Image credit University of Maryland College Park One of the first known viruses, the Tobacco mosaic virus (TMV), spelled disaster for tobacco crops, but it could be the secret to success for more efficient batteries and fuel cells, according to research from University of Maryland. Researchers are learning how to exploit the virus’s amazing ability to self-renew and self-assemble to improve on today’s lithium ion batteries. … Read the full story on TreeHugger
Continue reading …Tuesday's Washington Post Style section carried this front-page headline “Pesky ant video refuses to die.” But the only new developments on the National Portrait Gallery story were security officers removing two (left-wing) protesters on Saturday and the laments of
Continue reading …You know that untitled Spider-man project that’s set to revitalize the franchise at some point in 2012? Yeah, that’s being shot in 3D (not news) using 3ality rigs and RED EPIC cameras (superhotawesome news). Peter Jackson already scooped up 30 EPICs to help him shoot his next big venture, The Hobbit , in 3D, but he’s been beaten to the digital cinematography punch by the producers of the next Spidey flick, who have cornered a quarter of the cameras and actually started shooting with them on set yesterday. Jason Schwartzman, daytime actor and nighttime videography geek, has been extolling the virtues of using such fancy gear over on the RED forums, which is also where he promises his crew will be making further comments detailing the user experience. In slightly less thrilling RED news, the Scarlet S35 is being renamed to the EPIC Lite and will suffer the upheaval of having its features and price change — hit the links below for more. [Thanks, Anthony ] Spider-man reboot is being shot in RED EPIC 3D, has Jason Schwartzman all kinds of excited originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 07 Dec 2010 07:06:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …Um, ok look… we’re not sure what the Aepel Phone is exactly . We know it’s for girls because the t-shirt says so and we know it’s a phone because it’s right there in the product name. However, “phone” seems to be a whacky mistranslation of the “binary CDMA” tech used in the wireless mic. If we had to guess, we’d say it’s a battery-powered compact speaker for fetishists ensnarled by their desire to read Canon service manuals to bespectacled teddy bears. It’s more common than you think. Check the whole mangled press release after the break. Continue reading The Aepel Phone is a product The Aepel Phone is a product originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 07 Dec 2010 06:34:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …Watch Two and a Half Men S8E11: Dead From The Waist Down Alan is getting frustrated that he continuously see Charlie shower Courtney with diamonds and such, and with Lyndsey’s birthday nearing, he must now find a way to somehow earn enough cash to buy her something special on her day. As we now of Alan’s luck, his efforts fell short once again and have now resorted in to something unbecoming of him. The new installment of our favorite guys of Two and a Half Men, which is entitled “Dead From The Waist Down” is the comedy hit TV show’s 1th episode of the 8th season that aired last 12/06/2010 Monday at 9:00 PM on CBS. Watch Two and a Half Men 8×11(0811)
Continue reading …So, we don’t mind a small home renovation project every now and then, and this is one we’re seriously considering. Instructables has posted a step-by-step guide on installing sliding doors which are powered by an air compressor , and which look super cool. As you’ll see in the video which is after the break, it’s a pretty simple idea, which requires a pretty fair amount of work, but the results are very impressive. The sliding doors are controlled by a panel switch and have a key which can lock them open or shut, and the door also boasts a vent above it for air ventilation after operation. Yes, we actually want one of these. Continue reading DIY Star-Trek style air powered sliding doors are something from the future that you can have at home right now DIY Star-Trek style air powered sliding doors are something from the future that you can have at home right now originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 07 Dec 2010 00:58:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …Google’s Andy Rubin brought more than just a Nexus S in his bag of goodies tonight. On stage at D: Dive Into Mobile, the man has brought with him a prototype Android tablet from Motorola. It’s got video chat, an NVIDIA processor, a “dual core 3D processor,” and… oh yeah, it runs Honeycomb , not Gingerbread. Little else is known — Rubin immediately turned his attention to a new release of Google Maps — but we wouldn’t be surprised if we were looking at Stingray , a tablet rumored for a launch on Verizon shortly. Is it seven inches? Ten? We honestly don’t know — but our gut tells us on the bigger side of the spectrum, which would line up with rumblings that the Stingray would in fact be a full ten inches diagonally. Feast your eyes on our pics below! Gallery: Motorola Android tablet prototype makes a cameo at D: Dive Into Mobile Motorola Android tablet prototype makes a cameo at D: Dive Into Mobile running Honeycomb originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 06 Dec 2010 22:37:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …Click here to view this media (h/t Heather@VideoCafe ) CNN tried to have a discussion about Wikileaks Sunday on Howard Kurtz’s Reliable Sources. Only Jeff Jarvis stuck up for Julian Assange, which is still strange, considering that the panel represented the “media.” It was a pretty typical example of how our media is handling the WikiLeaks story. CNN transcripts: KURTZ: Jeff Jarvis, I know you argue for a greater transparency of information, but why should “The New York Times” and “The Guardian” and others let Julian Assange set their agenda? JEFF JARVIS, FOUNDER, “BUZZ MACHINE”: It’s not even Julian Assange. It’s not even WikiLeaks, Howie. The world has changed. Someone can know information now and spread it for the whole world in an instant. I think we have to look at this the other way around and say, why isn’t government more transparent? Government should be transparent by default, secret by necessity. Part of the lesson of the WikiLeaks leaks is that too much is secret, much of what is secret is done in our name, and we should know it. And also, as Fareed Zakaria said in “TIME” this week, the revelations about our diplomacy core are actually all in all good, actually say that they do a good job. And I think that what we should be doing is turning around and recognizing that this is the future. We are in a transparent age. It used to be the secrets went — brought power. Now transparency brings power. Howard Kurtz allegedly understands journalism so I thought it was outrageous for Kurtz to take offense when Assange refuses to out his sources. KURTZ: Rick Stengel, let’s turn now to your interview with Julian Assange. I found some of his answers to be absolutely disingenuous. For example, you ask whether secrets are ever necessary, and he says, well, his secrets are necessary, protecting his sources, but “Our responsibility is to bring matters to the public.” What’s important is the information contained in the Wikileaks cables–not Assange–and when we’re dealing with whistle blowers, of course their identities have to be protected. KURTZ: Do you want to respond to that, Jeff Jarvis? JARVIS: Well, I want to say that all of us journalists around this virtual table should be thinking very seriously about the threat that can be made to our First Amendment rights. Matthew Ingram, a Canadian journalist, wrote at GigaOm.com today — and I think a very important post — saying that WikiLeaks is a publisher. It, took, has First Amendment rights, and we should be defending its First Amendment rights. We in journalism are going off, and many of us attacking WikiLeaks. We should think twice about that, I think, ,because we should be defending transparency as a principle, and defending openness as a principle. And as Rick said, we publish and be damned, so certainly has WikiLeaks. KURTZ: Well, certainly some people are damning the profession as a result. Some people are damning the profession of journalism because it appears to most people that your interests are tied in to protecting the ruling class elites and assisting governments to go to war with other countries so that you may continue to have access to all the powerful people. Digby has been covering the WikiLeaks story as well as anybody and she links up Greg Mitchell, who sheds some excellent light on a very important false meme about WikiLeaks the media keeps using. Digby: For instance, in the course of conversations both online and in the real world, I’ve become convinced that peple do not understand something very important about this last batch of documents and the press is simply not telling them. They were not just dumped on the internet willy nilly. Mitchell explains in this post: German mag Der Spiegel out with its 2nd issue on its access to cables. A lot on Iraq. One headline: “US Diplomats Bewildered and Bamboozled in Baghdad.” Say its based on their reading of 5500 cables. This raises key point: WikiLeaks itself has still posted less than 900 cables — due to relying on heavy redacting by its new org partners. But the same partners do have the complete 250,000 cables. So they, not WikiLeaks, are the ones breaking news and quoting from — even if not postings — the cables. This is just one of many, many misapprehensions that have been allowed to fester (if not actively disseminated) by the American news media and one I would guess most people do not understand. WikiLeaks is working with partners in the press to release these documents, which are being reviewed and redacted before they are uploaded on to the web and published in newspapers. Right now, the only people besides WikiLeaks who have access to all the cables are the newspapers they’ve partnered with. I imagine that many of the people who are threatening to imprison and assassinate Assange do know this and also understand that they are threatening not just him but the publishers of newspapers all over the world who also have these documents. Is everyone comfortable with that? What, you mean WikiLeaks isn’t giving al-Qaeda all the cables, un-redacted and letting them do what they want with them? And what about the “rape” charges? Dana Kennedy reports that Julian Assange‘s alleged crime isn’t violent rape, but that his trouble with the law “apparently stems from a condom malfunction” and an obscure Swedish law involving continuing consent in those situations. David Cay Johnston writes: “If Kennedy is right, and at a minimum her report deserves to be checked out today, then our best news organizations are behaving more like (to borrow a hoary newspaper phrase) those ‘semi-official’ newspapers and broadcast outlets that reliably convey official government truths.” Why hasn’t the media gone to Sweden and found out exactly what the truth is instead of regurgitating what’s being fed to them by people who are completely against Assange for reasons more to do with embarrassment than any ongoing question of national security? Romenesko asks an important question: My hope here is that the top editors at the organizations named above will immediately call or email their reporters and tell them to check out Kennedy’s story and find out the actual facts. Better yet, the reporters whose bylines were atop stories about this will act on their own.
Continue reading …Clarence B. Jones, appearing in 2008 on Tavis Smiley’s PBS show. I had lunch with my oldest son yesterday and he asked if I thought there’d be a primary challenge to Obama. I told him it wouldn’t happen unless the black voters supported it, and I didn’t think we were quite there yet. That was before I read Clarence Jones’ Huffington Post piece this morning. Jones was a personal advisor, legal counsel, draft speech writer and close friend of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Now he’s a Scholar in Residence at the Martin Luther King, Jr. Research and Education Institute at Stanford University. When someone with those credentials is calling for a primary challenge to Obama, something very interesting is happening. Outlier — or crack in the dam? We’ll see: When few other public figures of national stature spoke out about Johnson’s escalation of the war in Vietnam, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr, at New York City’s Riverside Church, before a meeting of Concerned Layman and Clergy, on April 4th, 1967, said “A time comes when silence is betrayal.” For Dr. King, it was “time to break the silence.” And, so it is with Obama’s continued squandering of the extraordinary support he developed for his election as President. Go and check out the video clips of the panorama of faces that assembled in Grant Park in Chicago after the election results confirmed his victory. Check out the million + people who came to Washington to witness his Inauguration . It is not easy to consider challenging the first African-American to be elected as President of the United States. But, regrettably, I believe that the time has come to do this. It is time for Progressives to stop whining and arguing among themselves about whether President Obama will or will not do this or that. Obama is no different than any other President, nominated by his national party. He was elected with the hard work and 24/7 commitment of persons who believed and enlisted in his campaign for “Hope” and “Change.” You don’t have to be a rocket scientist nor have a PhD in political science and sociology to see clearly that Obama has abandoned much of the base that elected him. He has done this because he no longer respects, fears or believes those persons who elected him have any alternative, but to accept what he does, whether they like it or not. It is time for those persons who constituted the movement that enabled Senator Barack Obama to be elected to “break their silence”; to indicate that they no longer will sit on their hands, and only let off verbal steam and ineffective sound and fury, and “hope” for the best. The answer is blowin’ in the wind. The pursuit of the war in Afghanistan in support of a certifiably corrupt Afghan government and the apparent willingness to retreat from his campaign commitment of no further tax cuts for the rich, his equivocal and foot dragging leadership to end DADT, his TARP for Wall Street, but, equivocal insufficient attention to the unemployment and housing foreclosures of Main Street, suggest that the template of the 1968 challenge to the reelection of President Lyndon Johnson now must be thoughtfully considered for Obama in 2012.
Continue reading …You unfortunately still have a bit of a wait in store for your off-the-self Windows Phone 7 device, but those lucky enough to have a developer device are now starting to receive an update that includes the much anticipated copy and paste functionality, and we’re now seeing the first videos of it in action. That expectedly functions much as we’ve heard before , and it appears to work reasonably well in the (admittedly brief) video. Head on past the break to check it out for yourself. [Thanks, Austin] Continue reading Windows Phone 7 shown copying and pasting on video Windows Phone 7 shown copying and pasting on video originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 06 Dec 2010 17:49:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
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