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T-Mobile no longer accepting G2 pre-orders due to ‘overwhelming demand’

Already got your pre-order in for the T-Mobile G2 ? Then you should count yourself lucky, as the carrier has updated its website for the phone with the short and sweet notice that “due to overwhelming demand, we’re no longer accepting pre-orders for the T-Mobile G2.” It does note, however, that you’ll still be able to buy the phone online starting tomorrow (though there’s no guarantee when it’ll ship) or, of course, at your local T-Mobile store. Then again, you could also try your luck at a few stores today, considering that official October 6th launch date isn’t exactly set in stone . T-Mobile no longer accepting G2 pre-orders due to ‘overwhelming demand’ originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 05 Oct 2010 15:40:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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Now Republican Meg Whitman wants to ban undocumented students from attending college, taking away their opportunity to succeed. That’s why we need to vote for Jerry Brown for Governor, to make sure everyone has a right to a good education and better future. … THE RETURN OF LITTLE BROWN COCO! At yet another press conference in the law offices of the notorious whore Allred Little Brown Coco said: “Meg Wheetman been very, very mean to me!” Hint: Think baseball. …

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As Feingold Runs Afoul of NFL, AP Claims He Is ‘Slightly Trailing’ In Wis. US Senate Race

The National Football League is whistling incumbent Wisconsin Senator Russ Feingold’s campaign team for illegal use of film. The campaign has been playing a commercial which includes footage of former Minnesota wide receiver Randy Moss’s pretend-mooning of Green Bay Packer fans during a 2004 playoff game, and is apparently doing so without the express written consent of the league. During the course of his coverage of the situation, the Associated Press’s Dinesh Ramde demonstrates that he doesn’t really know the score of the game that is progress, namely the electoral contest for Feingold’s U.S. Senate seat. In that game, the scoreboard at  Real Clear Politics has Feingold’s Republican opponent currently ahead by an average of nine points over four polls. The latest, from Rasmussen, has Johnson ahead by 12. To Ramde, these polls indicate that Feingold is “slightly trailing” Johnson. Here are several paragraphs from Dinesh’s deceptive dish : NFL flags Sen. Feingold’s ad for using Moss clip The NFL is flagging Sen. Russ Feingold’s latest ad, asking the Democratic incumbent to pull unauthorized footage of Randy Moss pretending to moon the Green Bay crowd in 2004. The TV ad, which the campaign said was released statewide Tuesday, opens with a series of clips of football players dancing in the end zone. A four-second clip shows Moss clearly wearing his Minnesota Vikings uniform. The others featured are not playing in NFL games. “We did not license the footage and have contacted the senator’s campaign about removing it,” NFL spokesman Greg Aiello told The Associated Press in an e-mail. Feingold spokesman John Kraus told the AP the campaign is editing the ad “to accommodate the NFL’s concerns.” Polls show Feingold slightly trailing his opponent, political newcomer Ron Johnson of Oshkosh, with four weeks left before the general election. Feingold says in the ad that football celebrations such as the ones shown are called “excessive celebration,” punishable by fines and 15-yard penalties. “It’s exactly the kind of behavior the corporate special interests and Ron Johnson are engaging in,” he says. He goes on to say his opponents are celebrating because they think they’ll take down a staunch enemy of Washington lobbyists. “Fortunately the game isn’t over yet,” he says. Based on the script described, the Feingold campaign deserves a further penalty for lame use of unauthorized content. Though of course it’s never over until the electoral clock runs out, I’d say that the situation is analogous to 3rd-and-25 at Team Feingold’s 10-yard line, down by six points with about two minutes left in the game – and Russ Feingold isn’t Brett Favre. Cross-posted at BizzyBlog.com .

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Hungary Declares State of Emergency As Toxic Industrial Sludge Covers Villages (Photos)

photo: AP/Bela Szandelszky Four people are dead, 120 injured and six missing in Hungary as torrents of red toxic sludge , the byproduct of bauxite refining for aluminum, burst from a containment pond and poured through six villages in three counties. A state of emergency has been declared. Check out the photos and more details below:… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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AT&T debuts trio of Motorola Android phones: Bravo, Flipout and Flipside

Looking to get an Android device on AT&T? Then you’re soon going to have a few more options to consider — the carrier has just announced three new Android-based phones from Motorola. Those include the touchscreen-only Bravo (not to be confused with the HTC Bravo ), and the QWERTY-equipped Flipout and Flipside, all of which will ship with Android 2.1 and the latest version of MOTOBLUR . Of the three, the Bravo is the highest-end, with it packing a 3.7-inch 854 x 480 display, an 800MHz TI OMAP 3610 processor, a 3-megapixel camera, and DLNA support for media streaming. The Flipout and Flipside, on the other hand, each pack a 720MHz TI OMPA 3410 processor, the same 3-megapixel camera, and a 2.8-inch QVGA and 3.1-inch HVGA screen, respectively. Somewhat notably, the Flipside also boasts a surprisingly large trackpad, which AT&T says will let you navigate with one hand while keeping your fingers off the screen (though it does, in fact, have a touchscreen). Look for the Flipout to be available first on October 17th for $79.99 on a two-year contract, while the Flipside and Bravo should be each available before the holiday season for $99.99 and $129.99, respectively. Gallery: Motorola Bravo, Flipout and Flipside for AT&T Continue reading AT&T debuts trio of Motorola Android phones: Bravo, Flipout and Flipside AT&T debuts trio of Motorola Android phones: Bravo, Flipout and Flipside originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 05 Oct 2010 15:18:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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How to DIY a Hand-Cranked Cellphone Charger (Video)

Image via YouTube video Hand-crank chargers are kind of a pain in the neck — or elbow — but they can be handy for charging gadgets when you’re off-grid. There are a handful on the market, but why not just hack your own? If you have a hand-crank emergency flashlight, you’re good to go. Ben Heck offers a cool way to modify it into a cell phone charger as a quick afternoon project. … Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Bird Declines Could Signal Coming Mass Extinctions

When birds, like the dodo, go extinct, it may be a sign of a much more widespread problem. Image credit: Wikimedia Commons “Every 20 minutes,” the saying goes , “we lose an animal species.” In reality, however, it is difficult to collect the data that details this trend—and motivates policy makers to take action. Now, researchers believe they have found a way to estimate ecosystem-wide rates of loss based on one easily observed group of animals: birds…. Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Parker: Palin Is a Dishonest Tease, But ‘I Am Not Unfair to Palin’

On Monday’s premiere episode of CNN’s Parker-Spitzer, pseudo-conservative Kathleen Parker targeted Sarah Palin, labeling her a ” tease ” for not announcing her candidacy for the presidency, and stated that the Republican is ” also coy, which, after a little while, begins to feel dishonest .” When co-host Eliot Spitzer accused Parker of being unfair to Palin, she replied, ” I am not unfair to Sarah Palin .” The host devoted her first “Opening Argument” segment to the former vice presidential candidate. After her co-host called for the firing of Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner in his “Opening Argument,” Parker replied, “Eliot, I want to talk about my favorite politician, Sarah Palin” and played a clip from a recent commercial made by Palin’s political action committee. An on-screen graphic proclaimed, ” Palin the Tease ,” and the new CNN host immediately launched into that theme: PARKER: So, Sarah, are you running or aren’t you? Of course, Palin won’t say because the suspense benefits her. As long as her fans think she might run, they’ll keep sending money to SarahPAC and they’ll keep showing up for her rallies. I have to confess I never thought Sarah would grow the legs she has- no, guys, not those- the legs to keep building momentum. She has something that obviously appeals to lots of people. She has ‘it’- big-time. But she’s also maddening to many others, especially women. She flirts; she’s a tease; and, of course, all politicians do that . Men do it. Democrats do it. That’s how they raise money. Parker continued with her Palin is “coy and dishonest” line and hinted that “I know of at least one person who won’t run if it looks like Sarah has the wind at her back, and he should run.” Spitzer responded by trying to pry the answer out of her. The columnist didn’t answer, but explained that her unnamed Republican “should run because he can win a national election, and Sarah Palin, for all her good qualities, cannot . It may be that Palin is waiting for a thunderbolt or a voice from beyond to instruct her next move.” She then returned to her “tease” label of the former governor: PARKER: In the meantime, she’s teaming with RNC Chairman Michael Steele to raise money. Come on, Sarah. Drop the tease and just tell the American people you’re not running . As consolation, maybe and you Michael Steele can turn your road show into a moneymaking gig for real- a TV show perhaps. You could call it ‘Steele Magnolia.’ Parker gave a Palin-esque wink as she made her “Steele Magnolia” line. Spitzer replied to all of this by accusing his co-host of being unfair to Palin. Parker ultimately denied this charge, but not without making a bit of a Freudian slip: SPITZER: Clever name- we should have taken that. But you know what? I will not defend Sarah Palin on the substance of anything. But you’re not being fair to her. Why are you judging her by a different standard than anybody else? PARKER: Suddenly- SPITZER: Barack Obama didn’t announce- PARKER: Suddenly, Eliot Spitzer is Sarah Palin’s champion. I love this. SPITZER: Well, you know why, because as Democrats, we want her to run, because we can beat her. PARKER: You never told me this before. Suddenly, we’re on TV and you’re a big Palin fan? SPITZER: No, no, no, no. Here’s the thing. I want you to be as fair to her as you are to everybody else. Sarah Palin should not need to decide before other folks do. Barack Obama didn’t decide until late in the game. Ronald Reagan didn’t decide until late in the game. Everybody who has run successfully for the presidency was counted out at one point, and was told you have no chance. PARKER: I am not fair- unfair to Sarah Palin. I actually like Sarah Palin, and others have been very unfair . So let me just state that for the record- SPITZER: Right. PARKER: But I do think she needs to get out of the way. She’s not going to run for president- for the president, and yet, a lot of people kind of hope she does. SPITZER: Why do you presume that? In other words, I don’t think she knows yet. The critical thing is here is that, like most politicians, she hasn’t figured it out. You were right the first time, Ms. Parker, before you corrected yourself. Remember, Parker were the columnist who, just days after John McCain announced that Palin was going to be his running mate, compared the former Alaska governor to a character in the novel ‘To Kill a Mockingbird’ who falsely accused a black man of raping her.  Earlier in 2010, the columnist speculated whether Palin’s son Trig would be hurt by his mother’s thoughts of abortion during her pregnancy with him. Near the end of the segment, Parker did go after Spitzer for his prediction that President Obama would win reelection in 2012, but only last Thursday, the columnist herself admitted that she didn’t want the Democrat to fail . SPITZER: I think that Barack Obama will be reelected, almost regardless of the Republican candidate . This is the debate for next year perhaps- PARKER: Wow. SPITZER: But here’s the thing: Sarah Palin- PARKER: You really did get hooked on that hope thing, didn’t you? SPITZER: You know, the hopey-changy thing- stuff is good .

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Nikon Coolpix P7000 reviewed: a serious contender, but sluggish RAW performance

In case you weren’t aware, competition’s getting some kind of fierce down in that $400 to $800 not-quite-a-DSLR realm. We’ve got interchangeable lens options galore, a new breed of high performance compacts and the Canon G12 . Nikon’s got its aim planted firmly on the latter with the Coolpix P7000 , a decidedly prosumer camera with the body of a point-and-shoot and the controls of a pro rig. The good folks over at Photography Blog recently put the P7000 through its paces, and while they adored the optical viewfinder, the build quality and the zoom range, they couldn’t quite get over the notably sluggish RAW performance. Worse still, Nikon has yet again changed up its RAW formula, with the newfangled NRW+ only being understandable by the company’s own software for the moment. They found “no unwanted noise” from ISO 100 to 400, with only mild amounts at 800 and 1600; the extra pro-like features were also lauded (neutral density filter, zoom step feature, virtual horizon and tonal range histogram), and with an exception for that sluggish RAW mode, they found it tough to not recommend. Particularly for those of you who’d prefer to stick with JPEG anyway, this here shooter looks to be a solid option if you’ve got the cash ($499.99 MSRP), but we’d recommend poring over the source link before making a final call. Nikon Coolpix P7000 reviewed: a serious contender, but sluggish RAW performance originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 05 Oct 2010 14:57:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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Nikon Coolpix P7000 reviewed: a serious contender, but sluggish RAW performance

In case you weren’t aware, competition’s getting some kind of fierce down in that $400 to $800 not-quite-a-DSLR realm. We’ve got interchangeable lens options galore, a new breed of high performance compacts and the Canon G12 . Nikon’s got its aim planted firmly on the latter with the Coolpix P7000 , a decidedly prosumer camera with the body of a point-and-shoot and the controls of a pro rig. The good folks over at Photography Blog recently put the P7000 through its paces, and while they adored the optical viewfinder, the build quality and the zoom range, they couldn’t quite get over the notably sluggish RAW performance. Worse still, Nikon has yet again changed up its RAW formula, with the newfangled NRW+ only being understandable by the company’s own software for the moment. They found “no unwanted noise” from ISO 100 to 400, with only mild amounts at 800 and 1600; the extra pro-like features were also lauded (neutral density filter, zoom step feature, virtual horizon and tonal range histogram), and with an exception for that sluggish RAW mode, they found it tough to not recommend. Particularly for those of you who’d prefer to stick with JPEG anyway, this here shooter looks to be a solid option if you’ve got the cash ($499.99 MSRP), but we’d recommend poring over the source link before making a final call. Nikon Coolpix P7000 reviewed: a serious contender, but sluggish RAW performance originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 05 Oct 2010 14:57:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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