A software keyboard may sound anathema to Palm, with its rich history of wonderful QWERTY keyboards, but you had to feel it was coming, what with the wild consumer adoption of slate devices and, you know, the economy these days. Well, after a short history of hints in webOS 2.0′s code and a longer history of hacks , a full-on Palm-developed software keyboard has been found in shipping webOS 2.0 devices. It takes a little bit of a hack and a restart, and apparently it’s buggy as well, oh and you have to use the physical keyboard to enter the Opt+Sym+K command that opens the virtual keys. Still, none of these shortcomings are going to stop us from sketching out slick, slim slate phones in our diaries, translating that understated elegance of the Pre 2 into a screen-dominated form factor with our unbridled imaginations, leaving the Pre’s cramped hardware keyboard in the past as we sprint into a glorious future of tangible webOS 2.0 market share and maybe a threaded email app or something. Sorry, we’re done. Check out a video of the keyboard in action while we wipe the drool off our chins. Continue reading Software keyboard pops up in webOS 2.0, dreams of a Palm slate phone flourish Software keyboard pops up in webOS 2.0, dreams of a Palm slate phone flourish originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 06 Dec 2010 14:13:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …Don Meredith, one of the most recognizable figures of the early Dallas Cowboys and an original member of ABC’s “Monday Night Football” broadcast team, died Sunday. He was 72. (Dec. 6)
Continue reading …Mercury News Apple has been assembling land in Cupertino for a while, and just acquired a bit Hewlett Packard property two miles away from its current base. Now a Spanish newspaper breaks the news that Norman Foster, architect of Masdar, has been hired to des… Read the full story on TreeHugger
Continue reading …Around the world, tarantulas are kept as pets but many popular species are endangered in the wild. Photo credit: christopher.woo / Creative Commons ” Operation Spiderman “—which had nothing to do with the fictional crime-fighting web-slinger—came to an end this weekend with the arrest of Sven Koppler, a German man thought to be responsible for the smuggling of thousands of endangered spiders. Authorities began tracking Koppler after intercepting a package concealing 3… Read the full story on TreeHugger
Continue reading …The Republican leader in the Senate is virtually guaranteeing that there will be no repeal this year of the military’s controversial policy which forces gay, lesbian and trans-gender members to hide their personal lives or face expulsion from the service. Minority Leader Mitch McConnell told NBC’s David Gregory Sunday that he doesn’t see any way that “don’t ask, don’t tell” can be repealed in the lame duck session. “People are talking like that is the only issue,” McConnell said. “That defense bill also has abortions in military hospitals. Once you get on the defense bill it typically takes two weeks. I don’t see how we can possibly finish the defense authorization bill — a two-week bill wholly aside from these controversial items that are in it, there are a lot of other things in it — before the end of the year.” “Even as you get into January, in your mind, do you think the support is there to lift the ban in Congress?” Gregory asked. “My personal view is that Sen. McCain is correct on this. I intend to follow his lead. We’ll find out when we finally get around to debating this bill which I think will not be before the end of the year,” he concluded. The Pentagon released a study last week that said a majority of service members support ending the ban. Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) has rejected the study’s methodology. “[T]his study was directed at how to implement the repeal, not whether the repeal should take place or not,” McCain said in mid-November . The Arizona senator has blasted President Barack Obama for advocating for repeal. “The fact is this was a political promise made by an inexperienced president or candidate for presidency of the United States,” he said. But Retired General and former NATO Supreme Allied Commander Wesley Clark said Sunday that with the military focused on war, now was the perfect time to do away with the policy. “This is the ideal time to do this, because we’re talking about building teamwork around a common purpose,” Clark told ABC’s Christiane Amanpour .
Continue reading …Public Security Ministry officials drawing up plans to create renewed fire services layout under ministry’s command following Carmel fire disaster. Issue discussed by Yitzhak Aharonovitch, Eli Yishai several weeks ago, Ynet learned
Continue reading …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 tech savvy lot may think PMPs are a dying breed, but funnily enough, the market’s still going strong with a handful of products. There are certainly some benefits from using a dedicated media device alongside your phone: more battery juice, greater range of supported file formats, better audio quality, more form factors to choose from, etc. Perhaps our list of gift recommendations will be more convincing — check it out after the break. Continue reading Engadget’s Holiday Gift Guide: PMPs Engadget’s Holiday Gift Guide: PMPs originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 06 Dec 2010 13:41:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …Looks like the Motorola i1 Android set ( not pictured above) will stand as the highest-end Nextel phone ever — Sprint just announced that it’s phasing out the iDEN network sometime in 2013 as it begins a new four to five billion dollar network enhancement project called “Network Vision.” We’ve expected this for a while — the Sprint / Nextel merger has been beset by subscriber losses and rumors of a breakup for years now — but this is the first time we’ve gotten a date. Sprint’s rolling out push-to-talk on its own network to support its 10.6 million Nextel customers, but we don’t have a schedule for that yet. Sprint’s also announcing vendors for Network Vision: Alcatel-Lucent, Samsung, and Ericsson will each handle a region and be tasked with expanding and fortifying Sprint’s existing 1900MHz 3G network while buying 800MHz, 1900MHz, and 2.5GHz spectrum for future use. Interestingly, Sprint’s definitely hedging its WiMAX bets a little — it can upgrade its new gear to LTE with swapping in a baseband card and issuing a software patch, which certainly gives the company some 4G flexibility should Clearwire not pull things together . We’ll see what happens — the underdog’s making some moves. Sprint phasing out Nextel’s iDEN network, selects vendors for $5b network upgrade project originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 06 Dec 2010 13:22:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …Sumatran tiger in the Melbourne zoo, photo: Wikipedia A rare bright spot in the world of tiger conservation: New research by the Wildlife Conservation Society ‘s Indonesia Program and Forum HariumauKita has produced a new map of Sumatran tiger distribution which shows that the Indonesia island may actually have the second-highest population of tigers
Continue reading …Liberal newspapers may claim that taxpayer-funded art galleries should take “public sensitivities” into account, but in reality, they don’t want members of Congress actually representing the insulted public by speaking out against anti-Christian exhibits. Friday’s Washington Post led their editorial page with the headline “The censors arrive: Do Republicans really want to ride into power with a burst of small-minded intolerance? ” That’s funny: Christians might find the “small-minded intolerance” coming from artists who think that modern-day Christianity is an oppressive, Jesus-betraying force – as represented by ants crawling all over Jesus on a crucifix. Here’s the key passage: Public sensibilities must be taken into account when taxpayer funds are in play, but the use of public dollars does not give lawmakers the right to micromanage or censor displays. Nor should the occasional dust-up be justification for threatened retribution against these valuable national assets. We hope Mr. Cantor's threats prompt many additional Washingtonians to visit the exhibit and judge for themselves. read more
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