Want to see HTC’s potential answer to your landscape physical QWERTY dreams slide itself open on video? How about the Windows Phone 7 handset with a hidden speaker bar ? You won’t have far to look — both the HTC 7 Pro and 7 Surround star in their own CG clips on YouTube today, and you’ll find both after the break. My, don’t they look fun? The HTC 7 Pro’s also got an official website now, though pricing and availability are still on the lam (save a mention of “early next year” ) and will likely elude us for months. Gallery: HTC 7 Pro press shots Continue reading HTC 7 Pro and 7 Surround strut their stuff in official sizzle videos HTC 7 Pro and 7 Surround strut their stuff in official sizzle videos originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 16 Oct 2010 15:03:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …Ken Langone, writing in the Wall Street Journal , takes it to the Business Destroyer-in-Chief: For more than two years the country has listened to your sharp rhetoric about how American businesses are short-changing workers, fleecing customers, cheating borrowers, and generally “driving the economy into a ditch,” to borrow your oft-repeated phrase. My question to you was why, during a time when investment and dynamism are so critical to our country, was it necessary to vilify the very people who deliver that growth? Instead of offering a straight answer, you informed me that I was part of a “reckless” group that had made “bad decisions” and now required your guidance, if only I’d stop “resisting” it. I’m sure that kind of argument draws cheers from the partisan faithful. But to my ears it sounded patronizing. Of course, one of the chief conceits of centralized economic planning is that the planners know better than everybody else… …Your insistence that your policies are necessary and beneficial to business is utterly at odds with what you and your administration are saying elsewhere. You pick a fight with the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, accusing it of using foreign money to influence congressional elections, something the chamber adamantly denies. Your U.S. attorney in New York, Preet Bahrara, compares investment firms to Mexican drug cartels and says he wants the power to wiretap Wall Street when he sees fit. And you drew guffaws of approving laughter with your car-wreck metaphor, recently telling a crowd that those who differ with your approach are “standing up on the road, sipping a Slurpee” while you are “shoving” and “sweating” to fix the broken-down jalopy of state. A little more than 30 years ago, Bernie Marcus, Arthur Blank, Pat Farrah and I got together and founded The Home Depot. Our dream was to create (memo to DNC activists: that’s build, not take or coerce) a new kind of home-improvement center catering to do-it-yourselfers. The concept was to have a wide assortment, a high level of service, and the lowest pricing possible. We opened the front door in 1979, also a time of severe economic slowdown. Yet today, Home Depot is staffed by more than 325,000 dedicated, well-trained, and highly motivated people offering outstanding service and knowledge to millions of consumers. If we tried to start Home Depot today, under the kind of onerous regulatory controls that you have advocated, it’s a stone cold certainty that our business would never get off the ground, much less thrive. Rules against providing stock options would have prevented us from incentivizing worthy employees in the start-up phase—never mind the incredibly high cost of regulatory compliance overall and mandatory health insurance. Still worse are the ever-rapacious trial lawyers… In Obama’s America there will never be another enterprise like Home Depot. Oh, and by the way, today Obama called for tax hikes on businesses.
Continue reading …Liberal comedia Stephen Colbert's joke-testimony to Congress may have been a low moment for the House of Representatives, but apparently, to reporters, it makes you a symbol of holiness. Kimberly Winston of the Religion News Service hailed Colbert in an article that appeared in Saturday's Washington Post. “And, you know, whatsoever you do for the least of my brothers, and these seem like the least of our brothers right now,” Colbert said, quoting Jesus. “Migrant workers suffer and have no rights.” It was a different kind of religious message than Colbert typically delivers on Comedy Central's “The Colbert Report,” where he often pokes fun at religion – even his own Catholic Church – in pursuit of a laugh. Yet it was the kind of serious faith that some of his fellow Catholics say makes him a serious, covert and potent evangelist for their faith. “Anytime you talk about Jesus or Christianity respectfully the way he does, it is evangelization,” said the Rev. Jim Martin, associate editor of the Jesuit magazine America, who has appeared on Colbert's show four times. “He is preaching the gospel, but I think he is doing it in a very postmodern way.” read more
Continue reading …All images credit Lloyd Alter unless noted Both of the leading candidates for Mayor of Toronto want to cut back on spending and rip up bike lanes on main streets. The leader, Rob Ford , says “I can’t support bike lanes. Roads are built for buses, cars, and trucks. My heart bleeds when someone gets killed, but it’s their own fault at the end of the day.” So who knows how long Toronto’s first bike boxes will last. That’s cycling activist Yvonne Bambrick handing out postcards to dr… Read the full story on TreeHugger
Continue reading …It’s time to stop pretending that negotiations are possible in the Middle East: In Ramallah meeting with Hadash party members, Palestinian president calls on Israel to ‘recognize state of Palestine within 1967 borders’; says opposed to population exchanges as part of permanent agreement. Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas said Friday he would not recognize Israel as a Jewish state, adding that he was also opposed to population exchanges as part of any permanent peace agreement. During a meeting with heads of the Hadash party in Ramallah, Abbas said, “Had we given up on our principles, we would have signed an agreement years ago.” According to those who took part in the hour-long meeting, the Palestinian president said the direct talks with Benjamin Netanyahu have not progressed and that the Israeli prime minister is insisting on the continuation of construction in the West Bank’s Jewish settlements. Abbas reiterated that he would not agree to resume negotiations as long as settlement construction continues. Israel is not going to give up the Old City and go back to 1967 borders. The Palestinians will never accept the presence of a Jewish state in that area. Let’s quit pretending that there’s a negotiated settlement available somewhere. Israel, keep building those walls.
Continue reading …Ten-thousand empty plates were displayed at the bottom of the Eiffel Tower in Paris on Saturday in an event to mark World Food Day. (Oct. 16)
Continue reading …Thick fog may be to blame for a deadly highway pile-up in southern China. More than 20 vehicles were involved in the massive crash that killed at least eight people and injured dozens. (Oct. 16)
Continue reading …You know that iPad Dock Connector to VGA Adapter that you wasted money on ? Yeah, turns out there’s probably a superior alternative available in the wilds of China… well, aside from the fact that it probably lacks an internal authentication chip needed to play back most protected content. Noosy’s iPad HDMI output adapter is fairly simple in design — it plugs into the 30-pin Dock Connector that’s on modern iPhone, iPad and iPod touch devices, and then allows 720p content to flow directly over HDMI. We’re guessing there’s just a VGA-to-HDMI converter wrapped inside a familiar package, but we definitely like where this is headed. There’s nary a word on how much this will cost you (or what street corner you need to visit in order to find one), but here’s hoping the engineers in Cupertino are paying attention to what consumers are really after. [Thanks, Thomas] KIRFy iPad adapter adds HDMI output, probably balks at DRM’d material originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 16 Oct 2010 13:01:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …Republicans used their weekly address to call on Congress to come back into session to take an immediate vote on whether to extend Bush-era tax cuts. (Oct. 16)
Continue reading …Nate Silver has been looking at the numbers : FiveThirtyEight’s projection for the U.S. House shows little change from last week. Republicans are given a 73 percent chance of taking over the House, up incrementally from 72 percent last week. During an average simulation run, Republicans finished with 227 seats, up from 226 last week; this would suggest a net gain of 48 seats from the 179 they hold currently. However, there is considerable uncertainty in the forecast because of the unusually large number of House seats now in play. A gain of as large as 70-80 seats is not completely out of the question if everything broke right for Republicans. Conversely, if Democrats managed to see a material rebound in their national standing over the final two weeks of the campaign, they could lose as few as 20-30 seats, as relatively few individual districts are certain pickups for Republicans. At this point, barring a major news or political event, it’s hard to see what could happen in the last two weeks that would swing voters back to Democrats. There isn’t any good economic news, people are still mad at how the liberal agenda was rammed down our throats, and the most motivated voters right now are still the Tea Party Republicans and Independents. Obama’s not on the ballot so there’s little reason to expect a surge among black voters or starry-eyed youth. I’m still going with my over/under number of 56 and wouldn’t be surprised to see 60+.
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