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Brangelina Tour the Big Apple

Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt visit New York for the premiere of Jolie’s romantic thriller, “The Tourist.” (Dec. 7)

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Spotify still planning to launch in the US… sometime

Wondering about the state of Spotify in the United States? You’re not the only one, and Spotify CEO and co-found Daniel Ek was once again asked that key question at the D: Dive Into Mobile conference today. His response? The company does indeed still plan to launch the music streaming service in the US, but it can’t say when it will happen — he did confirm, however, that it will cost $10 a month. Ek further explained that the reason for the delay is due to the nature of the service, which requires “complex deals” with recording companies — there apparently wasn’t any mention of any other potential complicating factors . Spotify still planning to launch in the US… sometime originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 07 Dec 2010 21:22:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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It’s official now – all living Secretary of States, including six Republicans and two Democrats, are in favor of ratifying New START . The one hold out was, until this week, Condoleezza

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Ga. Students Set Gym Class World Record

The Georgia Dome hosted almost 2300 elementary and middle school students who set the Guinness World Record for the largest virtual aerobics exercise class. Members of the Atlanta Falcons organization helped the youngsters reach their goal. (Dec. 7)

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LG invents imaginary 1GHz processor requirement to say Optimus One won’t get Gingerbread

So here’s the story: dude asks LG’s US mobile team on Facebook when the Optimus One — the basis for the various Optimus devices that have launched recently on American carriers — will be getting Android 2.3 . LG responds saying that “the minimum requirements for Gingerbread require 1 GHz processor,” hence, no update’s in the cards. Well, Android engineer Romain Guy took to Twitter to drop some knowledge, saying “there’s no hard minimum processor requirement for Gingerbread… trust me, if there were I’d know.” In other words, whoever’s manning the ship on LG’s Facebook account is under sorely underinformed or showed some awful judgment in choosing a lie to justify keeping the Optimus off the upgrade path. Sure, we can understand why LG wouldn’t want to temper excitement for a still-new smartphone line by telling buyers their phones won’t be receiving the next version of the platform, but the least they could’ve done is formulated a reasonable excuse, no? LG invents imaginary 1GHz processor requirement to say Optimus One won’t get Gingerbread originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 07 Dec 2010 20:57:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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RIM’s Mike Lazaridis: QNX coming to BlackBerry phones when dual-core processors are ready

Unfortunately, the crazy rumors that Google’s Nexus S would ship with a dual-core Orion processor didn’t pan out, which means we’re still waiting for a smartphone to ship with honest-to-goodness multicore silicon of any sort; it’s still unclear just how soon we’re going to see that wild dream come to fruition, but RIM’s Mike Lazaridis is talking like he wants to take the lead in making it happen. At D:Dive Into Mobile this evening , Waterloo’s outspoken co-CEO went on record that they’ll be taking the PlayBook’s QNX platform to smartphones just “as soon as [he has] dual core baseband CPUs,” though power consumption remains a limiting factor. At any rate, RIM seems to be fully acknowledging now both that QNX is a little too beefy for today’s smartphones and that BlackBerry OS isn’t quite beefy enough, which leaves these guys in a bit of a pinch until the dual-core revolution takes hold. RIM’s Mike Lazaridis: QNX coming to BlackBerry phones when dual-core processors are ready originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 07 Dec 2010 20:35:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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Rare Photos of JFK About to Be Auctioned

Rare photographs of US President John F. Kennedy are about to be auctioned this week at Bonhams auction house in New York City. They come from the collection of Cecil W. Stoughton, the first official White House photographer. (Dec. 7)

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Flame Retardant Found in Butter

Extremely high levels of a fire retardant found in a sample of butter show the need for better monitoring of the nation’s food supply, researchers say.

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When the president says this compromise satisfies no one, he really isn’t kidding. But my question is whether it makes for good policy in the long run. My gut and my head say it doesn’t, though it does have some extremely beneficial provisions. The Good Child tax credit – In general, refundable tax credits are far more valuable than deductions or even rate reductions. The Child Tax Credit gives eligible taxpayers (low income families) a refundable tax credit of $1,000 per child. That’s a significant break for families who most need it. It’s estimated to benefit 10.5 million families with 18 million children . College Tuition Tax Credits – The Recovery Act included refundable tax credits of up to $2,500 to assist with college tuition, books and costs. This deal extends those, and makes college affordable for families and students who couldn’t otherwise afford it. Unemployment Insurance Extension – Although it doesn’t help the 99ers at all under the current framework, it does give some breathing room to the unemployed and puts the burden on business to let go of the trillions they’re sitting on for job creation. Since a key GOP talking point is “tax cuts create jobs”, 13 months should be more than enough time for that to play out, even though it hasn’t for the past 10 years. Business Investment Tax Breaks – Allowing businesses to expense 100% of their capital investments in one year is a huge jump start to job creation. This is a win-win. The Bad 2% Payroll Tax Holiday – On its face, it looks great. But if you scratch under the surface, it’s really not . The Republicans have long wanted to reduce the payroll tax in order to strip Social Security of its security. Shifting $120 billion from paychecks to a government budget item leaves that piece ripe for cutting when the deficit hawks come to town. At the same time, no one will want to let that provision expire since it’s of such immediate benefit. More importantly, it’s bad policy. It’s the equivalent of telling employees they shouldn’t contribute to 401k plans or save for retirement in hard times, and is basically a way of eroding Social Security’s rock-solid financial standing. We’re at a point where the taxable wage base should be expanding. If they’re unwilling to do that to cover the shortfall from this payroll tax holiday, then it’s going to put the whole program on shaky ground. The Ugly Extending lower tax rates for high income taxpayers This sort of goes without saying. It’s the big bonus for them stooping down and agreeing to extend unemployment. It’s bad policy. It reinforces the idea that “expiration” is a myth” and gives political ammunition where none should be allowed. Extending them for two years on the premise that Democrats can run on their expiry is foolish, given the fact that Democrats aren’t letting them expire now. Temporal rate cuts create a situation for business and industry where sitting on large amounts of cash, maintaining austere hiring practices and continuing to make the specious claim that ‘uncertainty’ leaves businesses with no option will continue to erode all efforts at legislation and governance, which is, of course, exactly what conservatives want. Extensions of temporary rates are far better political ammunition for conservatives. Permanence would kill it as a political talking point. Estate Tax Concessions The 35% estate tax rate with a threshold of $5 million is really generous, but that’s not really the worst of it. That could be acceptable, except that it is once again a temporary and fleeting thing. That means it will come up again in the middle of the 2012 election at a time where the money boys will be looking for the friendliest party to their cause. Alternatives There aren’t many that don’t involve some real sacrifice. Look at the list of the good. There are some very real, significant, tangible benefits to lower and middle income families there. It would be a blow to the economy and to those families to see their tax bill rise and lose those refundable credits. Unemployed people need the unemployment benefits to survive. Still, overall this is bad policy, in my opinion. If the clock were to run out on the current tax provisions, 2011 could be a year for real tax reform which is really where we should be going. It’s badly needed.

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Raw Video: Lighting of Capitol Christmas Tree

US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi lit the Capitol Christmas Tree Tuesday evening. The 67-foot spruce came from Wyoming and is decorated with 5000 ornaments made by Wyoming schoolchildren. A child from Wyoming helped Pelosi light the tree. (Dec. 7)

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