America’s latest free speech folk hero, Juan Williams, thinks its time for his old boss to compete in the marketplace of ideas : Juan Williams, the former National Public Radio news analyst who was abruptly fired this week for expressing a personal view on Fox News, called for the federal government to stop funding the radio organization. “If they want to compete in the marketplace, they should compete in the marketplace,” Williams said Friday in an interview on “Fox and Friends”. “They don’t need public funds. I think that they should go out there. They think their product is so great, go out and sell the product.” They just got a million bucks from George Soros – they don’t need our tax money.
Continue reading …Even though we’ve seen a torrent of Windows Phone 7 devices, we couldn’t leave you hanging on a review of the Samsung Focus. In the last few days, a flurry of new Microsoft-powered devices have hit the market, boasting slight differences, but all looking and acting largely the same. We’ve taken a deep dive on the operating system itself, the Omnia 7 , Optimus 7 , Mozart , HD7 , and Surround (phew!) — now it’s time to focus on the, er… Focus. The device itself has a lot in common with its European brother, the Omnia 7, boasting the same 4-inch Super AMOLED display, 8GB of internal storage, 1GHz CPU, and 5 megapixel camera. The device will soon go on sale in America for $199.99 on AT&T’s network — in fact, it’s the only Windows Phone 7 device you’ll be able to buy when they go public on November 8th. But is it really worth your hard earned cash when there are so many other options in the market? Read on for the full Engadget review to find out! This review is primarily of the Samsung Focus hardware. Check out our full review of Windows Phone 7 for our thoughts on the OS. Gallery: Samsung Focus review hands-on Continue reading Samsung Focus review Samsung Focus review originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 22 Oct 2010 18:47:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …With one kid in a Cal State and another one heading there next year, I found this story interesting: NoteUtopia, a startup company for college students founded by a young Sacramento State graduate, has been ordered to “cease and desist” by the CSU chancellor’s office, which said the company is violating state education codes that prohibit students from selling their class notes. The ban came just weeks after Ryan Stevens launched his company – sort of an eBay for college students to buy and sell their study materials – with back-to-school booths in September at CSU Sacramento, Chico and East Bay. The 10-year-old law that prompted the ban is so obscure that it caught NoteUtopia’s founder, campus officials and Internet law experts by surprise. Eric Goldman, director of the High-Tech Law Institute at Santa Clara University Law School and a professor of Internet law, said “many people had no idea it’s on the books.” But while the law may be a sleeper, the issue of what students can do with material taken from class lectures “comes up with some regularity,” Goldman noted. It’s at the heart of an academic and legal debate on intellectual property rights involving how classroom content is shared among students. I would think a legal challenge to this might be successful. Notes are not the property of the professors or college and a student should be able to share or sell them if they wish. Next I expect the professors to push for the end of the used book market. A lot of profs pad their income by requiring books they’ve written to be purchased for their classes (at exorbitant prices, mind you). The used book market, and now the rental book market, saves students a ton of money and costs the profs the money they’d make on their new books. Of course, they can get around that be creating a new revision of their books that renders the old ones useless. That’s done quite a bit too.
Continue reading …Animals at the Detroit Zoo terrorize pumpkins and other features of the fall harvest, alternately destroying the items or guarding them from other creatures. All of this is part of the zoo’s annual ‘Smashing Pumpkins’ event. (Oct. 22)
Continue reading …Remember that slimmer-than-slim Blu-ray 3D / BDXL player that Sharp demonstrated at CEATEC? Looks like the world now has a ship date and price, though you aren’t likely to be keen on either. The unit itself — which measures but 35mm thick and looks eerily familiar to the slimmed-down PlayStation 2 — will tout a Blu-ray recorder while supporting BD 3D and BDXL playback, and there’s even compatibility with OTA broadcasts for those looking to toast television to blank Blu-ray media. Naturally, a contraption this awesome is going to be reserved for the Japanese market, with reports suggesting that it’ll ship anywhere between mid-December to early January. The real kicker, however, is the price — at
Continue reading …click on image to enlarge. Credit: Dukakis Center Smart Planet points us to a report ( PDF here ) from Dukakis Center for Urban and Regional Policy at Northeastern University that concludes that new transit can lead to gentrification. My first response was well, duh, isn’t that the point? It has always been a rule i… Read the full story on TreeHugger
Continue reading …Photos: Gilbert13 Though it’s probably greener to just rescue scrap paper and post-its to bookmark your reading, the neat-freak bookworm in me couldn’t resist these adorable themed bookmarks from UK-based design studio Gilbert13 . Made from sustainably-sourced, recyclable cardboard, the colourful markers add a more organized and thoughtful touch to your book collection. … Read the full story on TreeHugger
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