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U.S. Life Expectancy Down

Overall U.S. life expectancy dropped a tenth of a year to 77.8. It’s down by a fifth of a year in white men and women but up to 70 years for black men — an all-time high.

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California High Speed Rail Line to Begin Construction

Image: CA HSR Authority Board With my apologies to the late Sam Cooke: It’s been a loooong time comin’, but I know-oh-oh-woah, that a high speed train gon’ come. (That was either the lamest thing I have ever written, or the most awesome. Or neither.) Anyhow, it’s true. The California High-Speed Rail Authority Board voted last week to begin construction on the line that will connect Los Angeles to San Francisco. This is big news…. Read the full story on TreeHugger

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House Dems Reject Bush-Obama Tax Cuts

Democrats in the House passed a resolution Thursday telling the president not to bother bringing his compromise extension of tax cuts for the wealthy to their chamber. Nancy Pelosi said Democrats would continue to work with the White House, and, if history is our guide, the White House will continue to work with Republicans to get the bill passed.

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Snapstick shows off iPhone-controlled internet TV prototype

It’s still not an actual product just yet, but upstart Snaptick has given Crave an early look at its eponymously-named internet TV system, which it says will challenge the likes of Google TV and Apple TV. The company’s hook is that it simply delivers the “full web” to your TV, which can be controlled using either your phone or a laptop. In the case of the company’s iPhone app, you can actually flick content from your iPhone to the TV, and even have multiple people control the same TV with their respective iPhones. Things get a bit more complicated when it comes to the actual device, though. It seems the company still isn’t sure what form it will take — it could be a separate set-top box like the prototype above, or it could be built-in into a Blu-ray player or TV. Given that state of things, it shouldn’t come as much surprise that there’s no indication of a price or release date, but the company is now accepting applications for a private beta, and you can get an idea of what might be in store in the video after the break. Continue reading Snapstick shows off iPhone-controlled internet TV prototype Snapstick shows off iPhone-controlled internet TV prototype originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 09 Dec 2010 14:29:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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Bonus Track? Keyshia Cole Busts Out New Song

Keyshia Cole, who is releasing her fourth CD ‘Calling All Hearts’ on Dec. 21, busted out a tune from the past when asked about the songs she wrote before becoming a Grammy-nominated, R&B superstar. (Dec. 9)

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New York Spa a Treat for Dogs

Fetch Club, a new canine spa in New York, treats its clientele better than some human spas. The AP’s Ted Shaffrey reports from New York. (Dec. 9)

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Assad blames ‘Israeli intransigence’ for failed peace talks

In Paris, Syrian leader says American initiative ‘has not worked,’ but adds, ‘Before we blame the sponsor, we should blame the sides themselves’

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Windows Phone 7 devices are being discounted by third parties, but it’s business as usual

We’re seeing reports pop up that discounting — some of it heavy — off the full retail prices of Windows Phone 7 handsets by third-party retailers this early in the game could be a sign of trouble for Microsoft, but realistically, you can’t use that yardstick for guesstimating how well a phone (or a platform, in this case) is doing. Guys like Amazon, Wirefly, Simplexity (which runs a number of mobile stores, including Walmart), and Best Buy Mobile regularly undercut carriers’ first-party pricing on handsets immediately following release — or shortly thereafter — because it’s effectively a win-win: they’re given multi-hundred-dollar commissions for each new contract they bring to the network, giving them the wiggle room to apply some of that cash to the sticker price. The retailers win because they’re earning sales by offering phones for less than the carriers, and the carriers still win because they’re pushing on-contract units either way — and that means they’ve captured another long-term revenue stream, which is where the real money’s at. Popular Android devices like the Epic 4G and the Vibrant (among countless others) were handled the same way in the retail channel as these Windows Phone 7 devices are being handled. Of course, that’s not to say we know Windows Phone 7 is selling well — Microsoft’s Joe Belfiore dodged questions about numbers this week at D: Dive into Mobile , which seems shady at best for a platform that’s now been on the market for a solid month. We are saying, though, that you can’t use third-party discounting to steer the conversation either way. Call us when AT&T or T-Mobile starts blowing out Quantums and HD7s for a penny directly when they’re not tied up in some sort of holiday BOGO promotion, because that’s when you have to worry. Windows Phone 7 devices are being discounted by third parties, but it’s business as usual originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 09 Dec 2010 14:08:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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House Dems Reject Obama Tax Plan

The House Democratic Caucus has voted to reject President Barack Obama’s tax deal with Republicans in its current form. (Dec. 9)

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The Tea Party platform was all about smaller government and less spending. Now that they helped Republicans sweep into the House and Senate, the deficit is all but forgotten. Let’s see how the mainstream Republican party is adhering to Tea Party values. Hint: not closely at all. Cutting a deal on tax cuts while extending unemployment insurance It seems everyone hates the deal President Obama cut with the Republicans on tax cuts, but it’s a toss-up as to whether progressives hate it quite as much as the Tea Party. Jim DeMint and the Club for Growth came out against it with some of the most cynical, hypocritical reasoning I’ve ever seen. They want the top tax rate to be made permanent with no offset, but insist that the middle class tax cuts and unemployment extensions must be paid for. All that talk about the deficit is just that. Talk. Leadership positions and earmark spending Rep. Hal Rogers (R-KY) has been appointed chairman of the House Appropriations Committee. Rogers is one of the biggest earmarkers in Congress, earning the title of “Porker of the Month” in August. Not only that, but true to hypocritical form, Rogers requested funds appropriated as part of the Affordable Care Act while swearing during his campaign that he would move to repeal or defund it. This one may be a little tough for the Tea Party to attack too hard, since Ron Paul is one of four Republican Congressmen to request earmarks . Defense spending Tea party purists like Ron Paul and presumably his son Rand oppose both wars and advocate cuts in defense spending. This is one area where I happen to agree with them, as do many others who oppose the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. And once again, Republicans have betrayed those core Tea Party values by putting Buck McKeon in charge of the Armed Services Committee. Mother Jones: McKeon’s views on such issues as Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell (he’s against its repeal) and defense spending put him directly at odds with Defense Secretary Robert Gates. He has described Gates’ thinking on defense reform as “shortsighted and the wrong path,” arguing that the US should spend whatever it takes to prevail in Iraq and Afghanistan, while simultaneously investing to prepare for future wars. “The word ‘tradeoff’ hasn’t really been in McKeon’s vocabulary,” observes the Center for a New American Security’s Travis Sharp. The differing philosophies of McKeon and Gates on defense spending are likely to produce some confrontational hearings. Sharp also predicts that the California lawmaker will attempt to make an issue of the Obama administration’s plans for a gradual pullout from Afghanistan by hauling top commanders before the committee to testify about the wisdom of setting a date to begin withdrawing troops. McKeon, for his part, has said that a deadline undermines US efforts in the eyes of its NATO allies and Afghans, and gives the Taliban every reason to sit tight and pounce when the time is right. McKeon’s defense spending zeal is no surprise. Since his election in 1992, the defense and aerospace industries have practically bankrolled his political career. And over the years, he’s returned the favor, directing millions in pork-barrel projects to defense contractors like Lockheed Martin and Boeing. So many betrayals, so little time. Will the Tea Party rebel against the Republicans? Stay tuned…

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