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Sonos Controller for Android with voice search will blow you away (video)

You can exhale Sonos fans, it’s finally happening. The Sonos Controller for Android is official. After almost a year in development, the free WiFi music remote finally gives Sonos owners control over their whole-home audio system from any Android 2.1 and above device with a screen size of HVGA 320 x 480, WVGA 480 x 800 or WVGA 480 x 854. At least it will when it hits the Market at the end of March. Better yet, it trumps the Sonos iOS controller with music controls mapped directly to the buttons on your Android hardware. As such, you can control the volume of your Sonos system with the physical volume rocker on your Desire Z or use the search button on your Droid X to forage for that certain artist, track, or album. Oh, and the Sonos Controller for Android also supports voice search — take that iOS app. Sorry, Sonos isn’t announcing anything related to an Android tablet-equivalent of the Sonos controller for iPad today as the company is waiting to see how that market develops and which screen sizes and resolutions gain the most traction. Nevertheless, we’ll be getting our first hands-on opportunity of the handset controller at Mobile World Congress next week. So, until then, why not wipe the tears from your $349 Sonos CR200 controller and watch the video preview after the break. Continue reading Sonos Controller for Android with voice search will blow you away (video) Sonos Controller for Android with voice search will blow you away (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 10 Feb 2011 09:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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How’s this for irony: Chris Lee, the married ex-Congressman who resigned after Gawker busted him trolling for women on Craigslist, penned an op-ed all about “the dangers of the Internet” in 2009. Gawker points to the piece, originally printed in the Tonawanda News ; it focuses on legislation Lee helped to…

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Raw Video: Protesters Prepare in Cairo Square

Anti-government protesters continued to gather in Cairo’s Tahrir Square and outside the Egyptian parliament Thursday, as demonstrations to demand the departure of Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak showed no sign of abating. (Feb. 10)

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Iran: Mehdi Karroubi ‘house arrest’ after protest call

Iranian opposition leader Mehdi Karroubi has been put under house arrest, a…

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Love, Pie, and Flower Valentines Delivered by Bicycle

Photo courtesy termie via flickr and Creative Commons license. H.G. Wells said: “Every time I see an adult on a bicycle, I no longer despair for the future of the human race.” What is even more hope-filled is to see the growing number of green entrepreneurs delivering their wares and services by bike. Human-powered delivery is not only an ancient art, it’s a way to help balance out the CO2-heavy trucking that keeps our cities in perpetual traffic jams. Remember Xmas trees… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Phantom of the Floppera (video)

This is what happens when you connect a few floppy drives to a PIC18f14k50 microcontroller operated by a MIDI-wielding madman. Be sure to watch until at least the 2 minute 30 second mark for a 5 1/4 inch surprise. Look closely, and you might just notice that Box 5 was left empty. [Thanks, Jussi J.] Phantom of the Floppera (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 10 Feb 2011 07:50:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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Ayman Mohyeldin thanks US viewers

Al Jazeera English’s correspondent in Cairo, Ayman Mohyeldin, lets the American audience know that the network appreciates enthusiastic support for ongoing Egypt coverage.

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WiFi-only Motorola Xoom tablet does its FCC duty, silver version spotted in Dubai (video)

We heard some weird reports over the weekend that the 3G Motorola Xoom tablet couldn’t be sold unless you bought at least one month of wireless data. That, plus the groan-inducing $800 MSRP, is surely giving some potential buyers a wee bit of pause. This might help. Crossing the wires at the FCC is what appears to be a WiFi-only version of the Xoom, called a “wireless tablet with embedded WLAN.” It’s lacking a 3G radio so, unless Moto has another trick up its sleeves, this is probably that. Obviously any speculation on price would be highly… speculative, but here’s to hoping ditching that modem brings this thing down a Benjamin or so. Also spotted, this time in Dubai but also embedded below, was a silver version of the Xoom, sporting a two-tone back that will nicely complement your Casio Data Bank calculator watch. No word on whether we’ll get that on these shores, but we hope so. Variety is, dear readers, the spice of life. Continue reading WiFi-only Motorola Xoom tablet does its FCC duty, silver version spotted in Dubai (video) WiFi-only Motorola Xoom tablet does its FCC duty, silver version spotted in Dubai (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 10 Feb 2011 07:31:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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Stars Gather for AmfAR’s 25th Anniversary

Alan Cumming, Dionne Warwick and Rosie O’Donnell were among the stars to celebrate the quarter of a century fight against AIDS at amfAR’s anniversary gala in New York. (Feb.10)

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Egyptian foreign minister rejects US intervention

Ahmed Aboul Gheit resists American pressure for rapid political reform, saying Washington should not impose its will The Egyptian leadership is resisting American pressure for rapid political reform, again warning that mass demonstrations and spreading strikes calling for President Hosni Mubarak’s immediate resignation could lead to a military coup. The country’s foreign minister, Ahmed Aboul Gheit, rejected Washington’s demand for concrete actions to show that major change is under way, saying that Washington should not impose its will. The White House responded by warning that Cairo has not done enough to satisfy what the Obama administration has previously described as legitimate demands of the protesters. “I think it is clear that what the government has thus far put forward has yet to meet a minimum threshold for the people of Egypt,” said Robert Gibbs, the White House spokesman. Earlier this week, the US vice-president, Joe Biden, called Mubarak’s deputy, Omar Suleiman, the former intelligence chief who is now overseeing dealings with the opposition and the promised political transition, to urge him to immediately lift the oppressive 30-year state of emergency. In an interview with PBS television in the US, Aboul Gheit was asked if he regarded Biden’s call as helpful advice from a friend. “No, not at all. Why is it so? Because when you speak about prompt, immediate, now – as if you are imposing on a great country like Egypt, a great friend that has always maintained the best of relationship with the United States, you are imposing your will on him,” he said. The Times has reported that Saudi Arabia has threatened to prop up Mubarak if the White House tries to swiftly force him from power. It said that King Abdullah told Obama two weeks ago not to humiliate Mubarak and said Saudi Arabia would step in to replace the $1.5bn (£0.9bn) in annual US aid to Egypt, most of it to the military, if Washington cuts off assistance. Such an offer would embolden Suleiman who would otherwise be concerned about the impact on the army about the sudden loss of financing. Abdullah has defended Mubarak and accused “intruders” of meddling in Egypt’s affairs. Aboul Gheit said the US should accept the extended timetable for political change outlined by the Egyptian leadership which centres on Mubarak resigning at elections in September. “So for Americans to come and say ‘Change is now’, but already we are changing. Or ‘You start now’, we started last week. So better understand the Egyptian sensitivities and better encourage the Egyptians to move forward and to do what is required. That is my advice to you,” he said. However, talks with Mubarak’s political opponents have faltered before they even gained traction after the regime declined to consider the establishment of an interim government. Diaa Rashwan, a member of a key opposition group, the Council of Wise Men, told the Guardian that talks were going nowhere for now and that pro-democracy campaigners are alarmed at Suleiman’s warning – since reiterated by Aboul Gheit – that if the protests continue there could be a military coup. “The regime is taking a hard line and so negotiations have essentially come to an end. Suleiman’s comments about there being a danger of a coup were shocking to all of us. It was a betrayal of the spirit of negotiations, and is unacceptable,” he said. “The regime’s strategy has been just to play for time and stall with negotiations. They don’t really want to talk to anyone. At the start of this week they were convinced that the protests were going to fade away.” Instead, the government was faced with its largest demonstration to date in Cairo on Tuesday with another mass turnout planned for Friday. Some trade unions have also thrown their weight behind the opposition cause with a series of strikes. Rashwan said the lack of swift progress in the talks and the upsurge in protest had shifted the initiative back to the street. The Egyptian foreign minister said Mubarak has not considered stepping down immediately as the demonstrators are demanding because it would lead to chaos and possibly a coup. “When you have a president who is stepping down, you have one of two possibilities. The demonstrators and the opposition insisting that they compose a government unconstitutional. And then maybe the armed forces would feel compelled to intervene in a more drastic manner,” he said. “Do we want the armed forces to assume the responsibility of stabilising the nation through imposing martial law, and army in the streets? The army is in defence of the borders of the country and the national security of the state. But for the army to rule, to step in, to put its friends on the scene, that would be a very dangerous possibility.” Egypt Middle East US foreign policy United States Obama administration Protest Chris McGreal guardian.co.uk

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