The New York Times was clearly enchanted by Comedy Central host Jon Stewart’s “Rally to Restore Sanity and/or Fear” held on the National Mall on Saturday afternoon. Brian Stelter and Sabrina Tavernise reported the story on Sunday, “ At Washington Rally by Two Satirists, Thousands — Billions? — Respond .” While Stelter and Tavernise nailed the political tone as “overwhelmingly liberal,” the rally's agenda didn't stop them and other Times reporters from enjoying the rally both in print and through live blogging while hyping the numbers for a gathering that was apparently smaller than the one held two months ago in D.C., “Restoring Honor,” sponsored by Fox News host Glenn Beck. The print edition story ran with a photo of Stewart and Stephen Colbert with Yusuf Islam, the former singer Cat Stevens, who supported the deadly fatwa against novelist Salman Rushdie in 1989 (more on that later).
Continue reading …photo: Kevin Dooley / Creative Commons Late last week at the Convention on Biodiversity a resolution was adopted which places a moratorium on geoengineering unless it can be proven that the method in question can be shown to not have an adverse effect on biodiversity. Opponents of geoengineering cheered, TreeHu… Read the full story on TreeHugger
Continue reading …Pop rockers Good Charlotte are glad to be back with their fifth studio album, ‘Cardiology,’ almost a decade after their first record. (Nov. 1)
Continue reading …ATHENS (Reuters) – Greek police intercepted a booby-trapped parcel addressed to French President Nicolas Sarkozy on Monday, after another package exploded at a courier company in Athens, slightly wounding an employee. Police suspect the parcels were linked to Greek leftist guerrilla groups. Greece has been rocked by a wave of gas canister and bomb attacks, usually…
Continue reading …These numbers line up pretty nicely with last night’s Gallup GOP +15 release.
Continue reading …The driver of a pickup truck is suspected of intentionally driving into a Los Angeles home, killing his teenage girlfriend and their 6-day-old daughter. Police say the driver remains hospitalized with minor injuries. (Nov. 1)
Continue reading …Iraqi Christians were in mourning and in shock, the day after an attack on a Baghdad Catholic church left more than 50 dead. (Nov. 1)
Continue reading …A three-judge panel of the US Circuit Court of Appeals began hearing arguments from lawyers representing Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer, who appealed a lower-court ruling putting parts of the law on hold. (Nov. 1)
Continue reading …The argument used to be that carriers’ higher pricing for smartphone data plans were what kept them out of the low end, regardless of the upfront on-contract cost — but now that T-Mobile has rolled out a 200MB / $10 package , phones like the Comet — a T-Mobile branded version of the Huawei Ideos announced at IFA — might actually pose a serious threat to the livelihoods of dumbphones everywhere. Why’s that? Well, the carrier will be charging a ridiculously low $9.99 on contract after $50 rebate for it, featuring 7.2Mbps HSPA, FM radio, integrated Swype , microSD expansion up to 32GB, and 802.11b / g / n atop Froyo ; in fact, the only immediately-obvious downside to it is that it’s got just a 2.8-inch QVGA display. As you might recall, Huawei worked closely with Google to design the Ideos as an Android device for the masses, and we came away with a pretty positive impression with it when we checked it out at IFA — so we’re bullish that this thing is going to make some waves in its Comet guise. It launches on November 3 — and you’ll be able to get it in prepaid guise through some third-party retailers for “less than $200.” T-Mobile Comet sends $9.99 shot across the bow of dumbphones originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 01 Nov 2010 12:54:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …The discovery of explosive devices in cargo shipments have prompted a halt to goods and passenger flights moving between Yemen and the rest of the world. Authorities are scrambling to find who may be behind the bombs. (Nov. 1)
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