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AOC’s 16-inch portable monitor sucks power, video from your USB port

AOC’s latest may not have the IPS viewing angles of recent tablet offerings or high-end monitors, but this portable 16-inch screen connects — and powers itself — through just one USB port. Priced at $139, the AOC e1649fwu also includes a fold-up stand and can be propped up in both portrait and landscape. The 16:9 TFT screen packs 1366×768 resolution, and AOC promises that it won’t immediately suck all the life out of your laptop, though we’ll hold our judgement until we can get our hands on one. It could be a very canny addition to your portable office arsenal; it weighs in at a spritely 2.3lbs (just under over 1kg) and the 1.4 inch thickness means it may squeeze into some (admittedly more capacious) lappie bags . You’ll finally be able to look like you mean business while pluggin’ away in your own private corner at Starbucks after this launches next month. Continue reading AOC’s 16-inch portable monitor sucks power, video from your USB port AOC’s 16-inch portable monitor sucks power, video from your USB port originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 21 Sep 2011 08:26:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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David Nelson

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David Nelson

2011 Week 2 – Bills 38, Raiders 35 Bills Have Worst Names in NFL Bloomberg Sports Top 10 Running Backs From Week 2 ebabaji says: http://t.co/wFQkZZOI David Nelson gives Bills ‘it’ factor #david_ nelson #latestnews

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Glee Project Winner

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Glee Project Winner

‘Glee’: ‘The Purple Piano Project’ Songs – Season 3 (FULL VIDEO) ‘Glee’ Recap: ‘The Purple Piano Project’ Goes Up in Flames What Is The Glee Project’s Cameron Mitchell Up to Now? ReginaOwen says: Glee Project winner interviews Inside TV EW.com http://t.co/BRQw7knd

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Troy Davis execution nears despite widespread protests

Troy Davis to die by lethal injection in Georgia on Wednesday as protesters appeal to stop execution going ahead Death row inmate Troy Davis faces execution on Wednesday evening, despite a furious campaign in the US and Europe to win clemency for Davis over his conviction for a murder he says he did not commit. Vigils outside Georgia’s death chamber were set up, and protests were planned across the US. Davis’s attorneys said he was willing to take a polygraph test if the pardons board would consider its results. Davis’s lawyers also drew up a late appeal asking a local judge to block the execution over evidence Davis’s legal team object to. Defense attorney Brian Kammer told The Associated Press he would file the appeal in superior court in Butts County, home of the state’s death row, when it opens on Wednesday. The motion argues that ballistic testing that linked Davis to the shooting was flawed. In Europe, where the planned execution has drawn widespread criticism, politicians and activists were making a last-minute appeal to the state of Georgia to refrain from executing Davis. Amnesty International and other groups planned a protest outside the US embassy in Paris, and Amnesty also called a vigil outside the US embassy in London. Parliamentarians and government ministers from the Council of Europe, the EU’s human rights watchdog, called for Davis’s sentence to be commuted. Renate Wohlwend of the council’s parliamentary assembly noted doubts raised about Davis’ conviction by his supporters and said: “To carry out this irrevocable act now would be a terrible mistake which could lead to a tragic injustice.” After winning three delays since 2007, Davis lost his most realistic chance at last-minute clemency this week when the state pardons board denied his request. He is set to be executed by injection at 7pm ET for the 1989 killing of Mark MacPhail, an off-duty police officer who was working as a security guard in Savannah when he was shot dead rushing to help a homeless man who had been attacked. Davis refused a last meal. He planned to spend his final hours meeting with friends, family and supporters. According to an advocate who saw him late on Tuesday, he was upbeat, prayerful and expected last-minute wrangling by attorneys. Attorney Stephen Marsh said he had asked state prisons officials and the pardons board if they would allow a polygraph test. A prisons spokeswoman said she was unaware of the request, and the pardons board did not immediately respond for comment. “He doesn’t want to spend three hours away from his family on what could be the last day of his life if it won’t make any difference,” Marsh said. Davis has received support from hundreds of thousands of people, including a former FBI director, former president Jimmy Carter and Pope Benedict XVI. The US supreme court gave him an unusual opportunity to prove his innocence last year, but his attorneys failed to convince a judge he did not kill MacPhail. State and federal courts have repeatedly upheld his conviction. Prosecutors have no doubt they charged the right person, and MacPhail’s family lobbied the pardons board Monday to reject Davis’ clemency appeal. The board refused to stop the execution a day later. “He has had ample time to prove his innocence,” said MacPhail’s widow, Joan MacPhail-Harris. “And he is not innocent.” Spencer Lawton, the district attorney who secured Davis’ conviction in 1991, said he was embarrassed for the judicial system that the execution has taken so long. “What we have had is a manufactured appearance of doubt which has taken on the quality of legitimate doubt itself. And all of it is exquisitely unfair,” said Lawton, who retired as Chatham County’s head prosecutor in 2008. “The good news is we live in a civilized society where questions like this are decided based on fact in open and transparent courts of law, and not on street corners.” Davis supporters said they will push the pardons board to reconsider his case. They also asked Savannah prosecutors to block the execution, although Chatham County district attorney Larry Chisolm said in a statement he was powerless to withdraw an execution order for Davis issued by a state superior court judge. “We appreciate the outpouring of interest in this case; however, this matter is beyond our control,” Chisolm said. MacPhail was shot dead on 19 August 1989, after coming to the aid of Larry Young in a Burger King parking lot. Prosecutors say Davis was with another man who was demanding that Young give him a beer when Davis pulled out a handgun and bashed Young with it. When MacPhail arrived to help, they say Davis had a smirk on his face as he shot the officer to death. Witnesses placed Davis at the crime scene and identified him as the shooter. Shell casings were linked to an earlier shooting that Davis was convicted of. There was no other physical evidence. No blood or DNA tied Davis to the crime and the weapon was never found. Davis’s attorneys say seven of nine key witnesses who testified at his trial have disputed all or parts of their testimony. The state initially planned to execute him in July 2007, but the pardons board granted him a stay less than 24 hours before he was to die. The US supreme court stepped in a year later and halted the lethal injection two hours before he was to be executed. And a federal appeals court halted another planned execution a few months later. The supreme court granted Davis a hearing to prove his innocence, the first time it had done so for a death row inmate in at least 50 years. At that June 2010 hearing, two witnesses testified that they falsely incriminated Davis at his trial when they said Davis confessed to the killing. Two others told the judge the man with Davis that night later said he shot MacPhail. Prosecutors, though, argued that Davis’ lawyers were simply rehashing old testimony that had already been rejected by a jury. And they said no trial court could ever consider the hearsay from the other witnesses who blamed the other man for the crime. Troy Davis State of Georgia Capital punishment Human rights United States guardian.co.uk

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Typhoon Roke heads towards Japan’s tsunami-hit areas

Storm leaves four dead in central region as 130mph winds threaten to cause damage at Fukushima nuclear plant A powerful typhoon is heading for Japan’s Fukushima prefecture and other areas hit by the 11 March earthquake and tsunami, after leaving at least four people dead in the country’s central region. The meteorological agency warned that the typhoon, the second to strike Japan this month, was generating winds of up to 130mph (209 km/h). Tokyo Electric Power (Tepco) said strong winds and torrential rain had so far not caused damage to the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant, although the area had yet to feel the full force. “The biggest cause for concern is the rise of [radioactive] water levels in the [reactors'] turbine buildings,” said Junichi Matsumoto, a Tepco spokesman. The firm said cooling systems used to keep the reactors stable would not be endangered by the typhoon, adding that every possible measure had been taken to prevent leaks of radioactive water. “We expect to be able to withstand [an overflow] even if water levels rise suddenly,” Matsumoto said. According to Tepco estimates, the plant’s reactor buildings contained more than 1m litres of radioactive water as of the middle of September. Earlier, more than a million people in central areas had been urged to evacuate. Evacuation advisories had been issued to 1.3 million people, including 800,000 in the city of Nagoya, 170 miles west of Tokyo. Most advisories had been lifted by early afternoon, but remained in place for 330,000 people in the most vulnerable regions. Typhoon Roke does not appear to have caused as much damage as some had initially feared, but strong winds and driving rain led to the cancellation of train services in Tokyo, stranding tens of thousands of commuters. Power was cut to more than half a million homes in Tepco’s service area, including the capital. The firm said more than 575,000 households were without electricity, while several other companies, including Toyota and Nissan, were forced to close plants as a precaution. Media reports said four people had died in central and western Japan, including a middle-aged man whose body was discovered in a river in Nagoya on Wednesday morning. Police in Gifu prefecture said a nine-year-old boy and an 84-year-old woman were missing after reportedly falling into a swollen river. The typhoon caused strong winds, heavy rain and high waves in central Japan before heading towards Tokyo and north-eastern regions. The government advised people to remain vigilant until the storm had passed. “We need to exercise maximum caution against heavy rains, strong winds and high waves in wide areas from eastern to northern Japan,” the chief cabinet secretary, Osamu Fujimura, told reporters. The meteorological agency warned that rivers in parts of central Japan were overflowing. NHK television showed residents in some areas wading through knee-high water. The typhoon dumped as much as 400mm (16ins) of rain in some areas on Wednesday. “In Aichi the heavy rain is causing some rivers to overflow,” an agency official told reporters. “I would like to ask people to exercise caution against potential disasters from torrential rain, strong winds and high waves.” Roke’s arrival comes two weeks after typhoon Talas triggered floods and mudslides that left 67 people dead and 26 missing. In 2004, typhoon Tokage killed 95 people. The meteorological agency described the eye of Roke as “very strong” and advised residents living in its path to exercise the “greatest possible vigilance”. The approaching typhoon also caused disruption to factories and power output. Chubu Electric Power, which supplies the central region, said it had lost 1,870 megawatts of hydropower output but there was no threat of electricity shortages. About 450 domestic flights were cancelled and some bullet train services were suspended, including the busy route between Tokyo and Osaka. Toyota, meanwhile, said it would close 11 factories in central Japan early to ensure the safety of employees. The carmaker said it would make up for lost output on subsequent shifts. Many commuters in Tokyo have been advised to leave work early. Heavy rain was expected to continue in many areas of Japan’s main island of Honshu until Thursday morning, according to Kyodo news agency. Japan Natural disasters and extreme weather Japan disaster Justin McCurry guardian.co.uk

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Has our education system’s laser-like focus on lifting standardized math and reading scores made school impossibly boring? That’s the argument of Daniel Denvir at Salon, who points to recent studies that suggest the average kid in public school is receiving less instruction time in non-tested subjects such as art, music, and physical education since the

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Bail Deal Approved for Iran Hikers

The lawyer for two Americans jailed as spies in Iran says a $1 million bail-for-freedom deal has been approved by the courts, clearing the way for the release of the men after more than two years in custody. (Sept. 21)

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Independent and Moderate Voters: What’s a ‘David Brooks?’

enlarge Let’s get this out of the way: David Brooks and his colleague Tom Friedman are two of the biggest frauds in the world of punditry. Anyone who claims to speak on behalf of “moderate” and “independent” voters has no idea what they’re talking about and are only using the mantle of “moderation” to advance their own personal views. You see this every three weeks or so when Friedman claims that America is just on the cusp of forming a new radical centrist party that just-so-happens to believe everything that Tom Friedman believes. The reality, of course, is that actual independent voters don’t give a damn about what David Brooks thinks and only care about whether they have jobs and whether they feel economically secure. You can read John Judis breaks this down pretty well in his piece debunking the myth of independent voters from late last year: The two other groups, the Disaffected Republicans and the Doubting Democrats, who make up 36 percent of Pew’s sample, are swing voters who are not dependable partisans. They are overwhelmingly white. They are not likely to have graduated from college and many of them have not attended college at all. Most of them make less than $75,000. It’s fair to characterize them as white working-class voters. Why are they independents and not Republicans and Democrats? According to the Pew poll, both groups believe that “parties care more about special interests than average Americans.” And this is generally true! Actual swing voters generally support parties based on whatever special interest they happen to be angrier at any given time. As I’ve said in the past , a lot of blue-collar swing voters will support Republicans when they want lower taxes and tough-on-crime/family values sorts of policies while they’ll support Democrats when they want to protect middle-class entitlement programs and to kick Wall Street’s ass. Most importantly, they vote based on how well the economy happens to be doing . They do not, repeat, not, pick up their copies of the New York Times every day and say to themselves, “Wow, David Brooks and Tom Friedman are reading my mind! We need a third party that coincidentally conforms to every one of their ideas!” Anyway, back to Brooks. Today he’s upse t because it seems, it least for the time being, that Obama has realized that taking David Brooks’ advice is not actually the key to win over independent voters. Yes, I’m a sap. I believed Obama when he said he wanted to move beyond the stale ideological debates that have paralyzed this country. I always believe that Obama is on the verge of breaking out of the conventional categories and embracing one of the many bipartisan reform packages that are floating around. But remember, I’m a sap. The White House has clearly decided that in a town of intransigent Republicans and mean ideologues, it has to be mean and intransigent too. The president was stung by the liberal charge that he was outmaneuvered during the debt-ceiling fight. So the White House has moved away from the Reasonable Man approach or the centrist Clinton approach. But here’s the thing: Obama really tried doing all that crap. He did! I remember slapping myself in the forehead all summer (and being too depressed to even attempt blogging) reading about it! Don’t you remember that column you wrote this past July hilariously titled “The Grand Bargain Lives” where you said that Obama and Boehner were “close to a deal” that would cut Medicare and Social Security in exchange for some tax increases? Let’s use the wayback machine to find it : At the last minute, two bipartisan approaches heave into view. In the Senate, the “Gang of Six” produces one Grand Bargain. Meanwhile, President Obama and John Boehner, the House speaker, have been quietly working on another. They suddenly seem close to a deal. There’s a lot you don’t know about these two Grand Bargains. But they probably have the elements that have been part of just about every recent bipartisan debt proposal: some sort of tax reform that lowers overall rates while raising revenue by closing loopholes; cuts in the level of entitlement spending without much fundamental reform; a freeze on domestic discretionary spending. Mostly, there will be vagueness. The specifics of what exactly will be cut and who will be taxed will not be filled in. You are being asked to support a foggy approach, not a specific plan. You are being asked to do this even though you have no faith in the other party and limited faith in the leadership of your own. You are being asked to risk your political life for an approach that bears little resemblance to what you would ideally prefer. Do you do this? I think you do. So let’s recap: This past summer you urged members of Congress to support a vague package that none of them had time to read that would have promised both tax increases and entitlement cuts. I may not be a political scientist or anything but none of those three things — tax increases, entitlement cuts or vague bills that no one has read — are popular with the independent voters you claim to speak for. The politics of such a deal were so transparently stupid that even Mickey Kaus can see it. Thankfully for us all, the Republicans decided to K.O. this Grand Bargain and then proceeded to get a very-crappy-but-not-catastrophic deal with $2.4 trillion in future budget cuts with no additional revenues. Question: Did independent voters see that Obama had done his earnest best to compromise with Republicans and give him a pat on the head? Hell no — they concluded that he was an ineffectual weakling who had no idea what the hell he was doing. What’s more, it led to the further demoralization of a Democratic base that had been getting its butt handed to it pretty much since the day Bush left office. The approach that Brooks advocates was, in fact, a giant loser. Triangulation, centrism and most-reasonable-guy-in-the-room-ism can work when things are going well. When Clinton was up for reelection in ’96 the economy was recovering, people were feeling better about the direction of the country and Newt Gingrich had just committed a string of political blunders that lessened his ability to be an effective leader. But when there’s high unemployment, a continuing mortgage crisis and the prospect of a double-dip recession, people don’t want the most reasonable guy in the room. They want help . If Obama has finally realized that David Brooks has no idea what he’s talking about, well, that’s a small step in the right direction. It may not win him reelection but it will at least guarantee that he receives more than one vote (i.e., David Brooks’ vote and no votes from anyone else) come November 2012.

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At AP, It’s ‘LightWhat’?

So I figure that I need to catch up on the LightSquared saga. This is the company which, as Fox News

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An award-winning German winegrower has lost his crop of grapes to a band of brazen thieves just before harvest time. Almost three tons of high-quality red grapes destined to become wine were stolen overnight by bandits who brought their own harvest machine, reports Der Spiegel . Wine experts believe the theft…

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