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Crowds in Tahrir Square react as Hosni Mubarak refuses to step down – video

Protesters react with anger in Tahrir Square as Egyptian president reaffirms he will stay in role until September

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Wikileaks’ Julian Assange has made much of the 5GB of data taken from an executive at Bank of America, saying it could potentially “take down” the institution and perhaps a few others. But privately, Assange sings a different tune: Three sources tell Reuters that Assange has found the material difficult…

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Sloan Leaving Jazz

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Sloan Leaving Jazz

Jerry Sloan is leaving the Jazz after 23 years as the team’s head coach. He was the longest-tenured bench boss in the NBA. (Feb. 10)

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The Engadget Show returns next Thursday, February 17th

Gentlemen and ladies, it’s that time again — that’s right, the Engadget Show is back next Thursday, February 17th ! We’ll have more details for you on Monday, but clear your schedules, cancel your hot dates, put down Dead Space 2, and get yourself to New York City next Thursday. As usual, we’ll be streaming live right here on Engadget, but you’ll have to trust us when we say you’re gonna want to be at this one in person. Stay tuned! If you’re a member of the media who wishes to attend, please contact us at : engadgetshowmedia [at] engadget [dot] com, and we’ll try to accommodate you. All other non-media questions can be sent to: engadgetshow [at] engadget [dot] com. Subscribe to the Show: [ iTunes ] Subscribe to the Show directly in iTunes (M4V). [ Zune ] Subscribe to the Show directly in the Zune Marketplace (M4V). [ RSS M4V ] Add the Engadget Show feed (M4V) to your RSS aggregator and have it delivered automatically. The Engadget Show returns next Thursday, February 17th originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 10 Feb 2011 17:13:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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NYSE Euronext in Merger Talks With Deutsche Boer

Germany’s Deutsche Boerse AG, the company that runs the stock exchange in Europe’s largest economy, could soon take over the New York Stock Exchange.(Feb. 10)

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When Gawker exposed the Craigslist wanderings of ex-Congressman Chris Lee, it justified the story as newsworthy because Lee’s votes on DADT and abortion funding “suggests a certain comfort with publicly scrutinizing others’ sex lives.” Oh, please, writes Steve Kornacki at Salon , save the false piety. When Gawker runs a salacious…

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Ratigan Unhinged: GOP’s ‘Moronically Small’ Cuts ‘Truly a Flea on a Dog’s Ass’

Civility was in short supply yesterday on “The Dylan Ratigan Show,” as the MSNBC anchor after which the show is named used words and phrases such as “moronic” and “dog's ass” to demagogue the GOP's proposal to trim the federal budget. “How can you be serious about cutting spending when your spending proposals are truly a flea on a dog's ass?” howled Ratigan, who went on to demonize Republicans as “nasty” frauds who want to “get rid of all the food for poor people.” Ratigan's spurious logic that cutting federal subsidies for food stamps is akin to letting poor people to starve to death on the streets is reminiscent of Alan Grayon's mischaracterization of the GOP health care plan, which the former Florida congressman said was to “die quickly.” [Video embedded after the page break.] Toward the end of his bombastic tirade, Ratigan insulted House Republicans for proposing “moronically small” cuts that, by “depriving poor people of food,” should be dismissed as “sensationally devastating.” While the $32 billion list of proposed spending cuts does not address entitlement reform, the recently elected Republican majority cannot be expected to undo years of fiscal malpractice in a matter of weeks. Ratigan also accused Republicans of not taking serious steps to “reform the tax code,” even though the House Ways and Means Committee, led by Chairman Dave Camp (R-Mich.), started holding hearings on tax reform in late January. “We're going to do tax reform and it's going to ruffle some feathers,” Camp told The Hill , a congressional newspaper. When Ratigan directed his wrath toward Doug Heye, a Republican strategist, his guest rejected the premise of his vacuous argument: “I think your questions are insulting and I don't take them seriously.” Heye, the former communications director for the Republican National Committee, added, “I've heard you talk about an era of new civility and now you're calling people morons.” After being interrupted repeatedly, Heye implored the unhinged Ratigan to “talk about positive issues.” To his credit, although perhaps too little too late, Ratigan confessed, “I get a little worked up, I apologize.” A transcript of the relevant portions of the segment can be found below: MSNBC Dylan Ratigan February 9, 2011 4:27 p.m. EST How can you be serious about cutting spending when your spending proposals are truly a flea on a dog's ass? These people come out with a few billion here and a few billion there. We'll just get rid of all the food for poor people. We'll just obliterate any subsidies for heating oil for the most desperately poor. But we'll continue to account for nearly half of the 1.5 trillion that's spent globally on defense. We won't in any shape, way, or form address that. We will not reform the tax code or investment policies in this country to drive investment in our country, which, by the way, would help people get rich and create jobs because we wouldn't want to alienate those who are using us to extract money from this country. There was a great tweet. We were going to the break and I said are the Republicans serious or are the Republicans nasty? And @NONOTAGAIN on Twitter said, “They're both serious and nasty. If only the Democrats were any better.” That seems to be our problem, doesn't it? Well today House Republicans, friend of I don't know who, released a partial list of what they plan to cut in government spending. Not that we don't spend a lot – Medicare, Social Security, massive defense budget – not surprisingly, they're targeting none of that and instead are targeting peanuts that are central to the Obama political agenda. Why deal with the military industrial complex, or massive loopholes and bleed in the banking or tax code, when you can cut the EPA, high speed rail, renewable energy, and the IRS, which has to help enforce the health care law? And in the process, the other cuts take aim at the most vulnerable in our society, like WIC, which provides food for low-income mothers and children. That will save your budget problems! The full set of Republican cuts will save about $32 billion this year. I cannot emphasize how moronically small that number is and how sensationally devastating depriving poor people of food is, while you continue to subsidize multi-trillion-dollar tax, trade, banking, and health care scams. It is stunning. Almost as stunning as the Democrats's refusal to deal with the same problems. I get a little worked up, I apologize. –Alex Fitzsimmons is a News Analysis intern at the Media Research Center. Click here to follow him on Twitter.

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Pac Machina displays a trivial love of the needlessly complex

Now, you may look at this little project and ask yourself, “what is the point of this thing?” but that would, in fact, be the wrong question. The Pac Man -loving creator of Pac Machina needs no reasons, and honestly, neither do we. While we wouldn’t necessarily want one of these clock-like Pac Men in our drawing room, we admire the creativity and time put into what was surely a somewhat tedious project. We are huge fans of tedium, after all. Video is after the break. Continue reading Pac Machina displays a trivial love of the needlessly complex Pac Machina displays a trivial love of the needlessly complex originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 10 Feb 2011 16:42:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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Conservatives Hear From Potential Presidents

Potential Republican presidential candidates spoke to the influential American Conservative Union during its annual meeting in Washington. (Feb. 10)

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Bloomberg: Apple working on ‘cheaper, smaller’ and dual-mode iPhones, trying to kill SIMs along the way

Bloomberg is citing — you guessed it — “people who have been briefed on the plans” as saying that Apple is hard at work on taking the iPhone downmarket with a new model that’s roughly one-third smaller than the existing iPhone 4, possibly with the intent on delivering it midyear using mostly carryover components from the iPhone 4 to keep pricing down. Thing is, Bloomberg says that Apple is looking at launching the “cheaper” model at $200 off contract, which would be the same as the 16GB iPhone 4 on contract currently. Let’s not understate the fact that $200 off contract is dirt cheap by modern smartphone standards, which means Apple would have to be using every scrap of its enormous economies of scale to pull that off. In all likelihood, in fact, it’d have to abandon the 3.5-inch Retina Display — it might be too big for a “smaller” model anyhow. The pub goes on to say that the device could’ve been delayed or scrapped altogether since its source saw the device last year, but it’s something to keep an eye on; after all, Apple’s probably leaving money on the table right now by failing to go after the midrange with a current-generation handset, so this could be its golden opportunity. Moving on, they’re also saying Apple’s working on a dual-mode iPhone that’d work on both CDMA and GSM — not a surprise at all, really (if anything, it was a little surprising to us that Apple didn’t kill off the existing GSM iPhone 4 and replace all SKUs with CDMA / GSM ones when it announced the Verizon model ). There’s no mention of whether this model would have any manner of 4G support, but CDMA, GSM, and LTE in a single phone — with at least five bands, if not more — would be pretty wild indeed. Finally, Bloomberg says (and our own sources have corroborated) that Apple’s working on a so-called “Universal SIM” technology that would eliminate physical SIMs altogether and make using the iPhone on different networks a simple matter of provisioning, not unlike American CDMA networks today. Of course, this rumor’s been through the mill before — and has already been killed off — so it’s hard to say whether this is something Apple is actively working on or has been shelved. The device independence afforded by the SIM has been one of the chief advantages of GSM networks around the world over the past twenty years, and we’d hate to see Apple succeed in killing that off in favor of some sort of locked-up iTunes nonsense, but let’s be honest: if anyone could pull off that kind of coup, it’d be Cupertino. More on all these rumors as we hear it. Bloomberg: Apple working on ‘cheaper, smaller’ and dual-mode iPhones, trying to kill SIMs along the way originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 10 Feb 2011 16:34:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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