Remember that “Related” / “Similar” tab we spotted in Google’s own Gingerbread video ? Looks as if you won’t have to wait for Android 2.3 to enjoy the spoils of having El Goog sort out what similar apps you may like after you download one. This morning, waves of Android loyalists are finding a new tab in their Market, with a Droid 2 and Nexus One both seeing the update here at Engadget HQ. Naturally, it works just like the App Store’s equivalent, but it remains to be seen just how accurate the advice is. When looking at ‘Related’ for the (also recently updated) Engadget app, we’re finding items we’d prefer to be listed first about a page or so down, but we’re sure the mix-and-match engineers in Mountain View are already fine tuning things as we speak. You know, during the brief moments they aren’t preparing for Tuesday’s big Chrome reveal . [Thanks to everyone who sent this in] Gallery: Android 2.2 Market update brings ‘Related’ tab Android Market update brings long-awaited ‘Related’ tab, similar app suggestions originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 04 Dec 2010 13:43:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …Police say man, 58, and his 21-year-old son fled to Israel, wanted for alleged abuse of at least four female relatives
Continue reading …Vice President Joe Biden is pressing the point that it’s the middle class that needs a tax cut and the unemployed who need more help. He gave the weekly White House radio and Internet address in place of President Barack Obama. (Dec. 4)
Continue reading …Senate Republicans have blocked legislation allowing taxes to rise on upper income taxpayers on Jan 1. The vote Saturday was 53-36, seven short of the 60 needed to advance the measure. (Dec. 4)
Continue reading …It’s hard to imagine, but Art Ginsburg has spent 30 years quietly turning himself into an unlikely food celebrity, an icon with a multimillion dollar brand, all under the radar of the culinary elite. Ginsburg is TV’s Mr. Food. (Dec. 4)
Continue reading …Republicans say voters in the mid-term elections expressed a clear choice against tax hikes. In the weekly GOP media address, Sen. Mark Kirk of Illinois says Bush-era tax cuts need to be extended. (Dec. 4)
Continue reading …Hey, don’t knock the naming engineers — “Clear Modem with WiFi” just works . Indeed, that’s the official title of Clear’s new at-home WiMAX modem (the same one that flew through the FCC back in September), designed to bring the 4G superhighway into one’s home for as little as $35 per month. According to the operator, it’s an all-in-one solution that’s “around the size of a book,” offering 4G reception as well as an internal 802.11b/g/n router to distribute those waves across your home without the need for a separate WLAN router. It’s available today from your local Clear store, with a $120 outright price or a $7 per month lease rate. Furthermore, Clear home service customers can add home voice service, with unlimited local and long distance calling in the US, Canada and Puerto Rico, for an extra 15 clams per month. Oh, and if your math skills are a tad fuzzy, we’d recommend buying it if you’re planning to keep the service for greater than 17 months. You’re welcome. Continue reading Clear launches new at-home WiMAX router with integrated WiFi Clear launches new at-home WiMAX router with integrated WiFi originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 04 Dec 2010 11:11:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …CNN imported its Parker-Spitzer model of liberal versus slightly moderate to Friday's Situation Room, except reversing the sexes. Anchor Wolf Blitzer brought on Democratic strategist Hilary Rosen and Tea Party-hating columnist John Avlon to discuss the debate in Congress over tax rates and the military's “don't ask, don't tell” policy. Avlon took the same position as his colleague Kathleen Parker , that taxes should be raised on some rich, and joined Rosen in calling for the repeal of the controversial policy. The two CNN political contributors appeared during the regular “Strategy Session” segment 49 minutes into the 5 pm Eastern hour. Blitzer read an excerpt from a recent blog item by Time's Mark Halperin where he wondered if the Democratic Party was “in the midst of a nervous breakdown.” Rosen denied that this was the case and mouthed her party's talking points on the tax debate: read more
Continue reading …If there’s one thing I know about being poor, it’s the cascading effect that even a week without cash flow can trigger. Late charges, reinstatement fees, bounced checks… it gets to the point where you’re really behind the eight-ball. That’s why it’s always infuriated me that the people in charge are always so oblivious to the consequences of their indifference. I mean, how can they not know how many people are hurting? Even as Congress debates whether to extend emergency unemployment checks for more than 6 million Americans who are approaching the 99-week-limit, some four million others are facing the certain end of their benefits over the next year, unless an entirely new program is crafted. This is the sobering conclusion of a report released by the President’s Council of Economic Advisers on Thursday. The study forecast that the exhaustion of unemployment benefits for so many will curb spending power enough to significantly impede an already weak economic recovery. The typical household now receiving emergency unemployment benefits would see their income fall by a third should they lose their checks, according to the report. Among the roughly 40 percent of households in which the person receiving a check is the sole breadwinner, income would fall by 90 percent. The existing emergency unemployment program, which extends benefits for nearly two years, expired on Wednesday. Without an agreement to extend the program, the economy will lose about 600,000 jobs, as the spending enabled by continued unemployment checks ceases. National economic output–which expanded at an annual pace of 2.5 percent during the summer months–would fall off by 0.6 percent. That disturbing prospect does not even account for the roughly four million people who would exceed even the extended limits in the emergency program. Were that many jobless people left to fend themselves without unemployment checks, that would pose significant risks for the broader economy, say economists. They cite the fact that consumer spending accounts for roughly 70 percent of all economic activity.
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