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Toshiba outsourcing semiconductor production to rival Samsung

‘Tis the season for manufacturing deals? Sure seems it. Merely hours after Sony announced its intentions to buy back Cell chip fabrication facilities from Toshiba, it looks as if Tosh is about to enter into yet another agreement. In this case, it’ll be outsourcing the unprofitable production of semiconductors to rival Samsung, which will be responsible for churning out the brains behind a number of smartphones, televisions and digital home appliances. Numerous sources have explained that Toshiba is interested in realigning its focus onto the blossoming memory chip business, and moreover, its hoping to evade costly facility upgrades that would be necessary to remain competitive in the system LSI business. In other words, the company is dodging investment costs and placing a greater emphasis on a sector that’s already profitable (NAND flash production, for those curious), and after the Oita plant is handed off, it’ll be used to make image sensors in digital cameras. The Nagasaki plant, as we heard earlier, will be handed over to Sony. Toshiba’s stocks were sent northward after investors welcomed the news, but of course it remains to be seen what kind of consumer impact this will have. Whatever the case, we certainly hope Toshiba never runs into any trouble with Sammy — it’s not like its top brass can be touched, regardless of infraction . Toshiba outsourcing semiconductor production to rival Samsung originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 25 Dec 2010 14:40:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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Best Notable Quotables of 2010: Media Dopes vs. Hollywood Dopes

Every year, the Media Research Center invites a distinguished panel of expert judges to sift through the dopiest, wackiest quotes of the year, and every year it seems the honor roll of idiocy gets longer and longer. This year, top honors in the MRC's ” Audacity of Dopes Award for the Wackiest Analysis of the Year ” went to the Boston Globe Magazine's Charles Pierce, for a January 10 column he addressed to Republican Senate candidate Scott Brown just days before the Massachusetts special election. In Pierce's highly-esteemed opinion, Brown's cause was hopeless: read more

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Corporate Lobbyist Front Group’s Barbara Comstock Blames Unions for Outsourcing

Click here to view this media Well, most of the media might be taking the weekend off for the holidays, but you can count on Fox News to keep working and pumping that propaganda out there day in and day out. What would Christmas Eve be without some good old-fashioned union bashing from Republican corporate shill Barbara Comstock? Comstock is terribly upset about a new rule being proposed by the National Labor Relations Board. More on that from the AFL-CIO’s blog. Proposed NLRB Rule Requires Employers to Post Workers’ Rights : Most workers have seen notices about their right to a minimum wage or safe workplace posted in the company break room or elsewhere on the job. Employers are required to post those notices by federal law. But there is no requirement for employers to post any sort of notice about workers’ rights under the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA), including the right to form a union. Now, the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) is proposing a rule that would require employers to post such notices in the workplace. AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka says the proposed rule is “a common sense policy needed in today’s workplace.” Every working person in America deserves to know his or her rights… [The rule]…ensures that workers’ rights are effectively communicated in the workplace. It is necessary in the face of widespread misunderstanding about the law and many workers’ justified fear of exercising their rights under it. According to the proposed rule, published in the Federal Register, the NLRB believes that many employees protected by the NLRA are unaware of their rights under the statute. The intended effects of this action are to increase knowledge of the NLRA among employees, to better enable the exercise of rights under the statute, and to promote statutory compliance by employers and unions. More there with some specifics on the proposed rule, so go read the rest. But according to WFI’s Comstock, this is going to harm small businesses. She also blames unions for the outsourcing that’s gone on in America and pretty well destroyed the economy in places like Detroit. Yeah Barbara, it’s not the greedy CEO’s or our crappy trade laws that reward companies for shipping jobs overseas or the fact that our health care costs are so high. It’s the dirty f#%king hippie union members fault. And of course the “fair and balanced” Fox News didn’t put anyone from labor on to counter Comstock, or bother to inform their viewers just whose interests she’s really looking out for. Here’s more on her organization, the Workforce Fairness Institute : The Workforce Fairness Institute (WFI) describes itself as “an organization committed to educating voters, employers, employees and citizens about issues affecting the workplace.” WFI’s website lists among its “allied groups” the Coalition for a Democratic Workplace , Rick Berman ‘s Center for Union Facts , the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and the National Federation of Independent Business . Yeah, those groups are all just looking out for the little people and those small businesses, don’t ya’ know. And here’s more on their funding. Sounds a whole lot like Dick Armey’s Freedom Works or the US Chamber of Commerce with them not wanting to disclose exactly who’s paying their bills. I can’t imagine why. Neil Golub , CEO of the Golub Corporation , “has raised millions of dollars from the industry for The Workforce Fairness Institute, one of the main coalitions working to defeat” EFCA, reported the States News Service in January 2009. [8] When asked by the New York Times , WFI’s Mark McKinnon “would not say which companies are financing the institute, founded by several longtime Republican operatives.” [9] On its website WFI states that it “is funded by and advocates on behalf of business owners who enjoy good working relationships with their employees, and would like to maintain those good relationships without the unfair interference of government bureaucrats, union organizers and special interests.” [1] And who are their personnel? Big players in the Republican party and big business shills of course. Katie Packer Executive Director [10] Mark McKinnon [11] Barbara Comstock [12] Danny Diaz The Workforce Fairness Institute “employs Former Bush ad man Mark McKinnon, former White House Political Director Sara Taylor , Mitt Romney aides Barbara Comstock and Katie Packer, powerhouse conservative PR firm CRC , GOP Web gurus Patrick Ruffini , Mindy Finn and Patrick Hynes and former RNC Communications Director [Danny] Diaz,” reported Politico.com. [13] Barbara Comstock is a founding partner of the Corallo Comstock public relations and lobbying firm [14] , which counts the National Association of Broadcasters and — until January 2009 — the Hearst Corporation among its clients. [15] That name Mark McKinnon sound familiar? Of course it does to anyone who reads this blog since he’s one of the founders of the latest Republican re-branding effort, No Labels . Hey Mark, I’ve got a label for you buddy… union buster. Here’s how the AFL-CIO described the Workforce Fairness Institute (got to love the names these people come up with for these groups, don’t you?) in their post on who is opposed to the Employee Free Choice Act . Take a look at the other groups listed there as well. Who They Are: National Journal calls them a “stealth group” that refuses to reveal their funding base. [xii] This group was formed by corporate lobbyists and public relations shills specifically to block the Employee Free Choice Act through public campaigns. Money spent on anti-worker campaign: “One source says the WFI is trying to raise as much as $10 million for its operations.” [xiii] All these people care about is taking care of their wealthy donors and them having access to cheap labor. And they could give a hoot about small businesses, how many Americans are hurting or creating jobs in the United States. But Fox is going to roll this shill out on Christmas Eve and let her blame our economic woes on unions and working people who dare to demand a living wage and benefits.

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Turkey: Israel would take days to send planes

Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu continues to demand apology for flotilla raid, says rifts in Israeli government making it difficult to patch up ties. ‘Messages it sends are contradictory, tough rivalry exists in coalition,’ he explains

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They’re saying that the new Black Friday of sales is actually the days after Christmas when stores need to dump all their extra merchandise that they overloaded for the holidays. The after Christmas sales of many top retailers and store giants like Walmart, Target, Best Buy and more are HUGE! You get huge discounts on many of the undersold After Christmas Sales: Stores Open on Christmas 2010 is a post from: Daily World Buzz

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Mark Shields Apologizes for Saying ‘Christmas Season’ on Christmas Eve

Syndicated columnist and PBS regular Mark Shields on Friday apologized for saying “Christmas season.” Such occurred on the most recent installment of PBS's “Inside Washington” broadcast in many parts of the country on Christmas Eve (video follows with transcript and commentary): read more

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Indian Rocket Explodes Carrying Comms Satellite

CAPTION: A rocket carrying an Indian communication satellite exploded just after liftoff on Saturday in the second launch failure for India’s space agency this year. (Dec. 25 2010)

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Old Christmas Trees Help Other Trees Grow Year-Round in Paris’ Neighborhood Parks

Sign at a tree-recycling collection point in Paris. Image: City of Paris Once all the gifts have been opened, all the feasting done, all the toasts made, the time will soon come to figure out what the heck to do with the Christmas tree around which so many of the holiday festivities have been held. Plenty of cities now have

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Byron York is awfully certain that filibuster reform won’t happen. Funny thing, that.

Click here to view this media Byron York is awfully certain that there will be no filibuster reform for the Senate in the coming weeks: It’s also why you’re hearing new rumbling about what many Democrats consider the ultimate fix for the Washington-is-broken problem: eliminating the filibuster. A perennial complaint, unhappiness with the filibuster is likely to reach new heights among Democrats in the next few months. Already, the entire returning Democratic caucus has signed a letter by Sens. Carl Levin and Mark Warner calling for rules changes that will make it easier to kill filibusters. Some are also hoping to make it possible to change the Senate’s rules with a simple majority vote, rather than the two-thirds vote required now. That way, Democrats could do anything they want, even without that 60-vote majority. It won’t happen; there aren’t the votes. I t could even be that Democrats are pushing the anti-filibuster argument so loudly because they know it won’t happen. That way, they can position themselves as favoring “filibuster reform” with the comfort of knowing they’ll still have the filibuster the next time they’re in the minority, which might be soon. Nevermind, of course, that Republicans’ abuse of the filibuster has had the distinctly anti-constitutional effect of transforming the Senate from a majority-rule body to a supermajority-rule body . Conservatives, as we have seen multiple times in the past year, only make a fetish out of the Constitution — or rather, a mythologized version of it — when they think it favors them. When the actual Constitution prevents them from, say, stripping American-born Latinos of their citizenship, well, all they want to do is overturn it. But it’s interesting that York assumes the votes aren’t there. Because, as Susie pointed out the other day, every returning Democrat wants to reform the filibuster. That would mean we have 53 votes for the reform now. And, as we pointed out several weeks ago, all that is needed on January 5, the first day of Senate business, is 51 votes in order to change the rules. As Tom Udall has been pointing out for awhile now: And so what the Constitutional Option is about is doing rules reform in the Senate at the beginning of a Congress and the crucial thing is that at the beginning of Congress you can set rules with 51 Senators. You can end the debate and you can adopt new rules. Now is the time for rules reform. I have a feeling a bunch of smug Republicans are going to wake up on January 6 and realize that they just got hammered by Democrats again. Couldn’t happen to a nicer bunch. Meanwhile, be sure to read Ezra Klein’s interview with Jeff Merkley for more on all this.

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So, what’d you get?

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So, what’d you get?

Let’s just call it what it is: the best Christmas ever . Why? Well, for starters, it’s December 25th. Secondly, it’s a Saturday in much of the world. How often does that happen? The technology outfits ’round the globe have managed to deliver a rather insane stack of wares to consider this year — from terrifically desirable goods to rubbish that we wouldn’t wish on our worst enemy’s enemies — and now it’s our turn to pry into your business and find out what Santa Claus dumped (or didn’t dump) under your tree overnight. Hit us up with your scores in comments below, and be sure to cast your vote as to whether or not the kid on the right is feigning excitement over his newfound laptop. Oh, the kid in the video just past the break — that’s probably useful information. When you’re done, check out what people got jazzed about in 2004 , 2005 , 2006 , 2007 , 2008 and 2009 . Continue reading So, what’d you get? So, what’d you get? originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 25 Dec 2010 11:55:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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