Category: News

  • Richard Blumenthal’s Vietnam Comments on “Meet The Press” As National Fallout Continues

    The national fallout continues as Connecticut Attorney General Richard Blumenthal became a topic of conversation Sunday on “Meet The Press” in a nearly week-long string of widespread attention over comments he has made about serving in Vietnam.

    The story broke last week on The New York Times web site, including a video of Blumenthal saying in 2008 in Norwalk that he served in Vietnam. He apologized for the remarks Sunday night in an e-mail to The Hartford Courant.

    On NBC’s “Meet The Press,” Blumenthal was defended by Senator Robert Menendez of New Jersey, the chairman of the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee. He noted that some veterans rallied around Blumenthal at his press conference last week in the same way “as he’s had their back” in the past on various issues.

    Menendez also criticized Republican convention nominee Linda McMahon, whose campaign researched Blumenthal’s background in the Vietnam era. Menendez said that professional wrestling is “a dirty business,” and that the excesses of wrestling are done “all for the purposes of making money.” 

    But Sen. John Cornyn of Texas, Menendez’s counterpart for the Republicans, said Blumenthal “has damaged his reputation … by misrepresenting his record.”

    “Meet The Press” is one of many national shows that have focused attention on Blumenthal over the past week.

    McMahon was interviewed on the Fox News Channel by conservative host Sean Hannity, who seemed to be out of the loop by suggesting that the McMahon campaign had absolutely nothing to do with the New York Times report on Blumenthal.

    “And you had no role whatsover in The New York Times breaking the story?” Hannity asked.

    “No,” McMahon responded, noting that her campaign had a role in the story. “We contributed some research, you know, to the story for the New York Times, but they initiated. They did the research. They did all the verification for it.”

    Earlier, Hannity asked, “How do we characterize this? Chronic liar? What’s the word you are using to describe his behavior? … This was not one time. This was multiple times.”

    “He’s just not leveling with the people of Connecticut, and they sense it,” McMahon said.

  • J.Crew – Indigo Deck Jacket

    Terry fleece is just the right fabric for the summer nights. J.Crew has theirs dip-dyed in indigo and washed for a great soft feel and vintage effect. It features a shawl collar, lobster clip closures, and front and inside pockets. J.Crew boasts that the sweater is made by a special weaving technique, giving you the best in comfortableness and style. Available now at J.Crew.





  • Lamborghini recalling 2007-2008 Murciélago models over possible fire risk

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    Lamborghini Murciélago – Click above for high-res image gallery

    We’ve seen a rash of recalls in the past few months, but none of the cars and trucks under the spotlight of the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration have quite the cache of the Lamborghini Murciélago.

    The Raging Bull is recalling 428 of its 2007 and 2008 model year Murcielago coupes and roadsters for a potentially serious problem that could result in a fuel leak and possibly a fire. The problem apparently lies with the welds holding the fuel pump support inside the fuel tank. If the welds fail to hold, the tank could detach – and nobody wants a $350,000 exotic with a detached fuel tank.

    Owners of the potentially defective Murciélagos can take their supercar to the nearest Lambo dealer for a free repair. Hit the jump to read over the official NHTSA press release.

    [Source: NHTSA]

    Continue reading Lamborghini recalling 2007-2008 Murciélago models over possible fire risk

    Lamborghini recalling 2007-2008 Murciélago models over possible fire risk originally appeared on Autoblog on Mon, 24 May 2010 16:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • iLuv has three new speaker systems for your enjoyment

    There clearly isn’t enough computer speaker options available and so iLuv has three new solutions coming out. There’s a speaker bar, cube speakers, and even a mini clip speaker that features a clip for you know, clipping.

    • iSP130: Mini Clip Speaker – The perfect speaker companion for any laptop, the USB powered iSP130 includes a built-in hanging clip for mounting
    • iSP150: Portable Speaker Bar – Ideal for iPad, iPhone, iPod, laptops and other portable audio devices with a 3.5mm jack, this powerful speaker bar is perfect for travel and features a built-in power switch, volume control and  2 power source options – USB or 4 AAA batteries
    • iSP170: Cube Speakers – A small cubed designed, USB powered speaker solution perfect for laptop users, the iSP170 is only 2.8” x 2.8” x 2.8” in size, features loud and clear sound, built-in volume control

    The new speakers are now available at i-luv’s site for $19.99, $34.99 and $39.99, respectfully.


  • Lady Gaga: “I Love The Rumor That I Have A Penis!”

    Lady Gaga loves a good Lady Gaga rumor — even a gender-bending one that calls her womanhood into question.

    “I love the rumor that I have a penis. I’m fascinated by it. In fact, it makes me love my fans even more that this rumor is in the world because 17,000 of them come to an arena every night and they don’t care if I’m a man, a woman, a hermaphrodite, gay, straight, transgender, or transsexual. They don’t care! They are there for the music and the freedom,” Gaga remarked in an interview with French entertainment show Sept a Huit over the weekend. “This has been the greatest accomplishment of my life, to get young people to throw away what society has taught them is wrong. Gay culture is at the very essence of who I am and I will fight for women and for the gay community until I die.”

    And there you have it.


  • Heart of Dryness: Reversing the Politics of Water Scarcity from the Kalahari to Suburbia

    The final installment of our seven-part series of excerpts from James G. Workman’s Heart of Dryness examines how we define water rights for the Bushmen in Botswana as well as suburbanites in the U.S. Workman stresses that the Bushmen’s incredible survival is a warning call for other populations that have yet to endure such water-scarce conditions. As water becomes more scarce, and consequently more political, Workman asks us to question how we’ve “surrendered both our right and our responsibility to water to state-run or-regulated institutions.”

    Botswana Bushmen

    Photo by James G. Workman
    In this final excerpt from Workman’s Heart of Dryness, the author weaves several segments together to understand the political battles that often accompany water scarcity, and the problem of complacency when water is in abundance.

    By James G. Workman
    Special to Circle of Blue

    The dark side of drought and water scarcity isn’t economic stagnation; it is political implosion.[1] Scarce water fragmented society and curtailed liberty. It eroded trust. When drought-struck, the local governments from Atlanta to Los Angeles rationed individual water consumption to one-tenth of what people normally consume each day. [2] It cracked down on private well pumps, claimed and regulated waters for public consumption.

    Outside the Kalahari, these political responses are almost universal. Conflict is inevitable, as most recently witnessed in Boston supermarkets as families brawled over the last bottled water. “Other hazards tend to pull people together,” said Michael Hayes, director of the National Drought Mitigation Center, speaking of water’s power. “With a drought, because it’s a limited resource, it tends to drive people apart.” [3]

    Divide us it did. Southeastern states have sued one another for remnant water, and even Maryland challenged Virginia over control of Potomac River currents for the first time since the Civil War. [4] As citizens appealed to government, governors appealed to God. In July 2007 Alabama Governor Bob Riley declared a week in July “Days of Prayer for Rain.” In November, Georgia Governor Sonny Perdue gathered people together on the capitol steps, bowed his head, and appealed to a higher power for relief. “We’ve come together here simply for one reason and one reason only,” he told the gathering, “to very reverently and respectfully pray up a storm.”[5]

    Irreversibly rising heat, migrating jet stream, booming industry, thirsty populations, helpless leaders driven to their knees: The Perfect Drought.

    “El Nino anomalies aside, it doesn’t appear on the horizon to be getting any cooler or damper; both the World Meteorological Organisation and the British Meteorological Office confirm that last decade was the hottest on record, and reputable observers maintain that our current mega-droughts represent the overture of what will follow for centuries.”

    El Nino anomalies aside, it doesn’t appear on the horizon to be getting any cooler or damper; both the World Meteorological Organisation and the British Meteorological Office confirm that last decade was the hottest on record,[6] and reputable observers maintain that our current mega-droughts represent the overture of what will follow for centuries. Based on new evidence that the Global Warming Era was dawning sooner than expected, even Nobel laureate Al Gore changed his mind: prevention alone was not enough, and too late. Now, he said, we must rapidly learn to adapt to less water.

    If that’s the case, who will teach us?

    For the last seven years as the U.S. broke records for high temperatures and low reservoirs and prepared for what could become the worst hot Dry Age in 30,000 years, the remnants of the world’s oldest civilization—the only people with the survival savvy, strategies, tactics, and values to guide us through the extremes of our once and future drought—were embattled in the heart of the Kalahari Desert, surrounded by armed men who were urging these last free Bushmen to surrender their way of life forever…

    For more than a decade even the wildest drylands in Africa no longer held autonomous bands who might share their self-sufficient experience. Then Botswana’s convoy destroyed the last government water supplies and deliveries inside the Reserve, triggering their crisis—and my opportunity.

    I saw America’s fate inextricably linked to the predicament of a thousand indigenous people suddenly forced to submit, die or adapt once again to The Great Thirstland. The survivors had to tap into the deep reservoir of indigenous wisdom, and I hoped to grasp the essence of their unwritten code. For centuries Bushmen had been shot and infected, poked and prodded, and now, facing the onset of permanent droughts, I set out to exploit them one last time.

    The ‘Last of the First’ welcomed me to their fire. I listened to what often seemed serious debate but was later translated as spectacularly lewd banter. During a lull one evening, as it grew cooler, I moved with tape recorder and camera from one Bushmen to the next until coming to an unspoken matriarch. In exchange for smuggling contraband water and other supplies, I sought to extract from her and others a few Important Answers to Big Questions, namely, “What will you do without government supplied water?”

    She kept scooping flesh out of a tsama melon, trading gossip with another.

    “How are you going to manage water during the drought?”

    The old woman shrugged without looking up and shifted back on her heels. Next to her a small fire burned. It was more smoke than flame, but never seemed to go out.

    I persisted. “Do you think you could manage enough water for your family and your band to last until the rainy season?”

    “Back then, her caginess didn’t make sense. Years later it began to. It wasn’t that Bushmen didn’t want to answer; they just couldn’t.”

    Like others before her, she grew evasive. Repeating the question through my translator met with awkward silence. Back then, her caginess didn’t make sense. Years later it began to. It wasn’t that Bushmen didn’t want to answer; they just couldn’t. As an ‘international water expert’ my grilling Qoroxloo about how humans must manage water was like a Vatican cleric interrogating Galileo about how the sun must orbit the earth.

    To be sure, we will not soon abandon eBay or Wal-Mart to hunt and gather in foraging bands. Nor should we feel the need to. Yet the Bushmen code of conduct may help us escape a Hobbesian or neo-Malthusian nightmare. Prepared for extreme deprivation, Kalahari Bushmen chose the hard responsibility of a dry reality over a government-dependent fantasy of water abundance. Outside of their Reserve the so-called civilized world found that for all our military might and internet bandwidth, certain things still lie beyond our grasp. We discover we cannot ‘regulate’ barren rivers and depleted aquifers any more than we can ‘regulate’ our climate, clouds, or rain. Out here, while elected leaders kneel and ask us all to pray for a thundershower that will provide temporary relief, the increasingly dry hot wind whistles through the thorn trees in the central Kalahari and whispers the ancient secret those last defiant Bushmen never forgot.

    “We don’t govern water.

    Water governs us.”

    We don’t govern water.

    Water governs us.

    If our competitive demand for scarce water drives us apart and escalates political tensions, this same finite supply of freshwater is also itself what ultimately drags us back and binds us together. We may not like the rule of increasingly scarce water, but at the same time we cannot escape it. And Qoroxloo’s band demonstrated how to embrace that reality. Her fundamental rule of adaptation was not to organize and mobilize physical resources to meet expanding human wants, but rather to organize human behavior and society around constraints imposed by diminishing physical resources.

    Whether it pulses between a competing heart and brain, sinks down in the shared aquifer beneath our fenced-off private property, or flows in the common currents that runs along or across our walled-off borders, water is quite literally the connective tissue that links and rules our fates. Only this magical glue makes us collaborate to endure scarcity. If we are to prevent dehydration, domestic strife, or degeneration into the ruthless Hobbesian/Darwinian scenario and if we are to avoid testing the nightmare hypothesis of a trans-national water war, then we need to derive a system like that which for millennia sustained people in the Kalahari.

    Given the scale and complexity of our current political economy, what might this system look like? How do we obey water’s rule? If Qoroxloo’s band ran America’s waterworks: what would Bushmen do?

    Based on my reading of the evidence, they’d organize us politically around the measurable contours of the hydrological unit where we live: water known to exist within an aquifer or river basin. Then, within that unit their code would secure the fundamental and minimal amount of fresh water required to keep each human healthy and alive. Some researchers peg this quantity at thirteen potable gallons per day, for drinking, cooking, and basic hygiene; others ratchet the amount up to one hundred gallons per person per day. Let’s conservatively assume the upper limit, which still lies below America’s comfortable average, and secure it as a fundamental human right, the kind Bushmen owned, recognized and respected in others. The flip side of this individual right is that it demands we also own water as an individual responsibility.

    Human nature takes over from there. Confronted with finite limits imposed by drought and siege, the Bushmen code of conduct allows people to negotiate informally over the water resources they required, reaching out to partners with whom to exchange if and when they need more or less. People increased supply by efficiently reducing demands, and the benevolent result of their integrated informal right to water brought Bushmen into a relative state of social abundance.

    This informal right may seem on the surface like what liberals vehemently demand from the UN, in which under a binding convention governments collectively hold federal water on behalf of the public, safe from the clutches of commerce.[7] If anything, Bushmen sought the opposite. It was not trade itself they feared, but the lack of secure access to the water resources they needed to trade in the first place. Government’s primary role would then be to uphold their individual or band’s right to access water—water that they already inherently owned and traded in reciprocal, lateral, and mutually beneficial exchanges. Defense of this kind of individually defined and divestible water right is a far cry from the enlightened paternalistic eco-socialism espoused by the so-called global water movement. It more accurately reinforces Justice Unity’s Dow’s assertion that water does not belong to the government: It belongs to each of us.

    Or it would if we had not already given it away. All of us growing up in cities and suburbs have surrendered both our right and our responsibility to water to state-run or -regulated institutions. Many of these command-and-control structures are now teetering on the brink of physical failure or institutional collapse. The left wants trillions borrowed and invested to improve all creaky public waterworks. The right wants to privatize them.

    Yet ideology aside, it matters little whether our taps and pipes and sewers can be traced back to a government utility or a corporate venture if both operate as absolute top-down centralized monopolies that impose involuntary and uncompetitive rates and quality with which we cannot, by definition, negotiate. Public or private utilities are neither good nor evil; but right now they still remove all real incentives and accountability to conserve water efficiently, while making us dependent on aging infrastructure, political fecklessness, wasteful approaches, and unreliable supply in a radically changing climate.

    “In an era of permanent droughts, that is not a desirable place to be.”

    In an era of permanent droughts, that is not a desirable place to be.

    Like Qoroxloo’s band, however, we can use our will and our cunning to reclaim what has always been rightfully ours. Government must ensure equitable delivery of water, but it need not be the institution that delivers it. In a free democratic society we can demand that water agencies restore and protect our inherent human right to water—say, the first one hundred gallons per day, owned by each of us—in return for our once again taking responsibility for using it wisely, free to truck, barter and exchange any surplus water within that right that we manage each day to conserve.

    In the spirit of Bushmen, we could demand water exchanges within aridity’s authoritarian rule, in other words: unlimited markets within natural monopolies.[8]

    Rather than pressure politicians to keep water rates low, build more dams, drain more wetlands, pump more deltas, expand storm drains and sewers, and plunder more aquifers, we would all be pulled in the opposite direction. We would nudge governments to raise rates higher and across the board, to reward our efficiency, make the water we conserved worth more, drive us to more efficient exchanges, and restore substantially more leftover wild water back to all those endangered aquatic species.[9]

    However small, local, and interpersonal in its origins, this translation of the Bushmen code of conduct could be replicated and scaled from the bottom up, from urban utilities to irrigation districts to international transboundary waters. By redefining water as an owned and tradable right that turns costly conflict into symbiotic cooperation, security analysts suggest that exchanges like those among Bushmen could alleviate national security tensions over border-crossing aquifers and streams from the Rio Grande and Colorado to the Great Lakes and Columbia, perhaps even in the Middle East.[10] In other words, landlocked Botswana could learn from the Bushmen living within its dry heart how to break the siege imposed by rival neighboring African states.

    My interpretation may or may not accurately convey what the late Qoroxloo would have outlined, either for her resilient and humble band or for our far more rigid and profligate civilizations growing thirsty outside the Kalahari. Then again, even while living she never was one to lay down rules or dictate advice to friends and family, let alone foreign strangers like us. She didn’t write a code of conduct. She lived it. As drought dragged on, she danced against the armed and unthinking political forces closing in on her, until finally, and on her own terms, she broke free.

    When I think of the permanent drought we face in the years ahead, I like to picture her as last seen by her band of foragers: calm, defiant and aware, striding purposefully across the hot dry Kalahari sands while singing an ancient song quietly to herself…and to anyone else who might care to listen.

    Read more of Workman’s Heart of Dryness on Circle of Blue.
    ________
    * Footnotes

    [1] Michael Dudley, “Cities Abandoned? Mass Migrations? The Questions No One is Asking about Drought.” World Environment, PlanetCitizen.com, November 18, 2007.

    [2] Leonard Doyle, “The big thirst: The great American water crisis; the US drought is now so acute that, in some southern communities, the water supply is cut off for 21 hours a day,” The (UK) Independent, November 15, 2007.

    [3] Lynn Waddell and Arian Campo-Flores, “Dry—And Getting Drier: The severe drought has Georgians praying for rain—and battling with their neighbors,” Newsweek, Nov 16, 2007.

    [4] Linda Greenhouse, “Justices Consider Dispute on Use of Potomac River,” New York Times, October 8, 2003.

    [5] Jenny Jarvie, “Gov. to God: Send Rain!” Los Angeles Times, November 14, 2007.

    [6] Matthew Jones, “All 11 hottest years were in last 13: UK Met Office,” Reuters,
    December 14, 2007.

    [7] See Maude Barlow’s Blue Covenant: The Global Water Crisis and the Coming Battle for the Right to Water. As a tireless activist leader Barlow deserves credit for putting the right to water on the global radar screen, but her anti-privatization ideology blinds her to the practical fallacy of what she seeks. An inalienable right to water, held as a public trust by the government, which no one can trade, is the equivalent of a right to vote, held in trust by the state, which no one can cast. It confines individual liberty and diminishes social opportunity. Barlow seeks to disenfranchise in the name of empowerment.

    [8] As Saltzman, in Thirst: A Short History of Drinking Water observed, there is ample precedent for this combination: A rights-based water management regime is clearly not a new idea. The Right to Thirst in Jewish and Islamic Law, sharing norms in Africa and India, and the “always ask” custom among aborigines all depend on a universal norm of access to drinking water by right in times of need. The Aqua Nomine Caesar practice in ancient Rome of free water was rights-based, as well – a right of provision guaranteed by the Emperor. Treating drinking water supply as a priced resource is by no means a new idea, either. The vectigal, a tax on the private consumption of water, funded operation of the Roman water system for centuries. Private water vendors underpinned much of New York and London’s water supply through the 19th century, and now supplies London once more. Nor, finally, are these two identities mutually exclusive.

    [9] The Bushmen survival strategies have also shown why we might be suspicious of the current top-down environmental flow regimes, requirements and regulations. Experts have their place, and I by no means consider myself anti-intellectual or anti-elitist. But anyone who has tried to set aside a certain amount of water “for nature” faces the same lack of political clout as another who tries to set aside water “for extractive industries” or “for agriculture.” Each indirectly represents a vague constituency; my particular special interests may or may not diverge from your own, but in any case we each seek bigger slices from what we assume to be an expanding pie. We want it all.

    [10] Franklin Fisher and Annette Huber-Lee, “Liquid Assets: An economic approach for water management and conflict resolution in the Middle East and beyond,” Resources for the Future, 2005.

  • Cells Can Be Controlled Electronically

    It is now possible to control cells through electronic intervention. This is a breakthrough achieved with help from researchers at Karolinska Institute, Sweden, and Linkoping University.

    Similarities between plastic – having an ion-selective membrane; and silicon – a semiconductor – were explored to produce what is called “diodes.” The diodes were joined into an ion transistor, which is then connected to cultivated nerve cells. It controlled the supply of acetylcholine to the cells. It showed that charged bimolecules can be passed on. This development paves the way for controlling chemical signals.
    Soon enough, ion transistors can be integrated with other materials and eventually contribute in regulating the delivery of drugs, said Berggren, professor of organic electronics.

    The study is included in the scientific journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Key contributors are Karin Larsson and Agnets Richter-Dahlfors, Karolinska Institute; and Klas Tybrant and Magnus Berggren, Linkoping University. Foundation for Strategic Research funded the research center OBOE (organic bioelectronics).

    Related posts:

    1. Stem Cell Research Provides Hope for Deafness
    2. Algae Reduces Water Pollutants
    3. President Barack Obama pushes for artificial DNA

  • INSIGHT: It’s a lot easier for a small company to

    It’s a lot easier for a small company to happily grow into a large one than a large one happily downsizing to a small one. When you’re small you have options – you can stay small or go middle or go big. But once you’re big, getting smaller is almost always out of the question unless you’re forced in that direction. This is the problem when companies grow too fast – they skip right over their options and set themselves up for big or bust.

  • Paul McCartney to be honored by Obama, Michelle at White House

    below, from the White House…..

    THE WHITE HOUSE
    Office of the Press Secretary

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
    May 24, 2010

    PRESIDENT AND FIRST LADY TO HOST CONCERT HONORING PAUL MCCARTNEY IN THE EAST ROOM

    On Wednesday, June 2nd, the President and First Lady will host a concert in the East Room honoring Paul McCartney, who will be awarded the 3rd Gershwin Prize for Popular Song from the Library of Congress. President Obama will present the award as he did last year when the Library of Congress honored Stevie Wonder. The concert will be broadcast on PBS stations nationwide on Wednesday, July 28, 2010 at 8:00 PM EDT (check local listings) as “In Performance at the White House Celebrating the Music of Paul McCartney: The Library of Congress Gershwin Prize.”

    The prize commemorates George and Ira Gershwin, the legendary American songwriting team whose extensive manuscript collections reside in the Library of Congress. The prize is awarded to musicians whose lifetime contributions in the field of popular song exemplify the standard of excellence associated with the Gershwins.

    The President’s remarks at the ceremony will be pooled press.
    ###

  • General Odierno Nominated for New Job

    Washington D.C. — The military announced Monday that President Obama has nominated General Raymond T. Odierno to head Joint Forces Command (JFCOM). Odierno is a four-star general who serves now as the head of US Forces – Iraq.

    If confirmed by the senate, Odierno will replace Marine Corps General James Mattis, and will be responsible for overseeing more than 1.16 million men and women. Unlike other combatant commands that focus on specific areas like the Middle East or Europe, JFCOM reaches all military services and commands.

    Headquartered in Norfolk, Virginia, JFCOM’s real purpose is to train U.S. military services around the the world to work in tandem. It ensures equipment is sent to the right places and provides military to military coordination with other countries.

    It’s unclear when Odierno will leave his post as top general in Iraq, although officials in the Pentagon are speculating it could happen around the Fall of 2010. General Llyod Austin was nominated last week to replace Odierno in Iraq.

    General Odierno served as second in command under General David Petraeus during the Iraq surge in 2007 and took command of those forces in September of 2008 when Petraeus left to lead Central Command.

    Odierno is a highly decorated general with multiple service and achievement medals, including the State Department highest award, the Secretary of State Distinguished Service Medal.

    Odierno met with the Secretary Gates Monday in the Pentagon.

    Fox News has reported on several occasions that the next biggest test for U.S. Forces – Iraq will be to meet President Obama’s deadline of reducing to 50,000 troops by September 1, 2010. With 94,000 troops in Iraq now, the U.S. will have to remove 44,000 of them in less than 15 weeks.

  • Android Screenshots: No Root Required with EVO

    We’re not sure if this is a bug that will get fixed, an easter egg, or what, but when we heard reports of unrooted EVO users being able to use the screen capture app ShootMe, we had to test it out ourselves. And it worked! You’re looking at the results of our test on the left.

    Previously, getting screenshots from an unrooted Android device required hooking it up to a P.C. that has the Android SDK installed. Applications in the Market that take screenshots, including ShootMe, all note requiring a rooted phone to work.

    We tested this on a stock HTC EVO 4G distributed at Google I/O. Let us know in the comments if other screen capture apps work on your unrooted EVO, or if you’ve come across other methods of getting screen captures on unrooted devices.

    Might We Suggest…


  • Froyo Feature: Bluetooth voice dialing

    Froyo bluetooth voice dialing

    One of the biggest thorns in Android’s side so far has been lack of Bluetooth voice dialing.  (These are phones, after all.)  For those of you on-the-go who need to safely use the phone features without touching it you now have the option in Android 2.2.

    Once your device is paired and connected, a press of the action key brings up what you see above.  You’re greeted by a female robotic voice who also repeats your instructions.  Seems fairly accurate (as accurate as my Blackberry or Pre), and worked well with both a Motorola MOTOROKR S305 set and a Jawbone Icon in my testing.  Shout out Froyo-ers — does your headset work, and how’s your Bluetooth experience on 2.2?

    This is a post by Android Central. It is sponsored by the Android Central Accessories Store

  • On Interreligious Dialogue, “Love the Questions Themselves”

    The Summer 2010 edition of Reform Judaism Magazine includes a feature story titled “The Art of Muslim-Jewish Dialogue.” I recommend this excellent piece to anyone interested in learning more about the experiences of URJ congregations from across North America that have engaged in meaningful, successful dialogue relationships with local mosques and Muslim communities. Toward this aim, many congregations have utilized the “Children of Abraham: Jews and Muslims in Conversation” curriculum, developed by the URJ and our partners at the Islamic Society of North America (ISNA) as part of a 2007 Biennial initiative.





    The feature includes examples of the ideas, conversations, and most significantly, the questions that have emerged through the various dialogue groups. As poet Rainer Maria Rilke wrote, we must “try to love the questions themselves, like locked rooms and like books that are now written in a very foreign tongue. Do not now seek the answers, which cannot be given you because you would not be able to live them.”



  • Classic Mac Paper Trashcan for Trash, Cans, Paper [Crafts]

    After successfully following these instructions to make a paper classic Macintosh trashcan, please don’t use the resulting paper classic Macintosh trashcan to trash any failed paper classic Macintosh trashcans. The paradox can destroy the Universe. Thank you. [Codeco via Designboom] More »







  • Desiree Rogers welcomes Julianna Smoot to the White House Social Secretary “sisterhood”

    WASHINGTON–Former White House Social Secretary Desiree Rogers on Saturday hosted a welcome lunch for her successor, Julianna Smoot at a hotel here.

    “It was a wonderful celebration welcoming Julianna to the social secretaries sisterhood,” Rogers told me.

    Hosting a lunch for the new Social Secretary is a tradition started in the 1990s by former Clinton White House Social Secretary Ann Stock. The lunch took place days after Smoot’s first State Dinner, hosted by President Obama and First Lady Michelle for Mexico President Felipe Calderon and his wife, Margarita Zavala.

    Rogers threw the lunch bash at the Jefferson Hotel; her menu included green salad, crab cakes or chicken, with sorbet and berries for dessert.

    Others attending were Ann Stock, a Social Secretary in the Clinton White House, nominated by Obama to be Assistant Secretary of State for Educational and Cultural Affairs; Capricia Marshall, also from the Clinton White House and now the Chief of Protocol at the Department of State; Amy Zantzinger, who served under President Bush and First Lady Laura Bush and Cathy Fenton, who also came out of the George W. Bush White House. For more details, click here.

    Said Zantzinger,
    “I think it is nice for the incoming Social Secretary to see the support system she has in place.”

  • Photo: Heart and Soul Nebulae Reveal Star Birth in the Cold Dust | 80beats

    heartsoul

    What do you see in this image?

    “One is a Valentine’s Day heart, and the other is a surgical heart that you have in your body,” said Ned Wright of the University of California, Los Angeles, who presented the image May 24 at a meeting of the American Astronomical Society. [Wired]

    This infrared image is from WISE, more technically known as the Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer, a NASA space telescope launched on December 14, 2009. Orbiting Earth at an altitude of 326 miles, WISE snaps an infrared picture every eleven seconds. This one, of the so-called Heart and Soul nebulae, is made from 1,147 of these images stitched together.

    The Heart and Soul nebulae are over 6,000 light years away, in the constellation Cassiopeia. To capture beauties like these, WISE needs to stay cool enough that its own heat doesn’t distort the infrared images. For this reason, it carries a chunk of solid hydrogen, cryogen, that keeps the on-board telescope at about 17 degrees Kelvin (minus 429 degrees Fahrenheit). With its sensitive infrared vision, WISE can see the cool and dusty crevices of nebulae, where gas and dust are beginning to clump together to form new stars.

    Having already taken about 960,000 images, the mission promises more pics like these for about four more months, until its cryogen supply runs out. Though this isn’t the first time we’ve seen these nebulae, WISE certainly has a unique perspective.

    “WISE is the first survey capable of observing the two clouds in a uniform way, and this will provide valuable insight into the early solar system,” said astronomer Tommy Grav of Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, Md., who presented the information at today’s meeting. [SPACE.com]

    Related content:
    80beats: A Hot Piece of Hardware: NASA’s New Orbiter Will Map the Entire Sky in Infrared
    Bad Astronomy: A WISE flower blooms in space
    Bad Astronomy: When a star struggles to be free of its chrysalis
    Bad Astronomy: What does a nebula look like up close?

    Image: NASA/JPL-Caltech/UCLA


  • McLaren Announces MP4-12C Production Numbers, Dealership Locations

    McLaren Automotive has detailed production numbers and dealership locations for the McLaren MP4-12C supercar, which goes on sale next spring. The company says “up to” 1000 cars will be sold in 19 countries for 2011; over 2500 potential buyers have reportedly registered interest online.

    Between 300 and 400 of the first years’ cars are destined for the U.S. Another 400 to 500 will go to Europe, with the remainder divided among the Middle East, Asia, and South Africa. Within the U.S., the company plans to have dealerships in Chicago, Dallas, Los Angeles, Orange County, Miami, New York, Philadelphia, San Francisco, and Tampa. Yes, that’s three dealers in California and two in Florida, a nod to the car’s intended demographic (read: rich people in sunny climes).

    The eventual goal is to expand the total number of dealerships to no more than 70 and increase sales to 4000 cars annually once the lineup is filled out. Seems like an ambitious target for a newly reborn car company peddling a car that will cost north of $200K.

    No related posts.

  • Reach HSBC Executive Customer Service

    This number goes to the customer care division of HSBC Bank USA. It’s good for when you have a Sisphysian customer service issue that you’d rather have the sneakers of Mercury.

    813-571-8998

    Don’t forget your CCP’s – always be concise, clear, and polite.

  • Blumenthal campaign says its own poll shows he still has the support of the people of Connecticut

    Connecticut voters are standing by Richard Blumenthal, even as he continues to face strong criticism for misrepresenting his military record.

    At least that’s the main finding of an internal poll of 602 likely voters conducted by the Blumenthal campaign last week, right after the New York Times disclosed that Blumenthal had, on several occasions, incorrectly implied that he served in the Vietnam War.

    Al Quinlan, Blumenthal’s pollster, said his survey, taken May 19 and 20, puts the Democratic attorney general’s personal favorable rating at 55 percent, compared with an unfavorable rating of 28 percent.

    And it’s not because people aren’t familiar with the story of Blumenthal’s military embellishments. More than 90 percent of those polled said they knew about the story.

    But because the poll was commissioned by the Blumenthal campaign, it is already drawing scorn from the campaign of Linda McMahon, one of his Republican opponents.

    “I think the public understands Dick Blumenthal at this point is in 100% damage control mode, and this poll is part of that effort,” McMahon spokesman Ed Patru said. “Nobody believes his untrue statements about Vietnam have made him more popular, but that is what Dick Blumenthal’s latest poll would have us believe. Perhaps his pollsters misstated something in the numbers.”

     

     

     

     

     

    Quinlan and campaign staffer Marla Romash spoke about the poll in a conference call with Connecticut reporters this afternoon. He said a head-to-heard match up between Blumenthal and McMahon shows the Democrat on top, 55 to 40 percentage points.

    “The point were trying to make today is a narrow one,” Romash said. “A man who has taken a very serious attack thanks to $16 million of opposition research still has the support of the people of Connecticut.”

    The survey also found that, by a 59 percent to 31 percent ratio, repondents said they felt Blumenthal addressed the matter honestly.

    When asked if the campaign had conducted earlier polls, Quinlan and Romash declined to say.

    “This is not about being desperate,” Quinlan said. “This is about not taking anything for granted…that’s the way the campaign’s going to be run.”

    Patru of the McMahon campaign said in an email that the Blumenthal internal numbers “do not square with other public data from independent and more credible sources. A Rasmussen poll released May 6 showed Linda within 13 points of Dick Blumenthal, 52-39. A Rasmussen poll released Wednesday, May 19 (the day after the explosive story on Blumenthal was published in The New York Times) showed Linda within three points of Blumenthal, 58-55.” 

     

  • The Government Is the Housing Market

    As if we needed more evidence that not all is well in the housing market: Bloomberg reports that the Federal Housing Administration “may be involved in more home-purchase transactions than borrowing financed by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.”

    “This is a market purely on life support, sustained by the federal government,” [David Stevens, the head of the FHA] said at the Mortgage Bankers Association conference. “Having FHA do this much volume is a sign of a very sick system.”

    The FHA, which backs loans with down payments as low as 3.5 percent, insured $52.5 billion of home-purchase mortgages in the first quarter, compared with $46 billion of purchases of the debt by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, according to data compiled by Washington-based Potomac Partners.

    At this point, the government is the housing market, in that mortgage rates would climb precipitously and housing prices and turnover would fall dramatically without that support. The life support metaphor is apt. The problem is not the government support, problematic though it is. The problem is that the credit and housing markets have not yet stabilized. Thankfully, there are some signs that the foreclosure crisis has peaked and the market might start to improve from its very low trough.