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Watch Glee Season 2 Episode 8 – Furt

Watch Glee S2E8: Furt The new installment of our favorite high school club of Glee, which is entitled “Furt” is the teen musical hit comedy TV show’s 8th episode of the 2nd season that aired last 11/23/2010 Tuesday at 9:00 PM on FOX. Sue gets an unexpected visit from none other than her “Nazi-hunting” mother named Doris(played by Carol Burnett), who goes back from Lima to get some updates on her beloved girls. Meanwhile, Finn and Rachel moves up with their relationship by making one giant step forward, while Kurt has been pushed to the brink and is now forced to make an important decision. Watch Glee 2×8(0208) Online Free Online Streaming Full Episodes Replay of the Latest Season and Video Clip Download Link: HERE

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Scientists finally find a practical use for metamaterials: boosting antenna performance (video)

Metamaterials can do all sorts of cool things in theory, like create invisibility cloaks or focus lasers . In practice, though, they’re rather less useful. Or at least they were, before the team at Fractal Antenna figured out that a simple sleeve made out of fractal-based metamaterials triples the bandwidth of a simple monopole antenna and boosts its gain by 3dB. All you need to do is slip the fractal sleeve on and and, hey presto, instant super antenna. You can see it demonstrated in the video after the break before reading all the nitty, gritty, infinitely-repeating details in the PR, which is down there too. Continue reading Scientists finally find a practical use for metamaterials: boosting antenna performance (video) Scientists finally find a practical use for metamaterials: boosting antenna performance (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 24 Nov 2010 04:29:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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Pocketbook spills the transflective colored beans, announces Mirasol e-reader for CES this year

Details are about as scant as can be, and The Digital Reader claims the entire announcement was a mistake, but PocketBook USA just outed what could be the very first Mirasol e-reader in a CES 2011 press release. In addition to the newish PocketBook Pro e-readers spotted at IFA 2010 , the company will apparently showcase a brand-new model with one of Qualcomm’s transflective color screens, and to commemorate the long-awaited occasion it’s tentatively christening the reader “Mirasol,” too. Early whispers suggest the device cost a bundle and won’t have a fast enough refresh rate (12fps) for video speeds, but we’ll find out the truth of the matter come the first week of January. PR after the break. Continue reading Pocketbook spills the transflective colored beans, announces Mirasol e-reader for CES this year Pocketbook spills the transflective colored beans, announces Mirasol e-reader for CES this year originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 24 Nov 2010 01:11:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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Nielsen: 31 percent of kids want an iPad, other stuff

Hey look, a chart with the iPad on top. Aren’t statistics fun? And yet, this chart may not mean quite what you think it does. The Nielsen Company presented a cadre of individuals with a list of nice, shiny gadgets and let them cross off anything and everything they’d like to buy in the next six months, and 31 percent of kids 6-12 picked the iPad as one of them. That doesn’t mean these youngsters wanted the iPad any more than a game console, mind you, it just means more of them picked the tablet than any other single game console on the list. Also, it turns out that the iPad was the only tablet PC available, so it could well ave served as a proxy vote for other slates — Galaxy Tab , anyone? The survey results also don’t factor in ownership, so if the Xbox 360′s low on the buy list, it could be because respondents already have one … but we suppose this is the definitive proof we’ve been searching for that e-readers are on the outs in the 12-and-under crowd. Jeff Bezos is crying over his evening oatmeal right now. After the break, see what the same chart looks like for teenagers and adults. (Hint: they aren’t all that hot on handhelds.) Continue reading Nielsen: 31 percent of kids want an iPad, other stuff Nielsen: 31 percent of kids want an iPad, other stuff originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 24 Nov 2010 00:22:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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If you missed any of this, be sure to watch both videos in this post. It’s definitely some of the most spontaneous and revealing television I’ve seen in a very long time. Keith Olbermann brought together Michael Moore and Wendell Potter in a segment about how the health insurance industry mobilized to smear both Moore and “Sicko” ahead of its release, fearing it would get traction and start a “grass roots uprising” for single payer health insurance. It’s not that it’s a surprise. We all know this is the standard tactic. But what comes through on these videos is how truly angry and passionate Moore is about this effort to discredit work that he viewed as essential to the debate. If memory serves me, they did succeed at marginalizing it, at least to the extent that it was not as relevant to the general debate as death panels were to become. Partial transcript follows… OLBERMANN: Let me jump in, Wendell. APCO, that PR film seems to contradict some of the remarks you made. APCO did not conduct research on Michael Moore’s family. We did not suppress turnout for his movie. Explain what you know about the personal research that was done on Michael Moore and his family. POTTER: I think whoever wrote that, I think, she was just protesting too much. The industry did an enormous amount of research on what we thought was going to be in the movie and on Michael Moore as a movie maker. I, myself did. I have seen every one of his movies, read all three of his books, seen all 24 episodes of “The Awful Truth.” I know where you went to school. I know when you dropped out of college. I know who you are married to. I know a lot about you. Everybody in the industry knows a lot about you. We needed to know as much as we could, not that we necessarily were going to be using that if we didn’t have to. One of the things that I was afraid about doing what I’m doing was that I would be attacked not by the industry directly by but its allies to try to attack my character and reputation. So that’s what’s goes on in a lot of the campaigns like this. MOORE: When you were doing this research and this spying on myself and my family, what, I mean, to what ends, really? Obviously, they don’t really want to have the debate on the issue, whether or not a for-profit health insurance system is what’s really best for Americans? POTTER: right. MOORE: It seemed like their main goal was if people get in to see that film, we are doomed. We have got to make sure as few people see that film as possible. The way to do that is to smear Michael Moore, call him Anti — American, say Anti-American and say he is not telling the truth. You said the other day that you guys were ready for Plan “B” if that failed, If the movie was getting too much traction, that it might be necessary to push me off a cliff, right? > > what exactly did that mean? POTTER: I was in that meeting and those words, indeed, were said. It was not literal, obviously. It meant we would do what we had to do to create ads and op-eds that we would get conservative pundits to place in newspapers with the whole objective of, as they call it, reframing the debate, to try to move the attention from them to you as a filmmaker.

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Schultz’s Strange Mind-Melt: Confuses Palin With . . . Michelle Obama

With the Thanksgiving weekend coming on, today somehow feels like Friday.

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Screen Grabs: BlackBerry Eyed PlayBooks (video)

Screen Grabs chronicles the uses (and misuses) of real-world gadgets in today’s movies and TV. Send in your sightings (with screen grab!) to screengrabs at engadget dot com . Whoulda thunk that the third time we’d see the BlackBerry PlayBook on video, it’d be in the hands of cube-headed dopplegangster Will.I.Shill? Not us, but we’re terribly excited to see the 7-inch tablet show off its augmented reality chops in the Black Eyed Peas’ latest music video. We’re not really sure what alternate reality hijinks turned the musicians into 8-bit portraits nor pixelated their world, but the BEP sure look adorable as Xbox LIVE-friendly avatars. Watch it after the break, or skip to 2:12, 3:16 and 3:54 if you just want to get your tablet on. [Thanks, Jamesy] Continue reading Screen Grabs: BlackBerry Eyed PlayBooks (video) Screen Grabs: BlackBerry Eyed PlayBooks (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 23 Nov 2010 21:11:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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AT&T-branded BlackBerry Bold 9780 spotted by way of eBay

T-Mobile’s got an American lock on the Bold 9780 at the moment, but you know how it goes with BlackBerrys: they tend to go pretty much everywhere ( Storm and Torch notably excepted) if you give ‘em enough time. Sure enough, an AT&T-branded version just popped up… and if you’ve got $899 lying around and an undying love for unreleased RIM gear, it can be yours. The phone’s chilling on eBay right now with a prominent AT&T logo silkscreened at the bottom; obviously, it stands to reason these guys would want to replace their Bold 9700 before too long, so we’re not surprised to see it go down like this. Want a white version, though? Well, you’ll just have to wait for that. AT&T-branded BlackBerry Bold 9780 spotted by way of eBay originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 23 Nov 2010 20:37:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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Gibson sues WowWee, retailers over Paper Jamz toy guitars; would rather some other company get all that free advertising (video)

It looks like WowWee is learning the implications of that old saw, “imitation is the surest way to get your company sued.” That’s right, the company’s radical looking, fun for about twenty minutes, paper-thin plastic toy guitars have recently drawn legal fire from Gibson, who recognizes a distinct resemblance between some classic axes (like the Flying V and the Les Paul) and the aforementioned Paper Jamz line. Which we could certainly see — even if WowWee hadn’t name dropped Gibson in its product literature (which seems to us to be rather on par with taunting the company outright). And if that weren’t bad enough, the company is going after retailers, such as Toys ‘R Us and eBay, who it claimed kept selling the things after receiving a cease and desist letter. Of course, this raises a few questions: At which point is a design so ubiquitous that it becomes fair game for companies like WowWee? And wouldn’t Gibson want the kiddies (who will be ready to move up to real guitars soon enough) hooked on their brand? And most importantly — when are we getting a Paper Jamz Rickenbacker? Because there has to be an easier way to be like Paul Weller. Commercial after the break (it adds nothing to the post, but it’s kind of a laugh). Continue reading Gibson sues WowWee, retailers over Paper Jamz toy guitars; would rather some other company get all that free advertising (video) Gibson sues WowWee, retailers over Paper Jamz toy guitars; would rather some other company get all that free advertising (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 23 Nov 2010 18:21:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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The new TSA policy is awful and will have ramifications until the Obama administration does something about it. More and more people will be filmed to cause attention to themselves and also the new rules. We know that the right wing will exploit this as much as they can. If a Republican was in the Oval office they would be doing and saying the exact opposite. They’d give up their dignity in a second to prove that Conservatives are the only real Americans and care more about our safety than the left, but implementing a bad, bad policy only makes things easier for them and causes videos like this to explode on Drudge. Duncan: …it really should be obvious to our overlords that taking pictures of and fondling peoples’ genitals aren’t really acceptable security measures. Is that so hard to understand?

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