Did you know that it takes nearly seven and a half million pounds of thrust to get a Space Shuttle off the ground and into the final frontier? NASA opts to generate that power by burning through 1,000 gallons of liquid propellants and 20,000 pounds of solid fuel every second , which as you might surmise, makes for some arresting visuals. Thankfully, there are plenty of practical reasons why NASA would want to film its launches (in slow motion!), and today we get to witness some of that awe-inspiring footage, replete with a silky voiceover explaining the focal lengths of cameras used and other photographic minutiae. It’s the definition of an epic video, clocking in at over 45 minutes, but if you haven’t got all that time, just do it like us and skip around — your brain will be splattered on the wall behind you either way. Continue reading NASA’s Space Shuttle launch videos are spectacularly incredible, incredibly spectacular NASA’s Space Shuttle launch videos are spectacularly incredible, incredibly spectacular originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 12 Dec 2010 07:31:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …Sadly the Nanoblock-fronting NB1000 looks destined only for Japan, but Pentax is at least blessing those abroad with its RS1000 which, with its customizable and hot-swappable faceplates, offers you a modicum of two-dimensional customization. That cam has been reviewed over at Photography Blog , with the conclusion being that you won’t be dazzled by the cam’s features nor image quality, but for the $120 MSRP (closer to $99 street price) you could do a lot worse. That’s especially true since you get 720p video and a 4x zoom out of the deal — though an inability to zoom while filming means those two features remain somewhat mutually exclusive. Pentax’s faceplate-swapping RS1000 reviewed, a good choice if you’re on a strict budget originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 12 Dec 2010 06:06:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …WETA Workshop is filled with engineers, and that means they solve problems. Practical problems. For instance, how Valve Software is going to keep its throng of Team Fortress 2 players in awe. The answer? Use a gun. Like this heavy-caliber, tripod-mounted, fastidiously crafted life-size reproduction of The Engineer’s level 1 Sentry Gun, which features a bona fide motion sensor for tracking whosoever is fool enough to venture into Valve’s geektastic lobby in Bellevue, Washington and touch the darn thing. We can think of a few souls offhand. Video after the break. Continue reading Weta Workshop builds real-life TF2 sentry gun, minus the screaming and blood (video) Weta Workshop builds real-life TF2 sentry gun, minus the screaming and blood (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 11 Dec 2010 19:01:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …Rail guns play a major part in nearly every fanciful battle of the future, whether it be giant robots fighting for control of the Inner Sphere or the last remaining member of Noble Team holding off the Covenant invasion for as long as possible. They’re the stuff of geeky dreams, and thanks to the US Navy they’re closer to deployment than ever. Three years ago our sea-borne force managed an 8 megajoule blast , now its researchers have more than tripled that: 33 megajoules accelerating a projectile using magnets. That power means speeds of Mach 7 for the slug and a current range of 100 miles, though the hope is for at least double that by the time these things start finding themselves mounted on the decks of battleships in 2025. At that point they’ll reduce the need for rooms full of powder charges and the associated dangers that come along with explosive shells, but will instead need to make way for what looks to be a warehouse full of capacitors. There’s a video of the thing in action below, and you’ll be sorry if you miss it. [Thanks, Jacob L.] Continue reading Navy’s prototype rail gun projectile hits mach 7 at 33 megajoules, our hearts skip a beat (video) Navy’s prototype rail gun projectile hits mach 7 at 33 megajoules, our hearts skip a beat (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 11 Dec 2010 15:31:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …Charles Krauthammer on Friday scolded Mark Shields and other liberals for “moaning and bitching” about the President's compromise tax plan after months of demanding the White House implement a second stimulus package. After Shields on PBS's “Inside Washington” predictably criticized Obama for agreeing to extend the Bush tax cuts on the so-called rich, Krauthammer marvelously struck back (video follows with transcript and commentary): read more
Continue reading …The military has released video showing the moments just before aa C-17 crashed. Four people were killed in the July incident in Alaska. A pilot’s overly aggressive maneuvering and overconfidence were blamed in an investigative report. (Dec. 11)
Continue reading …In the plenary hall at COP16 last night… video: Adopt a Negotiator That title is a paraphrase of Greenpeace International’s climate policy director Wendel T… Read the full story on TreeHugger
Continue reading …The LG Star. The dual-core beast from the east that was once a mere twinkle in our eye has managed to find its way to the Engadget mansions, having been lent to us by a very generous (and very anonymous) tipster. It’s clearly a test device, as evidenced by its diagnostics menus and lack of a lockscreen, but there’s no disguising the power that lies within it. We put the Star through a battery of common Android benchmarks and the results were, in a word, outstanding. Basically, Tegra 2 will give anything your current phone ‘s running an inferiority complex. Join us after the break as we delve deeper into this upcoming powerhouse of a handset from LG. One thing’s for sure: CES 2011 can’t come soon enough. Gallery: LG Star hands-on Continue reading LG Star preview LG Star preview originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 11 Dec 2010 11:30:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …Updates have been coming fast and furious to Google’s Android Market for a couple weeks now, but this is the biggest shift yet — that rusty tab-based interface is out, replaced with a rotating carousel of downloadable content, and a single scrolling pane of info for each and every app. What’s more, it seems that Mountain View has heard the cries of game companies in particular, as it’s got a couple of very special changes largely targeted at them — the size cap on individual apps has been upped to 50MB, and Android Market’s famous 24-hour return policy is no more. You’ll still have 15 minutes to decide whether you want a piece of software or prefer a refund, perhaps long enough to give it a basic test, but there’s no longer enough time to finish a game in one sitting before slyly giving it a pass. There’s also a number of behind-the-scenes changes that should help make sure you only see apps your device can actually run, based on screen size, pixel density and OpenGL support. Google’s pushing the update to every Android 1.6-and-above device over the next couple of weeks, so you can expect your app purchasing world to turn upside-down in time for Christmas cheer. Android Market update streamlines content, nukes tabs, dismantles 24-hour return policy to appease devs originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 11 Dec 2010 11:29:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Looks like this one has got the conservatives up in arms. Seems the Republicans are not looking very serious about their pledge to end earmarks with this appointment. Conservatives upset that ‘Prince of Pork’ will rule spending panel : High-profile conservatives are questioning the decision by House Republicans to place Rep. Hal Rogers (R-Ky.), a veteran lawmaker with a history of earmarking, in charge of a key spending committee. Richard Viguerie, a longtime conservative activist, said Rogers’s election as the next Appropriations Committee chairman (along with Michigan GOP Rep. Fred Upton’s selection as chairman of the House Energy and Commerce Committee ) “should cause all conservatives and Tea Partiers to doubt how serious the Republican leadership is about cleaning up the culture of waste, seniority and corruption in Congress.””Grassroots conservatives are unhappy with the status quo in Washington, and Speaker-designate Boehner needs to balance this slap in the face with something to show conservatives that he is truly committed to reversing the size of government,” Viguerie wrote in a blog post Thursday . ‘Prince of pork’ wins top seat on House Appropriations Cmte. : U.S. Rep. Hal Rogers — known for his ability to secure funding for projects in his Eastern Kentucky district — was selected Tuesday as the new chairman of House Appropriations, the most powerful committee in Congress. The 5th District Republican was chosen by the GOP steering committee in a secret vote late Tuesday afternoon. The decision is expected to be ratified Wednesday by the rest of the House Republicans. In the lead-up to the selection, some conservatives argued that neither Rogers nor Lewis was qualified to be the chairman because of their past history as vigorous users of earmarks, special requests for spending on state and local projects. Critics dubbed Rogers “the Prince of Pork” and called his earmark-benefitted district, where everything from highway construction to homeland security contracts had the Kentuckian’s help over the years, “Mr. Rogers’ Neighborhood.” Rogers secured 137 earmarks worth $251.9 million between 2008 and 2010, according to LegisStorm, a nonpartisan congressional watchdog group. That ranked him 99th among Senate and House members with earmarks. Transcript below the fold. COOPER: “Keeping Them Honest” tonight: a politician who says we should all grab a shovel and start digging the government out of debt, who says he’s committed to ensuring, in his words, that taxpayer money is being used appropriately. Sounds good. He’s Congressman Hal Rogers of Kentucky. He will be the new chairman of the congressional committee that decides how your tax dollars are actually spent. And he’s been called one of the biggest money-wasters in Congress. Of course, that comes from folks who don’t actually live in his district, which is the beneficiary of an awful lot of that money. Now, I want to show you something he posted on his Web site, a column he wrote for “Roll Call” magazine. “It’s time,” he writes, “to grab a big shovel with a sharp blade to start digging ourselves out of this $14 trillion mess.” The congressman goes on to write, “We have got to go line by line and take an axe to programs that we simply can’t afford.” Well, it sounds tough. And, as new chairman of the House Appropriations Committee, he’s going to be in a position to do just that. But, “Keeping Them Honest” tonight, Congressman Rogers only seems to talk the talk, not exactly walk the walk. Take a look at this. These are the earmarks, the pet projects for 2010 that Congressman Rogers got his rural district. There’s 52 of them totaling $98.9 million, according to the nonpartisan group the Center for Responsive Politics, putting him in the top 20 percent of all congressional earmarkers. Now, some earmarks are totally — of course totally legit. And you can judge for yourself if some of his are. For instance, he got a quarter-billion dollars in the last two years, including $52 million for a national center for hometown security. It’s located right there in Somerset, Kentucky, which is Congressman Rogers’ hometown, population — wait for it — 11,000. Well, the local airports have also gotten earmarks over the years, $17 million, even though the last commercial airline, well, they pulled out in February due to a lack of passengers. It’s right down the road, by the way, from the Hal Rogers Parkway. In August, Citizens Against Government Waste named him their “Porker of the Month.” And according to “The Lexington Herald- Journal,” the congressman this summer pushed through a $5 million measure for conservation groups that work with cheetahs — cheetahs in the wild. Now, I was surprised when I heard that, because I — I didn’t realize there were cheetahs in the wild in Kentucky. It turns out there’s not. Cheetos, yes. Cheetahs, no. There is at least one cheetah- lover, however, in the state. Her name is Allison Rogers, and she’s the congressman’s daughter, who just so happens to work for a group called the Cheetah Conservation Fund. Now, the congressman denies any conflict of interests, because he says he’s always been a champion of wildlife. And that may be. But conflict or not, it — it kind of goes against the grain of his own statements about cutting spending and comments from his fellow Republicans on the campaign trail and after. Take a look. (BEGIN VIDEO CLIP) SEN. JOHN MCCAIN (R), ARIZONA: I have been to the floor for 20 years saying that earmarking was a corrupt practice. REP. MIKE PENCE (R), INDIANA: Federal spending’s out of control. SEN. JIM DEMINT (R), SOUTH CAROLINA: It just tells you how irrational this spending culture has become that’s driven by earmarks. UNIDENTIFIED MALE: It’s been a power that’s been abused by the Congress. REP. PAUL RYAN (R), WISCONSIN: We need to change the culture of spending. REP. MICHELE BACHMANN (R), MINNESOTA: All this pork is bad. The old pork was bad. The new pork is bad. RAND PAUL (R), KENTUCKY SENATOR-ELECT: Earmarks is part of the problem, and we must stop it. UNIDENTIFIED MALE: This country worked really well for 200 years without earmarks. REP. TOM COLE (R), OKLAHOMA: And I’m all for saying let’s just not have any earmarks. REP. JEB HENSARLING (R), TEXAS: Earmark after earmark after earmark. (END VIDEO CLIP) COOPER: All right, so that’s how a lot of them ran on it. As you might imagine, some of those who have been railing against government pork are angry that Congressman Rogers is going to be in charge of spending in the new House, especially Tea Partiers. Erick Erickson today blogging, asking, did you vote Republican for nothing? But it wasn’t bloggers or Tea Partiers who secured this so-called Prince of Pork his chairmanship. It was the House leadership, Eric Cantor and John Boehner. And what have they been saying about earmarks? Well, take a look. (BEGIN VIDEO CLIP) REP. JOHN BOEHNER (R-OH), HOUSE MINORITY LEADER: The earmark process here in Congress is a symbol of a broken Washington and a symbol of out-of-control spending. REP. ERIC CANTOR (R-VA), HOUSE MINORITY WHIP: Most Americans know that the earmark issue is emblematic of a greater problem in Washington, that Washington’s spending too much, it’s incurring too much debt, bringing on the need for higher taxes. (END VIDEO CLIP) COOPER: That was Congressman Cantor and Congressman Boehner back in April. The previous month, they had pledged a one-year moratorium on earmarks. And according to the nonpartisan Taxpayers for Common Sense, earmarked money is down about 40 percent so far in 2011 budgeting, largely due to that pledge. Let’s give them credit for that. But it’s only a one-year pledge. And when it expires, the big- spending congressman will, in all likelihood, still be running his committee. We invited Congressman Rogers on the program. He declined.
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