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3M’s 32-inch display with 10-finger multitouch steps out at CeBIT (video)

Though there are bigger multitouch screens out there — and ones that can support more simultaneous touch points — 3M’s brand new C3266PW is the company’s largest, said to be suited for industrial-strength installations with multiple simultaneous users (the company is quick to note that the ultra-wide 178-degree viewing angle along both axes is great for that, since folks can crowd around and start touching). The company demoed the new unit here at CeBIT in two ways: three of them in a row on a “cascade table” with one high, one slanted, and one low, and another separate unit mounted on a solo kiosk at roughly eye level. The table’s set up as a multi-display Windows box running a tech demo with maps, images, and videos that can be flicked between screens, pinched, and zoomed; the kiosk, meanwhile, is running a rudimentary flight simulator designed to demonstrate all ten points of multitouch capability at once with a finger-based aircraft control scheme (not the way you’d really design a game, but a good demo nonetheless). 3M points out that touch response — the amount of time that it takes the screen to actually recognize that it’s been touched — is an issue in the industry, and it’s not something that we really think about as users; if a gesture is laggy, we just assume the processor isn’t up to the task or the software sucks. The C3266PW is rated at a relatively brisk 12ms recognition time, and while the company has other products with even quicker ratings, we definitely noticed the lack of lag as we played around (of course, the computers powering the displays have plenty to do with that). We’ve come to associate good capacitive displays with glossy glass and resistive with matte, but that’s really not a fair assessment — this one has a non-glare “anti-stiction coating” that, as its name implies, makes your fingers glide like butter. It might not be great for a phone, but it works well for a display of this size that’s probably going to be used in public installations and potentially handled by hundreds of people a day. Follow the break for 3M’s press release and video of both setups! Gallery: 3M’s 32-inch display with 10-finger multitouch steps out at CeBIT Continue reading 3M’s 32-inch display with 10-finger multitouch steps out at CeBIT (video) 3M’s 32-inch display with 10-finger multitouch steps out at CeBIT (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 02 Mar 2011 17:54:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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Jazz Festival

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Jazz Festival

Delta. by Mamelo Gaitanopoulos Nonet HUBERT LAWS UP CLOSE Hubert Laws’ “AWESOME PIANIST” The Winners of Java Jazz Festival 2011 Quiz | Jazzuality.com … We would like to announce the winners of the Java Jazz 2011 Quiz. Each winner will get one free daily pass for the Java Jazz Festivals 2011. (Two winners for each day). We have selected the winners by lucky draw and came up with this … Applications for the BlackBerry Java Jazz Festival Create you who like jazz and had to wait menhunggu Jakarta International Java Jazz Festival , do not miss the information. To simplify the jazz lovers, there is now an application of Jakarta International Java Jazz Festival for the … Tommy Holloway at Spring Wine and Jazz Festival The Spring Wine and Jazz Festival continues Sunday, March 20, 1:00 p.m. – 4:00 p.m., featuring a live outdoor concert by at the el Pedregal Shops and Dining at the Boulders in Scottsdale. el-pedregal- jazz-festival … Concert Gallery: Dubai International Jazz Festival , Night 3 … Home > USD Radio > Concert Gallery: Dubai International Jazz Festival , Night 3. Concert Gallery: Dubai International Jazz Festival , Night 3. March 2nd, 2011 Tom Leave a comment Go to comments. All photos by Tom Roth … Hot or cool or both: The P.I. Jazz Fest The ongoing Philippine International Jazz and Arts Festival (P.I. Jazz Festival ), for instance, is showcasing diverse talents that can be appreciated by all kinds of audiences. More after the break. JavaScript is disabled! … Add_Bird says: Cece ntn??heheRT @jelingunawan : Ticket daily pass @350rb java jazz festival for sunday only @infojakarta

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Scotty Mccreery

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Scotty Mccreery

American Idol Top 12 Boys Review 03/01/2011 American Idol Scotty McCreery March 1, 2011 Scotty McCreery American Idol “Letters From Home” (VIDEO) Scotty McCreery performs 'Letters From Home' on 'American Idol … You’re going to be receiving a lot of letters from home,” Steven Tyler told 17-year-old Scotty McCreery after his performance during “American Idol’s” Mar…. Scotty McCreery American Idol “Letters From Home” Lyrics, Video Watch Scotty McCreery’s American Idol Letters From Home performance in this video clip, plus check out the Letters From Home lyrics below. Scotty. Scotty McCreery “Letters From Home” American Idol Top 12 Guys … Country boy, Scotty McCreery , didn’t come out of his comfort zone when he performed “Letters From Home” by John Michael Montgomery at the American Idol. Watch Scotty McCreery “Letters From Home” American Idol Video … Did you watch the first performance from the American Idol Top 24 men last night? One of the best performances of the night was from country crooner, Scotty McCreery , who sang “Letters From Home.” In case you missed it, you can watch … Letters From Home: Scotty McCreery Wins Our Hearts | Famecrawler Watch Scotty McCreery Letters from Home performance from tonight’s American Idol. Fronkensteen says: Casey Abrams, Paul McDonald, Scotty McCreery , and Jacob Lusk are the ones I'm supporting to be the next American Idol. Forget the girls.

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A New Zealand man whose home was destroyed in the Christchurch earthquake is auctioning off the 25-ton boulder responsible. Phil Johnson put “Rocky,” which bounced down a hill and crashed into his house, up for sale on an auction site as a landscape feature that will “enhance your ‘indoor outdoor’…

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Tennis star Serena Williams is undergoing treatment for a pulmonary embolism she suffered last week, People reports. The blood clot in her lungs was discovered when she returned to LA, after receiving treatment in New York for an injured foot. She underwent emergency treatment Monday for a hematoma, which she…

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Egypt’s revolution has been 10 years in the making | Hossam el-Hamalawy

Hosni Mubarak’s wall of fear began to crumble once people were able to see that others shared their desire for liberation In the 1990s, one could only whisper Hosni Mubarak’s name. Political talk or jokes were avoided in phone calls. This year, millions of Egyptians fought for 18 days against their ageing tyrant, braving the police troops firing teargas, rubber bullets and live ammunition. People in Egypt have lost their fear, but it did not happen overnight. The Egyptian revolution, rather than coming out of the blue on 25 January 2011 , is a result of a process that has been brewing over the previous decade – a chain reaction to the autumn 2000 protests in solidarity with the Palestinian intifada. Mubarak’s iron-fist rule and the outbreak of the dirty war between the regime and Islamist militants in the 1990s meant the death of street dissent. Public gatherings and street protests were banned and if they did take place, confronted by force. Live ammunition was used on strikers. Trade unions were put under government control. Only after the Palestinian intifada broke out in September 2000 did tens of thousands of Egyptians take to the streets in protest – probably for the first time since 1977. Although those demonstrations were in solidarity with the Palestinians, they soon gained an anti-regime dimension, and police showed up to quell the peaceful protests. The president, however, remained a taboo subject, and I rarely heard anti-Mubarak chants. I recall the first time I heard protesters en masse chanting against the president in April 2002, during the pro-Palestinian riots around Cairo University. Battling the notorious central security forces, protesters were chanting in Arabic: “Hosni Mubarak is just like [Ariel] Sharon.” The anger was to explode on an even larger scale with the outbreak of the war on Iraq in March 2003 . More than 30,000 Egyptians fought the police in downtown Cairo, briefly taking over Tahrir Square, and burning down Mubarak’s billboard. The scenes aired by al-Jazeera and other satellite networks of the Palestinian revolt or the US-led onslaught on Iraq inspired activists across Egypt to pull down the wall of fear brick by brick. It was in 2004 that pro-Palestinian and anti-war campaigners launched the Kefaya movement , which took on the president and his family. Though it failed to create a mass following among the working class and the urban poor, Kefaya’s use of both social and mainstream media helped shift the political culture in the country. Millions of Egyptians, while sitting at home, could watch those daring young activists in downtown Cairo mocking the president, raising banners with slogans that were unimaginable a decade before. In December 2006, workers at the biggest textile mill in the Middle East, located in the Nile delta town of Mahalla, went on strike . The action followed two decades of a lull in the industrial struggle, caused by repression and by an aggressive neoliberal programme that had the blessing of the IMF and the World Bank. Following their victory, which received widespread media coverage, a wave of strikes engulfed the textile sector, with workers in other mills demanding the same gains as those of Mahalla. The industrial militancy was soon to spill over into other sectors of the economy. Images of the strikes, aired via both social and mainstream media, meant millions of workers could gradually overcome their fears, and organise protests inspired by news of victories of strikes in other sectors. As a journalist covering the strike wave in 2007, I frequently heard from strikers: “We were encouraged to move after we heard of Mahalla.” Though scoffed at by some as only economic, the strike wave was political in essence . In April 2008, a mini revolt took place in the city of Mahalla over the price of bread. Security forces put down the uprising in two days, leaving at least three dead and hundreds detained and tortured. The scenes from what became known as the “Mahalla intifada” could have constituted a dress rehearsal for what happened in 2011, with protesters taking down Mubarak’s posters, battling the police troops in the streets, and challenging the symbols of the much-hated National Democratic party. Soon after, a similar revolt took place in the city of el-Borollos , north of the Nile delta. Though these uprisings were quelled, the country continued to witness almost on a daily basis strikes and sit-ins by workers, and smaller demonstrations by activists in downtown Cairo and the provinces. Protesting workers in the spring and winter of 2010 occupied the area around parliament, in what local columnists described as a “Cairo Hyde Park”. Those daily economic and political struggles against the state meant the legitimacy of Mubarak’s regime was rapidly eroding, if it ever really existed. By October 2010, there was definitely something in the air . It became normal to bump into a strike here or there while heading to work. Civil servants heading home from the office would pass by activists holding small protests in downtown Cairo. They looked, and very occasionally reacted. But they were witnessing visual displays of daily dissent . Tunisia then went through its own revolt, overthrew a tyrant, and, more importantly, the revolution was televised to millions of viewers in Egypt and elsewhere, largely via al-Jazeera again. This was only one of many catalysts – daily incidents of police brutality provided many others. The uprising that started on 25 January 2011 was the result of a long process in which the wall of fear fell, bit by bit. The key to it all was that the actions on the ground were visually transmitted to the widest possible audience. Nothing aids the erosion of one’s fear more than knowing there are others, somewhere else, who share the same desire for liberation – and have started taking action. Egypt Middle East Hosni Mubarak Protest Arab and Middle East protests Hossam el-Hamalawy guardian.co.uk

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Apple is set to unveil its iPad update today at 10am PT, so naturally the tech world is awash in speculation. What should you be expecting? “Not much,” opines Farhad Manjoo of Slate . It’s been less than a year since the iPad first hit stores, and it’s still dominating the…

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Bernanke: Spending Cuts Would Slow Growth

Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke says a House Republicans plan to cut $61 billion in federal spending this year would reduce economic growth and cause job losses. (March 2)

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As Mike Tobin whines to O’Reilly about mean Wisconsin protesters, Fox runs footage from other union protests

Click here to view this media I received several emails last night about this clip from O’Reilly’s show which had on FOX reporter Mike Tobin, who has been claiming he was punched by union protesters. It looks like he was fibbing about it, which is bad enough — it’s clear this is yet another case of fake right-wing victimhood like Kenneth Gladney. ( Eric Boehlert has more. ) But on Monday night, Bill was trying to find out who these violent protesters were and where they came from and asked Tobin to supply the answers. You’d expect to see the bad weather of Wisconsin in the background as they ran their ‘union protest’ footage behind Tobin, right? Wrong. Think Progress : O’Reilly sent his ambush goon Jesse Watters out to badger people protesting Fox outside their studios in New York. On Monday during an interview with Fox News’ Mike Tobin, who is reporting from Wisconsin, O’Reilly was at it again, calling chants that “Fox lies” from pro-union demonstrators “some kind of organized deal.” But during the interview, Fox aired b-roll of some unknown protest that contained physical confrontations among demonstrators and simply labeled it “union protests,” as if it was coming out of Wisconsin. Update: The footage Fox aired during O’Reilly’s discussion of the Wisconsin demonstrations appears to have come from a union rally in Sacramento, CA last week. Digby writes: What’s wrong with this picture? If you guessed the snowless ground and palm trees in Wisconsin you win a big prize. Your sanity. It just galls them that the Tea Party rallies were so out of control and produced insane signs and wackaloons saying racist things on a consistent level, while in contrast the WI protests have been orderly, supported by the police and have featured impeccably crafted signs. I think it also galls them that the protesters’ chant: “Fox News Lies!” is hitting home, where it hurts. As the truth tends to do. This is what’s known as perpetrating a News Distortion on viewers and is strictly forbidden by the FCC. Fox News has done this type of distortion previously and I filed a complaint with the FCC and documented what they had done here. Where to go to file a complaint : News Distortion . The Commission often receives complaints concerning broadcast journalism, such as allegations that stations have aired inaccurate or one-sided news reports or comments, covered stories inadequately, or overly dramatized the events that they cover. For the reasons noted above, the Commission generally will not intervene in such cases because it would be inconsistent with the First Amendment to replace the journalistic judgment of licensees with our own. However, as public trustees, broadcast licensees may not intentionally distort the news: the FCC has stated that “rigging or slanting the news is a most heinous act against the public interest.” The Commission will investigate a station for news distortion if it receives documented evidence of such rigging or slanting, such as testimony or other documentation, from individuals with direct personal knowledge that a licensee or its management engaged in the intentional falsification of the news. Of particular concern would be evidence of the direction to employees from station management to falsify the news. However, absent such a compelling showing, the Commission will not intervene. For additional information about news distortion, see http://www.fcc.gov/cgb/consumerfacts/journalism.html . Please submit a complain t against FOX News and The O’Reilly Factor I’d also call into FOX News and ask them to stop distorting the news. Address: News Corporation 1211 Avenue of the Americas New York, NY 10036 Phone: (212) 852-7017 Fax: (212) 852-7145

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As Mike Tobin whines to O’Reilly about mean Wisconsin protesters, Fox runs footage from other union protests

Click here to view this media I received several emails last night about this clip from O’Reilly’s show which had on FOX reporter Mike Tobin, who has been claiming he was punched by union protesters. It looks like he was fibbing about it, which is bad enough — it’s clear this is yet another case of fake right-wing victimhood like Kenneth Gladney. ( Eric Boehlert has more. ) But on Monday night, Bill was trying to find out who these violent protesters were and where they came from and asked Tobin to supply the answers. You’d expect to see the bad weather of Wisconsin in the background as they ran their ‘union protest’ footage behind Tobin, right? Wrong. Think Progress : O’Reilly sent his ambush goon Jesse Watters out to badger people protesting Fox outside their studios in New York. On Monday during an interview with Fox News’ Mike Tobin, who is reporting from Wisconsin, O’Reilly was at it again, calling chants that “Fox lies” from pro-union demonstrators “some kind of organized deal.” But during the interview, Fox aired b-roll of some unknown protest that contained physical confrontations among demonstrators and simply labeled it “union protests,” as if it was coming out of Wisconsin. Update: The footage Fox aired during O’Reilly’s discussion of the Wisconsin demonstrations appears to have come from a union rally in Sacramento, CA last week. Digby writes: What’s wrong with this picture? If you guessed the snowless ground and palm trees in Wisconsin you win a big prize. Your sanity. It just galls them that the Tea Party rallies were so out of control and produced insane signs and wackaloons saying racist things on a consistent level, while in contrast the WI protests have been orderly, supported by the police and have featured impeccably crafted signs. I think it also galls them that the protesters’ chant: “Fox News Lies!” is hitting home, where it hurts. As the truth tends to do. This is what’s known as perpetrating a News Distortion on viewers and is strictly forbidden by the FCC. Fox News has done this type of distortion previously and I filed a complaint with the FCC and documented what they had done here. Where to go to file a complaint : News Distortion . The Commission often receives complaints concerning broadcast journalism, such as allegations that stations have aired inaccurate or one-sided news reports or comments, covered stories inadequately, or overly dramatized the events that they cover. For the reasons noted above, the Commission generally will not intervene in such cases because it would be inconsistent with the First Amendment to replace the journalistic judgment of licensees with our own. However, as public trustees, broadcast licensees may not intentionally distort the news: the FCC has stated that “rigging or slanting the news is a most heinous act against the public interest.” The Commission will investigate a station for news distortion if it receives documented evidence of such rigging or slanting, such as testimony or other documentation, from individuals with direct personal knowledge that a licensee or its management engaged in the intentional falsification of the news. Of particular concern would be evidence of the direction to employees from station management to falsify the news. However, absent such a compelling showing, the Commission will not intervene. For additional information about news distortion, see http://www.fcc.gov/cgb/consumerfacts/journalism.html . Please submit a complain t against FOX News and The O’Reilly Factor I’d also call into FOX News and ask them to stop distorting the news. Address: News Corporation 1211 Avenue of the Americas New York, NY 10036 Phone: (212) 852-7017 Fax: (212) 852-7145

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