“It’s almost as if Antarctica didn’t want us there and was continually trying to kill us,” says Will Steger of his seven-month dogsled expedition across the southern pole. But the journey wasn’t just arduous and unprecedented, it was an eye opener for this hardened explorer. Steger and his team crossed the Larsen B ice shelf, a frozen and seemingly immovable mass that later crumbled into the sea, becom… Read the full story on TreeHugger
Continue reading …In Paris, Syrian leader says American initiative ‘has not worked,’ but adds, ‘Before we blame the sponsor, we should blame the sides themselves’
Continue reading …We’re seeing reports pop up that discounting — some of it heavy — off the full retail prices of Windows Phone 7 handsets by third-party retailers this early in the game could be a sign of trouble for Microsoft, but realistically, you can’t use that yardstick for guesstimating how well a phone (or a platform, in this case) is doing. Guys like Amazon, Wirefly, Simplexity (which runs a number of mobile stores, including Walmart), and Best Buy Mobile regularly undercut carriers’ first-party pricing on handsets immediately following release — or shortly thereafter — because it’s effectively a win-win: they’re given multi-hundred-dollar commissions for each new contract they bring to the network, giving them the wiggle room to apply some of that cash to the sticker price. The retailers win because they’re earning sales by offering phones for less than the carriers, and the carriers still win because they’re pushing on-contract units either way — and that means they’ve captured another long-term revenue stream, which is where the real money’s at. Popular Android devices like the Epic 4G and the Vibrant (among countless others) were handled the same way in the retail channel as these Windows Phone 7 devices are being handled. Of course, that’s not to say we know Windows Phone 7 is selling well — Microsoft’s Joe Belfiore dodged questions about numbers this week at D: Dive into Mobile , which seems shady at best for a platform that’s now been on the market for a solid month. We are saying, though, that you can’t use third-party discounting to steer the conversation either way. Call us when AT&T or T-Mobile starts blowing out Quantums and HD7s for a penny directly when they’re not tied up in some sort of holiday BOGO promotion, because that’s when you have to worry. Windows Phone 7 devices are being discounted by third parties, but it’s business as usual originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 09 Dec 2010 14:08:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …The Tea Party platform was all about smaller government and less spending. Now that they helped Republicans sweep into the House and Senate, the deficit is all but forgotten. Let’s see how the mainstream Republican party is adhering to Tea Party values. Hint: not closely at all. Cutting a deal on tax cuts while extending unemployment insurance It seems everyone hates the deal President Obama cut with the Republicans on tax cuts, but it’s a toss-up as to whether progressives hate it quite as much as the Tea Party. Jim DeMint and the Club for Growth came out against it with some of the most cynical, hypocritical reasoning I’ve ever seen. They want the top tax rate to be made permanent with no offset, but insist that the middle class tax cuts and unemployment extensions must be paid for. All that talk about the deficit is just that. Talk. Leadership positions and earmark spending Rep. Hal Rogers (R-KY) has been appointed chairman of the House Appropriations Committee. Rogers is one of the biggest earmarkers in Congress, earning the title of “Porker of the Month” in August. Not only that, but true to hypocritical form, Rogers requested funds appropriated as part of the Affordable Care Act while swearing during his campaign that he would move to repeal or defund it. This one may be a little tough for the Tea Party to attack too hard, since Ron Paul is one of four Republican Congressmen to request earmarks . Defense spending Tea party purists like Ron Paul and presumably his son Rand oppose both wars and advocate cuts in defense spending. This is one area where I happen to agree with them, as do many others who oppose the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. And once again, Republicans have betrayed those core Tea Party values by putting Buck McKeon in charge of the Armed Services Committee. Mother Jones: McKeon’s views on such issues as Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell (he’s against its repeal) and defense spending put him directly at odds with Defense Secretary Robert Gates. He has described Gates’ thinking on defense reform as “shortsighted and the wrong path,” arguing that the US should spend whatever it takes to prevail in Iraq and Afghanistan, while simultaneously investing to prepare for future wars. “The word ‘tradeoff’ hasn’t really been in McKeon’s vocabulary,” observes the Center for a New American Security’s Travis Sharp. The differing philosophies of McKeon and Gates on defense spending are likely to produce some confrontational hearings. Sharp also predicts that the California lawmaker will attempt to make an issue of the Obama administration’s plans for a gradual pullout from Afghanistan by hauling top commanders before the committee to testify about the wisdom of setting a date to begin withdrawing troops. McKeon, for his part, has said that a deadline undermines US efforts in the eyes of its NATO allies and Afghans, and gives the Taliban every reason to sit tight and pounce when the time is right. McKeon’s defense spending zeal is no surprise. Since his election in 1992, the defense and aerospace industries have practically bankrolled his political career. And over the years, he’s returned the favor, directing millions in pork-barrel projects to defense contractors like Lockheed Martin and Boeing. So many betrayals, so little time. Will the Tea Party rebel against the Republicans? Stay tuned…
Continue reading …Many pundits, enthusiasts, bettors and even the BetUs football lines makers were surprised when Qatar was announced as the World Cup host for 2022. It’s been a hot topic ever since. But now there is a hot topic regarding Qatar of a different kind. There is growing concern regarding the weather for the tournament in Will the heat be a problem in Qatar 2022? is a post from: Daily World Buzz
Continue reading …China’s campaign to vilify this year’s recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize and sabotage the award ceremony showed signs of backfiring, as criticism of Beijing rose and the imprisoned Chinese dissident seemed to be turning into a celebrity. (Dec. 9)
Continue reading …There were signs of diplomatic movement over the Korean crisis Thursday, as North Korean leader Kim Jong Il meet with China’s top diplomat. In the US, New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson said he’d travel to North Korea. (Dec. 9)
Continue reading …Click here to view this media One of the favorite pretenses at Fox News is to pretend that there is some magical barrier of objectivity between their “opinion” anchors and their shows and their “straight news” hours featuring “real” reporters — guys like James Rosen. ‘Course, it’s all a farcical facade — their news segments are only marginally less biased than their opinion shows. Though they sure whine loudly enough whenever someone points it out. Just the past couple of days, Rosen has coughed up a couple of real hairballs demonstrating (once again) just how “fair and balanced” Fox News really is. First, on Bill O’Reilly’s show Tuesday, Rosen argued, with a perfectly straight face, that President Obama had raised some serious concerns about national security because he had described Republicans in Congress as “hostage takers” with whom he had negotiated: Rosen: One other point, Bill, if I may, and this should concern a broader spectrum than just the president and his supporters. And that is the potential national security implications of a president of the United States broadcasting to the world that he is willing to negotiate with hostage takers if he believes the hostage is being harmed. O’Reilly actually burst out laughing, assuming that Rosen was kidding. He wasn’t. Then yesterday, on Happening Now, Rosen followed up with a segment about Obama’s record regarding how well he’s keeping his promises. It featured a clip of Obama saying, “Look at what I promised during the campaign. There is not a single thing that I said that I would do that I have not either done or tried to do,” and “And if I haven’t gotten it done yet, I’m still trying to do it.” Rosen then told his audience: “That leaves little terrain as ground for contradiction, and yet the Pulitzer Prize winning website PolitiFact.com lists more than 500 broken Obama campaign promises. ” But as Simon Easter at Media Matters observes, that’s a far cry from what PolitiFact actually reports — namely, that of the 506 campaign promises they’ve monitored, Obama has actually broken only 24 of them : enlarge And the best part is that, because he said all these things on Fox News, Rosen will never have to run a correction. And Bill O’Reilly can keep laughing at his absurd “concerns”. Y’see, at Fox, spreading misinformation and lies and wild conjecture isn’t cause for correction. It’s the job description.
Continue reading …Men with a low libido aren’t as uncommon as you might think. Here’s some insight into what causes a low sex drive in men and how to revive a libido that’s lagging.
Continue reading …Loose-lipped shock jock Howard Stern has signed a $500 million, five-year contract with SiriusXM radio. (Dec. 9)
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