‘How will you explain this to God?’ says letter sent from Spain to homes of officers exposed on ‘war criminals’ website. ‘I’ve gotten used to curses, but when such a thing arrives at your doorstep, it’s very unpleasant,’ reserve colonel tells Ynet
Continue reading …A 20-year-old Pennsylvania student who vanished last week was killed by her on-again, off-again boyfriend, who then dumped her body in a park near Syracuse, NY, a prosecutor said Saturday. (Nov. 27)
Continue reading …enlarge Credit: The Professional Left Time for your weekly podcast from The Professional Left, our own Driftglass and Bluegal . I hope everyone enjoyed their holiday and have a great weekend everybody. You can listen to the archives or make a donation to help keep these going if enjoy their weekly podcasts as much as I do at http://professionalleft.blogspot.com/ .
Continue reading …If Intel prognosticated correctly , context is the future of apps — your device’s array of sensors will determine where you are and what you’re doing, and clever programs will guess from there. Problems arise, however, when one tries to run those accelerometers, microphones, radio antennas and GPS tracking devices constantly on the battery life of an average smartphone and determine what the raw data means, and that’s where a group of Dartmouth researchers (and one Nokia scholar) are trying to stake their claim. They’ve got a bundle of algorithms called Jigsaw for iPhone and Symbian that claims to be able to continually report what you’re up to (whether walking, running, cycling or driving) no matter where you place your device, and only pings the sensors as needed based on how active you are. (For better or for worse, Jigsaw also dodges the privacy concerns Intel’s cloud-based API might raise by storing all personal data on the phone.) Of course, we’ve had a very basic version of context-aware functionality for years in a little Android app known as Locale — which modifies your smartphone settings under very specific conditions you specify (GPS coordinates, WiFi locations, battery life and more) and it just so happens that Espoo’s doing much the same with an app called Nokia Situations. Presently in the experimental stage, Situations is a long ways away from the potential of frameworks like Jigsaw, but here you won’t have to wait — you can download a beta for Symbian^3, S60 5th Edition and S60 3.2 at our source links without further delay. Nokia toys with context-aware smartphone settings switch, Jigsaw provides better context for apps like this originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 27 Nov 2010 23:59:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …I just don’t like pot. I’ve smoked maybe two dozen or so times in my life, but I hate inhaling the smoke, I can’t stand the smell and I just don’t like the high. But I certainly don’t care about what other people do, and it’s bizarre that we spend as much time and money as we do arresting people for pot. Not only that, we have Washington pressuring those states that are forward-looking enough to recognize the inevitable and try to figure out a way to make money from what is still our biggest crop: SIERRA BLANCA, Texas (AP) — A U.S. Border Patrol spokesman says country singer Willie Nelson was charged with marijuana possession after 6 ounces was found aboard his tour bus in Texas. Patrol spokesman Bill Brooks says the bus pulled into the Sierra Blanca, Texas, checkpoint about 9 a.m. Friday. Brooks says an officer smelled pot when a door was opened and a search turned up marijuana. Brooks says the Hudspeth County sheriff was contacted and Nelson was among three people arrested. Sheriff Arvin West didn’t immediately return a phone message left at his home Friday, but he told the El Paso Times that Nelson claimed the marijuana was his. The singer was held briefly a $2,500 bond before being released.
Continue reading …The future of Australian’s Labor Party-backed National Broadband Network is looking much brighter today. The Senate voted in favor of an A$11 billion bill for Telstra’s copper network that also has the Telecom company (and former government-owned entity) splitting into both a retail group and a wholesale network group. The House of Representatives will weigh in on Monday, with all signs pointing to passage there as well. The opposition party and its A$6.3 billion proposal ? A lost packet. Australian Senate passes bill to split Telstra in two, pushes National Broadband Network closer to reality originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 27 Nov 2010 22:01:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …In separate reports for the Associated Press during the past week, Christopher Rugaber and Jeannine Aversa, economics writers for the wire service, each dealt with estimates for next year's average unemployment rate. They came back with significantly different predictions for 2011 without recognizing how widely those estimates varied. On Tuesday , Rugaber dealt with the Federal Reserve's latest economic growth projections, in the process telling readers that the Fed expects that the unemployment rate “will be 8.9 percent to 9.1 percent in 2011.” On Friday , Aversa looked at three alternative proposals for handling next year's federal income tax rates, which will increase substantially for everyone unless Congress acts. The projected unemployment rates for next year under the three proposals are all either 9.9% or 10.0%. So the Fed thinks that unemployment will come down next year, while Aversa's consulted experts think it will go up slightly regardless of what Congress does or doesn't do about taxes. The one-point difference between the two sets of estimates represents about 1.5 million workers . That's not a small number. Did things suddenly get worse while the turkeys were cooking on Thursday? read more
Continue reading …Click here to view this media I am so tired of this “Obama needs to move back the the middle” meme constantly being pushed by our Beltway Villagers. Andrea Mitchell and Charlie Cook took their turn this week while wondering if President Obama might face a primary challenge from the left. Of course, what they completely ignore here is that the Republicans have done everything humanly possible to keep the economy from improving. Steve Benen wrote a piece last week on how the Republicans are sabotaging the economy for political gain, which apparently didn’t sit too well with former Bush speech writer Michael Gerson . The fact that they’re playing this zero sum game with our economy to regain power is apparently a topic of little concern to Mitchell and Cook; just whether they’re going to benefit from the results of their obstruction. Once again the Republicans can behave terribly and they never pay a price for their actions by the media because as we all know, no matter what happens, it’s bad news for the Democrats. Mitchell: With his approval rating at 45% President Obama could face a primary challenge in his reelection hopes next year. A new McClatchy/Marist poll shows 41% of Democrats want someone to challenge the president for the party’s 2012 nomination. That percentage jumps to 56% when you ask independent voters who are just leaning Democratic. […] What does he face, the president and especially looking at the economic climate, because that’s really what’s going to dictate what happens? Cook: This is what’s scary is if you think about the fed issues… Mitchell: Scary for the Democrats? Cook: Yes. Yes. Or for the White House because if you look at the fed report yesterday, they said that unemployment’s likely above 9% through 2011 and be at 8%, no lower than 8% by 2012. You know how many months of presidential election years in the post WWII era we’ve had with that 8% unemployment? One month, January of 1984. So the idea of having basically from the first full month the president set foot in office on all the way through election day with 8% plus unemployment, nobody’s ever been here before. And so that’s got to be very scary for the White House. Mitchell: And the White House, trying to retool, but they don’t seem really able to take that step. They’re not reaching out, according to most Democratic insiders, not looking beyond the immediate circle. Cook: Well I think they’ve already spent a very tightly knit group of people and they, you know, they view the establishment as having been for Hillary Clinton back in 2007 and eight and so there’s um… it’s a clickish group of folks. I mean they’re very bright, very talented people but reaching out hasn’t necessarily always been their strong point. Mitchell: Now the other thing looking out at the horizon is that they really did lose independents, moderates, whatever you want to call them. How do they regain them and still reach out to the base because you’ve got this much more liberal caucus, the House caucus led by Nancy Pelosi. They’re going to want to, you know, keep firm to Democratic principles and the president if he looks at this landscape is going to be wanting to move back to the center? Cook: Well I think you’ve hit the nail on the head that he’s going to be pulled two directions. They’ve got to solidify and enthuse their base while at the same time reaching out to independents.
Continue reading …Oh, sure — we’ve seen a litany of knockoff MacBook Pro units, but how’s about one that actually ships with OS X? As the level of nerve skyrockets towards infinity, an unnamed manufacturer in an unnamed section of China seems to be hawking a lookalike MBP with Snow Leopard onboard — a feat that even Psystar couldn’t achieve for long. As the story goes, around $466 buys you a 14-inch machine with a paltry 1.66GHz Atom D510 processor, 2GB of RAM, a 320GB hard drive and NVIDIA’s Ion 2 graphics platform. Oh, and a glowing Apple logo on the lid. Unfortunately, the dodgy specifications list seems somewhat reluctant to “admit” that “OS X” is actually loaded on, but it’s there. Trust us. We think. Keepin’ it real fake: ‘MacBook Pro’ runs ‘OS X,’ dodges questions on ‘legitimacy’ originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 27 Nov 2010 19:22:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
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