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Foiled Bomb Plot Sparks Calls for Expanded Military Presence in Yemen

WASHINGTON, DC – The U.S. is seriously considering sending elite “hunter-killer” teams to Yemen following the by militants in Yemen. The covert teams would operate under the CIA’s authority allowing them to kill or capture targets unilaterally, The Wall Street Journal . Support for an expanded U.S. military effort in Yemen has been growing within the military and the Obama administration, according to The Journal. Now pundits in the blogosphere are echoing calls to ramp up special operations in the country. Expect a U.S. Escalation, writes The Economist’s writes: “You can be sure that the US will be seriously considering amping up its semi-secret military campaign in Yemen. And you…

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Dropcam Echo review

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Dropcam Echo review

We’d all like to think that when we leave our homes absolutely nothing happens there — except maybe a Roomba making its solitary rounds or a pooch waiting somberly by the door. Of course that’s not the case, lots of things can go wrong in your absence and if you’re of the paranoid variety surely you’ve entertained a few of those ideas. With a camera capable of remote monitoring you can assuage some of those fears, and the models from Dropcam are about the easiest we’ve seen to use. But, at $199 to $279 with monthly monitoring fees ranging from $8.95 to $24.95, they sure aren’t cheap. Gallery: Dropcam Echo Continue reading Dropcam Echo review Dropcam Echo review originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 01 Nov 2010 12:23:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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One Hurt in Greek Package Bomb, Two Arrested

A woman was wounded after a package exploded at a private delivery company in Athens, Greece. Two men were arrested, and two other suspected mail bombs were destroyed in controlled blasts. (Nov. 1)

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‘Saw 3D’ Cuts the Competition

The seventh film in the ‘Saw’ franchise beat expectations at the Halloween box office. (Nov. 1)

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MRC’s Bozell Addresses Media’s Closing Campaign Pitch: Bashing the Tea Party

NewsBusters publisher and Media Research Center president Brent Bozell appeared on last night's special Sunday edition of “Hannity” to address what's easily become the liberal media's closing campaign tactic for liberal Democrats: attempting to discredit the Tea Party movement and its candidates. For example, in an October 26 interview with former president Jimmy Carter, Chris Matthews suggested Tea Partiers are simply the mindless dupes of corporate interests. “Remember the 'poor, uneducated and easy to command types?'” Bozell asked Hannity. To the liberal media, “[t]hat was the religious right 20 years ago. Now it's the Tea Party,” Bozell noted on the October 31 “Media Mash” segment: read more

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Nate Silver does some conjecturing at the Five Thirty Eight blog: Dawn breaks over New York City on Wednesday, Nov. 3. Democrats catching the early train to work are thinking about adding a little whiskey to their morning coffee. Because the headlines they are reading are truly terrible. Not only did Republicans take over the House, but they also did so going away — winning a net of 78 seats from Democrats. Seven seats in New York State changed hands; so did six in Pennsylvania, five in Ohio and four in North Carolina. Party luminaries like Jim Obertsar and Raul Grijalva were defeated. Barney Frank and Dennis Kucinich survived, but they did so by just 2 points apiece, and their elections weren’t called until 1 a.m. Democrats picked up just one Republican-held seat — the open seat in Delaware — but Joseph Cao somehow survived in his very Democratic-leaning district in New Orleans. Virtually every race deemed to be a tossup broke to the Republican. The news isn’t much better in the Senate. The Democratic candidates in North Dakota, Arkansas, Indiana, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, Colorado and Illinois all lost, flipping those seats to red from blue. So did Harry Reid in Nevada and Joe Manchin in West Virginia; both of them lost by 7 points, in fact. Washington State isn’t finished counting its ballots, but Dino Rossi has about a 30,000-vote lead over Patty Murray, and looks likely to prevail. California isn’t done counting either, and the race between Barbara Boxer and Carly Firoina remains too close to call. It might not matter anyway: Joseph I. Lieberman has scheduled a press conference for later that afternoon, and is expected to announce that — after seeing the strength of the mandate the voters have given the G.O.P. — he’ll begin conferencing with Republicans when Congress reconvenes in January. Races for governor provide little respite. Jerry Brown beat Meg Whitman in California — one of the few positives that Democrats can take out of the night. But Democrats lost the close races in Ohio, Florida, Illinois, Minnesota, Oregon and Connecticut, and were blown out in Pennsylvania and Michigan. Rick Perry, while expected to win in Texas, did so by a surprisingly large margin — nearly 20 points — and is making the rounds on the morning shows; the whispers are that he could be a Presidential contender. Pundits are running out of metaphors to describe what just happened. Not a wave, a hurricane. Not a hurricane, a tsunami! Not a tsunami; a tsunami from a magnitude 9.5 earthquake. Or by a meteor strike! Democrats knew it was going to be bad. But they didn’t think it was going to be this bad. So, what happened? Silver goes on in the piece to explain why the scenario above might not be all that far-fetched. You can read it here .

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30 Ways In 30 Days to Combat Climate Change – UNEP Program Highlights What We Need More Of

With COP16 kicking off in Cancún, Mexico at the end of the month, UNEP is hoping to get people jazzed up about all the different ways of combatting climate change–considering, that all signs point to little progress on the political front this year, taking meaningful individual action comes back to the forefront. Starting their ‘ 30 ways in 30 days ‘ program, UNEP is highlighting a really pretty cool way to help get Indian villages electricity, though

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SCHEMA robot shows off its conversation management skills in a group setting

SCHEMA is a conversational humanoid robot at Waseda University in Japan with some pretty serious skills. As you’ll see in the new video video they have posted (which is embedded below), SCHEMA is able to participate in a three person conversation without losing the plot, and is perfectly capable of understanding which speaker is which and what has been said by whom. It’s an impressive performance, to say the very least. Continue reading SCHEMA robot shows off its conversation management skills in a group setting SCHEMA robot shows off its conversation management skills in a group setting originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 01 Nov 2010 12:01:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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Cargo plane bomb plot tip-off came from freed Gitmo inmate

THE tip-off to authorities about two US-bound cargo plane bomb parcels came from a penitent al Qaeda member formerly held at Guantanamo Bay, British…

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Shell Oil Pays $6M for Clean Air Violations, Texas Schools Use Funds to Go Solar

Image: Flickr via Aaron Gustafson Here’s a story with a sense of justice (albeit small) from a case of environmental wrongdoing: Shell Oil was sued two years ago for releasing millions of pounds of chemicals, including benzene and other toxins, from its Deer Park refinery in Texas into the air. It was violating the Clean Air Act—and of the $6 million legal settlement that resulted, $2 million is now helping two Texas schools go solar. Beautiful irony…. Read the full story on TreeHugger

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