The Girls ask why the Jets are trippin', discuss John Boehner's “emotional” issues, and the snowman hit-and-run. [Video embedded after page break]
Continue reading …Photo: sharktrust.org It’s a loophole that should have been closed long ago — but since it wasn’t, shark finning is still legal off the West Coast and in the Pacific. Shark finning , as you’re probably aware, is the practice of capturing a shark, slicing off its dorsal fin, and casting it back into the water, where it slowly bleeds to death. The rise in popularity of shark fin soup in China has fueled a boom in the practice. But a bill in the Senate seeks to put an en… Read the full story on TreeHugger
Continue reading …Click here to view this media H/T Heather. Where to begin? Is it more egregious that Gov. Chris Christie is trying to pin NJ budget woes on public workers’ unions (and models his solutions on Grover Norquist ) — or that a “60 Minutes” producer allowed his misinformation to go unanswered? First of all, New Jersey’s pension problems came to a head in 1997, during the rein of one Christine Todd Whitman, who cooked up a high-risk scheme to finance tax cuts by refusing to make the state’s mandated pension payments from general revenue. Instead, she and state treasurer Brian Clymer floated a $2.75 billion bond issue that would fund the payments. In other words, she and Clymer were gambling that the market would generate enough money to cover their pension obligations, so they could borrow that money right away for tax cuts. (The state paid $23.9 million in bond fees, by the way. Plus interest.) This was a radical idea for the time , and not everyone was thrilled with the plan. The mayor of Edison N.J. filed a lawsuit to stop it . The State Supreme Court refused a stay, saying the point was moot — but agreed with the plaintiff that the bond authority was merely a legal shell created to get around the state’s debt ceiling without putting it to a public vote. And of course the inevitable happened: Whitman’s pension obligation bonds (and just about every other state’s ) became a ticking time bomb . From I’ve read, the Whitman bonds made no payments for the first 12 years and then, during the last 18 years, they were supposed to pay both the deferred interest and the current interest. Whitman assumed that the irrational exuberance of the market would continue to generate high returns — in other words, the state of New Jersey was looking at a massive balloon payment. Just to make things interesting, average annual returns on the bonds haven’t even been enough to cover the interest payments. enlarge Christine Todd Whitman, financial genius. Profit! Let me point out the obvious: This is how politicians have passed the buck for decades, simply because the Reagan years made them so wary of the political fallout from tax increases. See how well that worked out? When a state is in debt and cuts taxes, the cost of the tax cut is actually a loan that taxpayers will pay interest on, sooner or later. Now on to the second part of the story — namely, that 60 Minutes didn’t bother to get another side to this story. Jamison Forer at Media Matters notes: Did Chris Cristie’s speechwriters script this CBS report on state budget deficits? It certainly reads that way. In 2,600 words about state deficits, you won’t find the phrase “tax cuts.” Instead, CBS adopts the Republican framing that deficits are all about spending — frequently with loaded phrasing like “gold-plated retirement and health care packages.” And throughout the report, CBS allows Christie, New Jersey’s Republican governor, to launch attacks on unions and make unsupported claims about budget problems, all without ever challenging his assertions and without including substantive disagreement from Christie critics.CBS quotes Christie declaring: “We have a benefit problem. … It’s not an income problem from the state. It’s a benefit problem. And so we gotta change those benefits.” No contrary view is included.Then there’s this passage: Then there’s New Jersey. It has the highest taxes in the country, a $10 billion deficit and a depressed economy when first-year Governor Chris Christie took office. But after looking at the books, he decided to walk away from a long-planned and much-needed project with New York and the federal government to build a rail tunnel into Manhattan. It would have helped the economy and given employment to 6,000 construction workers. Gov. Christie acknowledged that’s a lot of jobs. “I canceled it. I mean, listen, the bottom line is I don’t have the money. And you know what? I can’t pay people for those jobs if I don’t have the money to pay them. Where am I getting the money? I don’t have it. I literally don’t have it.” You’d never know from CBS’s handling of the tunnel that there are people, like Nobel Prize-winning economist Paul Krugman , who argue that the tunnel would have had a stimulative effect on the economy, and that killing it was therefore shortsighted, as a stimulated economy produces more tax revenue. No, CBS simply presented Christie’s opposition to the tunnel as gospel.And here’s how CBS addressed New Jersey’s pension problems: It’s also the truth that some of the responsibility for New Jersey’s pension woes lie at the doorstep of the governor’s mansion. Christie and his predecessors have failed to contribute to the state’s share of its pension obligation in 13 of the last 17 years, one of the reasons the fund is going broke. Christie says it’s ancient history.”We spent too much on everything. We spent too much. We spent money we didn’t have. We borrowed money just crazily. The credit cards maxed out, and it’s over. It’s over. We now have to get to the business of climbin’ out of the hole. We’ve been diggin’ it for a decade or more. We’ve gotta climb now, and a climb is harder. Gotta do it,” he said. You’d never know from CBS’ report that a big part of the reason that “Christie and his predecessors” failed to make required contributions to the pension fund is that they decided to use the money for tax cuts instead. (Like I said, the CBS report takes the GOP-friendly stance that deficits are all about spending, not revenue.) As the New York Times noted on August 19 : Christine Todd Whitman became governor in 1994, and to balance out her deep tax cuts, she reduced the payments to the state’s pension funds. That contributed to the growth of the unfunded liability. If Christie didn’t get a producer credit on the 60 Minutes segment, he should have.
Continue reading …It’s a little hard to know exactly who to blame here, but one thing is for sure: consumers lose. Last week Suddenlink started deploying TiVo Premiere DVRs to its customers minus Netflix , saying that it was the agreements Netflix has with studios that prevents its streaming service from being deployed on a cable company DVR. At the time it was hopeful that Hulu Plus could still work, but now it’s confirmed that its customers won’t get that either, blaming the same sort of agreements between Hulu and its content providers. Frustrating? Absolutely — but there is one obvious work-around: buy your own darned TiVo Premiere, get access to Netflix and Hulu Plus, and stop paying your cable provider that monthly rental fee. Hulu Plus not happening on cable-provided TiVo Premiere DVRs, Scrooge wins again originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 21 Dec 2010 07:32:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …You won’t find this hack available for download just yet, but Erica Sadun over at TUAW has posted a video showing AirPlay streaming from an iPad to an XBMC media server running on Ubuntu. As we understand it, the Linux box runs the AirPlay client service with XBMC advertising its availability using the Bonjour-compatible Avahi. Erica, who helped initiate all this AirPlay trickery with her early code spelunking efforts, says that Windows hacks are also in development. Click on through to see AirPlay take another bold step down the path of device agnosticism. Continue reading AirPlay hacked onto XBMC Ubuntu PC, Windows next (video) AirPlay hacked onto XBMC Ubuntu PC, Windows next (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 21 Dec 2010 04:17:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …Not that we haven’t been inundated with circuit-related fashion accessories in the past, but if you’ve already started thinking about what to get that lovely lad (or lady) in your life come February, look no further. SenseBridge, a research group with loads of passion, has just revealed the Heart Spark ($69, on sale now) — a wearable pendant with an integrated wireless receiver, a smattering of LEDs and a wow factor that’s downright heartwarming. The fortunate wearer must also strap a belt around their chest in order to monitor their heart rate, which is then transmitted wirelessly to the Heart Spark; upon receiving the information, the onboard lights will flash at the same rate as your heart, making it easy for the love of your life to see when your heart is aflutter. Video demonstration is just past the break, and yes, it’s about as precious as you’d imagine. Continue reading Heart Spark pendant blinks with your heart, automatically gets you into B.E.D. (video) Heart Spark pendant blinks with your heart, automatically gets you into B.E.D. (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 21 Dec 2010 00:04:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …Sprint, Verizon, and AT&T have all deployed MiFis (and MiFi equivalents ) at this point, leaving T-Mobile as the sole US national carrier to do without a dedicated mobile router — some sort of device you can throw in your pocket and turn on for those occasions when you need to turn a cellular data signal into a nice little pocket of WiFi. Looks like that’s finally changing, though, with TmoNews leaking some shots suggesting that a device codenamed “Lil Wayne” — yes, Lil Wayne — will be introduced in March of next year, offering full 21Mbps HSPA+ speeds, followed by a second model in the second quarter of the year. The move makes a whole lot of sense for T-Mobile now that they’re offering WiFi tethering on select phone models… and really, shouldn’t we be using that shiny, new “4G” network in as many data-intensive ways as possible, anyway? T-Mobile finally getting in on the mobile 3G (or 4G) router craze next March? originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 20 Dec 2010 22:52:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …I dunno, I thought that the video would be a little more horrifying for all the fuss . Several hundred people gathered Sunday at the Metropolitan Museum of Art to protest the recent decision by the Smithsonian Institution to remove a contentious video from a current exhibit at the National Portrait Gallery in Washington, D.C. The video, “A Fire in My Belly,” which was created by the late New York artist David Wojnarowicz and had been part of the exhibition “Hide/Seek: Difference and Desire in American Portraiture,” includes a scene of ants crawling over a crucifix. The film was removed following criticism from, among others, the Catholic League and Rep. John Boehner (R-Ohio).[..] The protesters marched from the Museum to Cooper-Hewitt, the city’s primary Smithsonian institution, holding signs reading “Silence=Death” and “Smithsonian, Stop the Censorship.” The WSJ conveniently left out the name, but the outcry originated none other than Bill Donohue, the perpetually outraged head of the Catholic League, seeking headlines once again . A Smithsonian exhibit that includes a video of ants crawling on a crucified Christ has triggered an unholy backlash — with the head of the Catholic League fuming that the artwork is “hate speech.” “A Fire in My Belly,” by the late artist David Wojnarowicz, is included in “Hide/Seek: Difference and Desire in American Portraiture,” a show at the Smithsonian’s National Portrait Gallery to run through Feb. 13. Catholic League President Bill Donohue said the four-minute video “was designed to insult and inflict injury and assault the sensibilities of Christians,” and he blasted the museum’s federal funding. “If the government can’t fund the promotion of religion, it shouldn’t be in the business of funding an animus to religion,” he said. Smithsonian spokeswoman Linda St. Thomas declined to comment “on people’s opinions on art,” but noted that the museum, although 55 percent funded by Congress, raises its own money for exhibits. That’s right, the exhibit was privately–not government–funded. But you get a little wailing by Bill Donohue, egged on by John Boehner and the Smithsonian folded like a house of cards. But there are many whose delicate sensibilities aren’t so easily affected. In solidarity with the artist and against the censorship, protests have occurred in DC, NYC and Chicago and now, museums are agreeing to exhibit “A Fire In My Belly”, including the University of Chicago’s Smart Museum . While marches of protest have been staged in Washington, D.C., and New York City, dozens of privately funded institutions and collectives across the country have obtained permission from The Estate of David Wojnarowicz (via New York City-based P.P.O.W., which has represented Wojnarowicz’s work since 1988) to screen “A Fire in My Belly” on their own terms. Among them are a trio of Chicago venues including the Smart Museum, which announced this week the video airing as well as a faculty panel discussion organized in part by graduate student Jenn Sichel, who served as a research assistant for “Hide/Seek.” “On the one hand, it’s disheartening to see a work being used so blatantly out of context in this way to stir up controversy,” Smith said. “But on the other hand, it’s really quite beautiful and heartening to see how quickly awareness of the situation has spread, and to see how many institutions have really stepped up to provide people in their communities the opportunity to see the work, to experience it as art rather than just as this tool.”
Continue reading …Well, what do we have here? An ExoPC running Android 2.2 ? Oh yes, it’s Microsoft’s worst nightmare , and it has indeed been accomplished by one of ExoPC’s devout forum members. The details in the forum thread are extremely sparse, but apparently ExoPC fan MrWilson has added a Froyo boot option to his 11.6-inch, Windows 7 ExoPC and has gotten both touch and WiFi working within the Google OS. We’re hoping he’ll post detailed instructions on how he got this all working soon, but in the meantime we leave you with the poorly shot video of it all after the break. So, does this make you even more inclined to buy the $699 tablet from Microsoft Store ? Oh the irony! Continue reading ExoPC hacked to run Android 2.2, Microsoft sobs ExoPC hacked to run Android 2.2, Microsoft sobs originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 20 Dec 2010 17:44:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …There are 446 Bridges, Many with Pedestrian Sidewalks! This great video by our friend Clarence over at StreetFilms gives an excellent overview of Pittsburgh’s bike culture and infrastructure. Having never been, and because Pittsburgh isn’t as well covered by the national media, I had no idea that it was so vibrant and healthy. It’s a nice surprise! If you are in the area, make sure to check out Bike Pittsburgh ( become… Read the full story on TreeHugger
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