Notice how we said “hardware,” not “phones?” In light of that wild Motorola teaser we just saw and the fact that we know Verizon and Moto are working pretty closely on Android tablets , it’s entirely possible that phones won’t be the only items on Verizon’s docket when it starts pulling the covers off its first consumer-oriented LTE gear at CES in a couple weeks. The fact that there’ll be new LTE hardware intros from Verizon at CES is nothing new — they’ve been saying as much for a while now — but the specific mention of Android is a comforting confirmation that we’ll probably see the HTC Mecha , that unnamed LG , and perhaps a tablet or two on hand as opposed to MetroPCS’ unusual strategy of taking the dumbphone route . ‘Bout time the EVO 4G and Epic 4G had to watch their backs, isn’t it? Verizon teases Android LTE hardware for January 6th at CES originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 20 Dec 2010 13:45:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …Al-Youm Al-Sabe’a daily says ‘Joseph Dimor’ and ‘Idi Moshe’ are the two Israelis wanted in connection with spy ring, along with local businessman Tarek Hassan. Report says Hassan offered his services to Mossad via email, was tasked with damaging Cairo-Damascus ties
Continue reading …Photo by CGP Grey via Flickr Creative Commons Extracting and refining oil is a water-costly process. California doesn’t have much water to spare, yet it is pouring billions of gallons of this invaluable substance into its oil business. Right now, oil companies in Kern county use as much as 8 barrels of water for each barrel of oil produced. Oil companies consumed 83% of the district’s water allocation last year. Is this really the wisest use of a resource that, in so many ways, is far more precious than oil? … Read the full story on TreeHugger
Continue reading …After doing ‘detective work’ to play disgraced lobbyist Jack Abramoff in new movie ‘Casino Jack,’ Kevin Spacey talks about what he discovered and reveals what it was like to meet the man himself. (Dec. 20)
Continue reading …I’m still trying to wrap my head around this one : At the urging of the United States, the United Nations Security Council passed on Wednesday a resolution permitting Iraq to have a civilian nuclear program. The resolution, which also lifted prohibitions on exports to Iraq of certain materials that could be used to develop nuclear and other unconventional weapons, was one of several U.S.-backed measures to end restrictions that dated from before the invasion that removed Saddam Hussein from power. The Council’s action represented a retreat from its earlier position that it would not lift the nuclear restrictions unless Baghdad accepted an additional protocol to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty that provides for more intrusive international inspections. The Council’s action in affirming Iraq’s right to a peaceful nuclear program is ironic in view of the obsessive campaign to deny the country on its eastern border the same right. This is one more demonstration of the hypocrisy and inconsistency that characterize much nonproliferation policy, especially as it relates to the Middle East. What ostensibly is a concern about a certain category of weapons is actually much more a concern about the coloration and even the rhetoric of certain regimes that might get those weapons. Considering that the Bush administration used the threat of a looming mushroom cloud of a reconstituted Iraqi nuclear program to justify its invasion and occupation of the country and not a week goes by without some pundit fear mongering on Iran’s nuclear capability, the news that the UN has approved Iraq’s civilian nuclear program is more than a little bizarre. Okay, so let me see if I get this straight: Iran, with a democratically elected president (nutty as he may be), is a threat to us in developing a nuclear energy program. But Iraq, with a fragile government installed despite clear evidence of electoral fraud and corruption, their nuclear program is just fine. Alrighty then. Anyone else seeing this biting us in the ass in the decades to come?
Continue reading …Believe it or not, the crew at Engadget HQ will be packing up and headed to CES 2011 a fortnight from today, and it looks as if quite a few undercover products from NEC will be making the same trip. The company has just revealed that its single-screen Cloud Communicator tablet will be on display, but moreover, a dual -screen version will be making it awfully tough for the former to get any attention whatsoever. Now, dual-screen devices aren’t exactly new, but an Android tablet with a pair of 7-inch LCDs is definitely more inciting than Kno’s education-minded megabook and the two-faced e-readers that swarmed CES 2010. Details on the hardware are few and far betwixt, with NEC only revealing that both panels will be touch-enabled, WiFi, 3G and Bluetooth modules will be baked in and that a stylus will be included for good measure. Also, it’ll fully support the use of different programs on each LCD, which — if executed properly — could melt our faces into the desert sand below. Sadly, our prying for images got us nowhere, but we’re assured to see more at next month’s extravaganza. Hang tight. Continue reading NEC teases dual-screen Cloud Communicator Android tablet, promises more at CES NEC teases dual-screen Cloud Communicator Android tablet, promises more at CES originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 20 Dec 2010 12:59:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …Officials say dozens of passengers escaped an early morning fire on a Greyhound bus in Hancock County, Indiana on Monday. No injuries were reported. (Dec. 20)
Continue reading …Diplomatic cable reveals former military intelligence chief regarded 2007 Islamic takeover of Gaza as positive step; said it will allow Israel to declare Strip as hostile entity
Continue reading …It’s on, suckers. Motorola just sent us this “Tablet Evolution” teaser video for their CES 2011 announcements, and it doesn’t mince any words — it calls the iPad a “giant iPhone” and says the Samsung Galaxy Tab is running Android “for a phone” before closing out with a buzzing bee over that new red Motorola logo . That certainly suggests some Honeycomb action to us — and it fits perfectly with Andy Rubin demonstrating the next-gen version of Android on a Motorola tablet back at D: Dive Into Mobile. You know, the tablet that’s since leaked out with a Verizon logo on it . Yeah, we’re ready for this to go down — and you know we’ll be there live as it happens. Motorola’s ‘Tablet Evolution’ video teases some Honeycomb at CES originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 20 Dec 2010 12:32:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
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