It’s still not saying anything about the lightweight EliteBook 2560p and 2760p models that leaked out last month, but HP has now gotten official with three new slightly less portable laptops: the 14-inch EliteBook 8460w, 15.6-inch 8560w and 17.3-inch 8760w. The latter is expectedly on the top end when it comes to specs, with it boasting your choice of Sandy Bridge processors up to a Core i7-2920XM, either AMD FirePro or NVIDIA Quadro graphics with up to 4GB of memory, and up to three hard drives with RAID 5 support. The other two EliteBooks each dial things down a bit across the board, but you can still get up to a Core i7-2820QM on each of them, and there’s not even an option for integrated graphics. Look for all three to be available next month with base prices starting at $1,299, $1,349 and $1,899 — full press release is after the break. Continue reading HP rolls out EliteBook 8460w, 8560w and 8760w laptops for the business-minded HP rolls out EliteBook 8460w, 8560w and 8760w laptops for the business-minded originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 13 Apr 2011 09:31:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …The University of Michigan may boast the best blue , but Mitsubishi subsidiary Verbatim is showing off OLED lighting of a different color; several of them, actually. Demonstrated this week at the Fuori Salone show in Milan, these 14 x 14 cm Velve-branded lighting panels are amongst the first color tunable OLED light panels, giving off what Verbatim calls “colourful lighting with a luxurious feel; as smooth and as rich as velvet.” Velve. Velvet. See what they did there? Sample Kits will be available in Japan later this month for
Continue reading …Click here to view this media I’m with Digby … watching this stuff just makes me want to go have a tall drink as well. Dana Bash, Ed Henry, John King and Gloria Borger were discussing how the policy debate was going on raising the debt ceiling and on the 2012 budget, and the Republicans refusal to raise taxes. Ed Henry goes from saying that the President needs to get his base excited if he hopes to be reelected in 2012 and in the next breath, talks about how having liberal Democrats mad at him “is not a bad thing.” I think our beltway Villagers love to push this stuff just to aggravate the hell out of people at the left wing blogs and anyone that writes at or reads them. In what world would Ed Henry or anyone else in our corporate media be talking about how it’s a good thing for a Republican to piss off their conservative base and conservative Congressional members and that it would somehow help their chances for reelection? Whoever it is at the White House that talked to Ed Henry has their head on backwards because liberal Congressional Democrats are trying to keep the President from giving in too much to Republicans and allowing them to destroy our fragile economy, which is obviously the Republican’s plan. They’d like nothing more than to see us in another recession because they think it helps their chances for reelection, because they can then blame the bad economy on the Democrats. And if anyone doesn’t think they’re crass enough to do it, just look at how they attacked Democrats the last election for the health care bill as an assault on Medicare . Who wants to let a few facts get in the way when you can do some fearmongering instead? I don’t know what the President is going to say tomorrow, but if he concedes too much to Republicans, I think he’s going to help them get their wish with tanking the economy again. The center of our political debate in this country has moved so far to the right, it’s ridiculous. It would really be nice to see some push back in the other direction and the hostage taking by Republicans called out for what it is so the blame can lay at their feet if their demands harm the economy, which they will. And as Digby noted in her post, Chambliss has not agreed to tax increases: Chambliss has not actually signed on to “modest tax increases” he’s signed on to “raising revenue” which is not the same thing in this debate and relies on magical thinking about loopholes — and tax cuts! She’s got more on that here — Raising revenue without raising taxes . We need to be beating back at these Republican memes. We don’t have a spending problem. We’ve got a revenue problem. And lowering taxes on the rich does nothing to reduce our deficit; it makes it worse. Transcript below the fold. BASH: I was just going to add to that. You know, what’s so interesting is when you talk about the big picture about deficit reduction, Paul Ryan’s plan definitely had some things the Democrats didn’t like with regard to entitlements, but the biggest thing that they didn’t like was the fact that he kept taxes low and doesn’t raise them to help get rid of the deficit. And now you have Republicans saying the last thing we want in the world that we’ll sign on to is a tax increase. There’s so many divides on this whole idea of reducing the deficit. But tax cuts is probably one of the biggest right now. KING: And you do have some Republicans, Saxby Chambliss for one, Tom Coburn from Oklahoma, another who come to mind, who say, I don’t want tax increases, I don’t like tax increases. But if that’s what I have to pay, if I have to take some modest tax increases as long as I get other things, I get spending cuts, I get changes to Medicare, maybe changes to Social Security. So, the question, Ed Henry, is — does the president have any realistic — do any of us have any realistic belief that they will cut a big deal now? Or are we likely to have a big debate and carry this one into the 2012 presidential cycle? HENRY: It sounds more like a big debate that carries on. Now, obviously, there are some pending problems here. There’s the, you know, debt ceiling and lifting that by May 16th. And as part of lifting that, Speaker Boehner obviously saying, look, you’ve got to put some sort of deficit reduction on the table. So, something some event like that may force the president’s hand, may force both parties frankly to do something. But I think it’s much more likely to wind up being a 2012 issue. And here’s one reason why: the day after the big speech on Wednesday, where’s the president going? He’s going to Chicago to officially sort of launch the fundraising for 2012. And so, even if they say here it’s not about politics, within 24 hours, he’s out on the campaign trail. BORGER: But here’s something that came out of those negotiations, John, that you were talking about in the government — to avoid the government shutdown. I was talking to a senior White House adviser said to me, asked him what he learned about John Boehner. And he said, “What I learned about the House speaker is he knows how to negotiate, that he played it close to the vest, that he didn’t talk to his caucus about all the details until he had to, and that we liked negotiating with him. He was a good, tough negotiator.” So, ironically, the administration that has promised sort of openness is going to cut its deals in private because that’s the way they work the best. KING: And one of the reasons people are cynical about this is that the president just a few weeks ago submitted a budget to the Congress that if had wanted to put his proposals to do this on paper, that was the place to do it. So, then a few weeks later, he comes in and says, oh, wait that minute, now, let’s essentially amend my own budget with the proposal. You know, Dana, we know that’s why the Republicans are going to say he doesn’t mean it, or he’s late to the game. What do the Democrats on Capitol Hill think? Ed talked about the interest groups, Move On and the like saying, well, Mr. President, don’t you dare? What about his Democrats on the Hill? BASH: There’s similar trepidation. There’s no question about it. But they also realize that at least many Democrats I talked to, they need to get in the game. And the Republicans in the House have this big splash with Paul Ryan’s budget, which obviously they don’t like. They still have not done — the Democrats obviously run the Senate. They have not seen the Democrats answer here. So, they do feel like they want the president to get into the game, but they are concerned, as you said, at the beginning of the segment, the president’s looking over his left shoulder. There’s a good reason for that. A lot of people here are concerned that he’s, to be blunt, selling them out. KING: And it’s hard for an incumbent president, Ed, especially an incumbent president has to do business with the other party, to do the two things you just talked about. Number one, he has to seem responsible, he has to try to negotiate with them. He has no choice. On the other hand, he is starting to gear up a campaign where he knows his base, especially if unemployment’s still around 8 percent, he’s got to get every single one of them out to vote. HENRY: He’s got to get the base excited. You’re absolutely right. And the base is pretty upset with him right now, dating back to what you mentioned before, which is the December tax deal, extending the Bush tax cuts. They’re mad about that. They’re mad about last week’s budget deal and they’re very apprehensive about what he’s going to lay out here. I was talking to a senior Democrat who advises the White House, outside the White House today, who was saying, look, you know, every time this president sits down with Speaker Boehner to Gloria’s point about negotiating skills, the president seems to give up another $5 billion, $10 billion, $20 billion. It’s like the spending cuts keep going up, if you think where the president and congressional Democrats started a couple months ago, they were talking about no spending cuts on the table. It keeps going up. But this president has a much different reality than congressional Democrats. BORGER: Right. HENRY: He’s going for the election where him going to the middle and having liberal Democrats mad at him is not a bad thing. KING: Not necessarily. All right. It’s fascinating politics and it happens to be — happens to be — incredibly important policy, as well. Ed Henry, Dana Bash, Gloria Borger — thank you.
Continue reading …Sure, a lack of first-party tools never kept you from bending the Kinect to your diabolical whim, but Microsoft’s taking some time out at MIX 11 to talk about the official Kinect SDK for Windows and show off a few demos. Mind you, all of that’s going to happen on stage over the course of the next hour, so we don’t have many details for you right now, but Redmond says devs will have access to not only the basic color and infrared depth cameras, but “robust skeletal tracking” of two simultaneous individuals as well, and perhaps most excitingly, full access to the Kinect’s array of four microphones for noise canceling and voice recognition complete with API support. Hate to say it, Kinect hackers, but the bar’s about to be bumped up. Keep it locked right here and we’ll let you know if the Microsofties reveal anything else fun! Microsoft details Kinect SDK for Windows PC, promises ‘robust skeletal tracking’ originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 13 Apr 2011 12:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …Microsoft’s Kinect has already claimed one Guinness world record , and the company’s now asking for your help in setting another — don’t worry, though, you don’t have to buy anything else. It’s asking folks to take a bit of time during the free Xbox Live Gold preview weekend later this month to set a record for the “most people running a virtual 100m dash at one time.” To take part, all you have to do is download a free Xbox Nations gamer pic that will automatically register you for the record attempt, and then load up the sprint mini-game in Kinect Sports and start running at the time specified below. Everyone that takes part will get the snazzy Guinness World Records avatar tee pictured above for their trouble — actual Guinness certificates still have to be earned the hard way . The Guinness World Record attempt will take place at: o. 6pm UK Saturday 23/04 o. 7pm CET Saturday 23/04 o. 10am PDT Saturday 23/04 o. 1pm EDT Saturday 23/04 Microsoft wants you to help set a Guinness world record for the biggest ever virtual sprint originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 13 Apr 2011 12:59:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …Showdown looms in Sana’a after troops loyal to General Ali Mohsin clash with forces devoted to President Saleh A showdown is looming in Yemen after six people were killed in a skirmish between rival military factions in the capital, Sana’a, as hundreds of thousands of anti-regime protesters rallied across the country. The fighting broke out in the early hours, when troops loyal to General Ali Mohsin tried to wrest control of the Amran Road checkpoint, north of the capital from forces devoted to President Saleh. Local residents said the two sides traded fire with Kalashnikovs and rocket-propelled grenades for an hour, resulting in the death of two of Mohsin’s men, three soldiers and a civilian. Mohsin, a long-time confidant of the president and head of the Yemeni army in the north-west, announced his support for “the peaceful revolution”. He confirmed the decision three weeks ago by sending soldiers under his command to protect the thousands gathered in the capital demanding Saleh step down. Since then the two sides have held strategic positions across Sana’a, with the republican guard, an elite force led by the president’s son, stationed in the south of the city outside Saleh’s residence. The ministry of defence and Mohsin’s 1st armoured division have been guarding the young protesters camped outside Sana’a university in the north. Mohsin has kept a low public profile since his defection but hit out at regime supporters last week, by accusing them of trying to assassinate him. An interior ministry official said that Mohsin’s forces have been attacking Yemeni security forces in an effort to “expand their forces in the capital and open the doors of chaos”. “The clash between Mohsin’s supporters and those loyal to Saleh is no surprise, and the longer the stalemate festers, the more likely full blown military confrontations become,” said analyst Jane Novak. In addition to the dead in Sana’a, three protesters, all of them teenagers, were killed in Aden according to medical staff at Naqeeb hospital. The violence was prompted when protesters were fired upon by Yemeni security forces as they tried to set up makeshift roadblocks to prevent tanks from reaching the protest area. Protesters in Aden have also started using civil disobedience. Ahmed Safi, a 23-year-old medical student from the Khormaksar district said his neighbourhood looked like a “war zone”, with tanks and checkpoints in place, people looting and destroying government buildings, and shops and schools closed indefinitely. Yemen’s attorney general threatened to resign unless officials went after the killers of anti-government protesters last month. Abdullah Al-Olufi said: “Those who were responsible for killing almost 60 protesters and injuring hundreds of others should be identified and brought to justice soon. If the security authorities don’t identify those responsible for the massacre including those who were masked, I will step down.” Protests have continued in earnest across Yemen this week, despite efforts by Persian Gulf nations to ease tensions. Saleh has hailed an initiative brokered by the GCC, a regional bloc of Gulf states, that would see him step down and transfer power to his deputy. He insisted, however, he would only do so when his term ended in 2013. Yemen’s opposition coalition have rejected the Gulf initiative, describing it as vague and saying offers of immunity for the president and his family were unjust. The Joint Meeting Parties bloc, Yemen’s largest opposition group, said the Gulf initiative “does not clearly state that Saleh must step down and only focuses on Saleh’s transferring power”. Yemen Middle East Protest Arab and Middle East unrest Tom Finn guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …European Commission plans minimum tax on fuel for member states – but UK prices would not be affected Diesel prices are set to rise across Europe if new proposals from the European Commission for a minimum tax on fuel go ahead. Under the proposals, a new tax based on the carbon content of fuels would apply across member states, at a minimum of €20 per tonne of carbon dioxide. This is likely to affect diesel more than petrol, because at present most countries tax diesel more lightly, which makes it on average 10% cheaper at the pump even though it is 10% more expensive to produce. “It is about ensuring that the way we tax things is providing the right incentives, and at least not providing the wrong incentives,” said Connie Hedegaard, European commissioner for climate change. “It will encourage energy efficiency.” The minimum price for diesel would increase by €2.3 cents per litre per year from 2013 until 2023 under the plans. However the price rise would not occur in those member states whose fuel taxes are higher than the proposed minimum. In the UK, for instance, the Treasury said that fuel prices would not rise if the plans took effect, because the UK’s fuel tax rates exceed the minimum rates. Despite this, the government is fighting the commission on the issue, on the principle that member states should be free to set their own carbon taxes. A HM Treasury spokesman said: “Member states should have the flexibility to decide on the measures that will best help them meet their greenhouse gas emissions targets.” Hedegaard acknowledged that the proposals – which must be approved by member states and the EU’s parliament – would face stiff opposition. “No one believes this is going to be a walk-over to get through,” she said. “But there are very strong arguments for doing this.” The proposals would also require a minimum tax rate for heating fuels based on their energy content. This is controversial because poorer households spend a large proportion of their income on heating. But the commission said it would allow member states to set their own exemptions on home heating, to avoid damaging social effects. The Treasury was unable to tell the Guardian on Wednesday whether the proposals would have an effect on UK gas prices. Travel and transport Oil Energy Fossil fuels Oil Commodities European commission European Union Europe Tax and spending Fiona Harvey guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Joseph Massino, one-time chef and longtime boss of the Bonanno family, is bringing a taste of mafia life to the trial of a former associate New York Times It was a straightforward question, but not one usually answered by the likes of Joseph Massino. At least not with such candour. The longtime boss of the Bonanno crime family was asked by a prosecutor, “What powers did you have?” Massino, seated at the witness stand, offered a quick, matter-of-fact reply. “Murders, responsibility for the family, made captains, break captains,” he said. And so it was that Massino, 68, the only official boss of a New York crime family ever to co-operate with federal authorities, appeared in US district court in Brooklyn on Tuesday and became the first to testify against a former confederate. For nearly five hours, Massino catalogued his misdeeds, recounting murders and other acts of varying criminal scope. Massino would tell the jury that the man on trial, Vincent Basciano the family’s former acting boss, had spoken to him about ordering the 2004 killing of Randolph Pizzolo, a Bonanno associate, a conversation Massino secretly recorded. Basciano is charged with ordering Pizzolo’s murder. But for much of the day, Massino established his credentials and gave the jury his view from the top, his philosophy of mob management and his personal history, all larded with a steady stream of culinary metaphors and references. “If you need somebody to kill somebody, you need workers. It takes all kinds of meat to make a good sauce,” said the one-time restaurateur, catering consultant and coffee truck owner, referring to what he said were Basciano’s skills both as a killer and as an earner for the family. He recounted turning to crime as a 12-year-old, stealing some homing pigeons. By the time he was 14, he had run away from home; he said he hitchhiked to Florida, getting arrested twice for vagrancy on the way, and worked as a lifeguard in Miami. By the 1960s, he said, he had progressed to murder, and he testified that he eventually was involved in about a dozen killings, some that he ordered, some that he orchestrated and some that he helped carry out. Massino’s testimony also highlighted his underworld executive acumen in addition to his lifetime of crime, much of it in service of the Bonanno family, with which he said he had been affiliated for 33 or 34 years. His unassuming appearance, with heavy jowls, drooping eyelids and an expansive midsection, was belied by his authoritative-sounding responses to the prosecutor, assistant US attorney Taryn Merkl, who took him through his personal and professional history. Massino began co-operating with the authorities after he was convicted of seven murders in 2004, for which he faced life in prison, and was set to go to trial for an eighth, for which he could have faced the death penalty. In 2005, he pleaded guilty to the eighth killing, and Judge Nicholas Garaufis of US district court, who is presiding over Basciano’s trial, sentenced him to two consecutive life terms. By testifying for the government, he is seeking a sentence reduction, though he told the jury that none had been promised. In his words: “I’m hoping to see a light at the end of the tunnel.” Dressed in a black and grey jogging suit with a white T-shirt visible beneath, he alternately rested his folded hands on the edge of the witness stand or on his belly as he answered questions about his rise in the Bonanno family, and his management of hundreds of members and associates after he became boss in 1991. The jurors at times appeared rapt, but at times seemed to fade as photograph after photograph of Bonanno crime-family figures were introduced into evidence. He presented himself as a master of the deft bureaucratic manoeuvre, both in his dealings with internal family rifts and with other crime clans, and in his efforts to thwart law enforcement. He described going to the bosses of the Gambino and Colombo families, Paul Castellano and Carmine Persico respectively, in 1981 before taking pre-emptive action against three senior Bonanno figures who were moving against his faction in a brewing power struggle. After securing the bosses’ approval, Massino and several others shot the men dead in an ambush in the basement of a social club. He also testified about codes that he and his confederates worked out to discuss murder plots, and in one instance to determine if a social club had been bugged without alerting law enforcement. He described some changes he put into effect after becoming boss that were meant to reduce the risk that members of his family could incriminate one another. For example, Massino closed all the family’s social clubs, saying that if crime family members hung out in these storefront establishments, they made the FBI’s job easy, because one agent conducting surveillance outside could see everyone come and go. “If you close the club,” he explained, “it takes 50 FBI agents to watch 50 people.” He was, he said, extremely careful about where and when he talked about mob business. “You never talk in a club, you never talk in a car, you never talk on a cellphone, you never talk on a phone, you never talk in your house,” he testified, saying that so called walk-talks, where two or more crime figures would carry on a roving conversation as they strolled the streets, were safest. Indeed, Massino said he discussed mob business in a walk-in refrigerator at a catering business where he worked to avoid electronic eavesdropping. His efforts to thwart investigators, he said, were aided by at least four unnamed law officers: two New York Police Department detectives in the 1960s; an FBI agent who warned him of a pending arrest in the 1980s; and a Pennsylvania state trooper who destroyed copies of his fingerprints sometime later. While most of his testimony on the first day of the trial before Judge Nicholas Garaufis focused on Massino’s background and the history of the crime family, Merkl did ask a number of questions about the man on trial, Basciano. Basciano has already been convicted in a separate case of murder and racketeering, also before Garaufis, and was sentenced to life in prison in 2008. In this case, Basciano is charged with the murder of Pizzolo, who prosecutors said had insulted Basciano when he was the acting boss. He faces the death penalty if convicted. Basciano’s lead lawyer, George Goltzer, said in his opening statement that his client had not ordered the killing, but falsely admitted doing so to Massino to protect a friend who did order the killing, and his own business interests. Mafia Organised crime FBI New York United States guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …A revealing look at the Apple boss and a ‘cutting-edge’ work of popular science have been causing most excitement at busy trade event An inside look into the life story of Apple boss Steve Jobs , a revolutionary book from a rising star of popular science, and a sought-after debut drawing on Edith Wharton ‘s The Age of Innocence are among the books causing a stir at this year’s London Book Fair . Despite the tough economic times, and worries over the health of the high street, the fair – celebrating its 40th year – is bustling again after the washout in 2010 when the Icelandic volcano kept international visitors away. Former PM John Major’s stirring tale of derring-do in the British music hall has been announced, as has The Lennon Letters , coming in the autumn. Meanwhile the tricksily titled iSteve: The Book of Jobs, out in 2012, will be notable as the first biography with which the Apple co-founder has agreed to co-operate. The author, journalist Walter Isaacson, has had the benefit of three years’ worth of interviews with the 56-year-old mogul, who remains on medical leave of absence from the company after serious health problems. Ursula McKenzie, head of publisher Little, Brown, promised the biography would offer “a unique insight into the life and thinking of the man who has single-handedly transformed the world for all of us and in ways we never thought imaginable”. Quantum of Life by Iraqi-born theoretical physicist Professor Jim al-Khalili , who is presenting a high-profile BBC Radio 4 documentary series this autumn, sparked an auction which raged on the eve of the fair. Transworld’s Sally Gaminara – who edits Richard Dawkins and Stephen Hawking – eventually won the book with a six-figure bid, calling it a “new direction and a cutting-edge examination of how physics is revolutionising biology”. And another hotly-contested auction was fought over a first novel by Francesca Segal , daughter of Love Story author Erich Segal . Chatto and Windus secured Temple Fortune, described as “age-old tale of love, temptation, confusion, commitment and coming to terms with the choices we’ve made”. The novel recasts Edith Wharton’s tale The Age of Innocence from its 1870s New York setting into that of a close-knit Jewish community in contemporary north London, where a young man experiences pre-wedding jitters. A follow-up to the novel Push, the story of illiterate 16-year-old Precious Jones, filmed as Precious, was also announced at the fair. Author Sapphire has written a sequel, telling the story of Precious’s orphaned son Abdul, and the book will be published in August. The fair has also seen the customary bandwagon-jumping, with acres of Scandinavian crime being bought and sold, with a Finnish serial-killer tale set in a futuristic Helskinki, The Healer by Antti Tuominen, among the hottest properties. A vogue for fictional Gypsy weddings also appears to be on the way (publisher Cornerstone snapped up Gypsy Wedding, the novel), and numerous book proposals have been offering ripostes to Amy Chua’s hotly debated parenting memoir Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother . Publishing Fiction Steve Jobs Benedicte Page guardian.co.uk
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