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Growing Up Geek: Jesse Hicks

Welcome to Growing Up Geek , an ongoing feature where we take a look back at our youth and tell stories of growing up to be the nerds that we are. Today we have our very own Contributing Editor, Jesse Hicks . I’ve never been one for nostalgia, but if I I had to choose a Proustian element from my geeky childhood — a singular sense-memory that evokes a whole constellation of related feelings — I’d pick the eerie keening of a 28.8 modem. That high, quavering sound, for me, conjurs up the earliest days of my geekdom, when computers were slow, landlines were king and the internet was young. I was twelve when my family got our first computer: a 486DX that first appeared without a hard drive. My mom had found a great deal at a computer show… or so it had seemed. That missing 120MB hard drive, as you may have guessed, severely limited functionality. But once that problem was remedied, I was off and running with DOS and XTree, happily deleting essential system files. The learning process had begun. Continue reading Growing Up Geek: Jesse Hicks Growing Up Geek: Jesse Hicks originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 03 Oct 2011 16:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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Amazon Kindle Lighted Leather Cover hands-on

It’s true of other portable electronics and it applies here, too: if you own an e-reader, there’s a strong argument to be made that you need a case. Sure, readers are a little more scratch-resistant than smartphones, but a little bit of backpack trauma can do some nasty things to an e-ink display. That could be Amazon’s elevator pitch, anyway. Introduced at the company’s launch event last week , the Kindle Lighted Leather Cover comes in various sizes, with versions for the Kindle Touch and fourth generation Kindle . We spent some hands-on time with the latter over the weekend and have to say: we’re liking what we’re seeing so far. Read on to find out why. Gallery: Kindle Lighted Leather Cover hands-on Continue reading Amazon Kindle Lighted Leather Cover hands-on Amazon Kindle Lighted Leather Cover hands-on originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 03 Oct 2011 16:24:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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Amazon Kindle Lighted Leather Cover hands-on

It’s true of other portable electronics and it applies here, too: if you own an e-reader, there’s a strong argument to be made that you need a case. Sure, readers are a little more scratch-resistant than smartphones, but a little bit of backpack trauma can do some nasty things to an e-ink display. That could be Amazon’s elevator pitch, anyway. Introduced at the company’s launch event last week , the Kindle Lighted Leather Cover comes in various sizes, with versions for the Kindle Touch and fourth generation Kindle . We spent some hands-on time with the latter over the weekend and have to say: we’re liking what we’re seeing so far. Read on to find out why. Gallery: Kindle Lighted Leather Cover hands-on Continue reading Amazon Kindle Lighted Leather Cover hands-on Amazon Kindle Lighted Leather Cover hands-on originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 03 Oct 2011 16:24:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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LightSquared teams up with Sharp to begin production of LTE phones and tablets

Irksome GPS interference issues now somewhat safely behind it, LightSquared’s plowing forward into OEM waters. The LTE wholesaler has just struck up an agreement with Sharp that’ll see the electronics company creating the first line of devices specifically tailored for the nascent 4G network. Of course, these smartphones and tablets won’t be sold by the Falcone-backed company, and will instead make their way to its carrier partners — like Sprint , C Spire and Best Buy . If the already inked collaboration means we’ll be seeing this beastie on North American air waves, then we predict the heavily beset wireless outfit’s rocky road to launch will give way to smooth sailing. Official presser after the break. Continue reading LightSquared teams up with Sharp to begin production of LTE phones and tablets LightSquared teams up with Sharp to begin production of LTE phones and tablets originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 03 Oct 2011 16:42:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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LightSquared teams up with Sharp to begin production of LTE phones and tablets

Irksome GPS interference issues now somewhat safely behind it, LightSquared’s plowing forward into OEM waters. The LTE wholesaler has just struck up an agreement with Sharp that’ll see the electronics company creating the first line of devices specifically tailored for the nascent 4G network. Of course, these smartphones and tablets won’t be sold by the Falcone-backed company, and will instead make their way to its carrier partners — like Sprint , C Spire and Best Buy . If the already inked collaboration means we’ll be seeing this beastie on North American air waves, then we predict the heavily beset wireless outfit’s rocky road to launch will give way to smooth sailing. Official presser after the break. Continue reading LightSquared teams up with Sharp to begin production of LTE phones and tablets LightSquared teams up with Sharp to begin production of LTE phones and tablets originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 03 Oct 2011 16:42:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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Dallas’ Disaster and Aaron’s Athletics: Three Lessons Learned From NFL Week Four

TIME’s Sean Gregory breaks down the lessons from football’s fourth week. Disaster Brewing in Dallas. The Dallas Cowboys are 2-2, and by no means out of the running in the NFC East. But Dallas’ two losses could not have been more brutal. On opening weekend, Dallas was up on the New York Jets, 24-10, but

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Elizabeth Warren is within striking distance of Scott Brown, even though many voters have never heard of her, according to a new Boston Herald/UMass Lowell poll . While Brown came out ahead 41% to 38% in the poll, that’s essentially a tie given the poll’s 3.8% margin of error. And…

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Commie Van Jones and MoveOn.org Open Radical ‘Take Back American Dream’ Conference Today in DC

Commie Van Jones, MoveOn.org, the SEIU, Center for American Progress and several other far left socialist groups will hold their “Take Back American Dream” conference today in Washington DC. The community organizers hope this will jump start their efforts to … Continue reading → Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : Gateway Pundit Discovery Date : 28/09/2011 00:23 Number of articles : 2

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Scrap NHS reforms, doctors tell Lords

Experts including 40 directors of public health say government’s health and social care bill will cause ‘irreparable harm’ More than 260 senior doctors and public health experts are calling on the House of Lords to throw out the government’s health and social care bill, saying it will do “irreparable harm to the NHS, to individual patients and to society as a whole”. The signatories include Professor Sir Michael Marmot, the author of several reports on the links between wealth and health that suggest children born into poverty are penalised for life. Marmot has until now not been openly critical of the coalition’s approach, and instead has offered encouragement for David Cameron and Andrew Lansley’s apparent enthusiasm for public health. But Marmot and others in senior positions have now concluded the bill will damage all aspects of the health service. “While we welcome the emphasis placed on establishing a closer working relationship between public health and local government, the proposed reforms as a whole will disrupt, fragment and weaken the country’s public health capabilities,” says the letter. “The government claims that the reforms have the backing of the health professions. They do not. Neither do they have the general support of the public.” The letter details the harms the experts believe the health reform bill will do. “It ushers in a significantly heightened degree of commercialisation and marketisation that will lead to the harmful fragmentation of patient care; aggravate risks to individual patient safety; erode medical ethics and trust within the healthcare system; widen health inequalities; waste much money on attempts to regulate and manage competition; and undermine the ability of the health system to respond effectively and efficiently to communicate disease outbreaks and other public health emergencies,” the letter says. In their judgment, the signatories say, the bill “will erode the NHS’s ethical and co-operative foundations” and “will not deliver efficiency, quality, fairness or choice”. The signatories include around 40 directors of public health from around the country who have taken the difficult decision to go public with their concerns. There are also two senior members of the Faculty of Public Health, one of whom, Dr John Middleton, is a vice-president. Other well-known names include Professor John Ashton, director of public health in Cumbria, and Professor Michel Coleman from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. Dr David McCoy, consultant in public health medicine at the Inner North West London primary care trust, one of the organisers of the letter, said he was surprised at the number of people prepared to sign. “I think if we had continued to collect signatures, I’m quite sure we would have collected another 200 It is having a snowball effect,” he said. “I think the feeling is incredibly strong.” There was a lot of debate about whether we should call for outright rejection or amendments, but there is a feeling the whole package of reforms is harmful and we need to express our position in the strongest terms. I think there was a feeling the forthcoming reading in the House of Lords is the last chance of minimising the harm and damage.” The public health community has not spoken out in this way before. “I think there has been an attempt to work with the reforms and work behind the scenes to optimise the proposed reforms,” said Dr McCoy. Dr Middleton said there was no great opposition to the planned move to place public health services such as smoking cessation within local authorities. “But the letter is a recognition from the public health community that the reforms proposed around the NHS are deeply damaging to the public health in themselves,” he said. There was concern that they would lead to inequalities in healthcare and less access for the poorest and most deprived to the services they need. “The experience of other countries that have ‘liberated’ their health systems has resulted in very poor health services for their communities. I’m thinking of Russia and China where a free market in health resulted in major falls in life expectancy and systems that had provided some safety net cover have failed,” he said. Commenting on the letter, published in the Daily Telegraph on the eve of health secretary Andrew Lansley’s address to the Tory party conference, shadow health secretary John Healey said: “David Cameron is in denial, both about the damage his plans are doing to the NHS and the strength of opposition to his health bill. “There is no mandate for the bill, either from the election or the coalition agreement. With the government having railroaded its plans through the Commons, heavy responsibility is now going to be shouldered by the Lords.” NHS Health policy Health Doctors Public services policy House of Lords Sarah Boseley guardian.co.uk

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It’s Not Republican Obstruction, It’s Leadership! Peggy Noonan Sez Obama Needs To Reach Out More

Click here to view this media The Beltway Bubble is like walking through Alice’s Looking Glass: Though curiously familiar, no one acts as one would expect and what is unquestionably real on the other side is inverted from the inside. Inside the Beltway, there is no such thing as rabid partisan obstruction on the part of Republicans. Inside the Beltway, the magical ponies line up, waiting to be dispersed by the Unitary Executive Obama, without the interference of the Congress. Peggy Noonan is the ultimate insider. She, of the pursed lips and meaningful sidelong glances, wants you to know that it’s not the Republican pledge to make Obama a one-term president at all costs that’s at issue….it’s Obama’s leadership . NOONAN: A leader leads. A leader leads. Part of the president’s problem is that he has never, from day one, been able to really pull in bipartisan support. Either make Republicans afraid of him, or want to follow him. He’s never been able to do it. Part of the reason people are talking about Chris Christie is that he’s in a Democratic state–he’s a Republican governor—but he has made progress on deficits, spending, pensions, property taxes, with a Democratic legislature. It’s never an excuse that washes, to say, oh, the other team, the other party are bad guys, they wouldn’t follow me. If you’re a leader, you make them… Right….all the blame lies entirely with Obama. Nothing else washes. The Republicans would be completely willing to support the president if only he was different . He hasn’t reached out to them at all. He hasn’t incorporated Republican ideas and demands into everything he’s tried to pass. He hasn’t bent over backward to reach out to Republicans over and over and over. And I hate to break this to Nooners, but for as much as the eocnomy does suck, the Obama administration *has* made progress economically as well. And for cryin’ out loud, citing Chris Christie’s ability to pass legislation with a Democratic congress in New Jersey both misses and makes the point. Elected Democrats don’t put party over country (or state). Democrats will negotiate and work with the opposing party. Republicans won’t. Full stop. But that isn’t how it works through the looking glass, does it, Peggy?

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