Home » Posts tagged with » video (Page 64)
Sonim brings a trio of rugged devices to CTIA E&A 2011, we go hands-on (video)

Sonim doesn’t crank out smartphones. It’s too busy flooding the earth with uber-rugged featurephones that would most likely withstand an actual flood, and it’s darn proud of that fact. That’s the impression we got, at least, after visiting the company’s booth at this week’s CTIA Enterprise & Applications. We had the opportunity to play around with Sonim’s three new devices : the XP1301 Core NFC, XP3340 Sentinel and XP1330 Core PTT. Announced on Monday, the first two phones are already available in the US while the third is targeted squarely at Latin America over the next two months. Quite frankly, the new GSM / EDGE lineup looks so similar that it’d be incredibly easy to forget which one was which — aside from having an appearance not unlike a tank, all three devices seem to come from the same mold. As similar as they are, each one has its own specialty: the XP1301 offers a Near-Field Communication tag reader, the XP1330 takes advantage of Push to Talk and the XP3340 Sentinel throws in a customizable man-down sensor that triggers an emergency alarm when something is awry. But we’ll tell you what won’t require emergency assistance — viewing the galleries and videos below. Gallery: Sonim XP1301 NFC hands-on at CTIA E&A 2011 Gallery: Sonim XP3340 Sentinel hands-on at CTIA E&A 2011 Gallery: Sonim XP1330 Core PTT hands-on at CTIA E&A 2011 Zachary Lutz contributed to this report. Continue reading Sonim brings a trio of rugged devices to CTIA E&A 2011, we go hands-on (video) Sonim brings a trio of rugged devices to CTIA E&A 2011, we go hands-on (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 13 Oct 2011 11:29:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

Continue reading …
Samsung confirms Ice Cream Sandwich event on October 19

Just like we’d heard , we’ll be getting our first taste of Ice Cream Sandwich next week, on October 19th to be precise. Of course we’ve already had a whiff of what it looks like in a video , and sampling the new Music and Google+ apps gave us another good look. But now we’re set to see it for real, and if all goes well we might just get some new hardware out of the deal, too. Will this be the day the Nexus Prime makes us think that flat smartphones are… well… square? We’ll be there live to let you know as it happens. The event takes place 10:00am HKT, which is conveniently 10:00pm EST on October 18th. A primetime liveblog and gadget unveiling? Can’t wait. Samsung confirms Ice Cream Sandwich event on October 19 originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 13 Oct 2011 15:15:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

Continue reading …
Princess Letizia Shows Off Orange Accessories <![CDATA[&]]> New Short Haircut (PHOTOS)

Last month it was snakeskin, this week it’s bright orange. Princess Letizia make an appearance in Segovia with her husband, Prince Felipe of Spain, wearing her go-to outfit: a solid color suit (this time she went with pants) paired with fun accessories and killer heels. She ditched the animal prints for a bright orange clutch, coordinating perfectly with her orange blouse, and high nude pumps. The Spanish royal also showed off her new chic haircut, which we first noticed a few days ago (see the pics below). The princess was in Segovia for the World Heritage Committee Meeting, held at the Palacio de la Granja. With fans waiting outside, Letizia gamely shook hands and took pictures for the many children gathered outside the event. Take a look at Princess Letizia’s latest look! What do you think of the bright orange accents?

Continue reading …
Evan Van Der Spuy, South African Cyclist, Hit By Antelope While Mountain Biking (VIDEO)

This one will make you wince. Evan van der Spuy, a mountain biker on team Jeep South Africa, was hit by a buck while riding in a race at Albert Falls Dam in KwaZulu Natal, South Africa. In the video, we hear his team mate, Travis Walker, warning van der Spuy to “watch the buck.” And while van der Spuy looks to his right, there’s nothing he can do. Moments later…well, you’ll see what happens. According to Global Post, van der Spuy was taken out by a red hartebeest, a type of antelope that can weigh as much as 330 pounds. Shockingly, the visibly shaken — and audibly groaning — van der Spuy didn’t suffer any serious injuries, although his helmet was shattered. He tweeted later that he’s “stable with nothing more than a very stiff neck,” thanking his team mates for their help. #embedly_twitter_16181189{background:url(http://a0.twimg.com/images/themes/theme15/bg.png) #022330; padding:20px;} #embedly_twitter_16181189 p{background:#fff;padding:10px 12px 0px 12px;margin:0;min-height:48px;color:#000;font-size:18px;line-height:22px;-moz-border-radius:5px;-webkit-border-radius:5px} #embedly_twitter_16181189 .embedly_tweet_content{background:#fff;padding:10px 12px 10px 12px;margin:0;min-height:48px;color:#000;font-size:18px !important;line-height:22px;-moz-border-radius:5px;-webkit-border-radius:5px} #embedly_twitter_16181189 p span.metadata{display:block;width:100%;clear:both;margin-top:0px;height:40px; padding-bottom: 12px;} #embedly_twitter_16181189 p span.metadata span.author{line-height:15px;color:#999;font-size:14px} #embedly_twitter_16181189 p span.metadata span.author a{line-height:15px;font-size:20px;vertical-align:middle} #embedly_twitter_16181189 p span.metadata span.author img{float:left;margin:0 10px 0 0px;width:48px;height:48px} #embedly_twitter_16181189 p a {color: #0084B4; text-decoration:none;} #embedly_twitter_16181189 p a:hover{text-decoration:underline} #embedly_twitter_16181189 .embedly_timestamp{font-size:13px;display:inline-block;margin-top: 5px;} #embedly_twitter_16181189 .components-above span.embedly_timestamp{font-size:10px;margin-top: 1px;line-height:12px} #embedly_twitter_16181189 a {color: #0084B4; text-decoration:none;} #embedly_twitter_16181189 a:hover{text-decoration:underline} #embedly_twitter_16181189 .tweet-screen-name {font-size: 14px; font-weight: bold;} #embedly_twitter_16181189 .tweet-full-name {padding-left: 4px; color: #999; font-size: 12px;} #embedly_twitter_16181189 .tweet-actions{margin-left: 10px;font-size:13px;display:inline-block;width:250px} #embedly_twitter_16181189 .components-above span.tweet-actions{font-size:10px} #embedly_twitter_16181189 .controls{line-height:12px!important} #embedly_twitter_16181189 .tweet-actions a {margin-left:5px} #embedly_twitter_16181189 .tweet-actions a b{font-weight:normal} #embedly_twitter_16181189 .components-above span.tweet-actions a b{vertical-align:baseline;line-height:12px} #embedly_twitter_16181189 .components-above .tweet-text{font-size:13px;vertical-align:baseline} #embedly_twitter_16181189 .tweet-image {float: left; width: 40px;} #embedly_twitter_16181189 .tweet-user-block-image {float: left; width: 48px; height: 48px} #embedly_twitter_16181189 .tweet-row {margin-left: 40px; margin-top: 3px;line-height: 17px;} #embedly_twitter_16181189 .tweet-user-block {margin-left: -40px;} #embedly_twitter_16181189 .stream-item {padding-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 12px;} #embedly_twitter_16181189 .simple-tweet-image img {margin-top: 4px;} #embedly_twitter_16181189 .simple-tweet-content {margin: 0 0 13px 0px; font-size: 14px; min-height:48px;} #embedly_twitter_16181189 .in-reply-to-border {border-color: #EBEBEB; border-style: solid; border-width: 1px 0 0;} #embedly_twitter_16181189 .in-reply-to-text {margin-left: 4px; padding-left: 8px; padding-right: 10px; color: #999; font-size: 12px;} #embedly_twitter_16181189 .tweet-actions i {background: transparent url(http://a2.twimg.com/a/1306889658/phoenix/img/sprite-icons.png) no-repeat;width:15px;height:15px;margin:0 4px -3px 3px;outline: none; text-indent:-99999px;vertical-align:baseline;display:inline-block;position:relative;} #embedly_twitter_16181189 .tweet-actions a.retweet-action i {background-position:-192px 0;} #embedly_twitter_16181189 .tweet-actions a.reply-action i {background-position:0 0;} #embedly_twitter_16181189 .tweet-actions a.favorite-action i {background-position:-32px 0;} @evanvdspuyEvan van der Spuy Just saw the footage that put me in hospital with a very stiff neck take my hat off 2 @traviswalkermtb you got some good camera skills manOct 09 via Twitter for BlackBerry®FavoriteRetweetReply According to the YouTube description, Walker took this video with a GoPro camera. GoPro has been suspected of launching some pretty savvy viral video campaigns, but this video seems legit. What do you think? Let us know in the comments. Watch: Mountain Biker Taken Out By Buck (Available at top): Found via Facebook

Continue reading …
Evan Van Der Spuy, South African Cyclist, Hit By Antelope While Mountain Biking (VIDEO)

This one will make you wince. Evan van der Spuy, a mountain biker on team Jeep South Africa, was hit by a buck while riding in a race at Albert Falls Dam in KwaZulu Natal, South Africa. In the video, we hear his team mate, Travis Walker, warning van der Spuy to “watch the buck.” And while van der Spuy looks to his right, there’s nothing he can do. Moments later…well, you’ll see what happens. According to Global Post, van der Spuy was taken out by a red hartebeest, a type of antelope that can weigh as much as 330 pounds. Shockingly, the visibly shaken — and audibly groaning — van der Spuy didn’t suffer any serious injuries, although his helmet was shattered. He tweeted later that he’s “stable with nothing more than a very stiff neck,” thanking his team mates for their help. #embedly_twitter_16181189{background:url(http://a0.twimg.com/images/themes/theme15/bg.png) #022330; padding:20px;} #embedly_twitter_16181189 p{background:#fff;padding:10px 12px 0px 12px;margin:0;min-height:48px;color:#000;font-size:18px;line-height:22px;-moz-border-radius:5px;-webkit-border-radius:5px} #embedly_twitter_16181189 .embedly_tweet_content{background:#fff;padding:10px 12px 10px 12px;margin:0;min-height:48px;color:#000;font-size:18px !important;line-height:22px;-moz-border-radius:5px;-webkit-border-radius:5px} #embedly_twitter_16181189 p span.metadata{display:block;width:100%;clear:both;margin-top:0px;height:40px; padding-bottom: 12px;} #embedly_twitter_16181189 p span.metadata span.author{line-height:15px;color:#999;font-size:14px} #embedly_twitter_16181189 p span.metadata span.author a{line-height:15px;font-size:20px;vertical-align:middle} #embedly_twitter_16181189 p span.metadata span.author img{float:left;margin:0 10px 0 0px;width:48px;height:48px} #embedly_twitter_16181189 p a {color: #0084B4; text-decoration:none;} #embedly_twitter_16181189 p a:hover{text-decoration:underline} #embedly_twitter_16181189 .embedly_timestamp{font-size:13px;display:inline-block;margin-top: 5px;} #embedly_twitter_16181189 .components-above span.embedly_timestamp{font-size:10px;margin-top: 1px;line-height:12px} #embedly_twitter_16181189 a {color: #0084B4; text-decoration:none;} #embedly_twitter_16181189 a:hover{text-decoration:underline} #embedly_twitter_16181189 .tweet-screen-name {font-size: 14px; font-weight: bold;} #embedly_twitter_16181189 .tweet-full-name {padding-left: 4px; color: #999; font-size: 12px;} #embedly_twitter_16181189 .tweet-actions{margin-left: 10px;font-size:13px;display:inline-block;width:250px} #embedly_twitter_16181189 .components-above span.tweet-actions{font-size:10px} #embedly_twitter_16181189 .controls{line-height:12px!important} #embedly_twitter_16181189 .tweet-actions a {margin-left:5px} #embedly_twitter_16181189 .tweet-actions a b{font-weight:normal} #embedly_twitter_16181189 .components-above span.tweet-actions a b{vertical-align:baseline;line-height:12px} #embedly_twitter_16181189 .components-above .tweet-text{font-size:13px;vertical-align:baseline} #embedly_twitter_16181189 .tweet-image {float: left; width: 40px;} #embedly_twitter_16181189 .tweet-user-block-image {float: left; width: 48px; height: 48px} #embedly_twitter_16181189 .tweet-row {margin-left: 40px; margin-top: 3px;line-height: 17px;} #embedly_twitter_16181189 .tweet-user-block {margin-left: -40px;} #embedly_twitter_16181189 .stream-item {padding-bottom: 0px; margin-left: 12px;} #embedly_twitter_16181189 .simple-tweet-image img {margin-top: 4px;} #embedly_twitter_16181189 .simple-tweet-content {margin: 0 0 13px 0px; font-size: 14px; min-height:48px;} #embedly_twitter_16181189 .in-reply-to-border {border-color: #EBEBEB; border-style: solid; border-width: 1px 0 0;} #embedly_twitter_16181189 .in-reply-to-text {margin-left: 4px; padding-left: 8px; padding-right: 10px; color: #999; font-size: 12px;} #embedly_twitter_16181189 .tweet-actions i {background: transparent url(http://a2.twimg.com/a/1306889658/phoenix/img/sprite-icons.png) no-repeat;width:15px;height:15px;margin:0 4px -3px 3px;outline: none; text-indent:-99999px;vertical-align:baseline;display:inline-block;position:relative;} #embedly_twitter_16181189 .tweet-actions a.retweet-action i {background-position:-192px 0;} #embedly_twitter_16181189 .tweet-actions a.reply-action i {background-position:0 0;} #embedly_twitter_16181189 .tweet-actions a.favorite-action i {background-position:-32px 0;} @evanvdspuyEvan van der Spuy Just saw the footage that put me in hospital with a very stiff neck take my hat off 2 @traviswalkermtb you got some good camera skills manOct 09 via Twitter for BlackBerry®FavoriteRetweetReply According to the YouTube description, Walker took this video with a GoPro camera. GoPro has been suspected of launching some pretty savvy viral video campaigns, but this video seems legit. What do you think? Let us know in the comments. Watch: Mountain Biker Taken Out By Buck (Available at top): Found via Facebook

Continue reading …
Suspect Caught in Case of Slain Mom, Missing Son

A car belonging to a slain Maryland woman whose 11-year-old son is missing and feared abducted was found unoccupied Thursday and police were still searching for the boy. (Oct. 13)

Continue reading …
Victoria Jackson Goes to Occupy Wall Street and Gets in Over Her Head

(h/t The Political Carnival ) This is your brain . And this is your brain on Glenn Beck . Victoria Jackson employs so few braincells I’m actually amazed that she can navigate the greater New York state highway system to make it down to the Occupy Wall Street. I’m guessing that Jackson thought that she could pull a “gotcha” and catch a few DFH smoking their joints and banging on their bongos and convince them to accept Christ in their life and go Republican. But Jackson has been outsourcing all her thinking to the GB Network for so long that she came completely unarmed for this battle of wits. She found a few outrageous players that look for camera time that you see at any protest, no doubt infusing her with false confidence. But when she actually interviewed some participants, she found that not only were they intelligent and well-spoken, but like Kryptonite to conservatives, armed with facts. They refused to take her bait of degenerating this down to a partisan quibble, they pointed out that they were focused on systemic failures (oops…too many syllables for Victoria?) and they basically left her looking even more pathetic. But that’s not hard, is it? EDITOR’S NOTE: Why did she post this?

Continue reading …
Glenn Beck: Occupy Wall Street Protesters Will ‘Kill Everybody’ (VIDEO)

Glenn Beck made several gruesome predictions about where the Occupy Wall Street movement is headed. Speaking on his radio show Monday, Beck made his already-crystal-clear disdain for the protests, which have spread across the U.S., even more plain. He took a slightly surprising turn, though, in warning establishment Democrats like Nancy Pelosi (who has voiced her support for the movement) as well as any rich backers of the protests not to trust anyone in Occupy Wall Street. “Nancy Pelosi, you really think these people are your friends?” Beck asked. “Are you that stupid? People around Nancy Pelosi, are you this stupid? Do you really think that you’re going to be able to somehow or another control these people?” Beck then made the first of his dark analogies. Saying that the only thing that could control the movement would be a forceful crushing from “the top,” he added, “It will be the Night of Long Knives. It will be a purging of this country.” This was a seeming reference to the political murders carried out by the Nazis in 1934. Beck then turned to “capitalists,” and here his warning was even starker and more graphic: “Capitalists, if you think that you can play footsies with these people, you’re wrong. They will come for you and drag you into the streets and kill you…they’re Marxist radicals…these guys are worse than Robespierre from the French Revolution…they’ll kill everybody.” WATCH:

Continue reading …
Gilad Shalit Deal Reached With Hamas: Israel Radio

JERUSALEM — In a much-anticipated prisoner exchange that could have broad implications, Israel and Hamas on Tuesday announced that an Israeli soldier abducted to Gaza five years ago would be swapped for about 1,000 Palestinians held by Israel and accused of militant activity. Israel’s government approved the deal early Wednesday following a three-hour debate after both Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Hamas leader Khaled Mashaal announced the agreement in televised comments. Netanyahu said the captured soldier, Sgt. Gilad Schalit, would return home within days. Mashaal, portraying the agreement as a victory, said the Palestinian prisoners would be freed in two stages over two months. Hamas and Israel are bitter enemies. Hamas has sent dozens of suicide bombers into Israel, killing hundreds, and Israel blockaded Gaza after Hamas seized power there in 2007, carrying out a large-scale invasion in 2009 to try to stop daily rocket attacks on Israel. More than 1,500 Gaza Palestinians have been killed in Israeli raids and airstrikes since the soldier was captured. In the northern Gaza town of Jebaliya, thousands of Hamas supporters flocked the streets, led by masked militants. Cars with loudspeakers played praise for Hamas. Thousands of other Gazans rushed to their border with Egypt, clutching Palestinian and Egyptian flags, tossing flowers and cheering. Gaza’s Hamas prime minister, Ismail Haniyeh, smiled as he threw candy to celebrating backers. The deal maintains a decades-long tradition of lopsided exchanges that have come under increasing criticism in Israel – and ends a period of tortured indecision by Israeli governments torn between securing the release of a single soldier and the risk that freed militants might return to violence that could cost many more lives. “There is built-in tension between the desire to return a kidnapped soldier … and the need to preserve the security of the citizens of Israel,” Netanyahu said, in comments at opening the Cabinet meeting. “I believe we reached the best deal that we can reach at this time, a stormy time in the Middle East.” In agreeing to go ahead with the deal, the career hard-liner made a potentially fateful choice. It gives Hamas, a militant group that rules the Gaza Strip, a victory that might strengthen its hand against the more moderate Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, whose Palestinian Authority runs the West Bank. Mashaal said 1,000 male prisoners and 27 female ones would be released, the first 450 over the next week and the rest within two months. He said the released would include 315 prisoners serving life sentences, suggesting they were convicted of attacks that caused the deaths of Israelis. Seeming to confirm Israel’s fears, Mashaal said that those who are released “will return to … the national struggle.” “This is a national achievement for the whole Palestinian people,” Mashaal said, adding that he was pained not to be able to release the thousands of remaining prisoners held by Israel. The exact number of prisoners is under some contention, with the Palestinians citing 8,000 and Israel confirming about 5,000. Yoram Cohen, head of Israel’s Shin Bet security agency, said over the course of six secret rounds of talks in recent months, Hamas had backed down from key demands, including the release of some top militants. He said about 40 of the first group of prisoners would be exiled to other countries. News of the deal set off wild celebrations at a protest tent erected by Schalit’s family outside Netanyahu’s residence in Jerusalem. Several hundred people danced in the street and waved flags with Schalit’s image on it. The soldier’s father, Noam, has become a well-known public figure by pushing for his son’s freedom. The tiny structure is decorated with pictures of Schalit, as well as a large sign with the number 1,934, the number of days he has been in captivity. Schalit’s parents sat in the tent, smiling as people flooded to the area and cars honked horns in excitement. But typical of the criticism was a statement by Almagor, a group representing victims of Palestinian attacks. “In the end Netanyahu has surrendered to Hamas,” the group said. “The terrorists who are released are a danger to the citizens of Israel.” The plight of Palestinian prisoners is equally emotional among Palestinians. Virtually every Palestinian has a relative who has served time in an Israeli prison, and Palestinians routinely hold large demonstrations where they hold up posters of their imprisoned loved ones. The very fact of any agreement between Israel and its archenemy seemed to offer a beguiling prospect of a new dynamic in the region. To date, Hamas has not abandoned its ideology that calls for the destruction of the Jewish state. For its part, Israel has never accepted the violent Hamas takeover of Gaza in 2007. Though neither side hinted at changes in those basic policies, the prospect of even lukewarm relations developing between Israel and Hamas could open a new window for peace efforts. The deal was also an important milestone for the new military authorities in Egypt, which both sides credited with brokering the deal and who emerge with a heightened aura of regional leadership. Schalit was captured in a cross-border raid in June 2006 by Palestinian militants who burrowed into Israel and dragged him into Gaza after killing two other soldiers. Little has been known about his fate since then, and Hamas has outraged public opinion in Israel by refusing to even allow Red Cross visits, releasing only a brief audio recording and a videotaped statement early in his five years in captivity. Schalit’s ordeal has become an obsession in Israel, where military service is mandatory and the public has identified with his family. Israel’s Channel 2 TV said Schalit would be returned to Israel via Egypt. Cohen, the Israeli security chief, said there was a turning point in July, when Hamas dropped its demands to free key imprisoned militants. He said the most prominent names, uprising leader Marwan Barghouti, faction leader Ahmed Saadat and Hamas bombmaker Abdullah Barghouti were not included. Saadat was convicted of planning the assassination of an Israeli Cabinet minister in 2001. Barghouti was the top local commander of Fatah, the movement of President Mahmoud Abbas, when he was arrested in 2002 and convicted of a role in deadly attacks against Israelis. He is serving multiple life terms but is widely touted as a future Palestinian president. Israel has been carrying out unequal prisoner swaps for decades, including handing over 4,600 Palestinian and Lebanese captives in 1983 in exchange for six captured Israeli soldiers. In 2008, it even freed Arab prisoners for the bodies of two soldiers killed by Hezbollah guerrillas in Lebanon. Hamas is in a bitter rivalry with Abbas, who is enjoying a burst of popularity after defying Israel and the U.S. and seeking membership for the Palestinians at the U.N. Abbas, traveling in South America, praised the deal. “We’ve worked very hard for a long time to reach this agreement and reach this objective,” Abbas said after meeting Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez. “The Israeli soldier will finally return to his family … but there are 5,000 jailed Palestinians in Israeli prisons, whose families are impatiently waiting for them.” Netanyahu is also eager for a domestic boost. The Israeli leader has faced growing criticism for a deadlock in peace efforts with the Palestinians, as well as a series of domestic protests over the country’s steep cost of living. Bringing Schalit home could make Netanyahu a hero. ___ Diaa Hadid and Daniel Estrin in Jerusalem, Sarah El Deeb in Cairo, Ibrahim Barzak in Gaza City and Patricia Rondon Espin in Caracas contributed reporting.

Continue reading …
Traci Nobles Writes About Anthony Weiner Scandal In New Book, ‘I Freinded You’ (VIDEO)

Traci Nobles, the 35-year-old former cheerleading coach from Athens, Georgia who exchanged explicit text messages with former Rep. Anthony Weiner (D-N.Y.), has now written a book about her online affair with the congressman. The book, I Freinded You (the misspelling is intentional), is set to be published this week. “If anyone would have told me a year ago what would have been in store for me just one year later, I would have never imagined in my wildest dreams,” Nobles writes in the book, according to an exclusive excerpt published in the Daily Mail. Weiner resigned in June after he mistakenly tweeted a photo of his underwear-clad genitalia from his public Twitter account. He initially claimed his account had been hacked, but after more photos and revelations emerged, Weiner admitted to having online relationships with six women. Nobles exchanged messages with Weiner for nine months. After the scandal broke, she was outed by her roommate, who sent a screenshot of a private Facebook conversation between Nobles and Weiner to the Las Vegas Sun. But Nobles says that not all of their conversations were sexual. In an excerpt published in the Daily Mail, Weiner complains about his wife’s devout Muslim parents, who he describes as “a bit backwards thinking.” “A lot has to do with religion,” Weiner, who is Jewish, wrote to Nobles. “Lots of restrictions and how I’ve never been accepted by them.” “Touchy is a good word for this. It’s been touchy and worse from the beginning.” Weiner’s wife, Huma Abedin, revealed during the Weinergate scandal that she is pregnant. In September, Republican Bob Turner won a special election to replace Weiner in New York’s 9th congressional district. Read more at the Daily Mail. Correction: This article originally misspelled the title of Traci Nobles’ book. The title is I Freinded You, not I Friended You.

Continue reading …