Home » Archives by category » News (Page 8974)
Sphero toy ball rolls itself, you control it with your smartphone

Don’t have the airspace required for an AR.Drone ? Gearing up for its CES 2011 debut, Sphero is a small, robotic toy ball made by Orbotix, and controlled remotely via Bluetooth and your smartphone’s tilt sensor. A ball that moves by itself? Call us lazy (too lazy to roll a ball even), but we think this is a toy whose time has come. Sure, the whole thing is pretty straightforward, although we hope that once iPhone and Android developers get ahold of that open API we’ll see plenty in the way of augmented reality gameplay: a maze or a racing game of some sort would make this thing quite coveted, in our opinion. Catch a video of the prototype in action after the break. Continue reading Sphero toy ball rolls itself, you control it with your smartphone Sphero toy ball rolls itself, you control it with your smartphone originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 12 Dec 2010 18:22:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

Continue reading …

There’s been a lot of talk about how WikiLeaks is terrible, how the information released is damaging to national interests and/or security, how Julian Assange should be treated as a terrorist/enemy combatant/spy (pick your hyperbole), US Ambassador to the UN Zalmay Khalilzad points out that far more damaging information was given by someone with a much higher clearance to Bob Woodward, and no one started screaming that Bob Woodward should be prosecuted –or worse, executed . In his latest book, “Obama’s Wars”, Woodward quoted various high level administration sources : Obama rejected the military’s request for 40,000 troops as part of an mission with no foreseeable end. “I’m not doing 10 years,” he is quoted as telling Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates and Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton at a meeting in October 2009. “I’m not doing long-term nation-building. I am not spending a trillion dollars.”[..] Woodward says Obama is constantly barraged with warnings about the possibility of terrorist attacks on US soil. [..] General David Petraeus Relations between Obama and Gen. Petraeus, then chief of the central command region that included Iraq and Afghanistan, deteriorated after the President rejected his repeated requests for more troops, Woodward claims.[..] Woodward quotes Gen. Petraeus as saying: “You have to recognize also that I don’t think you win this war. I think you keep fighting. It’s a little bit like Iraq, actually. . . . Yes, there has been enormous progress in Iraq. But there are still horrific attacks in Iraq, and you have to stay vigilant. You have to stay after it. This is the kind of fight we’re in for the rest of our lives and probably our kids’ lives.” The General felt increasingly isolated by the administration and reportedly told his aids that the White House was f—— the wrong guy” after a glass of wine on a flight in May. He was effectively banned from appearing on the Sunday talk shows by the administration but made use of private channels to Congress and the news media, the book claims. Richard Holbrooke Woodward reports that Vice President Joe Biden called Richard Holbrooke, the special envoy to Afghanistan, “the most egotistical b—— I’ve ever met.”[..] James Jones A variety of administration officials reportedly expressed scorn for Obama’s national security adviser, James Jones, who allegedly became so distrustful of the President’s political aides that he began calling them the “Politburo” and the “Mafia”.[..] Hamid Karzai The Afghan president is a manic depressive, according to Woodward. “He’s on his meds, he’s off his meds,” the veteran reporter quoted Karl Eikenberry, the US Ambassador to Afghanistan, as saying. Admiral Mike Mullen The chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff was criticised by his deputy, James Cartwright, because he “wasn’t a war fighter,” according to Woodward. Mullen suspected that Cartwright was briefing against him behind his back, the book claims. Robert Gates The Defense Secretary was tempted to walk out of an Oval Office meeting after taking offence at comments made by deputy national security adviser Thomas E. Donilon about an unnamed general, the book claims. Rahm Emmanuel The White House chief of staff was reportedly firmly in support of CIA drone attacks on al-Qaeda militants in Pakistani territory and reportedly asked a security adviser, “who did we get today?” David Axelrod The senior White House strategist was regarded as “a complete spin doctor” by Gen David Petraeus, then chief of the central command region that included Iraq and Afghanistan, Woodward claims. Axelrod had trouble trusting some of Obama’s senior appointments. When the newly-elected president floated the idea of making Hillary Clinton Secretary of State, Axelrod reportedly asked: “How could you trust Hillary?” Not exactly espionage, but certainly as damaging, if not more, than the recent WikiLeaks cables dump. Eikenberry, in particular, was fairly vocal about his discontent and the issues he foresaw about our occupation of Afghanistan, and the NY Times remained unscathed from releasing his diplomatic cables. Oops…maybe I shouldn’t have written anything. I’m sure George Will calling for Bob Woodward and the Editors of the NY Times to be tried alongside Julian Assange.

Continue reading …
Raw Video: 250 Football Fans Injured in Jordan

250 people were injured during a football match when a large metal fence separating spectators from the playing field collapsed during a clash between the nation’s native Bedouin clans and its Palestinian refugees. (Dec. 12)

Continue reading …
Minn. Metrodome Roof Collapses After Snowstorm

The inflatable roof of the Metrodome collapsed Sunday after a snowstorm that dumped 17 inches on Minneapolis. No one was hurt, but the roof failure sent the NFL scrambling to find a new venue for the Vikings’ game against the New York Giants. (Dec. 12)

Continue reading …
Public invited to inform on those renting to Arabs

In step supporting rabbis’ letter on halachic ruling against renting to Arabs, initiative gives number so public can give names for ‘list of disgrace’

Continue reading …
‘Division of Jerusalem not Israel policy’

Jurusalem, Dec. 12: Israel’s hawkish PM Benjamin Netanyahu on Sunday dismissed calls to share the holy city of Jerusalem with the Palestinians, a stand that will further queer the pitch for US brokered West Asia peace talks. Distancing himself from defence…

Continue reading …
Jordan’s king wants improved ties with Iran

Abdullah II accepts Ahmadinejad’s invitation to visit Tehran, says it’s ‘imperative to undertake practical steps for improving Jordanian-Iranian relations’

Continue reading …

Here’s hoping Waxman manages to plug up the worst loopholes before this deal gets rammed through, because they’re right: the future of the internet will be greatly affected by this merger . Is there no merger too large that the Justice Department won’t rubberstamp? .Although there has been a lot of talk in media circles about what Comcast’s ownership of NBC Universal would mean for viewers’ choice of news and entertainment, the two branches of the federal government reviewing the merger — the Justice Department and the Federal Communications Commission — are more worried about what the combination means for the online world. The Web is shaping up to be the No. 1 issue in a mega media merger today, much the way battles over program diversity and commitment to news loomed over media mergers in the past. “This isn’t the run-of-the-mill merger,” said Jeffrey Silva, a telecommunications and media analyst with Medley Global Advisors. “Online video is an emerging market and if someone gained power really early, it could stifle it…. That’s why there has been so much controversy.” The FCC and the Justice Department have different mandates, although there is considerable overlap between the two. Generally speaking, the Justice Department’s mission is to make sure a merger doesn’t diminish competition, and the FCC examines whether a deal serves the public interest. Rivals, legislators and watchdog groups fear that Comcast, armed with NBC content, will wield too much power in determining how the Internet develops as a medium to watch TV and movies. In addition to the NBC network and Universal Studios, Comcast would also get its hands on big cable channels including USA, Bravo, MSNBC and Syfy. NBC also owns about one-third of Hulu, the popular online video site. Congress and federal agencies want to slap conditions on Comcast, which provides cable TV to 1 in 5 homes and has 17 million broadband customers. The conditions would require Comcast not to withhold its own content — such as cable channels — from any potential broadband competitor or block rival video service providers from accessing Comcast’s broadband pipes into homes. This week, Rep. Henry Waxman (D-Beverly Hills), who is chairman of the House Energy Commerce Committee, sent a letter to FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski and Christine Varney, the assistant attorney general of the Justice Department’s antitrust division, outlining the conditions he wants put on the merger. People close to the review process said Waxman’s proposals would probably be very similar to the final terms of the deal .

Continue reading …
Toshiba’s new glasses-free 3D display tilts images and viewing angles your way (video)

Autostereoscopic (read: glasses-free) 3D screens sound like all the rage, but the narrow zones from which you can comfortably view their images have made them a dubious proposition. That’s not stopping Toshiba Mobile Display, however, which recently came up with a novel idea for a self-adjusting display. By sticking a six-axis accelerometer in this 12.1-inch slate, the company can tilt the tablet’s viewing angle as the tablet itself is tilted, letting viewers effectively look around 3D objects on screen, using software algorithms rather than the fancy lens-and-camera assembly that Microsoft’s been prototyping . Toshiba figures it’ll make a splash with e-tailers — because who doesn’t want to play with a prospective purchase in 3D space? — but is mostly talking up the tech as a way to extend the limited 3D viewing angles of these sorts of displays. But enough jabber: see it for yourself after the break. Continue reading Toshiba’s new glasses-free 3D display tilts images and viewing angles your way (video) Toshiba’s new glasses-free 3D display tilts images and viewing angles your way (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 12 Dec 2010 16:37:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

Continue reading …
Chief of staff: Yeshiva students significant force in IDF

After Paratroopers Brigade commander said hesder yeshivas ‘lack values,’ Ashkenazi tells members of program ‘know where they came from and what we are fighting for’

Continue reading …