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iLounge sounds attenuation alarm on Verizon iPhone [video]

The iPhone 4′s antenna situation truly is the story that just will not die. Now that the antenna gripes of the GSM iPhone has been exhausted, why not move on to the heir apparent… the CDMA iPhone. iLounge has published a seven minute YouTube video showcasing a karma sutra of death grips that can affect the signal quality of your Verizon iPiece. It’s not much of a secret that all cellular phones can… Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : The Boy Genius Report Discovery Date : 08/02/2011 23:21 Number of articles : 5

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Nokia CEO Stephen Elop rallies troops in brutally honest ‘burning platform’ memo? (update: it’s real!)

“The first iPhone shipped in 2007, and we still don’t have a product that is close to their experience. Android came on the scene just over 2 years ago, and this week they took our leadership position in smartphone volumes. Unbelievable.” This is just one of many, many pieces of stark knowledge allegedly dropped by recently-appointed Nokia CEO Stephen Elop — formerly of Microsoft — in a roughly 1,300-word memo to the company’s employees that we’ve received today. Though we can’t vouch for the authenticity, it’s notable that the memo contains a portion previously reported by The Register and heard by sources at TechCrunch Europe , so it would seem that we’ve simply received the whole thing. Elop goes on to suggest that his company is “standing on a burning platform” and must “change [its] behavior,” suggesting that the adoption of a non-homegrown platform like Android or Windows Phone 7 is a more realistic possibility than ever before. Update: We’ve now heard from multiple trusted sources that this memo is indeed real, and was posted to an internal Nokia employee system. That makes it one of the most exciting and interesting CEO memos we’ve ever seen — and we’re absolutely dying to see how Elop plans to shake things up. Overall, the communique laments Nokia’s lateral movement while Apple and Google have started eating its lunch on the mid- and high end and Shenzhen-based off brands have started to cut into its traditional dominance in emerging markets, leaving Espoo with virtually zero market leadership. It’s a stark revelation that seems befitting of a man brought in from the outside — he’s neither Finnish, nor raised in the Nokia system — and he promises to start revealing the way forward this Friday at the company’s Capital Markets Day event where grandiose plans have been unveiled in the past . Whether the memo is legitimate or not, the frequency and intensity of big-time rumors floating around Nokia ahead of Capital Markets Day (and MWC next week) have been pretty wild: we’ve heard they’ll be announcing a partnership with Microsoft possibly revolving around Windows Phone 7, that a boatload of executives would be shown the door , and that Elop would start looking to Nokia’s new Silicon Valley campus as its center of gravity, with execs and senior management expected to start spending more time outside Finland. We’ll know far, far more about what’s going on over in Espoo in the next few days, but in the meantime, here are some choice quotes from the memo: “…there is intense heat coming from our competitors, more rapidly than we ever expected. Apple disrupted the market by redefining the smartphone and attracting developers to a closed, but very powerful ecosystem.” “They changed the game, and today, Apple owns the high-end range.” “Google has become a gravitational force, drawing much of the industry’s innovation to its core.” “We have some brilliant sources of innovation inside Nokia, but we are not bringing it to market fast enough. We thought MeeGo would be a platform for winning high-end smartphones. However, at this rate, by the end of 2011, we might have only one MeeGo product in the market.” “…Symbian is proving to be an increasingly difficult environment in which to develop to meet the continuously expanding consumer requirements…” “Our competitors aren’t taking our market share with devices; they are taking our market share with an entire ecosystem.” “We poured gasoline on our own burning platform. I believe we have lacked accountability and leadership to align and direct the company through these disruptive times. We had a series of misses. We haven’t been delivering innovation fast enough. We’re not collaborating internally. Nokia, our platform is burning.” Read the full memo after the break. Continue reading Nokia CEO Stephen Elop rallies troops in brutally honest ‘burning platform’ memo? (update: it’s real!) Nokia CEO Stephen Elop rallies troops in brutally honest ‘burning platform’ memo? (update: it’s real!) originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 08 Feb 2011 18:14:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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WSJ: iPad 2 in production, features FaceTime camera, faster processor

Oh look, what’s this? The Wall Street Journal is reporting that the iPad 2 has entered production — which exactly lines up previously rumored manufacturing schedules . According to the WSJ , the new edition of Apple’s tablet will have a faster processor with a better GPU and more memory in a thinner, lighter package. There’s also said to be a front-facing camera for video conferencing, but the much-discussed display resolution will remain “similar” to the current iPad — which actually goes along with the most recent information we’ve gotten from our sources, who say that the next iPad will indeed stay at the current resolution, and that the higher-res display we’d heard about earlier may have actually been for a future model. As for availability, the WSJ says the new iPad will be on Verizon and AT&T, which certainly makes sense — although it’ll be interesting to see how Verizon handles positioning it against the upcoming Xoom, which Motorola is marketing in an aggressively anti-iPad manner . In any event, between the iPad 2, the Xoom, and whatever Palm has to offer tomorrow, this spring is about to get very, very interesting. WSJ: iPad 2 in production, features FaceTime camera, faster processor originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 08 Feb 2011 17:52:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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‘Blue Bloods’ Star Estes: Selleck Sets the Tone

Will Estes, who plays the youngest member of the Reagan clan on CBS’ cop drama ‘Blue Bloods,’ says star Tom Selleck sets the tone on the set. (Feb. 8)

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Stop-Motion Animation of the Day: Joy Division’s 1979 Peel…

Stop-Motion Animation of the Day: Joy Division’s 1979 Peel Session recording of “Transmission,” as performed by Playmobil figures. [ cassel / laughingsquid .] Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : The Daily What Discovery Date : 08/02/2011 22:34 Number of articles : 5

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Stop-Motion Animation of the Day: Joy Division’s 1979 Peel…

Stop-Motion Animation of the Day: Joy Division’s 1979 Peel Session recording of “Transmission,” as performed by Playmobil figures. [ cassel / laughingsquid .] Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : The Daily What Discovery Date : 08/02/2011 22:34 Number of articles : 5

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Stop-Motion Animation of the Day: Joy Division’s 1979 Peel…

Stop-Motion Animation of the Day: Joy Division’s 1979 Peel Session recording of “Transmission,” as performed by Playmobil figures. [ cassel / laughingsquid .] Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : The Daily What Discovery Date : 08/02/2011 22:34 Number of articles : 5

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New HTC with Android spotted in promotional video, possibly Wildfire 2?

Look, it happens — sometimes your video production team isn’t perfectly synced with the marketing team, which isn’t perfectly synced with the PR team, and so on and so forth until a leak eventually happens. No sweat, HTC! This video posted today on HTC’s official YouTube stream starts off with a gentleman handling a water-washed rock on a beach… which magically transforms just moments later into a device we don’t think we’ve seen before. Our tipster wisely suggests it could be the Wildfire 2, which seems believable considering its general similarity to the original model — minus the optical pad, of course. Whatever it is, odds are good we’ll get full disclosure in a few days at MWC . Follow the break for the full video. [Thanks, Andrew] Continue reading New HTC with Android spotted in promotional video, possibly Wildfire 2? New HTC with Android spotted in promotional video, possibly Wildfire 2? originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 08 Feb 2011 17:31:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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Google Translate for iPhone hits the App Store

iPhone users have been able to use a mobile-optimized HTML5 version of Google Translate for some time now, but they can now finally also get an honest-to-goodness app of their own just like their Android-using friends . That brings with it a number of enhancements over the basic web app, including a speak-to-translate feature with support for 15 languages, the ability to listen to your translations in 23 different languages, and a full-screen mode that lets you show your translated text to others with large, easy-to-read text. Google is still keep a few features exclusive to the Android version, however, including the still-experimental conversation mode that allows for some on-the-fly translations — both apps are also still lacking a much-needed beatbox mode . Google Translate for iPhone hits the App Store originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 08 Feb 2011 17:17:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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Howard Dean: Redistribution of Wealth is What Government Does

Click here to view this media Howard Dean made the sharpest comparison yet between what the protesters in Egypt are standing for, why they’re standing for it, and why we should pay attention to similar circumstances in this country. His key point is toward the middle of the video, where he says this: The fact of the matter is when social inequality and wage inequality gets too large, you have social instability. we are in a position now where we are in trouble in this country. I wouldn’t say we could be Egypt next week, but people really are disillusioned by the government and corporations. They don’t trust any institution very much, and that’s why. I think the President missed a chance to say that in front of the Chamber. he would have gotten i think a lot of credit from the American people if he had. I don’t agree that saying it to the Chamber would have gotten a lot of credit from the American people. I doubt most people would even know he’d said it, and if they did, it would have been so twisted up that it would have played as a negative, given today’s environment. But what Governor Dean says about inequality is right on the money. Granted, in this country we have elections. Egypt doesn’t. And in this country we have free speech and ostensibly, freedom of the press. Egypt doesn’t. Finally, in this country there is still a social safety net, which Egypt does not have. In those respects, we are much different from Egypt. But when it comes to income and wealth inequality , the US surpasses Egypt, and it has indeed fostered mistrust in government and business. Further, the Citizens United decision lends itself to further distrust, because the corporate “person’s” voice will carry farther and louder than any one citizen will. Look no further than the Koch Brothers’ bought-and-paid-for Energy and Commerce Committee in the House. Never in my lifetime has there been a more obvious subversion of democracy than the 2010 midterm elections. I know this isn’t news to many of you reading this, but it really is important for our “side” to begin to shift the conversation away from the right-wing tropes and come around to a real discussion of what “redistribution of wealth” means, what it is, what it isn’t, and why the last 30 years represent a consistent governmental redistribution of wealth from the middle class to the upper tier. While I don’t necessarily think a speech at the United States Chamber of Commerce would be the place for that, I do see that message lacking overall from what we’re hearing from the White House. 99ers should be interviewed on The Last Word, to tell their side of what it’s like to be “downsized” and have wealth redistributed to the corporations who “downsized” them to begin with. Prosperity and recovery shouldn’t be measured by what the Dow closes at, but by whether more people can afford to put food on the table without government or charitable assistance. Bob Herbert’s editorial in today’s New York Times says it far better than I: Corporate profits and the stock markets are way up. Businesses are sitting atop mountains of cash. Put people back to work? Forget about it. Has anyone bothered to notice that much of those profits are the result of aggressive payroll-cutting — companies making do with fewer, less well-paid and harder-working employees? For American corporations, the action is increasingly elsewhere. Their interests are not the same as those of workers, or the country as a whole. As Harold Meyerson put it in The American Prospect: “Our corporations don’t need us anymore. Half their revenues come from abroad. Their products, increasingly, come from abroad as well.” American workers are in a world of hurt. Anyone who thinks that politicians can improve this sorry state of affairs by hacking away at Social Security, Medicare and the public schools are great candidates for involuntary commitment. Lawrence and Governor Dean alluded to a very important part of the President’s speech yesterday, which Mike Lux wrote about in detail . The president’s framing of the importance of government regulations in commerce was excellent and important. Wrapping it all up with a call to patriotism was also excellent and important. But now it’s time to move past catering to these Birchers and start calling the entire country to patriotism, which means ending the meme of “me” and beginning a realistic discussion of poverty, inequality, and how best to change that. Transcript follows (It’s the MSNBC transcript that accompanies their video, so all typos, errors and other problems are entirely theirs): O’DONNELL: joining me now, former governor howard dean. thanks for joining me tonight. DEAN: thanks for having me on, lawrence. O’DONNELL: as you know, there’s a lot of worry from progressives that the president is sucking up to the chamber of commerce and wall street. is today’s speech an indication they should be worried? DEAN: i don’t think so. the chamber, this is a really interesting meeting. first of all, he gave a business oriented speech, but he’s done that before, and that’s appropriate at a time where jobs are in trouble. he did talk to them about investing, which they haven’t done as much as they should. this is also not wall street. these are the guys that actually do create jobs, which wall street mostly pushes around paper. these guys had mostly nothing to do with getting us into this recession, which wall street of course is probably the largest factor in. so it’s not the same as wall street. the other point i make, it is kind of an interesting political deal. the president gets to look like he’s in favor of jobs and move to the middle. the chamber changed in the last election cycle and became part of the right wing. the kind of ads they ran were embarrassing. a lot of local chambers stopped paying dues to the national chamber. corporations, large corporations didn’t want to be associated with it. so the chamber’s got to rehabilitate itself. they got a way to go. they were the most partison organization in the last election. so this is a very interesting thing. if i were the president, i’m not sure i would have been interviewed by bill o’reilly, but i’d go to see the chamber. but the chamber gets to be rehabilitated a bit as well. O’DONNELL: governor, i thought there was a huge omission in the speech. really infuriating omission which i will get to. the president talked about the things he was trying to do to make america a more business friendly place for these guys to do business. and then he said this. OBAMA: now, to make room for these investments, in education, in innovation, in infrastructure, government also has a responsibility to cut spending that we just can’t afford. that’s why i promised to veto any bill that loaded up with earmarks. that’s why i proposed that we freeze annual domestic spending for the next five years. O’DONNELL: governor, to pay for the investments, all he talked about was spending cuts. he did not say one word about the top income tax bracket that we just had that big fight over in december. the president said at the time he still wants to increase it, they only extended for two years. he’s got to convince the country that we need to increase it those four percentage points, and the people that need to pay that income tax rate were sitting right in front of him. wasn’t this the place to make that case to them? that they will be investing in a better country by paying their fairer share of taxes? DEAN: i think that was a mistake on the president’s part. the president got a lot of kudos for mentioning he wasn’t going to extend the bush tax cuts again, he did not do that here. this was a little of tell them what they want to hear and leave the other stuff out. that i think was a mistake. look, the business community has in the past been socially much more responsible than they are now. i totally agree with this inequality stuff. and it is not a left, right issue. the fact of the matter is when social inequality and wage inequality gets too large, you have social instability. we are in a position now where we are in trouble in this country. i wouldn’t say we could be egypt next week, but people really are disillusioned by the government and corporations. they don’t trust any institution very much, and that’s why. i think the president missed a chance to say that in front of the chamber. he would have gotten i think a lot of credit from the american people if he had. O’DONNELL: and governor, he gave the brilliant description of regulation and how regulation can be beneficial to business and beneficial to the consumer, and i’ve never heard a president describe that so smartly, and i think the same kind of intelligence could have brought to the top tax bracket. you mention the o’reilly interview. let’s listen to a piece of the o’reilly interview about income redistribution. O’REILLY: do you deny that you’re a man that wants to redistribute wealth? OBAMA: Absolutely. O’REILLY: You deny that? OBAMA: absolutely. bill, i didn’t raise taxes once, i lowered taxes in the last two years. O’DONNELL governor, this is one of those things, you can see he’s afraid of discussing what an increase in top tax rate actually does. this for me is i feel is why democrats so frequently lose the tax debate. you can see that they’re afraid of the tax debate. DEAN: that was an unusual thing. the president doesn’t often get mouse trapped, especially by the likes of bill o’reilly, but he did get mouse trapped that time. he laid out a proposition that is we shouldn’t have redistribution. that’s what governments do is redistribute. the argument is not whether they should redistribute or not, the question is how much we should redistribute. if you had no redistribution, we would have back before the mag i can’t cart a with a king. so the purpose of government is to make sure that capitalism works for everyone, not just the people that can run rough shot as they often do as the chamber has by throwing money around. so he missed that one because o’reilly laid out framed to proposition, the president didn’t see the frame, and answered the question straight up. no, it is government’s job to redistribute. the question is how much are we going to distribute. otherwise, we wouldn’t have social security, medicare, and we wouldn’t build roads. O’DONNELL: there would be no poor neighborhood in america that had a paved road. thank you for joining me. DEAN: thanks very much, lawrence.

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