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NYC Overprepares for Dusting of Snow

New York City came out overprepared Friday for a weak storm that delivered just a few inches of snow, not enough to plow in most places and likely not enough for the mayor to redeem himself from a disastrous response to a post-Christmas blizzard. (Jan. 7)

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LG LSM-100 Scanner Mouse hands-on

We just made our way to the LG booth here at the Consumer Electronics Show and found this multifaceted gizmo that the company is dubbing the Scanner Mouse. It does exactly what you think — works as a mouse and scanner. You might recall something similar from back in the day , but LG is looking to commercialize the idea. The bottom of the rodent has a clear (glass or plastic sheet, we’re not sure) packed with five LEDs for the camera to see the image being reflected off of the mirror inside. To kickstart the scanning process on a Widows or Mac machine, you simply press the scan button and huzzah — the software will activate and display the area the scanner is hovering over. Thanks to the dual lasers found on the top and bottom of the underside, you can actually rotate the mouse in any direction and it’ll pick up whatever it’s looking at — it’ll even translate copy on a page into editable text within a document editor. It also functions as a proper mouse (duh!), featuring a scroll wheel as well as left, right and back buttons. The software, in case you were wondering, couldn’t be any simpler to use. Formats such as JPEG, TIFF, PDF and PNG are exportable to your favorite social networks, and you’ve got basic editing functions to make your scans just right. Head on past the break to see an in-action demo. Gallery: LG LSM-100 Scanner Mouse hands-on Continue reading LG LSM-100 Scanner Mouse hands-on LG LSM-100 Scanner Mouse hands-on originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 07 Jan 2011 23:28:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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BP, Halliburton Likely to Face Criminal Charges Over Spill

Image via Freshness In light of the presidential report on the Gulf oil spill that’s due to be released next week, speculation is running rampant that the companies involved — BP, Halliburton, and Transocean — could soon be facing criminal charges. … Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Video: Drake & J. Cole Perform In London

The Hip Hop Chronicle UK got footage of Drake’s first performance in London last night, as well as a bit of J. Cole’s time on stage performing “Who Dat.” Previously: J. Cole Interview With DJ Semtex | Rick Ross ft. Drake – Made Men (CDQ) Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : Nah Right Discovery Date : 08/01/2011 04:16 Number of articles : 5

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Police: 2 Suspects Id’d in Disabled Abuse Case

Los Angeles County Sheriff’s detectives have identified two suspects recorded on tape sexually assaulting profoundly disabled women. The images were gleaned from over 100 hours of video delivered to deputies. (Jan. 7)

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Rep. Lynn Woolsey: Hey, The Public Option Is A Good Way To Cut The Deficit!

enlarge Anything that shows up the Republicans for the shameless, showboating hypocrites they are is okay with me: Even as Republicans gear up for a vote to repeal health care reform, one progressive House member is making a renewed push for the public option. On Wednesday, the first day of the 112th Congress, Rep. Lynn Woolsey (D-CA) introduced a measure to establish a robust public health insurance option as a supplement to the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act. The California congresswoman argued that the plan, which pays physicians 5 percent more than Medicare rates, would lower insurance costs and address deficit concerns, pointing to a Congressional Budget Office report saying it would cut the deficit by $68 billion. “This is the perfect moment for the public option,” Woolsey said. “It builds on the health care reform legislation by lowering costs and it provides a great way to bring down the deficit.” She added: “If Republicans really care about the deficit, they should sign on to this bill rather than try to dismantle the health care reform law, which would add billions to the budget deficit.”

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Microsoft shows off Home Server ‘Vail’ app for Windows Phone 7

Things may have been looking bleak for Microsoft’s upcoming version of Windows Home Server , dubbed ” Vail ,” when HP announced that it was dropping the OS in favor of WebOS last month, but Microsoft has now given it a boost of confidence that should put any rumors of its death to rest. The company is showing off an add-in for Vail that will let you manage alerts on your Windows Phone 7 phone, access media stored on your home server, and in turn send pictures stored on your phone to your server (but not other media, apparently). Still no firm word on a release, but Microsoft says it will available “soon.” Hit up the source link below for Microsoft’s complete walkthrough of the app. Microsoft shows off Home Server ‘Vail’ app for Windows Phone 7 originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 07 Jan 2011 22:58:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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Raw Video: Train Spares Girl Lowered Onto Tracks

A woman’s bid to avoid paying a train fare nearly cost her the life of her daughter. A girl is miraculously alive in Argentina after her mother lowered her onto the tracks as a train was coming into the station, according to surveillance video. (Jan. 7)

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3rd Parcel Ignites in DC, Mailed to Napolitano

A package addressed to the Homeland Security secretary ignited Friday at a postal facility, and authorities said it was similar to fiery parcels sent to Maryland officials a day earlier by someone complaining about the state’s terrorism tip line. (Jan. 7)

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I don’t usually take on Charles Krauthammer’s idiocy, but I really don’t think today’s column should get a pass, especially from liberals. In The World According To Krauthammer, liberals are anti-constitutional, revisionist idiots, because nothing pleases Krauthammer more than attributing his own behavior to others. It’s the conservative way. The theme of Krauthammer’s today crazy is ” Constitutionalism “, which he lauds as enlightenment ascendant. Reviewing events which have taken place since Wednesday, when most, but not all, of the new Congress with the New Conservative Majority was sworn into office, we have the following: A selective reading of the Constitution on the floor of the House of Representatives, after which… It was discovered that Pete Sessions (R-TX) and newbie Mike Fitzpatrick (R-PA) missed the swearing-in because they were attending a fundraiser elsewhere in the Capitol, and oops! they cast votes without being duly sworn. After that discovery… The Rules Committee meeting was then interrupted so that Rep. David Dreier could find a way around the problem of their votes counting when they had not been duly sworn, after which… Drier finally arrives at a half-baked solution via Thomas Jefferson’s congressional manual, settling on the explanation that Fitzpatrick and Sessions were “within proximity of the Speaker of the House” when taking the oath of office. If this is Constitutionalism, I’ve got six feet pointing in all directions. This strange fetish conservatives are having with the Constitution seems to resemble the same problem fundamentalist Christians wrestle with when confronted with biblical contradiction. They cannot reconcile or consistently argue portions of it, so they ignore those, while placing undue emphasis on other passages. But what really annoys me about their fetish is the specious claim that liberals have disdain and disrespect for the Constitution and conservatives are it’s True Defenders. What crap. Now watch what Krauthammer uses as his arguments about us badass liberals: For decades, Democrats and Republicans fought over who owns the American flag. Now they’re fighting over who owns the Constitution. The flag debates began during the Vietnam era when leftist radicals made the fatal error of burning it. For decades since, non-suicidal liberals have tried to undo the damage. Demeaningly, and somewhat unfairly, they are forever having to prove their fealty to the flag. Amazingly, though, some still couldn’t get it quite right. During the last presidential campaign, candidate Barack Obama, asked why he was not wearing a flag pin, answered that it represented “a substitute” for “true patriotism.” Bad move. Months later, Obama quietly beat a retreat and began wearing the flag on his lapel. He does so still. See? All one has to do to own the flag is wear it, whether they mean it or not. But wait, he goes on. Call it constitutionalism. In essence, constitutionalism is the intellectual counterpart and spiritual progeny of the “originalism” movement in jurisprudence. Judicial “originalists” (led by Antonin Scalia and other notable conservative jurists) insist that legal interpretation be bound by the text of the Constitution as understood by those who wrote it and their contemporaries. Originalism has grown to become the major challenger to the liberal “living Constitution” school, under which high courts are channelers of the spirit of the age, free to create new constitutional principles accordingly. I don’t mean for this post to become a treatise on originalism versus a living Constitution philosophy, but Krauthammer just makes no sense. Consider the choice of Republicans to leave out certain pieces of that original document which don’t suit them politically, like the 3/5ths clause, for example. Either the entire document should be interpreted in its original form (and likewise worshipped on the House floor), or else it is a living document, imperfect and subject to amendment and interpretation. But it isn’t both. You can’t excise pieces you don’t like and then claim to be an originalist. Unless you are Charles Krauthammer and are paid handsomely to do so, of course. Then you can, but it’s still as ridiculous as it sounds. But there’s more: What originalism is to jurisprudence, constitutionalism is to governance : a call for restraint rooted in constitutional text. Constitutionalism as a political philosophy represents a reformed, self-regulating conservatism that bases its call for minimalist government – for reining in the willfulness of presidents and legislatures – in the words and meaning of the Constitution. Hence that highly symbolic moment on Thursday when the 112th House of Representatives opened with a reading of the Constitution. Or at least, the parts of the Constitution they liked. Alex Altman’s rebuttal to this originalist constitutionalism gobbledegook points out the empty rhetoric under Krauthammer’s posturing: That’s one reason why the fetishizing of the Constitution is unsettling. It’s not that it isn’t worthy of veneration or study. It’s that too often, the Constitution is wielded as a political cudgel, even if, as Garrett Epps wrote this week at the Atlantic, the cudgelers fail to grasp the document’s finer points. Both parties are desperate to claim themselves as the true descendants of the framers, and they drape themselves in the constitution like a political safety blanket, since it’s one of the only unassailable quantities in contemporary politics. (Among the others, I count jobs, capitalism, liberty, faith and not a whole lot else.) Consider one example of how the Constitution gets hauled out for partisan arguments. At Commentary Magazine today, Pete Wehner, a former Bush Administration and a senior fellow at the Ethics and Public Policy Center, writes: “For many modern-day liberals, the Constitution is, at best, a piece of quaint, even irrelevant, parchment.” In the context of his argument, this swipe follows from a discussion of how liberals’ dismissal of the today’s reading as a “gimmick” shows they don’t take the document seriously. Just like Krauthammer did in his closer: In the interim, the cynics had best tread carefully. Some liberals are already disdaining the new constitutionalism, denigrating the document’s relevance and sneering at its public recitation. They sneer at their political peril. In choosing to focus on a majestic document that bears both study and recitation, the reformed conservatism of the Obama era has found itself not just a symbol but an anchor. But what Mr. Neocon fails to comprehend is this: Liberals aren’t sneering at the Constitution, or even at its reading. Liberals are sneering at conservatives empty, hollow, dishonest attempts to wrap themselves in it while they rake in the big bucks with the hand not holding it. Well, that and the fact that conservatives may hear the words but they don’t live . Kind of like those fundamentalist Christians. Same fetish, different document.

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