Welcome to the Engadget Holiday Gift Guide ! The team here is well aware of the heartbreaking difficulties of the seasonal shopping experience, and we want to help you sort through the trash and come up with the treasures this year. Below is today’s bevy of hand curated picks, and you can head back to the Gift Guide hub to see the rest of the product guides as they’re added throughout the holiday season. You didn’t think we’d let the holiday season go by without an official Engadget Tablet Gift Guide did you? Hey, give us more credit — we know it’s not 2009 anymore! The past year has seen an explosion in the tablet category , and while the iPad may still be the market leader, there’s no shortage of Android and Windows 7 alternatives out there that let you surf the web, read books, and watch videos with just a flick of a finger. Sure, more are on the way , and all signs point to Apple updating the iPad in early 2011, but if you’ve got to have a touchscreen slab before the end of the year, we’re here to lend a helping hand. Hit the break for a rundown of the best choices by price category. Continue reading Engadget’s Holiday Gift Guide: Tablets Engadget’s Holiday Gift Guide: Tablets originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 17 Dec 2010 12:16:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …Photo credit: Sierra Club During this lame duck congressional session or in the next Congress, we are expecting a battle over the gray wolf and its listing as an endangered species . Wolves are being unjustly blamed for killing too many elk in the western U.S. The numbers, however, don’t support this. In Montana, Idaho and Wyoming elk numbers have actually increased 18 percent since wolf reintroduction …. Read the full story on TreeHugger
Continue reading …Photo: Christian Rabeling Jimmy the chimp loves painting — and he’s darn good at it. Find this amazing story — plus a look at the new species discovered in 2010, the effect of media coverage on factory farming, how humans are causing shark attacks, and more in the Week in Animal News. … Read the full story on TreeHugger
Continue reading …By now you’ve probably heard that Harry Reid has agreed to a one-month continuing resolution on the budget appropriations bill. When I heard it, I went full-tilt ballistic. And then I heard the news about Senator Ron Wyden’s need to have prostate cancer surgery and everything fell into place. Here’s why I think Reid agreed the extension by continuing resolution: DeMint demanded a full reading of the appropriations bill on the floor of the Senate . That reading would involve having 1,924 pages of text read out loud on the Senate floor. As you may recall, that tactic was used last December when the vote on the health care bill was looming, and Democrats called the bluff. I suspect they would have this time too, except for what happened after DeMint’s demand. Reid planned to have the Senate in session through January 4th if necessary in order to bring up the DREAM Act and DADT standalone repeal after disposing of the tax cuts, appropriations bill, and START. Senator Scott Brown announced support for standalone DADT repeal bill today, putting the total number in support at 60 with Wyden and Murkowski’s support. There are rumors of more Republicans signing on after Pat Toomey spoke in favor of it. Wyden announced he had delayed prostate cancer surgery as long as he could without endangering his health, and would not be available on Friday for votes because of tests, nor would he be available on Monday because that was when surgery was scheduled. Past Monday was up in the air. Reid made a value judgment, decided to get the appropriations question out of the way and schedule cloture votes for DADT repeal and the DREAM Act on Saturday when Wyden was still available to vote. That would leave the START treaty on the table, which Republicans have claimed requires 6-7 days of debate before a vote. With everything else out of the way, it’ll be pretty obvious who is keeping the Senate from going home for the holidays. Because a majority is 60% in the United States Senate and because these DREAM and DADT repeal votes are so close , Reid decided he couldn’t lose Wyden’s vote on DREAM and DADT repeal. I think in the long run he’s probably right, since Republicans are about as trustworthy as foxes in henhouses. So where from here? I see a couple of directions — my opinion only. If the Senate actually tries for a filibuster rule change on the first day of the new Congress (January 5th) that makes filibustering harder than just waving a pinky and nodding at the minority leader, then the Senate will have new life. If they go there. And actually get it done. I do think that for the first time there’s some real will among Senate Democrats to modify these ridiculous filibuster rules. Many of the newest Democratic Senators are determined to attach a political and public cost to what is now nothing more than a wink and a nod. The new Republican House will have to either produce an appropriations bill by mid-January or so or shut down the government. I think it’s reasonable to expect them to shut down government. Whether they’re held accountable for the fallout from that action will be up to the people and the press. Still, it’s more likely they’ll produce an appropriations bill than a new version of the DREAM Act and DADT standalone repeal, and I think that’s the choice Harry Reid made. START is also on shaky ground at this point. If there is a victory at hand at all it will be pyrrhic, coming at the cost of defunding the Affordable Care Act in whatever final form the appropriations bill takes. In 2011, that funding was to provide ongoing funding to states’ high-risk pools, a second tier of funding for Bernie Sanders’ community health centers, and appropriations for transitions to electronic health records, among others. In the end, Wyden’s pending surgery and the dwindling time frame drove Reid’s decision. The only question is whether these two standalone bills will succeed. DADT repeal is looking hopeful. DREAM Act is on shaky ground. We need to keep the pressure on the Senate to vote for it. It’s an E-Ticket ride, isn’t it?
Continue reading …A number of strong economic reports show the economy is getting a boost. But when it comes to housing, the struggles continue.(Dec. 16)
Continue reading …Hezbollah leader dismisses IDF officials warnings, says group stronger than before
Continue reading …Home automation and jetpacks are surprisingly similar in that both of these space-age technologies have, for decades, been over promised and under delivered. Who here wouldn’t love to tap a single button when exiting the house to activate the alarm, shut off the lights in the kids’ rooms, lower the thermostat, and lock all the doors? That’s the convenience, the promise left unfilled as we say goodbye to 2010. We live on a planet that still requires humans to manually close the blinds at the end of the day and flip on a light switch some 90 years since the commercial introduction of the incandescent light bulb. How primitive. And it’s downright criminal in ecological and financial terms that we still can’t easily monitor and control the power usage in our homes let alone the trickle or wattage vampired off the individual electrical sockets feeding our greedy horde of household electronics. How is this possible given all the advances we’re seen? Wireless and sensor technology has advanced far beyond what’s required to automate a home. Just look at smartphones, for example, that now ship standard with 3G (and even 4G) data, 802.11n WiFi, Bluetooth, and GPS radios in addition to sensors for motion, temperature, moisture, proximity, and even direction. We don’t have the answer to home automation’s dilema — to dig into that topic we’d require a few thousand more words, at least. All we know for sure is that the biggie consumer electronics companies are reluctant to sort it out. As such, dozens of small companies are left to deal with a mess created by an industry incapable of coalescing around a set of interoperable home automation standards. One such company is Mi Casa Verde. A tiny startup that launched its linux-based Vera home automation server back in 2008 with a renewed promise to make home automation setup and control as easy for novices as it is robust for techies and enthusiasts. We’ve been using a recently launched second generation Vera 2 for a few weeks now. Sure, we haven’t quite reached one-button nirvana, but as home automation newbies we’re proud to say that we’ve automated a few helpful in-home lighting situations while skirting the clutches of the Dark Angel sequestered within our fuse box. Better yet, we can control it all from an iPhone — including the Christmas tree. Click through to see how we did it. Gallery: Mi Casa Verde Vera Review Continue reading Mi Casa Verde Vera review: Home automation, simplified Mi Casa Verde Vera review: Home automation, simplified originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 17 Dec 2010 11:49:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …A massive bipartisan tax package preventing a tax hike for millions of Americans is on its way to President Barack Obama for his signature Friday. The House easily passed the bill Thursday. It passed the Senate earlier this week. (Dec. 17)
Continue reading …The world of concepts is quite the wonderful place to behold, it’s filled with electric supercars , cameras that only ever need one lens , beautiful BlackBerrys , and now… a self-cleaning door handle. The product of one Choi Bomi’s hyperactive imagination, this gatekeeper continuously sterilizes itself with a UV light, only taking a break when you actually use it. A clandestine switch in the handle’s frame is what toggles the sanitizing illumination on and off, a spark of cleverness that’s earned the design a Red Dot award . That’s great, now who hands out the awards for making economically viable, mass producible devices? Self-sterilizing door handle looks perfect for hypochondriacs, is as real as their ailments originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 17 Dec 2010 11:27:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …Image credit: EraPhernalia Vintage , used under Creative Commons license. From discussing the role of debate in the green movement , to advocating that environmentalism must remain tolerant of differing viewpoints if it is to succeed , I like to think that I am a supporter of rigorous, even heated, discussion as a vital means to finding answers to… Read the full story on TreeHugger
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