So we’ve just installed Google’s first public-access preview of its tablet-focused Android 3.0 Honeycomb operating system , an early build of the platform’s SDK that features “non-final” code and APIs; it’s intended primarily for developers who want to get a head start on making their tablet app dreams come true, but naturally, we needed to install it and take it for a test drive ourselves. Here are our quick observations: Like Android SDK emulators before it , Honeycomb’s is extremely slow — nearly to the point of uselessness in this case. We’ll give them a mulligan since this is a preview build, but seriously, we wouldn’t recommend installing this unless you enjoy pulling your hair out. There appears to be some sort of orientation bug that prevents us from going landscape, which is what we really wanted. Sorry about that! We’ve shot the video sideways and rotated all of our images; if we’re able to figure it out or a newer build is released with orientation properly working, we’ll update. The browser looks great — specifically the UI, which is going to make desktop browser users feel right at home perhaps more than any other tablet browsing experience to date. As with the rest of the emulator, it was too slow to really use — and it kept crashing on us — but we’re digging the look. The system for adding and managing widgets is a joy to use — it makes your entire desktop accessible from a single screen, and we like the amount of detail you can preview for each widget before deciding whether to use it and where to place it. In general, the window animations and screen transitions seem cool, but none were smooth or fast enough in the emulator to know for sure. Jury’s still out until this gets faster or we’re using Honeycomb on actual tablets. We’re not in love with the dim, squashed segmented display that Google is using for the time in the lower right; we’re hoping there are plenty of alternative fonts available. Since the emulator doesn’t provide a “Google experience” build with access to the Android Market, Gmail, or other “branded” Google apps, we weren’t able to deep-dive on how real-world applications are going to look on the platform — but with any luck, Motorola’s Xoom should be shipping within a few weeks. In the meantime, check out a video after the break! Update: We’ve figured out the orientation trick — you need to uncheck automatic orientation in Settings, then flip the emulator from landscape to portrait (counterintuitive, we know). We’ll be updating the media as soon as we can! Gallery: Android 3.0 Honeycomb preview emulator hands-on Continue reading Android 3.0 Honeycomb preview emulator hands-on Android 3.0 Honeycomb preview emulator hands-on originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 26 Jan 2011 16:56:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …Prior to President Obama's State of the Union address Tuesday night, CBS Evening News anchor Katie Couric wondered what the message of the midterm elections was, to which political analyst Jeff Greenfield replied: “You've got 87 new members of the House, many of whom are fired up with a kind of militancy we very rarely see, even among new members.” Greenfield went to proclaim: “One of the things Obama politically is going to try to do – not just tonight but over the next year – is to separate out the middle from what he will try to paint as a much too ideological Republican majority.” He then used the “militant” label a second time in describing tensions between new Tea Party members and Republican leadership: “It's also going to be a lot of pressure on new Speaker – the new House Speaker John Boehner. I mean, there's a tension between John Boehner and the more militant Tea Party folks.” Moments later, Couric turned to Face the Nation host Bob Schieffer and fretted: “And how serious, Bob Schieffer, do you see this chasm developing? I mean, how big a problem will this pose for the GOP?” Schieffer declared: “It is a problem. And, I mean, the fact that the Republican leadership is letting Michele Bachmann make a second response here just underlines that….they're afraid to tell her not to, because they know how powerful these Tea Party people were and the power they had in the last election.” Here is a transcript of the January 25 exchange: 9:06PM ET KATIE COURIC: You know, Jeff, a lot of people are saying the real battle is how the recent midterm elections should be interpreted. Republicans say voters wanted less government, they didn't want government-run health care. And the White House claims they just didn't like partisan politics and they wanted both sides to work together. What do you think the message of the midterms was? JEFF GREENFIELD: Because different people can interpret those differently, one of the most important things we're going to see is how the Republicans interpret it when they start to govern. You've got 87 new members of the House, many of whom are fired up with a kind of militancy we very rarely see, even among new members. They really believe they were elected to put a firm immediate halt on spending and one of the things Obama politically is going to try to do – not just tonight but over the next year – is to separate out the middle from what he will try to paint as a much too ideological Republican majority. It's also going to be a lot of pressure on new Speaker – the new House Speaker John Boehner. I mean, there's a tension between John Boehner and the more militant Tea Party folks. That may be the best political story this season. COURIC: And, in fact, John Dickerson, how is that shaking out? We all talked about after the midterm results how these two, basically, sides of the Republican Party were going to be integrated once this new congress was convened. What have you seen happen? How has it all sort of turned out so far? JOHN DICKERSON: Well, it's a shaky business so far and the shakiness comes, we see it tonight. Congressman Paul Ryan, who will give the official Republican response, and then Congresswoman Michele Bachmann will give another sort of Tea Party response. And the difference there, essentially, is between governing – which is what Ryan has to do, put together a budget, listen to all of the input and voices – and Michele Bachmann who's doing a little bit something closer to campaigning. And the mix there and how they find that mix, how they keep all of those promises they made, but still get enough votes to actually pass something that could even make it to the President's desk. That's the tension and they're still working that out and they're working it out in public. COURIC: And how serious, Bob Schieffer, do you see this chasm developing? I mean, how big a problem will this pose for the GOP? BOB SCHIEFFER: It is a problem. And, I mean, the fact that the Republican leadership is letting Michele Bachmann make a second response here just underlines that. I mean, my heavens, can you imagine what Sam Rayburn, when he was Speaker of the House, would have done if one of his members had said 'Oh, by the way, I'm going to make a response, too'? Or Lyndon Johnson, when he was the leader of the Senate? They're letting her make this speech because they're afraid to tell her not to, because they know how powerful these Tea Party people were and the power they had in the last election.
Continue reading …Image: The Transport Politic All Politics is Local Without getting into partisan politics (that way lies madness), it’s fairly easy to conclude that in the U.S., one of the two main parties has been more opposed to things like transit, bike infrastructure, rail, etc (I’ll let you guess which one I’m talking about). So far a lot of ink has been spilled on how this is an ideological difference, but there’s another interesting way to look at it which I think could further explain the rift. The graph above shows which party is in power on one axis and population density on the other. L… Read the full story on TreeHugger
Continue reading …Consider this a most speculative bit of news for now, but a few Facebookers have today been confronted by a new, heretofore unseen “Call” button when visiting their friends’ profiles. Mashing on that icon didn’t connect them and their buddies don’t seem to have received any alerts at all, but the fact remains that the world’s most popular website just did something a little bit different. The logical suspicion is that the Skype partnership that saw Facebook Connect infiltrate the web telephony service is now bearing fruit in the other direction with us seeing a bit of Skype functionality being built into the social network. [Thanks to everyone who sent this in] Facebook may be developing, testing VoIP calls straight through its website originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 26 Jan 2011 16:50:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …Is Chicago heavy hitting mayoral hopeful Rahm Emanuel legit? Well, at least in the sense that he qualifies to run for mayor, given the residency requirements he believes certain prized items of clothing could have fulfilled in his physical absence. Related Entries January 26, 2011 9 Out of 10 Viewers Approve of Obama’s Proposals January 26, 2011 Hogwash, Mr. President
Continue reading …original link Why Celebrate Darwin Day? from American Humanist Association on Vimeo . Broadcasting platform : Vimeo Source : RichardDawkins.net Discovery Date : 26/01/2011 21:45 Number of articles : 5
Continue reading …No one would argue that natural gas is a carbon-neutral or even low-carbon energy source, but it’s a whole heck of a lot better than burning coal, oil from tar sands, or oil from anywhere for that matter. That’s the conventional viewpoint. A new piece by ProPublica , highlighting new EPA analysis of the of the lifecycle greenhouse gas emissions from natural gas, calls all that into question. At the hear… Read the full story on TreeHugger
Continue reading …Image Credit Wikipedia “See-Through” is a real estate development term that originated in Houston in the 80s, when they overbuilt glass skyscrapers that were empty and you could see right through them. Eventually the new buildings filled up as people moved out of the older ones, which were then often demolished; in Dubai, there is no old stuff, just new. Consultant Jones Lang LaSalle has a radical proposal,
Continue reading …Here’s a disturbing trend: The number of US police officers killed in the line of duty increased by 40% in 2010, including a 20% increase in those shot to death. And the trend shows no sign of slowing—10 officers have already been killed nationwide in 2011, including the pair…
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