Apps, apps, apps ! Everywhere you look, more apps. Both Android and Windows Phone 7 have reportedly crossed a couple of round number milestones recently, giving us a decent idea of the maturity gap between the two. Microsoft’s brand new OS with an old OS’ name has rounded the 5,000 available apps corner — that’s according to two sources keeping track of what’s on offer in the Marketplace — while AndroLib’s latest data indicates Android’s crossed the 200,000 threshold when it comes to apps and games taken together. We’re cautious on taking either of these numbers as hard truth, particularly since AndroLib was reporting 100,000 Android apps when there were only 70,000 — but they do provide rough estimates as to where each platform is in terms of quantity, if not quality. Now, where do you think each will be this time in 2011? Continue reading App store milestones: Windows Phone 7 hits 5,000 as Android passes 200,000 available apps App store milestones: Windows Phone 7 hits 5,000 as Android passes 200,000 available apps originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 28 Dec 2010 15:04:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …enlarge Credit: Paul Krugman/New York Times As the New Year – and the new GOP House majority – approaches, Republicans are ramping up their war on government workers . Grover Norquist and his Weekly Standard allies urged Congress to let cash-strapped states go bankrupt in order to slash public employees, drain their pension funds and punish their unions. At the heart of their crusade is the bogus claim, as 2012 GOP White House hopeful Tim Pawlenty put it two weeks ago, that “since January 2008 the private sector has lost nearly 8 million jobs while local, state and federal governments added 590,000.” Alas, as with so much conservative mythmaking, the statement isn’t merely a lie. As the data show, the public sector has actually shed hundreds of thousands of jobs over the past two years. While Ohio Republican Steve LaTourette was among the first to deploy the mythical 590,000 figure this summer, it was Governor Pawlenty who brought it to prominence two weeks ago in his vitriolic Wall Street Journal op-ed, ” Government Unions vs. Taxpayers .” “They work for government, which, thanks to President Obama, has become the only booming “industry” left in our economy. Since January 2008 the private sector has lost nearly eight million jobs while local, state and federal governments added 590,000.” Sadly for the man who calls himself ” T-Paw ,” the figure isn’t even close. As Politifact noted about T-Paw’s “Pants on Fire” lie, “Pawlenty’s statement doesn’t account for the tremendous — and now vanished — bump from hiring Census workers.” And as it turns out, Pawlenty simply reproduced the 590,000 figure from a June 24, 2010 blog post at Andrew Breitbart’s Big Government web site. Once the temporary hiring of Census workers from January 2009 through May 2010 came to an end, Politifact concluded, “total federal hiring comes to only 34,000.” Or as Paul Krugman put it: See, if you measure right at the top of that peak at the right, pretend not to notice that it’s all Census workers, and never update the number, you get your myth inserted into the discourse, and it becomes part of what everyone knows … But the Republicans’ sleight of hand over the Census is just the beginning. Even as they wrongly rail against “over-benefited and overpaid” government workers, hundreds of thousands of state and local government employees have already lost their jobs. By July 2010, over 200,000 state and municipal workers were laid off. By October, as David Leonhardt reported in the New York Times : Local governments are cutting jobs at the fastest rate in almost 30 years. They cut 76,000 jobs last month and over the last three months have cut 143,000 jobs, many in education, according to today’s jobs report. That’s 1 percent of total local-government employment across the country. Since the Labor Department began keeping records in the 1950s, the only other time that the cuts were so steep was in the harsh 1981-2 recession. As Ezra Klein lamented in the Washington Post two months ago, the draconian job cuts at the state and local level constituted ” the anti-stimulus .” The government is now impeding an economic recovery. But it’s not for the reasons you often hear…It’s because, at the state and local level, it’s firing people…Consider this: If we only counted private-sector jobs, we’d have had positive jobs reports for the last nine months. As it is, public-sector losses have wiped out private-sector gains for the past four months. By November , state and local governments had shed 407,000 jobs (-39,000 state, -368,000 local) since their peak in August 2008. With state budget shortfalls estimated to top $100 billion for each of the next two years, analysts including Moody’s Economics and the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities have forecast more state and local job losses reaching between 400,000 and 900,000. Surveying the data for the past year and the catastrophic fiscal landscape across the country, Derek Thompson of The Atlantic rightly concluded: “The biggest job killer in 2011? Cities and states.” Cities, states and, if the likes of Tim Pawlenty, Sarah Palin, Mitt Romney, Chris Christie, Mitch Daniels and other conservative luminaries have their way, the Republican Party . (This piece also appears at Perrspectives .)
Continue reading …Sir Elton John is now a father; 25 films selected to the National Film Registry; Reality star of MTV’s ‘Teen Mom’ star arrested for felony domestic battery and child neglect charges. (Dec. 28)
Continue reading …It may be common for couples to have sex early on in relationships or at least long before marriage, but a new study says that those who wait may enjoy more sexual quality after they’ve wed than couples who have intercourse before their vows.
Continue reading …This just in: Sarah Palin may not be a shoo-in for the GOP’s 2012 presidential nomination, according to a new CNN poll released on Tuesday. The survey also suggested that President Obama hasn’t squandered his support from Democrats, even after making several conciliatory gestures to the right side of the aisle this year.
Continue reading …For bedraggled commuters who are finally making their way back to work and travelers who are finding their way home, there is a sense of exhaustion that is overwhelming any excitement they might feel. (Dec. 28)
Continue reading …Just over a week ago we caught a glimpse of a device that claimed to be a Telus -branded version of the 4.3-inch HTC Desire HD , a beast that has yet to make the leap to North America and doesn’t officially exist in any variants that fully support the 3G frequencies used there. Well, now we’ve got the smoking gun in the form of an FCC approval for a device with model number PD98120 that supports WCDMA Bands II and V, which means it’s ripe for uses on AT&T, Bell, Telus, and Rogers (sorry, T-Mobile). The original European version of the Desire HD is the PD98100 — and the DLNA’s certification site actually refers to the phone as the “PD98 series” — so we think we can safely say that’s what we’re looking at here, particularly considering that the FCC label location document shows a device laid out in the Desire HD’s very unusual way . It’s anything but a slam dunk that AT&T might take an interest in this… but yeah, Telus subscribers, you can probably start saving your cash now. HTC Desire HD gets FCC approval with North American 3G, might be for Telus originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 28 Dec 2010 14:41:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …photo: A Girl With Tea / Creative Commons Oh no! If you’re a tea lover like this TreeHugger then some reporting from The Guardian comes as doubly dire news: Apparently climate change is both reducing crop yields of India’s Assam tea and changing its much-prized characteristic flavor. Besides being a personal issue of tea preference–Assam tea … Read the full story on TreeHugger
Continue reading …Strong winds may have picked up some rail containers and blown them off a bridge near Harrisburg, Pa. The accident disrupted rail traffic, including Amtrak passenger trains. (Dec. 28)
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