Escalation in south continues after Qassam explodes near kindergarten in Ashkelon Coast Regional Council kibbutz, injuring girl, Israeli warplanes strike in Strip. Palestinian media say four injured at Hamas training facility
Continue reading …Couldn’t stay up till 12:37AM ? We’ll forgive you… in time. Thankfully, the wonders of the internet are enabling you to travel back to catch our own Josh Topolsky’s holiday jam party with Late Night’s Jimmy Fallon . The duo ran through a gauntlet of gadgets, including B&N’s Nook Color, Samsung’s Galaxy Tab, D-Link’s Boxee Box, Apple’s MacBook Air, Dell’s Venue Pro and the Gingerbread-equipped Nexus S . Also appearing: teenage jokes, visions of a lunar eclipse, legally / illegally downloaded content and the Nexus X. Yeah, the X . See what we mean in the pair of videos just past the break. Continue reading Josh talks holiday gadgets on Late Night with Jimmy Fallon (video) Josh talks holiday gadgets on Late Night with Jimmy Fallon (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 21 Dec 2010 12:35:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …photo: Darren Blackburn / Creative Commons You’re probably aware that nitrogen runoff into rivers contributes to the growing problem of ocean dead zones, but according to new research published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences human-caused nitrogen loading in the world’s rivers is a much greater source of greenhouse gas emissions, in the form of nitrous oxide … Read the full story on TreeHugger
Continue reading …Image Credit: Resources for a Sustainable Future There is a strange debate going on at Green Building Advisor, where a writer thinks “home buyers have been “brainwashed” into thinking only about R-values, as energy codes give short shrift to the importance of airtightness.” The debate goes back and forth, but not once to they address the real point: How much energy is being consumed over all. They are preoccupie… Read the full story on TreeHugger
Continue reading …The Girls ask why the Jets are trippin', discuss John Boehner's “emotional” issues, and the snowman hit-and-run. [Video embedded after page break]
Continue reading …This one isn’t much of a surprise — considering N-Trig told us just a few months ago that “the most useful Android slates will be pen-enabled” and that it was working on Android support — but today the Israel-based company has officially announced support for Google’s mobile operating system. What does that mean? On a technical level, it means that N-Trig’s DuoSense pen and capacitive multitouch solution, which is currently on tablets like the HP Slate and Dell Latitude XT , will work on top of Android slates. On a product end, it means that we’re going to start seeing an Android slate or two that takes advantage of pen in 2011. According to N-Trig’s VP of Marketing Gary Baum, one company is far along in developing an Android slate based on DuoSense and there are “several others that are coming along.” Baum wouldn’t give us any specifics on those companies, though he did tell us that we should see one product in the first half of the year, while the majority will be waiting for Honeycomb . We’re still crossing our fingers for Honeycomb in the first part of 2011, so we don’t want to read into that too much, but he also stressed that third-party software developers are working on applications that take advantage of pen and that some of them may be previewed at CES. We’ll be digging as much as we can into what company’s pairing pen with Android, but until then, we leave you with the full press release after the break. Continue reading N-Trig teaches DuoSense to write on Android screens, tablet to come in the first half of 2011 N-Trig teaches DuoSense to write on Android screens, tablet to come in the first half of 2011 originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 21 Dec 2010 12:11:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …Photo by respres via Flickr Creative Commons When I first read the headline of the article on PressDemocrat stating that kids are now to have access to fresh water where they eat their lunches, my jaw dropped a little. Have I been out of school long enough for all the water fountains in cafeterias to have disappeared?! Apparently, yes. Sen. Mark Leno, D-San Francisco, who sponsored the bill that will go into law on January 1, 2011, says unfortunately, i… Read the full story on TreeHugger
Continue reading …The troubled Broadway musical ‘Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark’ was plagued by its fourth accident since it began previews last month when an actor performing an aerial stunt fell about 30 feet. (Dec. 21)
Continue reading …Image credit: Earthshipkirst Appalachian Gothic architecture made from recycled pallet wood is by no means the only DIY housing option using reclaimed materials. In fact, TreeHugger has featured countless posts on “earthships”—self-sufficient passive solar homes built from old tires, cans, mud and concrete. From Justin’s introduction to the earthship concept , via Kristin’s post on
Continue reading …enlarge Credit: Tom Tomorrow In the wake of President Barack Obama’s premature capitulation in the tax wars to the Republicans — a party who I might remind you controls neither congressional chamber at this moment (they will take over the House in January) — once-muted criticism of the Commander-in-Chief on the Left has suddenly erupted into a full-scale flurry of condemnation. There have been calls for other Democrats to primary him in 2012, jeremiads that Progressives should have been treating him as an adversary, and a feeling on the Left, put into words by a Congressman (Rep. Jerry Nadler of New York), that Democrats “can’t trust him.” So you could say it’s been a somewhat bad month for the president – although that might be akin to saying the guys attending South Carolina’s “Secession Ball” will only be missing some of their teeth. The president has not only caved on eliminating budget-busting tax cuts for people who have toilet plungers more expensive than your house, but has backed off long-delayed (but promised) environmental regulations to govern smog and toxic emissions from industrial boilers. He also negotiated a new Korea Free Trade Agreement that isn’t free from deleterious affects on American workers, enacted a freeze in pay for federal employees for reasons nobody can figure out, and was ready to listen to recommendations to cut Social Security from a committee of rich, irrelevant Beltway primates so old they look like they should be starring in Weekend at Bernie’s 3 . This turn of events would probably explain why in a new McClatchy Poll, President Obama’s approval among liberals has fallen from 78% to 69%, while his disapproval among self-described Democrats has nearly doubled, from 11% to 21%. That Obama doesn’t have much of a stomach for a rumble as president, this much many liberal commentators can agree upon. Yet, perhaps for political reasons, or maybe due to the glorious rose shade the passage of time can deliver to one’s glasses, many have looked admiringly back to a moment that never existed to call on Obama to be someone he never really was. A Fighter. Recently, I have read essay after essay asking Obama to “return to who he was during the campaign.” To stand up strong to GOP bullies! To bring us back to the glory days when he rode through the badlands of a never-ending campaign and apparently had the fortitude and purpose of General Sherman on a scenic gallop through Georgia. Now, it’s true he took stronger positions during the election, but that was simply a rhetorical exercise. It is also true that he was a much better communicator back then, one with an actual message. But what many pundits and progressives are forgetting is that during those heady days of Campaign 2008, much like today, he refused to hit back when viciously attacked by John McCain. Then as now he saw himself as above the fray. It was his Achilles Heel then, just as it is now. In fact, that may have been the very reason that up until the world economy went splat in September of 2008, a presidential race that should have been almost impossible to lose, against a party whose sitting President was just slightly less popular than scurvy, was neck-and-neck. So much so, that a month before the big economic crash, Chuck Schumer , Democratic senator, offered a none-too-subtle nudge to Obama to start fighting back when he said, “when they say, ‘he’s not one of us,’ you don’t say, ‘here’s our plan on health care.’” Democratic Strategist and Clinical Psychologist Drew Westen summed this up perfectly in an August 2008 (or pre-economic meltdown) Huffington Post piece : Obama has a voice, and he has the microphone to say anything he wants anytime he wants to say it. But as his opponent “distracts” the media – and hence the public – daily with a relentless drumbeat about what’s wrong with Obama – that he isn’t strong, that he isn’t American, that he isn’t patriotic…that he is the most liberal member of the United States Senate, that he isn’t “one of us” – what story has Barack Obama told that could possibly catch the public attention? That he has a slightly amended plan for dealing with the energy crisis? And what story is his campaign telling about why voters should worry as much about John McCain as they are beginning to worry about Barack Obama? Why do I point all of this out? Because now is as good a time as any to be realistic about what the president is made of. There will be many battles over the next 2 years. If we are to analyse the problem, and what to do about it, we have to begin by acknowledging the facts. In other words, when progressives and moderates decide how to confront President Obama’s propensity for playing dead at the outset of legislative negotiations over the next two years, one might want to – for once – think like former Donald Rumsfeld, the former secretary of defense. “You go into policy fights with the President you have. Not the one you wish you had.” [Editor's note: This is Cliff's weekly column for Al Jazeera English. ]
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