Rejoice, virtual keyboard aficionados! SwiftKey X 2.1 for Android tablets and smartphones just became available today, and brings a bunch of new features and bug fixes to your favorite touchscreen device. Since our hands-on with v2.0, TouchType has updated its on-screen keyboard using the feedback it gathered from its 25,000+ VIP members. The new version of SwiftKey X adds blog personalization, insights about your typing (shareable with friends), heat-map visualization (see screenshot above), localization / language enhancements, and an auto caps toggle. We’ve been using the final build of SwiftKey X 2.1 on our Nexus S for the past couple of days and noticed some improvements in terms of typing speed and accuracy. Pricing remains $4.99 for SwiftKey Tablet X and $3.99 for SwiftKey X. Full PR after the break. Continue reading SwiftKey X for Android hits v2.1, fingers party everywhere SwiftKey X for Android hits v2.1, fingers party everywhere originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 30 Sep 2011 09:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …After reports surfaced that Hugo Chavez had suffered kidney failure earlier this week, the Venezuelan president summoned reporters to the presidential palace in Caracas. They found Chavez wearing a red tracksuit, jogging, and throwing a baseball around with members of his cabinet, the Guardian reports. “I’m fine. Those who don’t…
Continue reading …A mass dispersal of kittenage following the firing up of a vacuum cleaner. via The Awesomer Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : Laughing Squid Discovery Date : 25/09/2011 09:22 Number of articles : 3
Continue reading …Floating vessel can hold four adults and could save lives, manufacturers claim A Japanese company has developed a miniature version of Noah’s ark in case Japan is hit by another massive earthquake and tsunami – a floating capsule that looks like a huge tennis ball. Engineering company Cosmo says its “Noah” shelter is made from enhanced fibreglass and could save users from disasters such as the earthquake and tsunami on 11 March that devastated Japan’s northern coast and left nearly 20,000 people dead or missing. The company’s president, Shoji Tanaka, said the capsule could hold four adults and had survived many crash tests. It has a lookout window and breathing holes, and could also be used as a toy house for children. The company said it had completed the capsule earlier this month and had received 600 orders. Japan Engineering Natural disasters and extreme weather guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Former News of the World senior reporter breaks silence, saying he ‘took no part in the matter which led to his dismissal’ Neville Thurlbeck, the former News of the World chief reporter, has sensationally broken his silence on the phone-hacking scandal, saying he “took no part in the matter which led to his dismissal”. In his first public statement since he was arrested and bailed for alleged phone hacking in April, Thurlbeck said the “truth will out” and “those responsible will eventually be revealed”. In a clear shot across his former employer’s bows, Thurlbeck claimed there was “much I could have said publicly to the detriment of News Interntional”, but had so far chosen “not to do so”. Thurlbeck had applied for “interim relief” at an employment tribunal hearing scheduled to be heard on Friday but pulled out late on Thursday. His solicitor Nathan Donaldson, employment partner at DWF, also issued a statement on Friday confirming that Thurlbeck was continuing his action against News Group Newspapers, the News International subsidiary that published the News of the World, “for unfair dismissal and whistleblowing”. The Guardian revealed more than two years ago the existence of a “for Neville” email – believed to be a reference to Thurlbeck – sent to private investigator Glenn Mulcaire, which contained a transcript of messages left on a mobile phone belonging to Professional Footballers’ Association chief executive Gordon Taylor. The “for Neville” email contradicted the defence that News International had maintained until late 2010, that phone-hacking was limited to Mulcaire and one “rogue reporter” on the News of the World, former royal editor Clive Goodman. Both were jailed in early 2007 for phone-hacking offences. Thurlbeck was due to attend an “interim relief hearing” about his unfair dismissal claim on Friday, but withdrew because the “issues to be determined by the employment tribunal will require key individuals within the News Group Newspapers being cross-examined”. His solicitors added that “unfortunately” Friday’s hearing was limited to “a review of papers” and because of this “procedural limitation” Thurlbeck and his legal team decided to withdraw. They wanted to ensure the benefits of a full hearing where “complete disclosure” from the parties would be made. The 49-year-old former chief reporter at the News of the World was sacked by Rupert Murdoch’s News International earlier this month, prompting him to sue his former employer for unfair dismissal. “Scotland Yard has now made me aware of the reason for my dismissal, a reason which News International has withheld from me for almost a month,” Thurlbeck said, in a statement issued by his solicitors that shows he is fighting back against his former employer. “For legal reasons, I am unable to go into the reason cited. However, I will say this. I took no part in the matter which has led to my dismissal after 21 years of service,” he added. “I say this most emphatically and with certainty and confidence that the allegation which led to my dismissal will eventually be shown to be false. And those responsible for the action, for which I have been unfairly dismissed, will eventually be revealed.” Thurlbeck also claimed that for more than two years, News International had accepted he was not responsible for the matter in question and there was “no valid or reliable evidence now to support their sudden volte face. At the length, truth will out.” Thurlbeck also said he would “fight my case to the end” and accused News International of “giving ‘off the record’ briefings” to the press. “This has compelled me to speak for the first time since my name became linked to the phone hacking scandal through the ‘For Neville’ email more than two years ago,” he said. “I would request that
Continue reading …Capitol Police were not amused by tweets and an article written by the satirical newspaper The Onion falsely reporting that members of Congress had taken a group of schoolchildren hostage. (Sept. 30)
Continue reading …Bill O’Reilly made his eighth appearance on “The Daily Show” Wednesday, and had a feisty, funny chat with Jon Stewart during the segment that actually aired on television. It was in an extended Web segment, though, that things got very heated, as the two hosts clashed intensely over taxation in one of the sparkiest arguments in their long history together. Stewart came right out and told O’Reilly that he wasn’t going talk about the book the Fox News host had come on to promote. Instead, he launched into O’Reilly’s much-vaunted threat to leave his show if his taxes rose above 50 percent (something Stewart already lampooned him for). “What threat of that is empty?” he asked. “All of it,” O’Reilly joked, before adding that the tax burden could become too “onerous” on him. Stewart said that the idea that O’Reilly and he would walk away if they took home $3 million instead of $3.5 million was “crazy talk.” O’Reilly was ready with a quip. “You’re not making that much money,” he said. “What is this whole business with the poor, poor rich in this country?” Stewart asked. “Are you ever going to wise up, ever?” O’Reilly responded. His basic point was that he would be fine with higher taxes if the government cut spending and spent the rest of its money more wisely. He brought up the infamous $16 muffins at the Justice Department, a story he was delightfully surprised Stewart hadn’t heard about. The two sparred for some minutes until taking their conversation to the Web, and it was here that things really got interesting. O’Reilly admitted that he was a “Democrat” on the issue of financial regulation, and said he wanted cocaine dealers to pay their fair share in taxes. (“So in your mind the debt crisis is caused by renegade cocaine dealers who are avoiding their social responsibilities?!” Stewart said.) As O’Reilly started saying again how oppressive taxes have become, Stewart grew increasingly peeved. “Stop it, stop it,” he kept saying. He pointed out that income tax has gone down. “Every other tax has gone up!” O’Reilly said. “Stop it!” Stewart responded. “You’re not living in reality!” He read a long list of statistics about the rising inequality in America. O’Reilly said this meant he wanted to “shoot” the rich. “I’m not saying we should shoot them!” Stewart said. “But we shouldn’t act like returning to the tax rate of the 90s is class warfare on par with Lenin and Marx!” O’Reilly then said he wanted a ten percent spending cut “across the board,” which made Stewart practically do a spit take. “What kind of idiot– across the board?!” he said. “You’re not even going to look?” Watch both parts below: The Daily Show with Jon StewartGet More: Daily Show Full Episodes,Political Humor & Satire Blog,The Daily Show on Facebook
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Continue reading …Southwest cabin crew member allegedly asked the couple to stop after a passenger complained Celebrity airport arrests were once big, splashy affairs – Paul McCartney getting arrested in Japan for marijuana possession, or a frenzied Courtney Love flinging her underwear around Heathrow. Now, the frustrations of air travel in the post 9/11 age have generated a different sort of friction – in which one person’s idea of free expression seems to run smack into the airlines’ definition of inexcusably bad behaviour. Just ask Leisha Hailey, a musician and moderately well known television actor who was thrown off her flight in El Paso, Texas, this week after she kissed her girlfriend and bandmate, Camila Grey, in the seat next to her. A cabin crew member, apparently responding to a passenger complaint, told Hailey that Southwest was a “family airline” and asked her to stop. By the time Hailey and Grey had stopped swearing and cursing, they were back in the airport, waiting for the next flight. Southwest later insisted the problem was the abusive language, not the kiss. “The conversation escalated to a level that was better resolved on the ground, as opposed to in flight,” it said. After days of incensed reaction from Hailey, her friends and the lesbian and gay community, however, Southwest backtracked, saying it was offering a full refund for the flight and had “reached out to extend goodwill” – a form of words that fell just short of an outright apology. Earlier this month, the lead singer of Green Day, Billie Joe Armstrong, was escorted off another Southwest flight in California because he refused to pull up his sagging trousers when asked. “Don’t you have better things to do than worry about that?” he retorted. The flight attendant responded: “Pull your pants up or you’re getting off the plane.” Armstrong complained, loudly, after he and his companion were taken back to the airport, and Southwest ended up apologising. He was luckier than Deshon Marman, a college American football player who suffered his own baggy trouser incident on a US Airways flight in June. He ended up in handcuffs, under arrest and charged with trespassing, resisting arrest, and battery on a police officer. The charges were later dropped, and Marman is now suing the airline. What these episodes have in common is that the affected passengers have all complained loudly and used their fan base to whip up outrage. Advocacy groups have also muscled in. The Gay and Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation pointed out that Southwest is a corporate sponsor and urged everyone to do the right thing. A black advocacy group called Color of Change pointed to the different treatment handed out to Marman, who is black, and Armstrong, who is white, and said it was a clear instance of race discrimination. “The vastly different treatment of these two passengers underscores the need for greater oversight and training by the airlines,” the organisation’s executive director Rashad Robinson said. The airlines, in turn, appear to be running scared from the negative publicity. Kevin Smith, the film director, has not stopped making hay over an incident in February last year when Southwest threw him off a flight, supposedly because he was too fat. Southwest, once again, offered “heartfelt apologies” but also said he had been removed “for the safety and comfort of all customers”. The L Word Gay rights Television Drama United States Texas Air transport Andrew Gumbel guardian.co.uk
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