Perhaps it should be no surprise, considering the heartbreaking delays ( and $1,000 price bump ) the Scarlet has already endured, but it looks like the project is undergoing a major shift in focus — namely, it will apparently be no longer be targeted towards prosumers. EOS HD quotes RED founder Jim Jannard thusly: The concept of RED was to build a camera with as much capability as possible… for the professional market. Then we thought we could extend it down a bit to the prosumer level. Apparently, that was a mistake. He also says that “plenty of companies [are] dedicated to selling prosumer (short for ‘almost right’) cameras. We aren’t going to be one of them.” And later, “we had no idea what we were doing… Nothing works like it is supposed to.” Ouch. Although we respect the man’s candor (if not his eyewear), it’s hard to say exactly what this all means: is the Scarlet camera going to be scuttled completely, or merely priced out of consideration for the (well-heeled) consumer? Either way, you can officially consider us bummed out. RED founder Jim Jannard calls prosumer Scarlet ‘a mistake’ originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 05 Oct 2010 12:09:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …With Election Day just a month away NBC’s Matt Lauer, on Tuesday’s Today show, attacked New York GOP gubernatorial nominee Carl Paladino repeatedly with such pejoratives as “angry” “nasty” and “dark” and accused him of practicing “gutter politics. ” Lauer even told the Tea Party backed candidate that if elected he wouldn’t be able to get anything done because political leaders “need not to crack heads, they need to build bridges” and added when “I look at you, I’m not sure you’re a bridge builder.” This is a far cry from when Lauer interviewed President Barack Obama back on the September 27 Today show and hit him with criticism from the left that he had not been “rigorous enough in pushing back against” GOP attacks. Lauer’s colleague, Meredith Vieira, teased the Paladino interview by alerting viewers “He is at the heart of one of the nastiest races in New York’s history and he promises it’s gonna get nastier” and Lauer didn’t waste any time trying to prove that point, as he opened up with the following first question: “You have seemed to embrace the mantle of the angry candidate. Is that what you think voters want right now?” Paladino punched back, something he had to do throughout all of Lauer’s interview as he countered: “I don’t think it’s anger…it’s people that are very frustrated and I’m just a reflection of that frustration.” The following is a full transcript of the intense back and forth between Lauer and Paladino as it was aired on the October 5 Today show: MATT LAUER: Carl Paladino is the Tea Party backed Republican candidate for governor of New York. Mr. Paladino, good morning. Nice to have you here. CARL PALADINO: Good morning, Matt. Thank you. LAUER: That’s a different guy in those ads, than I’ve seen over the last month or so. You have seemed to embrace the mantle of the angry candidate. Is that what you think voters want right now? PALADINO: I don’t think it’s anger. I think it’s, it’s people that are very frustrated and I’m just a reflection of that frustration. LAUER: But they’re frustrated at the status quo- PALADINO: Right. LAUER: What they have seen in Washington and in state houses across this country for years and years. Isn’t part of that status quo anger and rage? Isn’t it nasty campaigning between candidates that gets people nowhere once an official is elected? PALADINO: Well we’ve, we’ve left that gutter politics. We’re interested in talking about the issues. LAUER: How can you turn a corner like that, how can you practice that gutter politics for a long period of time and then all of a sudden say “That’s not me any more?” PALADINO: Well that was reaction, okay? The gutter politics came from Cuomo and his surrogates. They came out relentlessly after primary day and attacked, attacked and attacked. LAUER: But you said, even in your own words, you said, this campaign will get nastier, that was a promise. PALADINO: Yeah. LAUER: So, I mean, if it’s going to get nastier, are you gonna participate in i t or have you turned a corner? PALADINO: If, if, if that’s, if that’s the direction that he wanted to go in. Now we don’t, we, we’ve decided that we’re gonna speak issues. We’ve challenged him to a debate a number of times. We’re willing to debate every day from now until Election Day. We want to get those issues out to the people. We want him to answer for Obamacare. We want him to answer for the reckless mandates that are out there right now. LAUER: You are brash, there’s no question about it. You speak in blunt terms. One of the things you’ve said Mr. Paladino is that you’re gonna take a baseball bat to Albany. That is our state capital here. A lot of politicians have said that kind of thing in the past, “I mean I’m gonna crack heads, I’m gonna change things.” And you know what happens? Those candidates get elected, if they’re lucky enough, and they go to state houses or the White House and they run into the system and all of a sudden they realize they need not to crack heads, they need to build bridges. For some reason, I look at you, I’m not sure you’re a bridge builder. Tell me I’m wrong. PALADINO: No, I bring my own sandbox. You see we’ve been conditioned over the years to think that government in Albany is the way government should be, three men in a room. That’s not the, the representative republic that, that the Constitution outlined. We, we have legislators that sit there and wait for Sheldon Silver to do what, what he, you know to, to listen for, for, to him for the word on what they’re to do today. That’s not, that’s not proper. That’s not government. LAUER: But, but in more, in more general terms. Obviously there are a lot of Democrats out there who don’t like you, it’s a Democratically dominated state. There are some Republicans who don’t like you. The state chairman of the Conservative Party said something, and I’m paraphrasing here, that if you won the primary it would be a dark period for the Republican Party. The – Rick, Rick Lazio, who you ran against in the primary won’t endorse you. He apparently has a low opinion of you- PALADINO: And I’m not looking for it. LAUER: Okay? But, but who are, who’s your base that’s gonna help you get things done when you actually, if you win and go, go to Albany? PALADINO: My baseball bat is the people. The people. I’ve been speaking to the people for the last few months. That’s why we had that huge plurality in the Republican primary and that’s why we’re gonna have this, this mandate coming to us from the, from the entire electorate. It’s the people and nobody wants to listen to the people. These rulers, these rulers in Albany that have been feeding at the public trough for so long, they just don’t want to change. LAUER: On a more personal note, you have admitted to sending a series of emails that many people found highly offensive. There was language, there were words, in some of those emails, that were very offensive. There were characterizations, even of President Obama and Michelle Obama that many found highly offensive. You said it showed bad judgment. But you’re saying that now, that you’re running for governor, you didn’t think that, when you pushed the send button on those emails. PALADINO: People want to hear about the high crimes and misdemeanors in Albany. They want, they want an answer as to why Andrew Cuomo get- LAUER: People want judgment. PALADINO: -took a bribe from [Andrew] Farkas. LAUER: People, people want to know if the person they put in Albany as the governor has proper judgment. Can you tell, do you have that proper judgment? PALADINO: I have it. I’ve illustrated it time and again. I’ve illustrated it for my entire career. But where’s Andrew Cuomo on the Farkas deal? We’ve, we’ve asked him to explain his, his actions in taking a bribe of $1.2 million from Andrew Farkas when, when he put his thumb on the prosecution of Andrew Farkas at HUD. LAUER: People think that this midterm election is going to be, in many ways, a referendum on Barack Obama and the first two years of his presidency. Is that the way you see it or is it something else? PALADINO: No I think this is the people in, in New York state, the people are concerned with a government that’s recklessly spending their money. That’s overtaxing them, that is burdening them with all kinds of rules and regulation and for sure is not paying attention to the creation of good, fulfilling jobs. I will do that. LAUER: Carl Paladino who is running for governor of New York. Mr. Paladino thanks for your time this morning. PALADINO: Thank you.
Continue reading …You may or may not have noticed, but Western Digital just followed up on Seagate’s earlier efforts by breaking out a 3TB external drive of its own — one that has just a single HDD within. The newest My Book Essential not only houses a 3TB drive, but also packs a USB 3.0 port on the rear and the same rounded black shell that you’ve come to know and love / hate. If that’s far too much for you to swallow (or simply too large to haul around), the My Passport Essential and My Passport Essential SE lines are also being bumped to USB 3.0, with the former shipping in a 500GB version and the latter in 750GB / 1TB. Both of those guys are powered entirely over USB and ship in a variety of mind-bending hues, with pricing starting at $99.99 for the 500 gigger and running up to $249.99 for more space than you’ll ever need . Gallery: WD announces 3TB single-drive My Book Essential, two USB 3.0 Passport drives Continue reading WD announces 3TB single-drive My Book Essential, two USB 3.0 Passport drives WD announces 3TB single-drive My Book Essential, two USB 3.0 Passport drives originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 05 Oct 2010 11:47:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …So more government isn’t the answer to all of our problems? For a brief moment, that seemed to be the message Huffington Post editor-in-chief and co-founder Arianna Huffington was conveying. On CNBC’s Oct. 5 broadcast of “Squawk Box,” Huffington, author of “Third World America” explained what she thought the role of government should be in an American economic system. Now whether she was playing to the CNBC pro-capitalist audience or not remains to be seen, but she did depart with the so-called progressive/liberal view of government’s role in the economy, and criticized the Obama administration. “[S]o when it comes to the Obama administration’s policies, the problem has been rewarding people for taking excessive risks, which is not at the heart of capitalism,” Huffington said. “You and I have talked about that before. At the heart of capitalism is the assumption that if you take excessive risks and you fail, you’re on your own. The taxpayer is not on the hook. And we still have left the systemic risk in the system despite the financial reform bill that was passed. ‘Too big to fail’ has not ended and that really is the potential problem in the future.” However, “Squawk Box” co-host Joe Kernen asked Huffington for some clarity – if she preferred the European economic model or the American economic model as a means for providing the best opportunities for upward mobility. “Well first of all, we need to define our own system,” Huffington said. “It’s not about borrowing a system from anybody else. We need to tap again into our own spirit of innovation and that is really what is missing right now.” Fill-in co-host Michelle Caruso-Cabrera, author of “You Know I’m Right: More Prosperity, Less Government,” pressed Huffington on whether she was in favor of a free-market system or one with more government intervention. “There’s no question that for private enterprise, capitalist system is the best,” she continued. “In order to deal with people’s excessive attempts to make a short-term profit at the expensive of long-term profit and long-term stability, I mean you saw how that worked – that’s really where you need government intervention.” According to Huffington, the TARP bailout, which has been hailed by some since it won’t be as costly as previously estimated and may even turn a profit, isn’t necessarily a good thing. In fact she said, it sends the wrong message about what the relationship between free enterprise and the government. “Right now, government has done a terrible job,” she said. “That’s why there’s so much opposition to it. It has not operated in a way that has made people be pro-government. I mean, the bailout is very unpopular and the fact that now people are saying the bailout may turn out to make a profit is really economically not something that makes sense because we are not counting the opportunity cost of what could have happened if that money had been used for something else.”
Continue reading …Sharp has been working on miniaturizing its so-called Plasmacluster line of ion-generating products as of late, most recently with the pocketable IG-CM1 . Well, imagine if you took an IG-CM1 and duct-taped it to the back of a Japanese-style flip phone… what would you get? You’d get something like this concept being shown off at CEATEC , we think. Found in the booths of both Sharp and NTT DoCoMo, the basic idea is that the phone surrounds you with pleasant, invigorating ions while you chat away, repelling viruses and generally making you a better, happier, and healthier human being; in addition to the functional prototype, DoCoMo was also showing off totally fake (and considerably sexier) design concepts of how a personal ion generator / phone combo could look down the road. We’re not aware of any commercialization plans here — but considering that Plasmacluster technology comes pre-installed on some Toyota cars sold around the world, it’s not a far leap to say that we could see it in a production phone, too. We suppose. Gallery: NTT DoCoMo’s ion-generating phone is literally a breath of fresh air NTT DoCoMo’s ion-generating phone is literally a breath of fresh air originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 05 Oct 2010 11:23:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …Batteries die, and when your phone has a WiMAX antenna plus dual cameras and a gigantic screen, well, those batteries tend to meet their maker sooner than later. Enter hacker extraordinaire Ben Heck with a simple and cheap solution: a hand-powered charger. Ben took an inexpensive flashlight with a crank on it, disassembled it, and ran the leads from the internal motor to his HTC EVO 4G . The exciting (or at least excited) video below is proof that it works, but we’re wondering which would die first: the 4G’s battery, or your arm after cranking on this thing for an hour or two. Continue reading Hand-crank flashlight +soldering + Ben Heck = man-powered HTC EVO 4G charger Hand-crank flashlight +soldering + Ben Heck = man-powered HTC EVO 4G charger originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 05 Oct 2010 10:59:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …Have you noticed that with each passing year, Halloween has become less about kids wearing scary costumes to go trick-or-treating and more about women dressing up as French maids, prostitutes, and Playboy bunnies? Although this concept was first brought to my attention when I took my daughter to see Lindsay Lohan in the hit film “Mean Girls” a number of years ago, the sexual imagery since has become more and more lurid. Consider that this year, some of the outfits projected by CNBC.com to be in the most demand are sexy “Sesame Street” costumes: “Guys want to be funny or horrific so they stand out at the party,” said Steve Silverstein, president and CEO of retailer Spirit Halloween. “…Girls want to be beautiful, and when they grow up they want to be sexy.” To that end, costume manufacturer Disguise, a unit of Jakks Pacific [JAKK 17.88 0.42 (+2.41%) ], has designed a number of costumes for adults that take familiar children’s characters and make them a little…um…sassier. Sesame Street’s Big Bird, Elmo, and Cookie Monster, and Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles-even popular Hasbro [HAS 44.99 0.44 (+0.99%) ] board games such as Scrabble, Candyland and Monopoly-have been intrepreted by Disguise in a way that not only captures the essence of those iconic brands, but also fulfills a woman’s desire to wear a very attractive costume. The Sesame Street costumes, for example, use a feathery fabric that mimics the fuzziness of the puppets in the classic children’s TV show. There are also other details in the costume that reinforce the image. For example, the Big Bird outfit includes thigh-high hose that resemble the character’s legs, and a headband with Big Bird’s face. But the length of the skirt, and the bows on the stockings, all convey a flirty feeling. Isn’t that special? Now children can see their favorite Sesame Street and Disney characters with plunging necklines and semi-exposed G-strings. I guess Madison Avenue won’t be happy until innocence ends at birth.
Continue reading …If you’ve been following your NFL broadcasts, you’ll have noticed an entirely unusual hue infiltrating your typically macho sport — in most clashes this weekend players on both teams could be seen sporting pink paraphernalia alongside their usual uniform colors. This courageous act of pinkification was in aid of the US National Breast Cancer Awareness Month, which Microsoft is also supporting in its own small way. That small way is called the Wireless Mobile Mouse 4000, which will retail from now until the end of September of next year for $40 and contribute a $4 donation per sale to the Kamen for the Cure charitable fund. Hey, it’s got BlueTrack if you need to feel manly while buying one! Microsoft kicks out a pink mouse for Breast Cancer Awareness Month originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 05 Oct 2010 10:36:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
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