Home » Posts tagged with » breaking news (Page 1115)
Long Term HSPA Evolution specs come together, promise speeds of 650Mbps — and T-Mobile USA is on board

Thought the alphabet soup of modern wireless standards was confusing enough? 1X Advanced / EV-DO Advanced, UMTS, HSPA, HSPA+, dual-carrier HSPA+ , EDGE Evolution , LTE , LTE-Advanced , WiMAX , WiMAX 2 … we could keep going, but we’d really rather not. Oh, but we have to, because this one could get really interesting: Nokia Siemens is touting that the specifications for Long Term HSPA Evolution have just been submitted to the 3GPP, promising theoretical speeds in excess of 650Mbps — a number that still falls shy of the ITU’s definition of a 4G standard , but easily eclipses just about anything shy of LTE-Advanced or WiMAX 2. Interestingly, T-Mobile USA is specifically mentioned in Nokia Siemens’ press release as supporting the developments, a testament to the fact that the carrier is firmly committed to wringing everything it can out of legacy 3G standards before moving on — just as they’re already doing with their aggressive 21Mbps HSPA+ rollout . Considering that present-day LTE tops out somewhere in the 300Mbps to 400Mbps range, we can’t say we’re opposed, especially since the new technology will be backward compatible with today’s HSPA networks. Yes, granted: “Long Term HSPA Evolution” is a terrible name considering that LTE already stands for Long Term Evolution (and LTHSPAE isn’t the slickest acronym anyway) — but we’ll worry about naming logistics closer to launch, which is still years off. See the full press release after the break. Continue reading Long Term HSPA Evolution specs come together, promise speeds of 650Mbps — and T-Mobile USA is on board Long Term HSPA Evolution specs come together, promise speeds of 650Mbps — and T-Mobile USA is on board originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 15 Dec 2010 13:58:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

Continue reading …
Engadget for iPad now available!

Do you love Engadget? Do you love your iPad? Have you been longing for a day when the two would finally be together? Well guess what? That day has come. Yes, it’s true, the Engadget iPad app is now live in the App Store and waiting for installation on every single iPad in existence. Like our previous iOS apps, you’ll get a ton of the great features of the site formatted perfectly for mobile devices, but we think we’ve taken things a lot further on the Apple tablet, providing tons of new browsing, reading, and exploratory options which should keep you enraptured even if terrible things like a nuclear attack or zombie invasion start happening. All of your news-reading, podcasting-listening, video-watching, comment-posting, Engadget-tipping fantasies are about to become reality, and the application supports sharing via Twitter, Tumblr, Facebook, and email, while also allowing you to save articles to the iPad (in-app), Instapaper, Read It Later, and Evernote. Quite frankly, it’s awesome. The iOS 4-compatible app is available right now in the App Store, so don’t wait one more second… go get it! And before you ask — yes, updates are coming for all of our other apps as well, including a new iPhone app with iOS 4 support, a BlackBerry update with OS 6 support, and for all you Windows Phone fans… a WP7 app for your new phone! Engadget for iPad now available! originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 15 Dec 2010 13:40:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

Continue reading …
Twitter’s 2010 Most Retweeted list includes Colbert, Gaga, and Bieber, reminds us how boring we all are

Twitter has released a list of the top ten re-tweeted Twitterers for 2010. Yes, it was a landmark year in which Colbert — who takes home the top prize — made a funny about the oil spill, Drake said something vaguely wise, Lil Wayne announced his return from prison, Bieber said something we couldn’t be bothered to translate, fake Al Qaeda knew what was up with geo-location, Joe Jonas made fun of someone with less cred than himself, Lady Gaga reavowed her freakdom, Kanye said he was sorry to Taylor Lautner for calling him a wimp, Rihanna made fun of someone with less cred than herself, and some random person’s dad said some mildly amusing stuff. Yup, that about sums it up. Twitter’s 2010 Most Retweeted list includes Colbert, Gaga, and Bieber, reminds us how boring we all are originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 15 Dec 2010 13:35:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

Continue reading …
5 Facts and Fictions About Osteoarthritis

Think arthritis is a natural part of aging, and something you can’t do anything about? Think again.

Continue reading …
Raw Video: Ohio Woman Jumps in to Help Officer

A woman in Ohio jumped into action Saturday to help an officer in distress. The officer was involved in a scuffle during a traffic stop when the woman helped out. (Dec. 15)

Continue reading …
Official Emission Reduction Calculations Only Give 50-50 Chance of Avoiding Climate Catastrophe

photo: IRRI Images / Creative Commons With COP16 just ended and some hope of multilateral action on climate revived a new report from Friends of the Earth highlights an important point in all these discussions: Current official calculations on emission reductions only give us a 50% chance of keeping temperature rise below 2°C. That’s not what nations have pledged to do mind you, which certainly won’t keep temperature rise below that critical thr… Read the full story on TreeHugger

Continue reading …
Construction of Jewish neighborhood in east Jerusalem underway

Year after building project approved, bulldozers begin infrastructure work atop Mount of Olives Ridge; housing units to serve married students attending nearby yeshiva. Rabbi: Project strengthens Jewish presence in united Jerusalem

Continue reading …
The Economist Looks At Vertical Farming and Asks: Does It Stack Up?

Oliver Foster’s Vertical Farm The Economist does a good summary of the strengths and weaknesses of vertical farming . They note that “The necessary technology already exists. The glasshouse industry has more than a century’s experience of growing crops indoors in large quantities”, and that “The technology of hydroponics allows almost any kind of plant to be grown in nutrient-rich water, from root crops like radishes and potatoes to fruit such as melons and even cereals like maize.” But does it make sens… Read the full story on TreeHugger

Continue reading …
Are folks in the media afraid they might be implicated in Wikileaks cables?

Click here to view this media I know there are differing opinions on Julian Assange and WikiLeaks around the blogosphere, but what’s shocking to me is how the media has taken on such a hostile attitude against a man that they should be rallying around and who essentially is the new-age Daniel Ellsberg. There are differences, of course, but the fact that Assange has been targeted by Big Business is shocking. What’s at stake? The freedom of the press, that’s what . Here’s a great piece by Michael Lacy of The Village Voice echoing the same sentiments: WikiLeaks Betrayed by Amazon, Visa, Mastercard — and, Worst of All, the Media (h/t LA Weekly ) The outrageous behavior of Amazon, Visa, Mastercard, and PayPal directed at WikiLeaks represents a much greater threat to America than any of the alleged security breaches from Julian Assange…..Amazon, Visa, Mastercard, and PayPal set themselves up as judges, juries and executioners. And perhaps more troubling is that while the mainstream media happily regurgitated, repurposed and — in the case of The New York Times — reported the context of the released diplomatic cables, they have been noticeably silent as web conglomerates reshaped the First Amendment. Or, as in the case of The Washington Post and The Washington Times , they’ve joined the ninnies calling for Assange’s head. The chief enabler is Barack Obama’s Attorney General, Eric H. Holder who announced that the Justice Department and the Pentagon were in the midst of “an ongoing criminal investigation.” The key word is “investigation.” The Attorney General has yet to charge anyone, let alone bring the case. This is the same Attorney General who has investigated Arizona’s Sheriff Joe Arpaio — the sadistic and brutal jailer who flouts the Constitution in pursuit of Mexicans. The FBI and the Justice Department have had Arpaio under investigation, on a variety of fronts, since 2008. The Sheriff’s jails have been declared “unconstitutional” by the same Justice Department since 1996. Have banks or credit card companies seized Sheriff Arpaio’s home because he is under investigation? Did any internet company deny Sheriffi Arpaio access to his extensive, online marketing empire? No, that has not happened. But, with the patriots in Congress howling, Amazon and the others moved to isolate and strangle WikiLeaks. And the press does not speak out when the single largest document dump in the history of the media results in financial institutions determining when the flow of information will stop? PayPal’s president, Osama Bedler, explained his action by pointing out that the State Department claimed WikiLeaks’ dissemination of cables was illegal in a November 27 letter to Assange. And so they did. And so what? The State Department is not a judicial body. It is part of the Executive branch — and furthermore, they were the target of the revelations. {} “Your rights on the internet are only as strong as the will of companies to let you have it,” observed Hofmann. In such an anarchic environment, is it any wonder that anarchists have responded with the only weapons left? Congressional hearings are now scheduled for this Thursday, December 16. The House Judiciary Committee will not, I predict, worry much about the First Amendment. No good will come to free speech in such a political forum. I expected the State Department to speak out against WikiLeaks, but why have the media been so hostile to WikiLeaks and so passive about the people trying to silence his operation without a shred of evidence of him being guilty of a crime? I wonder if they are afraid that either they or their friends might show up in some of these leaked cables in an unfavorable light. Yesterday on MSNBC, Andrea Mitchell was discussing Assange’s bail in the UK and seemed afraid that he might have access to the dreaded “Internet” and destroy the world. Digby: Stephanie Gosk: the Swedish authorities had two hours to challenge this decision and that’s exactly what they’ve done and it has to be heard by Britain’s high court within the next 48 hours and that means that Julian assange will be in jail during that time. If they lose that case, and Julian Assange is granted bail as the magistrate has granted him today, he will be allowed to go but he has to stay at a registered address and one of his supporters, luckily enough, has a 600 acre mansion in southern England and he’s going to be allowed to stay there. He’s not going to be free to run around, he’s going to have electronic surveillance, he has a curfew and he’s already turned in his passport. But it has been a victory today, a small one, he trying to fight that extradition back to Sweden. Andrea Mitchell: He can be on a 600 acre estate with all sorts of electronic monitoring … but can he go on the internet?! … and sexually assault some female avatars and then destroy us all with his x-ray vision and cyber-army?? Run for your lives! The WikiLeaks saga has exposed the vapid stupidity of the celebrity press corps like nothing since the Great Clinton Panty Raid. One thing is very, very clear — they aren’t journalists and don’t even consider themselves journalists. They are celebrity public relations professionals who just aren’t as bright as the real public relations professionals Remember a reporter named Judy Miller? The media came out to support her when she wouldn’t give up her source of the Valerie Plame leak. Her stories were a huge factor in selling the Iraq war to the American public and her motives were questioned in 2003 by Slate: But none of Miller’s wild WMD stories has panned out. From these embarrassing results, we can deduce that either 1) Miller’s sources were right about WMD, and it’s just a matter of time before the United States finds evidence to back them up; 2) Miller’s sources were wrong about WMD, and the United States will never find the evidence; 3) Miller’s sources played her to help stoke a bogus war; or 4) Miller deliberately weighted the evidence she collected to benefit the hawks. It could be that the United States inadvertently overestimated Iraq’s WMD program. For example, the United States might have intercepted communications to Saddam in which his henchmen exaggerated the scale of Iraq’s WMD progress to make him happy. “The country needs to know if the spy organizations were right or wrong,” concludes the Times editorial, a fair and equitable stand. But by the same logic, the country needs to know if Miller and the Times too gullibly advanced the WMD findings of their sources—and if so, why. Later we found out that she was being the useful idiot of the Bush administration in helping lead this country into war with Iraq by printing Bush talking points into her many “news” reports that stoked the flames of fear and disseminated lies — lies the administration wanted the public to believe. And Miller did it so she could have unfettered access, which is power in the news business. As Joseph Palermo writes: In their infamous September 8, 2002, above the fold, front-page story in the New York Times , “U.S. Says Hussein Intensifies Quest for A-Bomb Parts” — the same story that Condoleezza Rice, Donald Rumsfeld, Colin Powell, and Dick Cheney cited in their appearances that Sunday morning on the political talk shows, the reporters Judith Miller and Michael Gordon offered the following tidbits: “Senior administration officials insist that the dimensions, specifications, and numbers of the tubes Iraq sought to buy show that they were intended for the nuclear program.” “Although administration officials say they have no proof that Baghdad possesses the smallpox virus, intelligence sources say they cannot rule that out.” “Still, Mr. Hussein’s dogged insistence on pursuing his nuclear ambitions, along with what defectors described in interviews as Iraq’s push to improve and expand Baghdad’s chemical and biological arsenals, have brought Iraq and the United States to the brink of war.” And who could ever forget the coup de grace? “The first sign of a ‘smoking gun,’ they argue, may be a mushroom cloud.” — Judith Miller should be held accountable for serving as the chief stenographer for George W. Bush’s lies that have produced the horror in Iraq…. At a critical time, Miller was in a unique position of influence in America because of her high perch at the nation’s “paper of record,” her perfectly timed repetition of official lies, and because it was her articles to which Bush, Cheney, and Rice pointed to give their own lies the credibility they needed to reverberate convincingly throughout our political discourse. James Moore also writes a great account of her fraudulent reporting. That Awful Power: How Judy Miller Screwed Us All Do you think she’s the only one who has ever traded in government “management” in exchange for access, which brought journalistic success and power? Are Julian Assange’s leaked cables causing a few journalists to feel queasy at what we might find? Are other reporters toeing the line to defend their brethren? I may be wrong, but it does seem plausible. Let’s face it, the way the media — especially the elite Village pundit corps, who have been busy calling for Assange’s assassination — have reacted over WikiLeaks is the most implausible thing of all.

Continue reading …
Google launches Chrome for a Cause drive, donates for each tab opened until the 19th

Google is clearly not aware of how many tabs we have open right now. Check the source link for an extension that will allow you to donate to a charity of your choice based on how many tabs you open each day. [Thanks, Josh] Google launches Chrome for a Cause drive, donates for each tab opened until the 19th originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 15 Dec 2010 12:31:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

Continue reading …