Seems Samsung still hasn’t solved the GPS woes on many of its Galaxy S models to the satisfaction of every user — complaints of inordinately long (or impossible) lock times continue to trickle into our inbox to this very day. To that end, folks might be interested in the news that Samsung Mobile is tweeting about a “GPS Restore Application” that it’s thrown together for wiping the GPS subsystem and making it factory-fresh. Now, we’ll be the first to admit — we don’t quite understand how “restoring” a screwed-up GPS to its original screwed-up state is doing any good, but we’ll leave it to Sammy’s confusing verbiage: “During online surveillance, there is an abundance of GPS tweaks that impair GPS performance. Often times, no backup is performed to restore values prior to modifications. Samsung has released an application that restores GPS settings to recommended factory defaults for optinum [sic] performance.” Right, then. It’s only compatible with the Captivate and Vibrant at the moment — no word on others like the Epic 4G , Mesmerize , or Fascinate , but folks on AT&T and T-Mobile should be able to nab it from the Market. Samsung releases ‘GPS Restore’ app for Captivate and other Galaxy S models originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 30 Nov 2010 16:19:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …enlarge ‘Are there no prisons? Are there no workhouses?’ Here’s what I suggest for anyone who’s losing their unemployment payments this week: Grab a blanket and a pillow, and head on over to your local congressperson’s office — or, if you live in a big city, go to your senator’s office. Tell them you can’t afford to turn on the heat, and you’re going to camp out in their waiting room until the congressman or senator has time to talk to you. And since you don’t have money for food, either, I suggest you loudly solicit the staff and incoming visitors for cash. Because I am so goddamned sick of these bastards and the protected little bubbles in which they live. It’s time we did what we could to remind them of the consequences of everything they’ve done — or failed to do : WASHINGTON — Food banks across the country are watching for the end of federally-funded extended unemployment insurance. “We are bracing for it,” said Vicki Escarra, CEO of Feeding America, the nation’s largest domestic hunger-relief charity, in an interview with HuffPost. Escarra said that Feeding America’s 200 member food banks across the country feed nearly six million people every week. “I can assure you, if these unemployment insurance benefits are not reinstated we’ll see these numbers go way up,” Escarra said. Two federal programs — Emergency Unemployment Compensation and Extended Benefits, which together provide up to 73 weeks of jobless aid on top of 26 weeks of state aid — are set to begin to expire this week because Congress has not reauthorized them. According to the Labor Department, two million long-term unemployed will be dropped from the programs by the end of December if Congress does not act. Congress allowed benefits to lapse twice for a brief time earlier this year, and once for a long time, when 2.5 million had their benefits interrupted for nearly two months over the summer. The path forward for reauthorizing the benefits is unclear, but Sen. Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) said Sunday that he wants the benefits preserved as part of a deal to reauthorize the also-expiring Bush-era tax cuts. The Congressional Budget Office recently reported that extended unemployment benefits prevented record poverty in 2009 and were used mostly by middle-class Americans. Households with total income more than twice the poverty threshold received 70 percent of the $120 billion the federal government spent on unemployment benefits last year. Part of the reason is that the benefits themselves push families into higher-income groups. A study released by Feeding America this year found that of the 37 million people served by its member food banks, 70 percent came from households with incomes below the poverty line. The study found that 5.7 million people received emergency food assistance in 2009, a 27 percent increase from 2006.
Continue reading …8:37 AM Wednesday Dec 1, 2010 Share Email Print Expand Shrink BRUSSELS – Europe launched a full-frontal attack on internet king Google, formally opening an antitrust probe after rivals accused the Silicon Valley giant of rigging the online search market. European Union competition watchdogs announced their investigation, after smaller companies accused Google of “unfavourable treatment” of their services in both unpaid and sponsored search results, the crucial listings that make the web navigable. Competition authorities are also probing whether Google’s own services – including YouTube video, book-scanning or telephony – are getting “preferential…
Continue reading …News that Comcast had threatened to block internet backbone Level 3 , which is one of the companies delivering Watch Instantly streams, sent shockwaves through the industry yesterday. Net neutrality advocates geared up for battle, Comcast insisted it was only enforcing the same arrangements other networks abide by while Roger Ebert and the rest of us fretted over Netflix access. Today, Level 3 issued a response to Comcast, claiming it is “distracting from the fundamental issue” which is free use of all content on the internet for its customers. Meanwhile, Multichannel News points out industry analysts say Level 3′s claims of traffic discrimination “appear unfounded” while VideoNuze editor Will Richmond supposes Level 3 may have “bid too aggressively for the Netflix business and is now trying to recover.” Most damaging to Level 3′s argument are its own words from a dispute where it sought financial compensation from Cogent for using too much of its network’s bandwidth: “For example, Cogent was sending far more traffic to the Level 3 network than Level 3 was sending to Cogent’s network. It is important to keep in mind that traffic received by Level 3 in a peering relationship must be moved across Level 3′s network at considerable expense. Simply put, this means that, without paying, Cogent was using far more of Level 3′s network, far more of the time, than the reverse. Following our review, we decided that it was unfair for us to be subsidizing Cogent’s business.” Beyond analyst opinions and posturing the question of whether or not Comcast has the power to set pricing for access to its network, creating the toll road Level 3 is accusing it of being, is still at issue. That will certainly come into play at the FCC, where chairman Julius Genachowski mentioned at today’s meeting that the agency is looking into Level 3′s claims at the same time it continues to review the joining of Comcast and NBC. As far as your Netflix streams? Safe for now, though the company isn’t commenting, Level 3 isn’t the only provider it relies on for access and how any deal it might reach with Comcast could affect the service is still unclear. FCC looking into Comcast / Netflix blocking threat, Level 3 responds as analysts chime in originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 30 Nov 2010 15:56:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …Photo: Zainub , Flickr, CC It’s so simple — so gloriously simple. In 2008, China instated a law that made it illegal for stores to give out plastic bags for free . Instead, shop owners were required to charge for the bags, and allowed to keep any profit they made for themselves. The results? After two years, the poorly-enforced law has nonetheless dropped plastic bag consumption by a whopping 50% — keeping an estimated 100 billion plastic bags out of the landfills. … Read the full story on TreeHugger
Continue reading …Managing Editor's Note: The following is adapted from a news release issued earlier today: Alexandria, VA – As CNSNews.com reported yesterday, the taxpayer funded Smithsonian’s National Portrait Gallery is hosting an exhibit during this Christmas season featuring images of an ant-covered Jesus, male genitals, naked brothers kissing, men in chains, Ellen DeGeneres grabbing her breasts, and a painting the Smithsonian itself describes in the show's catalog as “homoerotic.” [Link to CNSNews.com story here . WARNING: Story contains graphic photographs of items on display in an exhibit at the Smithsonian Institution’s National Portrait Gallery.] NewsBusters publisher and Media Research Center (MRC) president Brent Bozell reacted: read more
Continue reading …WikiLeaks memo describes row between Iranian president, General Mohammad Ali Jafari resulting in violent gesture. Another document reveals that Qatar allowed US to use its airbase to launch airstrike against Iranian nuclear facilities
Continue reading …Image: Youtube 2 Square Meters of Sunlight is All it Takes Last summer, I wrote about a cool video that showed how a solar oven could be used to melt steel . It’s a good demonstration of just how much solar energy is hitting the Earth (it’s one thing to know abstractly, but it’s much more memorable to see it in action). Here’s another very cool video in the same vein, except that they don’t just stick to steel (which has a melting point of approx. 1,370 °C/2,500 °F). The best quo… Read the full story on TreeHugger
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