The Cleveland Cavaliers posted their first victory since December 18th, ending their NBA-record 26-game losing streak with a 126-119 overtime win Friday over the LA Clippers. (Feb. 12)
Continue reading …Article by WN.com Dallas Darling. “The Nazi thing is just like a Democrat-Republican election fight.” -General George Patton, Occupied Germany “Who is Guilty?” and “This town is guilty! You are guilty!” were written on billboards throughout Germany after World War Two. Beneath these culpable words photographs showing human skeletons, charred bones, prisoners in uniform hanging from gibbets and children dead from starvation. Germans huddled in crowds, stared, shook their heads, and silently walked away. Others ether moaned and gasped or cried. It was part of the Allies de-nazification process to eliminate any sign of the Third Reich from Germany.(1) The Belsan Concentration Camp film was…
Continue reading …Elizabeth Taylor, the 78-year-old acting icon, has been hospitalized for treatment of congestive heart failure. Her spokeswoman says Taylor was admitted within the past couple of days. (Feb. 11)
Continue reading …Most of us don’t have $15,000 to drop on an Anybot , even though having one around would be nice in the event we don’t feel like leaving the house to get some coffee . To help those of us with more humble means, our old friend Johnny Chung Lee (of Wiimote hacking and Kinect dev team fame) has utilized his prodigious DIY talents to create a video chat robot for the relatively paltry sum of $500. Using an iRobot Create ($250), a netbook with Skype ($250), a cable to connect the two, and some control software he wrote himself, Mr. Lee built a digital surrogate on the cheap. Johnny isn’t the first person to so leverage iRobot’s hacking platform , but he added a stand on top of the robot to get the PC closer to human height, attached a fish-eye lens to the webcam for better remote viewing, and even did some re-wiring to allow the netbook to charge via the Create’s base station. The code and how-to instructions are up on his blog, so hit the source link if you’re feeling up to making one yourself. Seems like Johnny Lee’s putting that Google 20 percent time to good use thus far — keep ‘em coming. Check the video of this latest creation after the break. Continue reading Johnny Chung Lee makes DIY telepresence bot out of an iRobot Create and a netbook Johnny Chung Lee makes DIY telepresence bot out of an iRobot Create and a netbook originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 11 Feb 2011 23:40:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …It’s sounds like a set up for a joke: The NYC hotel hosting the CPAC convention is over-run with complaints of an insidious and pervasive infestation of blood-sucking pests… and they have bed bugs too . The three-legged stool of conservatism is strong and united at CPAC! Yes, as intelligent and alive as a small piece of furniture. However, the stool may not last long, as the hotel they chose, the Marriott Wardham Park, seems to currently be infested with bedbugs. Yes, we knew that, but are there blood-sucking insects there too? Har har har. “I woke up seeing the bed bugs on the bed, on my shirt and even on the bed that I am not using. Unbelievable!!! The hotel staff wasn’t surprised with what happened at all. I will never stay here again,” one visitor wrote recently. Hey, don’t worry about that. That sounds more like Teabaggers than bedbugs. wake up in the morning and I had all my leg cover with red spot. the bed was full of tiny little blood spot Seems like English may not be this poster’s first language. Perhaps some conservatives visited in the night and stabbed him or her in the legs, just to be safe that the hotel wouldn’t be bombed? I attended the AWP Conference from February 2-6 and found a bed bug in my suitcase upon returning home. Had to throw out my suitcase and am now dealing with cleaning everything else I took with me. Don’t stay here. I’d say that catching whatever is plaguing Andrew Breitbart, Ann Coulter, Dick Cheney and Michele Bachmann is far worse than a few bed bugs.
Continue reading …It has been a remarkable two-and-a-half weeks for Egypt – with developments coming thick and fast. Al Jazeera’s Tarek Bazley takes a look back at the 18 days that shook the world.
Continue reading …From the WSJ’s MarketWatch, information about exactly how close the administration came to proposing Social Security cuts. Please note, it wasn’t ruled out for good — but only put on the back burner. As Digby points out again and again, the Republicans will have no problem cooperating with the Democrats on cutting Social Security — and then turning around and slamming us in the teeth with it in the 2012 elections, just like they did in the mid-terms: The White House last month considered offering specific benefit cuts and tax increases to shore up Social Security’s finances, but ultimately decided to back off. Officials weighed suggesting that Congress raise the ceiling on wages subject to the Social Security payroll tax and allow benefits to rise more slowly than under current law, according to three people familiar with the deliberations. The hope was to engage Republicans in talks. But aides decided against putting forward the ideas, sure to be unpopular, without a clear signal from Republicans that they were ready to talk. As a result, the budget President Barack Obama will release Monday won’t include any specific proposals to alter Social Security. “It doesn’t make sense for us to come out and say, ‘We’re going to do it this way,’ and get pilloried,” said one person familiar with the conversations. “We have to do it together.” The decision is a fresh illustration of difficulties both parties face as they consider ways to follow through on their promises to slow the growth of spending on federal retirement and health benefits to address projected budget deficits. Some Republicans have endorsed recommendations made in December by a bipartisan fiscal commission, which includes the ideas the White House favored. Others have endorsed partial privatization of the system, which Democrats oppose. But the GOP has not coalesced around a proposal and there have been no bipartisan talks. House Republicans are having a similar internal debate about whether to propose changes to Medicare. Some are urging cuts to the health insurance program for the elderly; others are warning of political risks. The White House discussions were prompted, in part, by suggestions made by the fiscal commission the president appointed. An official said the president has embraced some other commission recommendations, including a corporate tax overhaul, a federal pay freeze and a medical malpractice overhaul. The decision to hold off was made as the White House came under pressure from Democrats and liberal interest groups who oppose any cuts to Social Security benefits. They suspected the president might make a Social Security bid in his State of the Union address. White House officials were declining to answer their questions, raising anxiety. In early January, AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka met with Mr. Obama and argued that Social Security did not need immediate action. On Jan. 20, the Congressional Progressive Caucus wrote Mr. Obama to urge him to resist efforts to cut benefits. And a large coalition of unions, women’s organizations and other liberal groups called Strengthen Social Security lobbied White House economic aides and organized supporters to send a half million emails and letters to the White House. At the same time, Democratic Party officials told the White House that a Social Security debate could be uncomfortable for Senate Democrats who face tough re-election races in 2012. The White House wasn’t contemplating a fully formed plan to fix Social Security, but rather an Obama offer that, it was thought, could lead to a bipartisan conversation . “To start a serious conversation, he would have to do something to show credibility,” said one person familiar with the deliberations. “You can’t just say, ‘Let’s go talk about Social Security.’ ” Obama advisers say they are open to talks on Social Security should Republicans show interest. “The president believes that we should strengthen the program without putting at risk current retirees or slashing benefits for future generations, and he believes we can only achieve this goal by working together—Democrats and Republicans—to find a bipartisan solution,” said White House spokeswoman Amy Brundage . “Bipartisan solution” — to what, exactly? To the fact that Social Security is in pretty good shape and doesn’t contribute one dime to the deficit — or to the goal of getting Obama reelected?
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