We’ve been looking forward to this for a while , and now it’s here: Adobe AIR runtime for Android. That means developers using Flash Builder or Flash Professional CS5 can publish AIR apps directly to the Android Market, and all users will need is this little runtime from the Market and they’re set. AIR’s desktop-oriented .air packages aren’t compatible, so you can’t just go and grab anything, but there are AIR apps already starting to pop up — AppBrain has a whole list of them in one of the source links below — since Adobe has been trialling this with developers for a little while now. Check out a video demo of the procedure from the developer end of things after the break. Continue reading Adobe AIR runtime for Android lands, apps already starting to follow Adobe AIR runtime for Android lands, apps already starting to follow originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 08 Oct 2010 15:20:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …With low poll approval ratings and the prospect of his congressional allies in Congress taking a drubbing in November, it’s hardly surprising the liberal media are looking for any silver lining for Obama that it can find. Enter Time magazine’s Kate Pickert, who on the magazine’s Swampland blog yesterday claimed that a ruling upholding ObamaCare’s constitutionality yesterday was a “significant victory for the Obama administration.” A temporary boost, perhaps, but significant? The ruling was at the District Court level, and the public interest firm representing the plaintiffs plans to appeal to the 6th Circuit Court of Appeals . Plus Pickert herself noted that there are plenty of other court challenges against ObamaCare, and they are not all bound to come down the same way District Court Judge George Steeh ruled yesterday. What is significant is how Judge Steeh’s reasoning profoundly obliterates the scope of the Constitution’s interstate commerce clause to define refraining from commerce as commerce. It’s an open question if appellate courts agree. From the ruling (emphasis mine): The health care market is unlike other markets. No one can guarantee his or her health, or ensure that he or she will never participate in the health care market. Indeed, the opposite is nearly always true. The question is how participants in the health care market pay for medical expenses – through insurance, or through an attempt to pay out of pocket with a backstop of uncompensated care funded by third parties. The plaintiffs have not opted out of the health care services market because, as living, breathing beings, who do not oppose medical services on religious grounds, they cannot opt out of this market. As inseparable and integral members of the health care services market, plaintiffs have made a choice regarding the method of payment for the services they expect to receive. The government makes the apropos analogy of paying by credit card rather than by check. How participants in the health care services market pay for such services has a documented impact on interstate commerce. Obviously, this market reality forms the rational basis for Congressional action designed to reduce the number of uninsureds. [P]laintiffs in this case are participants in the health care services market. They are not outside the market. While plaintiffs describe the Commerce Clause power as reaching economic activity, the government’s characterization of the Commerce Clause reaching economic decisions is more accurate. With that reasoning, Judge Steeh thoroughly unmoors the commerce clause from its concern with actual economic activity that Congress can regulate to a more amorphous realm of “economic decisions” which apparently include the decision to NOT enter into commerce at all. That’s the true significant aspect of yesterday’s ruling, and it will prove interesting to see how the 6th Circuit Court of Appeals would handle Judge Steeh’s reasoning and conclusions. But a significant victory for Obama? It’s far too early to tell, although it’s understandable why Obama cheerleaders in the media would like to paint it that way.
Continue reading …Jerry Brown calls Meg Whitman a “whore ” over pension reform (AUDIO). October 8, 2010 by randyedye. In a private conversation that was inadvertently taped by a voicemail machine (audio below), an associate of Democratic gubernatorial …
Continue reading …FTC Green Guides logo. Image credit:Federal Trade Commission. The long overdue FTC updated guidance – the “Green Guides – on what is appropriate for those making ‘environmental product claims’ is by no means a stretch change from the old guidance. The Commission’s Proposed Revisions To Green Guides sidestepped the questions of what it means to have a product that is “natural” or “sustainable.” Mr. Natural gets to keep on truckin.’ On the other hand, the FTC’s Draft Guidance revisions do cover important new ground. Green claims will never be the same. As reported to me by the pre… Read the full story on TreeHugger
Continue reading …Iowahawk invites us all to Carbon Action Day on 10-10-10: Dear Reader: Good news! This coming
Continue reading …From The Corner : Throughout the country, accusations have flown that Democratic operatives have secretly been backing faux tea party candidates in an effort to siphon away votes from Republican challengers. A South Jersey newspaper delivers the goods on just such an effort in New Jersey’s Third Congressional race. The Courier Post reports that campaign and legislative staff from Democratic Congressman John Adler, assisted by the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, have concocted a plan to siphon off votes from Republican challenger, former Philadelphia Eagle offensive lineman, Jon Runyan. Dems have recruited and collected enough signatures (apparently they only needed 100) to get an unknown Mount Laurel picture framer on the ballot as the “New Jersey tea party” candidate. The paper reports that the goal of the plan was to confuse voters and siphon off about 5 percent of Runyan’s support, enough to preserve the seat in a tight race. People who support the Tea Party tend to pay attention, so hopefully this fraud won’t take voters away from the Republican. In this political environment the fake Tea Party guy may actually take some moderate independent votes from the Democrat, people who don’t like where the Democrats are going but can’t bring themselves to vote for a Republican. The whole thing could backfire on the Dems.
Continue reading …In case you were worried that it was just Apple love that got major news outlets on the iPad so quickly, you should know that the general sense of desperation (or is it their never ending sense of adventure?) pervading the likes of the The New York Times , The Wall Street Journal , and USA Today has them building apps for the Galaxy Tab as well. The news comes courtesy of The Wall Street Journal , and has yet to be announced officially by the parties involved — though we have a hard time doubting any of it. It makes sense, of course: the big cost is producing content for a tablet form factor, not building the reader app, and the Galaxy Tab naturally won’t be the last of its Android kind. The WSJ and The Financial Times are also apparently some possible gets for RIM’s PlayBook, though less is known about those deals. On the Tab, The New York Times is supposed to be pre-loaded with some carrier’s versions of the device, and its app will be free until January of next year when The Times starts charging for its website. News publishers looking to the Galaxy Tab and BlackBerry PlayBook for refuge as well originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 08 Oct 2010 13:06:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …On Wednesday, the far-left blog ThinkProgress unveiled an “investigation” that alleged, without any conclusive evidence , that the Chamber of Commerce was spending funds acquired from foreign-owned companies on political activities in the United States, a crime under U.S. law. ThinkProgress demonstrated that such funds entered the Chamber’s general fund, and that money from the general fund was used to pay for political activities. But it readily admitted that it could not show the same funds attained abroad were used for those activities. Instead, it demanded the Chamber prove the licit nature of its political funds. Some in the media ran with the story, despite that lack of evidence. So was the Chamber consulted or asked for comment by media outlets that reported on the ThinkProgress post? In an interview with NewsBusters, Chamber COO David Chavern says they were not. And while the New York Times’s initial coverage was an editorial, MSNBC discussed the issue on two separate programs. Neither, Chavern claims, made an attempt at balanced coverage. I asked Chavern during a phone conversation on Thursday how he explained this apparent breach of the most basic standards of journalism. I think it comes back to the old axiom – which has now become a universal law in the media – that you don’t let the truth get in the way of a good story. There is such a demand for eyeballs, that that demand to get people to look at you or read you trumps anything like journalistic integrity or fact-finding. It is important for ThinkProgress to get readers and it is important for them to promote their bloggers. That’s more important to them than the facts of how we fund the Chamber. And similarly, there are traditional news organizations that get pulled into the same trap. If you get in to the world of facts or if you get into the world of two sides to the story, that muddies up the narrative, that makes it less exciting and less interesting to eyeballs. Further, you have the inherent drama of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, which is a major business organization, as somebody to wonderfully paint as a bad guy, whereas unions, who are often much bigger and much better funded, seem to be given a great big pass by the media generally. So that is clearly a double standard. So is the media’s approach to the story indicative of a larger left-wing slant among the news media? I think there’s a couple different things going on. There are some folks who have an axe to grind, and a political slant, and they’re just looking for any narrative that supports that slant. I think there are other folks that just like drama, and certainly business as the bad guy is an easier picture to paint than unions as the bad guy. I do think most broadly there is a common view in the media that business is inherently suspect and that labor unions, because they represent, supposedly, numerous workers out there, have more credibility, even thought the facts state that unions are some of the largest, most intensely self-interested organizations in the world. The burden of proof seems to have fallen on the Chamber to prove that ThinkProgress’s accusations are false. Some individuals in the media have run with these accusations, essentially demanding that the Chamber prove a negative. Is that a fair position for the mainstream media to take? Absolutely not, clearly. Again, ThinkProgress is not a news organization, certainly has no inherent credibility itself, makes an outrageous accusation and then demands that we disprove the accusation in the full hope that we either somehow become complicit or that we then do open up all information to them from which they would then try to develop new lines of attack I have no need to prove myself to ThinkProgress. I would be really interested for somebody to look into who funds ThinkProgress. They don’t seem to be too evocative about that. I know that their parent organization, Center for American Progress, was initially funded by the Sandlers, who were the founders of the subprime giant Golden West Financial. They have also received substantial funding support from George Soros. That seems to all be ok, but the onus is on us to talk about where our money comes form. I feel no obligation to prove myself to ThinkProgress or anybody else. I am quite confident in both our representation of our members’ interests, and also our compliance with the law.
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