whitman : Republican Meg Whitman’s former maid said Tuesday she’s not a Democratic pawn in California’s race for governor, but her attorney refused again to provide key details about her claims that Whitman employed her for nearly a decade despite knowing she was in the U.S. illegally. Nicky Diaz Santillan, a Mexican who Whitman says used a fraudulently obtained Social Security card and California driver’s license, dismissed claims by the GOP nominee that she was part of a Democratic smear intended to damage Whitman’s standing with voters, particularly Latinos. “I make my own decisions and I am not anyone’s puppet,” Diaz Santillan said in a prepared statement she read at the Los Angeles office of her attorney, Gloria Allred. “Nobody made me do it.” Allred, who has longtime Democratic ties and donated money to Brown when he ran for attorney general , has yet to disclose details about how she became involved in the case or disclose who, if anyone, is picking up the bill for her legal work. Allred says Diaz Santillan was referred to her by another lawyer, whom she will not name. Allred didn’t answer directly when asked if that lawyer had ties to Whitman’s opponent, Democrat Jerry Brown, or his Democratic allies. Allred also sidestepped a question about whether she had any contact with labor unions working to get Brown elected. Diaz Santillan has not taken a single question from reporters during three public appearances since last week. If Allred had limited Santillan’s appearances to one press conference she might have had some credibility. Two appearances showed a story that had real weaknesses, and the third appearance yesterday was out of desperation. The story just isn’t flying and with every appearance both lawyer and client’s credibility takes a hit. The whole thing is a set-up from the start, and if we had an actual objective press it would be completely ignored.

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Wind Power Too Loud for Maine Residents (Video)

Photo via Wind Watch The complaints you hear about wind turbines installed near people’s homes run a predictable gamut: They’re too ugly, too big, or yes, too noisy. Because renewable energy sources are gaining in prominence and are still mildly controversial in some regards, these complaints make for popular stories in the media. They’re are often treated with a ‘what are the costs of clean energy?’ angle. Take, for instance, this video on the front page of the Ne… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Motorola suing Apple for patent infringement

It’s getting hard to keep track of, isn’t it? The way we hear it told, most of these patent disputes and overlaps in the mobile space used to be settled in quiet ways, mutually assured destruction-style, but lately there’s a whole lot of nukes going off . Motorola is now suing Apple over a wide range of technology patents which it claims Apple is infringing on with its iPhone, iPad, “iTouch,” and even some Macs. The company is leveling three complaints which include 18 patents on “early-stage innovations” by Motorola, covering a pretty wide swath of the mobile landscape, including WCDMA, GPRS, 802.11, antenna design, wireless email, proximity sensing, software application management, location-based services and multi-device synchronization. Outside of the devices, Apple’s MobileMe and App Store services get called out specifically. At the end of its press release Motorola makes a very similar claim to the one Nokia made at the outset of its own lawyer salvo against Apple: We have extensively licensed our industry-leading intellectual property portfolio, consisting of tens of thousands of patents in the U.S. and worldwide. After Apple’s late entry into the telecommunications market, we engaged in lengthy negotiations, but Apple has refused to take a license. We had no choice but to file these complaints to halt Apple’s continued infringement. We’ll of course be digging deeper as we get more info, and covering the blow by blow with perhaps just a little too much enthusiasm. Oh, and before you go, riddle us this: do you think this is a preemptive strike on Motorola’s part, afraid of another Android-related lawsuit from Apple, or has Apple been holding off for precisely the threat this lawsuit represents? Or maybe Moto’s still mad about that antenna thing ? Perhaps we’ll never know. Continue reading Motorola suing Apple for patent infringement Motorola suing Apple for patent infringement originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 06 Oct 2010 16:03:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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Google and Hulu in talks about Google TV integration

Not a ton of details on this one, but Logitech’s Junien Labrousse just responded to a question about possible Hulu integration in Google TV by saying that while Hulu is now actually blocking the box, Google and Hulu are currently in talks about bringing the service to Google TV — and, well, that’s about it. Missed out on the event? Be sure to check out our liveblog and our coverage of Logitech’s complete Google TV lineup . Google and Hulu in talks about Google TV integration originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 06 Oct 2010 16:02:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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