(CNN) – Republican Sen. Lamar Alexander and Democratic Sen. Mark Warner engaged in a political back-and-forth Sunday that revealed fractures…
Continue reading …Each week Ross Rubin contributes Switched On , a column about consumer technology. In the decade that WiFi has blanketed home networks across the United States, several technologies aimed at using existing wiring in the home have met with limited success. These have included MoCA (Multimedia over Coax, which has been adopted by some service providers for implementing multi-room DVRs) and HomePNA (originally for phone lines but later expanded to coax cable as well). At least three dueling standards have also sought to bring high-speed connectivity over electrical wiring. HomePlug , the most successful of these, has had several iterations. The latest – HomePlug AV – is rated at a theoretical throughput of 200 Mbits/sec. However, power line technologies have been held back by high prices and occasional interoperability problems. But a new approach seeks to be the one protocol to rule them all, operating over phone lines, power lines or coax. Dubbed G.hn , the ITU standard promises up to 1Gbps theoretical throughput, with real-world usage over electrical lines expected to reach between 250Mbps and 400Mbps. If that sounds appealing to you, you’re not alone. Service providers like the idea of G.hn since it allows them more flexibility than previous efforts. In fact, they like it so much that — despite G.hn’s capacity — they have insisted on quality of service standards that could limit or prevent consumers from installing it themselves after they buy adapters from retailers. Continue reading Switched On: No new wires, one new caveat Switched On: No new wires, one new caveat originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 25 Sep 2011 20:14:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …Mitch Daniels has some advice for those who are writing Rick Perry’s political eulogy : Hold your horses. “It’s way too early to know, or to issue, to pronounce last rites over one performance,” Daniels said today. “There’s still many of these (debates), too many maybe. … I’d cut him some slack…
Continue reading …How to Make Popular Rosh Hashanah Recipes Kosher.com’s Monster Truck-Sized “Koshercart” Hit the Streets On WPIX-11! How To Use GFP AskHowRu says: New post: Rosh Hashanah Recipes : Noodle Kugel and Apple Crumble http://t.co/VU8RiFZi
Continue reading …Type: Office Product Title: Scotch(TM) Thermal Laminating Pouches, 9 Inches x 11.4 Inches, 50 Pouches (TP3854-50) See all customer reviews Product Description: 3 mil thick thermal laminating pouches for use in a thermal laminator. For Items up to 8.5 in x 11 in. Features: Laminate items up to 8.5 x 11 Inches 3 mil thickness. Clear, glossy finish Protect documents that you handle frequently. Great for children’s artwork! Photo safe 50 Per package See the details
Continue reading …Joshua Fattal and Shane Bauer tell press conference of difficult prison conditions and surprise of sudden release Declaring that they were detained because of their nationality, not their actions, two American hikers held for more than two years in an Iranian prison came home on Sunday, ending a diplomatic and personal ordeal with a sharp rebuke of the country that accused them of crossing the border from Iraq. Joshua Fattal and Shane Bauer, both 29, were freed last week under a $1m (£640,000) bail deal and arrived on Wednesday in Oman, greeted by relatives and fellow hiker Sarah Shourd, who was released last year . Their saga began in July 2009 with what they called ‘a wrong turn into the wrong country.’ The three say they were hiking together in Iraq’s relatively peaceful Kurdish region along the border with Iran when Iranian guards detained them. They always maintained their innocence, saying they might have accidentally wandered into Iran. The two men were convicted of spying last month. Shourd, to whom Bauer proposed marriage while they were imprisoned, was charged but freed before any trial. The men took turns reading statements at a news conference on Sunday in New York, surrounded by relatives and with Shourd at their side. Fattal said he wanted to make clear that while he and Bauer “applaud Iranian authorities for finally making the right decision”, they do not deserve undue credit for ending what they had “no right and no justification to start in the first place.” “From the very start, the only reason we have been held hostage is because we are American,” he said, adding that “Iran has always tied our case to its political disputes with the US” The two countries severed diplomatic ties three decades ago during the hostage crisis . Since then, both have tried to limit the other’s influence in the Middle East, and the US sees Iran as the greatest nuclear threat in the region. The hikers’ detention, Bauer said, was “never about crossing the unmarked border between Iran and Iraq. We were held because of our nationality.” He said they did not know whether they actually had crossed the border. The irony of it all, he said, “is that Sarah, Josh and I oppose the US policies towards Iran which perpetuate this hostility.” The two also told of difficult prison conditions, where they were held in near isolation. “Many times, too many times, we heard the screams of other prisoners being beaten and there was nothing we could do to help them,” said Fattal. Bauer added: “How can we forgive the Iranian government when it continues to imprison so many other innocent people and prisoners of conscience?” They said their phone calls with family members amounted to a total of 15 minutes over two years, and they had to go on repeated hunger strikes to receive letters. Eventually, they were told – falsely – that their families had stopped writing them letters. “We lived in a world of lies and false hope,” Fattal said. Fattal called their release a ‘total surprise’. On Wednesday, he said, they had just finished their brief daily open-air exercise and expected, as on other days, to be blindfolded and led back to their 2.5m by 4m cell. Instead, the prison guards took them downstairs, took their fingerprints and gave them civilian clothes. They were not told where they were going. The guards then led them to another part of the prison, where they met a diplomatic envoy from Oman, whose first words to the pair were “Let’s go home.” Hours later, the Americans were driven to the airport, then flown to Oman. Shourd was with the families to greet them on the tarmac at a royal airfield in Oman’s capital, Muscat. Close to midnight on Wednesday, Fattal and Bauer bounded down the steps from the blue-and-white plane. The men appeared very thin and pale, but in good health. The first hint of change in the case came last week when Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said Fattal and Bauer could be released within days, but wrangling within the country’s leadership delayed the efforts. On Wednesday, Iranian lawyer Masoud Shafiei secured the necessary judicial approval for the bail – $500,000 for each man. Iran’s foreign ministry called their release a gesture of Islamic mercy. Iran United States Middle East guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Yemeni medical officials say government troops opened fire on protesters in the country’s capital on Sunday, wounding at least 18 people. The protesters had gathered to demand an end to President Ali Abdullah Saleh’s 33-year rule. (Sept. 21)
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Senior White House adviser David Plouffe was out there making the rounds this Sunday, defending President Obama’s deficit reduction plan which has Republicans up in arms because he’s dared to suggest that the rich should be paying more in taxes. During Plouffe’s interview on Fox News Sunday, Wallace did his best to play concern troll for the wealthiest among us, trotting out some of the same tired talking points we’ve been hearing from Republicans, and repeated constantly on Fox, for some time now. Chris Hayes debunked one of them this weekend on his show that Nicole wrote about here — Chris Hayes: Welcome To Inequalistan! : No sophomore slump for the second weekend of Up with Chris Hayes . On Saturday, Hayes took on the ever-present, but disingenuous, conservative talking point that the top ten percent of income earners pay seventy percent of income taxes. Nothing says “patriotic American” more than defending the super-rich from a three percent hike to pre-Bush tax levels : You have to hand it to Brooks–he has a flair for turning reality upside down that George Orwell would admire. The wealthiest 10 percent pay nearly 70 percent of all income taxes in this country because they make more than 70 percent of all the income! Check out Mother Jones charts on skyrocketing income inequality in America. Over the last decade, as incomes for the very wealthy have soared, their tax rates have fallen. That 31 percent Brooks grouses about is considerably lower than the 37 percent they paid when they controlled less of the nation’s money than they do now. And Paul Krugman debunked the other as Susie noted in her post here –
Continue reading …Nearly two-thirds of the way through her endurance journey, a stung and swollen Nyad was advised to get out of the water. The jellyfish stings came early and often for the 62-year-old marathon swimmer. She soldiered on through the toxic attacks but Sunday was forced to end her 103-mile quest on the advice of her
Continue reading …