Category: News

  • Nikki Haley in Spotlight – South Carolina Rep. Nikki Haley Blogger Affair

    South Carolina State Rep. Nikki Haley denies the claim of a blogger that they had engaged in an affair several years ago. Haley stated, “I have been 100 percent faithful to my husband throughout our 13 years of marriage. This claim against me is categorically and totally false.”



    The accusation made by the blogger was seen as an act to ruin her rapidly-rising campaign for governor. Haley stated that it was less than a week after a poll showed that she was leading the field in a June 8 primary that the issue was brought up which makes it dubious. Other candidates, aside from Haley, running to replace Sanford in the June 8 primary are Lt. Gov. Andre Bauer, Rep. Gresham Barrett and State Attorney General HenryMcMaster. Haley had been receiving endorsements from the former Alaska Governor Sarah Palin.

    Will Folks wrote on his blog, “I refuse to play that game. I refuse to have someone hols the political equivalent of a switch-blade in front of my face and just sit there and watch as they cut me to pieces. The truth in this case is what it is. Several years ago, prior to my marriage, I had an inappropriate physical relationship with Nikki. That’s it… This network of operatives has made it abundantly clear that in the process of ‘taking down’ Rep. Haley, they will also stop at nothing to humiliate me, destroy my family and take a sizable chunk out of the credibility this website has managed to amass for itself.” The president of the blog, Nancy Mace, stated that “circumstances beyond his control compelled our founding editor, Will Folks, to address a personal matter Monday morning on FITSNews.com

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    3. Arizona´s New Law Will Not Hurt The Economy, Says Governor Brewer

  • Twitter reacts to last night’s episode of Lost, the last episode EVER: It was a storytelling Ponzi Scheme

    @RonnieBQuotes Lost = story-telling Ponzi Schemeless than a minute ago via txt

    Lost ended its glorious run last night. While I stopped watching the show about two years ago, I fully recognize that my fellow Americans absolutely love the show. In fact, they love the show so much that they’ve been tweeting about it non-stop. Come, let’s explore how the Twitterverse responded to this great TV moment!

    Here we go!

    The final message of Lost: dogs are awesome. #lostfinaleless than a minute ago via web

    Sadly, BP waited too long to hire Jack to plug up the Gulf of Mexico oil leak with a giant cork. #lostless than a minute ago via web

    End of LOST yesterday… End of 24 tonight… It’s the end of the world, as we know… and I feel fine.less than a minute ago via web

    Sin cervezas Polar, Venezuela sería como la isla de Lost. Nadie sabría que coño hacer y porque estan aqui.less than a minute ago via web

    That was it? That’s the big secret? Castaways were in an Italian restaurant the whole time?! Oh, wait, that was an Olive Garden ad. #lostless than a minute ago via HootSuite

    Meh 🙁 #Lostless than a minute ago via TweetDeck

    #LOST – You completed me.less than a minute ago via TweetDeck

    can’t wait for lost, lepidus http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xiB6QokvyCkless than a minute ago via web

    I think that sums of pulse of America (well, there entire world, what with that Venezuela tweet in there). There’s approximately 80 zillion tweets dedicated to Lost in the past 24 hours, so this represents a fraction of a fraction of a fraction…

    One question: Should I pick up the show again? I stopped with the season that ended in Spring, 2008.


  • Remember Amazon.com!

    Once again, I’d like to thank everyone who has purchased items at Amazon via of the links from my website! I really appreciate it and it does cover the web server costs of the site.

    And I wanted to remind everyone else that you can support my blog by clicking on any Amazon.com link from the website and as long as you don’t navigate away from Amazon before you buy something, I will get a percentage.

    Thank you very much!

    P.S. Some of you have written me nutrition questions and I’m a bit behind but hope get to them all soon.

  • Dodd on Blumenthal: “His record of service to our state certainly outweighs” his misstatements

    Sen. Christopher Dodd, D-Conn., stressed Monday that he continues to strongly support the candidacy of Attorney General Richard Blumenthal for U.S. Senate, the Courant’s Ken Gosselin reports.

    The comments came in a press conference in Hartford following a controversy last week over Blumenthal’s past statement on his military service during the Vietnam War.

    “He has apologized for these misstatements along the way,” Dodd said. “His record of service to our state certainly outweighs the misstatements that he has acknowledged and apologized for. What ought to be important to people come November is to elect a United States senator to protect our state, stand up for it, fight for it. I’m confident Dick Blumenthal is the best individual to do that for our state.”

    He added: “I can’t think of a better legacy I could have than to have Dick Blumenthal follow me in that job.”

     

  • Jesse Jr. Mulls Kirk Endorsement? Really?

    Politico.com offered today a “hold the phone” moment in the Illinois Senate race between Democrat Alexi Giannoulias and Republican Mark Kirk.

    According to Politico: Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr., who did not endorse anyone in the Democratic primary, is flirting with the idea of backing Republican nominee Mark Kirk in the general election.

    “I like Alexi Giannoulias, but I have great respect for Mark Kirk and his service to the people of Illinois,” Jackson told POLITICO.

    Jackson and Kirk work together on the House Appropriations Committee, on which both are senior members of the subcommittee that provides foreign aid.

    Giannoulias has indeed has his struggles. The beleaguered family business, Broadway Bank, which was teetering on the brink of failure for months fell after Giannoulias narrowly won the Democratic primary in February. But while the bank collapse has generated all sorts of bad news coverage for the campaign, polls still have the race within the margin of error.
    In addition, sources close to the Kirk campaign say the Politico story “was a surprise”. One reason the article caught the Kirk camp unawares is that there’s been no contact with Rep. Jackson, his staff or supporters.
  • Video: The 2011 Porsche Cayenne commercials have begun

    Filed under: , , , , , ,

    Porsche Cayenne “Utility Redefined” commercial – Click above to watch video after the jump

    In its new television commercial for the 2011 Porsche Cayenne, Porsche proudly promotes the middle letter in SUV, that “U” that stands for “Utility.” Because that’s why you’d buy a Cayenne, right – utility? Regardless of genuine or ersatz purchasing reasons, the commercial makes the new Cayenne look just and sound just as good as it does in real life, although the script is a bit staid, if we’re being honest.

    Follow the jump to see the spot, and if you want to do a little dreaming yourself, you can always head over to the Cayenne configurator, now up and fulfilling (almost) all of your virtual wishes.

    [Source: YouTube via Autoblog.it (translated)]

    Continue reading Video: The 2011 Porsche Cayenne commercials have begun

    Video: The 2011 Porsche Cayenne commercials have begun originally appeared on Autoblog on Mon, 24 May 2010 13:29:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • New Oregon Study Says Even Economic Rebound Can’t Save State, As Decade Of Budget Deficits Is Coming

    A study conducted by Oregon Governor Ted Kulongoski shows that Oregon will not be bailed out by a rebounding economy, assuming of course the economy rebounds at all.

    Please consider New report says Oregon faces decade of budget deficits

    Oregon risks 10 years of crushing, multibillion-dollar budget shortfalls unless it immediately puts the brakes on spending and starts offering fewer services, cautions a new report released Thursday.

    This is no attack by anti-tax or anti-government factions. The warning comes from Gov. Ted Kulongoski’s “reset Cabinet,” a group of trusted advisers he appointed to assess the state’s long-term fiscal outlook and suggest changes.

    “We find that Oregon faces a decade of deficits, during which we cannot expect to be bailed out by a rebounding economy or a more generous federal government,” the report, says. If state spending is allowed to grow at its current rate, it goes on to say, “lawmakers and voters will find themselves again and again between the rock and the hard place of cutting services or raising taxes.”

    Why Oregon Must Reset State Government

    Inquiring minds are investigating an Update from the Governor’s Reset Cabinet

    We conclude that the state will face a decade of deficits if it tries to sustain the type and scope of services it now provides. Business-as-usual budgets will no longer suffice. Current services, as currently structured, will be unsustainable.

    We must rethink and refocus our priorities, move from short-term budgeting to long-term planning and develop smarter ways to meet our responsibilities in the challenging years ahead.

    In that process, we must reaffirm our common goals and judge what we are doing now and what we propose to change by well defined measures of success. In the end, we must be willing to adopt new ways to organize and deliver services, control costs and get the best value for our tax dollars.

    Revenue growth is expected to resume as the economy recovers and should make up for the loss of one-time funds that sustain the current budget. The most likely scenario is that Oregon will have approximately the same level of general fund resources to work with in the next biennium (2011-13) as it has in the current biennium.

    But increasing costs, needs and demands will drive the expenditure side of the budget far beyond its resources. When compared to the cost of maintaining the current level of services, the state faces a shortfall of more than two billion dollars, or 13 percent of its next budget – a shortfall that persists at that

    two billion dollar level in budget projections through 2019.

    As a result, we find that Oregon faces a decade of deficits, during which we cannot expect to be bailed out by a rebounding economy or a more generous federal government. In fact, trends in both categories could make our fiscal future even more challenging. It is important to recognize that Oregon is not alone. Most states face similar challenges. Some are beginning to talk about “reset initiatives” of their own.

    Oregon Overestimates the Recovery, Underestimates What Needs to be Done

    My sense is that states are all overestimating what the recovery will do. That aside, Oregon is a step ahead of others in realizing the recovery alone will not fix the problem.

    The report made no recommendations even though it is crystal clear what needs to happen. For starters, the state needs to kill defined benefit plans for new hires. Next, the state needs to outsource everything possible with the goal of getting rid of all public unions.

    Anything else is just pecking at the fringes of the problem.

    Proposed Pay Freeze in Illinois

    Please consider this editorial opinion in the Rockford Register. Our View: State’s fiscal fix needs to start with real pay freezes

    If Illinois’ elected officials truly are serious about creating a responsible budget, they would freeze the wages of all government employees.

    No raises. No steps or lanes. No cost of living increases. Nothing.

    Instead, the budget that Gov. Pat Quinn has proposed calls for $1.5 billion more in spending with $350 million of that money dedicated to increasing wages for government union employees.

    Some of those raises range from 7 percent to 20 percent — unheard-of amounts in the private sector where most of the taxpayers work.

    The taxpayers in the private sector have been getting their wages cut, their benefits slashed and have seen pensions go the way of the dodo bird.

    Government union workers seem oblivious to the struggles of their private-sector counterparts. Illinois’ unemployment rate is 11.2 percent, higher than the national 9.5 percent.

    Union workers stage rallies that ask for tax increases that would further drain the wallets of taxpayers while providing enough money to keep their jobs and benefits safe.

    Unions have refused to have their contracts renegotiated. They’ve resisted efforts to pay more for health costs. They’ve sued the state to avoid layoffs that would have helped the state save money. They seem to think the tax well is bottomless. …

    Jonathan who lives in Rockford says …

    Mish,

    I live in Rockford, IL. Check out the Rockford Register Star editorial on a proposed wage freeze for state workers.

    Obviously, their solution is tepid, but this is a VERY liberal newspaper.

    If even they are writing things like this about the public employee unions, what you and others are doing is starting to sink in. Keep up the good work.

    Jonathan

    Thanks Jonathan. Union wages and benefits are the number one fiscal issue with states and scores of cities.

    I am doing what I can to inform people what is happening.

    Join the conversation about this story »

  • Planets gone wild









    McDonald Observatory / U. Texas

    Click for video: A graphic shows the star Upsilon Andromedae with lines
    tracing the orbits of three planets. Two of the outer planets have orbits that
    appear to be inclined about 30 degrees with respect to each other,
    astronomers say. Click on the image to watch an animation.




    For decades, Pluto has been seen as an oddball in the planetary tribe – in part because its orbit was so much more eccentric and tipped than those of the big planets. But in recent years, more off-kilter worlds have been discovered in our own solar system. And today, astronomers are reporting that they’ve detected planets much bigger than Jupiter that are way more out of whack than Pluto.

    Maybe Pluto, which was discovered by former Kansas farmboy Clyde Tombaugh 80 years ago, isn’t so weird after all.


    “We’re not in Kansas any more as far as solar systems go,” Barbara McDonald, an astronomer at the University of Texas’ McDonald Observatory, said at a news briefing today.

    …(read more)

  • ‘Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell’ Opponents Plan to Take the Hill This Week

    It’s not just in the Senate Armed Services committee’s mark-up of next fiscal year’s defense bill. While opponents of the military’s ban on open gay service target six senators — five Democrats and one Republican — to insert an amendment abolishing “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” this week, over in the House, they’ve got an ally ready to go. Rep. Patrick Murphy (D-Penn.), a former Army captain and Iraq veteran, plans to introduce his own amendment to the Defense bill when it gets a floor vote later this week.

    If you go to Murphy’s website, you’ll see an open letter from 15 mostly-senior retired officers from across the services arguing for a repeal of the 15-year old law. He comments alongside it, “To remove honorable, talented and patriotic troops from serving contradicts the American values our military fights for and our nation holds dear.”

    Murphy’s position is commensurate with comments from February from Adm. Mike Mullen, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, who came out forcefully for repeal. Mullen’s boss, Defense Secretary Robert Gates, wants Congress to wait until the end of the year to move on overturning “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” (when a Pentagon working group, one Gates empaneled to canvas the services on constructive ways to incorporate open military service, delivers its report).

    But anti-”Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” activists argue that this week’s legislative push isn’t in conflict with the working group. “If the law is not repealed this year, when the implementation study comes down, [the Pentagon will] not able to carry it out,” said Michael Cole, a spokesman for the Human Rights Campaign, a group urging repeal. That’s similar to the position taken by retired Gen. John Shalikashvili, a former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and one of the first to implement the ban on open gay military service.

    “[A]cting now to remove the constraints imposed by that law is the most faithful response that Congress can offer to the working group’s efforts to engage service members and their families,” Shalikashvili wrote in The Washington Post over the weekend, “to fully assess the impact of ending the policy, and to develop comprehensive recommendations for how to make the change.”

    Update: Geoff Morrell, spokesman for Gates, says in an email that the Pentagon is taking a look at whatever’s developing legislatively for next steps on the repeal. “Given that Congress insists on addressing this issue this week, we are trying to gain a better understanding of the legislative proposals they will be considering,” Morrell said. (And sure enough, I see that the Post’s Ed O’Keefe also has that comment, along with suspicion that a compromise may actually be adopted…)

  • This Week at the Foundation Center (May 24-28)

    Tuesday, May 25, 9:30-11:00 am Grantseeking Basics; 11:00 am-12:00 pm Introduction to Foundation Directory Online; and 2:30-4:30 pm Creative Corporate Partnerships Designed to Stregthen Education

    Wednesday, May 26, 5:30-6:45 pm Fundraising in a Challenging Economy

    Thursday, May 27, 1:00-3:00 pm Meet the Grantmakers: Focus on Early Childhood Education

    Our library is open Monday through Friday free of charge and no appointment is necessary.

    Library Hours:

    Monday/Tuesday/Thursday/Friday
    10:00 am-5:00 pm
    Wednesday
    10:00 am-8:00 pm

    The library will close at 1:00 pm Friday, May 28, and remained closed Monday, May 31, for Memorial Day.

  • China Decides Photocopiers Are Evil; At Least If They’re In Tibet

    It’s widely known that China tries to widely censor political dissent online, but modern technology makes it possible to communicate widely not just on the internet. And, so, it appears that China is also looking to plug the “analog hole” in its Great Firewall — at least in Tibet. The gov’t is so concerned about photocopier machines, that printing and copy shops in Tibet will be required to take down detailed identifying information from everyone who uses the shops.


    The authorities in Tibet apparently see printing and photocopying shops as potential channels through which unrest can spread. One Chinese print shop operator in Lhasa, who is of the majority Han ethnicity rather than Tibetan, said that her husband had been summoned to a meeting last week on the new requirements.

    “You know sometimes people print documents in the Tibetan language, which we don’t understand,” said the woman, who gave her last name as Wu. “These might be illegal pamphlets.”

    While some suggest that China’s censorship efforts are working well, when you get down to the level of trying to prevent people from making photocopies, it makes you wonder just how desperate the government is getting in trying to prevent any kind of speech it doesn’t want… and reinforces just how impossible a task it is to censor people in this manner.

    Permalink | Comments | Email This Story





  • “Twilight Eclipse” Clip Will Debut During 2010 MTV Movie Awards

    Great news, TwiHards: Rob, Kristen and Taylor will debut an exclusive clip from the eagerly-anticipated flick Eclipse — the third installment of The Twilight Saga — during the 2010 MTV Movie Awards next month.

    Aziz Ansari host this year’s MTV Movie Awards, airing LIVE from the Gibson Amphitheatre in Universal City, CA on Sunday, June 6 @ 9PM/8PM.


  • On-demand Web Seminar:Concurrent CFD for Electronics Cooling Applications Web Seminar

    The web seminar will show you how to prepare a model for analysis, analyze it and then evaluate the results. It will also show you the ease with which you can conduct what-if analysis by simply modifying the geometry and viewing the results for the new model.

  • 2011 Dodge Charger will be first to get brand’s new sporty logo

    New Dodge Logo

    As Ram and Dodge travel down a different road, the Ram brand will move forward keeping the old ram’s horn logo while Dodge vehicles will simply get a logo saying “Dodge.”

    Hoping to keep its sporty/youth oriented niche without the Ram pickups, Dodge CEO Ralph Gilles adopted the two red slashes of Chrysler’s SRT performance brand.

    “It signifies our sporty character,” Gilles said. Most SRTs are Dodges.”

    While the red slashes will appear on signs, advertising materials and owner’s manuals, the Dodge name will stand by itself in the new script without the two red slashes.

    The first vehicle to sport the new Dodge logo will be the 2011 Charger and an upcoming 7-seat crossover that will replace the Dodge Durango.

    – By: Omar Rana

    Source: Automotive News (Subscription Required)


  • Speed Tests Show Flash 10.1 Slowing Down Android 2.2 Significantly [Flash]

    Here’s the bottom line on the first speed tests of Android 2.2: without Flash 10.1, its browser handily beats all comers. But with Flash? It drops to the bottom of the heap. Ruh roh. More »







  • Matthews tells Obama to kill BP’s disaster capitalism – “Millions of people in the American right who sit around and say there’s no such thing as mankind destroying his environment through climate change or whatever, there’s an example of what we’re doing right now. We can destroy our habitat on this planet, and it’s the only one we got.”

    On Monday, May 17, MSNBC’s Chris Matthews erupted in anger at the oil disaster unfolding in the Gulf of Mexico. Matthews expressed his rage at the profits BP continues to reap as it fails to fix the growing environmental apocalypse.  Brad Johnson has the story and the video:

    Matthews criticized the behavior of the Obama administration. Matthews wondered why President Obama doesn’t “nationalize that industry and get the job done” and noted that in the “brutal society” of China, “they execute people for this”:

    It is maddening that our government is — everybody says, “Capitalism is great. Unbridled free enterprise is great.” Look at it!

    The moral hazard created by privatized profit and socialized risk has allowed bankers to cripple our economy and energy companies to destroy our planet. Matthews concluded by calling out the “millions of people in the American right” who deny the threats of climate change and other environmental catastrophes from our dependence on fossil fuels:

    Rush Limbaugh fired back, saying Matthews is “basically asking for a dictator” with his “delusional, deranged” commentary. Matthews has repeated his criticism of BP and the administration, telling Jay Leno on May 21 that President Obama is acting like “a Vatican observer here.” On May 19, Matthews asked for “Harry Truman to come back and do the job” — making reference to Truman’s seizure of the steel industry in 1952.

    Transcript:

    I have a hunch that the reason they don’t want to fix this mess down there is because they would admit who did it if they fix it. Nobody is down — if this was a nuclear bomb ready to go off, we would be down there. I am so angry — I don’t even want to talk about it. I get so mad at this oil company. Why aren’t they fixing it, first of all? …

    You know, I have a suspicion — I will go back to it again — I don’t think they’re doing their best. I don‘t think there’s — the government is doing its best. Why doesn’t the president go in there and nationalize that industry and get the job done for the people? There’s a national interest in this, not just a BP interest. We’re letting BP fix a national problem.…

    In China, it’s a more brutal society, a more brutal society, Kate, but they execute people for this. Major industrial leaders that commit crimes like this. Failure like this.

    This is a serious, serious problem. It is not over. It continues to destroy a part of our planet, basically. Part of our habitat, our American habitat. And everybody just sits and watches television every night and says, “Oh, well, that‘s interesting.” And these guys are still drawing their paychecks, still making their profits. The oil industry has been ballooning in profits this year, and nobody is doing anything about it, except — what are we, the Vatican observers now? We just watch? It is maddening that our government is — everybody says, “Capitalism is great. Unbridled free enterprise is great.” Look at it! …

    Millions of people in the American right who sit around and say there’s no such thing as mankind destroying his environment through climate change or whatever, there’s an example of what we’re doing right now. We can destroy our habitat on this planet, and it’s the only one we got.

    This is a Wonk Room repost by Brad Johnson.

  • Supreme Court rules on mandatory minimum sentencing for federal gun crimes

    Photo source or description

    [JURIST] The US Supreme Court [official website; JURIST news archive] on Monday ruled [opinion, PDF] unanimously in United States v. O’Brien [Cornell LII backgrounder] that the question of whether a firearm is a machine gun must be proved to the jury beyond a reasonable doubt and is not a sentencing factor to be considered by the judge by a preponderance of the evidence. The court held that the type of firearm used in perpetrating a crime was an element of the crime under mandatory minimum sentencing guidelines. The government had attempted to extend the sentence of the respondents under 18 USC s. 924(c) [text], which sets a mandatory minimum sentence of 30 years for using a machine gun during a crime. The US Court of Appeals for the First Circuit ruled [opinion, PDF] that such a determination should be made by a jury. In doing so, the court relied on statutory interpretation outlined by the Supreme Court in Castillo v. United States [opinion, PDF; Cornell LII backgrounder] in interpreting a previous version of s. 924(c), creating a circuit split. The First Circuit held that the amendment to the statute had not altered the holding of Castillo. In upholding the decision below, Justice Anthony Kennedy explained:

    Th[e] structural or stylistic change … does not provide a “clear indication” that Congress meant to alter its treatment of machineguns as an offense element. A more logical explanation for the restructuring is that it broke up a lengthy principal paragraph, which exceeded 250 words[,] … into a more readable statute. This is in step with current legislative drafting guidelines, which advise drafters to break lengthy statutory provisions into separate subsections that can be read more easily. … These points are overcome, however, by the substantial weight of the other Castillo factors and the principle that Congress would not enact so significant a change without a clear indication of its purpose to do so. The evident congressional purpose was to amend the statute to … make [it] more readable but not otherwise to alter the substance of the statute. The analysis and holding of Castillo control this case. The machinegun provision in [s.] 924(c)(1)(B)(ii) is an element of an offense.

    Justice John Paul Stevens filed a concurring opinion, and Justice Clarence Thomas filed an opinion concurring in the judgment only.

    Respondents Martin O’Brien and Arthur Burgess made a failed attempt to rob an armored car in 2005, using a firearm that the FBI alleged had been modified to operate as a fully-automatic weapon. The court heard oral arguments [transcript, PDF; JURIST report] in February. Counsel for the petitioner, the US government, argued that the language of the statute requires a judge to make the determination. Counsel for the respondents argued that such a result is foreclosed by the Supreme Court’s statutory interpretation jurisprudence.

  • Audi A8 To Offer Mobile Internet Access

    The new Audi A8’s technological portfolio expands with an optional accessory that offers mobile internet access for passengers. The system provides Wi-Fi connections for up to eight devices, and uses WPA2 encryption to keep your data private.

    Connecting to the outside world requires a SIM card with a data plan—the one from your BlackBerry, for example—or tethering of a Bluetooth-enabled phone to the A8’s infotainment system. There’s no additional fee on top of what your wireless carrier charges for data use.

    According to the folks at Audi, details about the system’s U.S. availability and pricing have yet to be determined. However, they say the mobile internet option will very likely be offered on American A8s.

    If you can’t afford the A8’s price tag but want to surf on the road, in-car internet is also available with the latest versions of Ford Sync and via dealer-installed accessories in Chrysler vehicles and the Cadillac CTS.

    Related posts:

    1. Cadillac CTS To Offer Mobile Internet – Car News
    2. Audi E-Tron Concept Leaks onto Internet
    3. Next Audi A8 Pushed Back, Plus Audi Plans for 2010 and Beyond – Car News
  • Phoenix Wright Comes to the iPhone [IPhone Apps]

    The Phoenix Wright franchise deserves a lot of credit for sticking to one of the least appealing-sounding concepts in game history. So anyway, here goes: Phoenix Wright, the comedic litigation game, is in the App Store for $5. Oh dear. More »







  • Official LG Fathom release info

    LG Fathom Press Release:Wireless and LG Electronics MobileComm U.S.A., Inc. (LG Mobile Phones), today announced the LG Fathom™ will be available in Verizon Wireless business sales channels beginning May 27 and online and in Communications Stores beginning June 3. The ultimate on-the-go office, the LG Fathom redefines productivity with Windows Phone power, stylish design and smart global capabilities for making voice calls in more than 220 countries and accessing data in 200 countries, 110 with 3G speeds.

    Key features:
    * Sleek slate blue case takes customers from Monday meetings to Friday outings
    * Large 3.2" touch screen with Improved Touch Experience and vibration for tactile feedback
    * 1 GHz processor
    * Full slide-out QWERTY keyboard with simultaneous touch screen capabilities
    * microSD™ slot for up to 16 GB of memory
    * Wi-Fi® enabled (802.11 b/g/n)
    * Bluetooth® 2.1 capabilities with support for the following profiles: headset, hands-free, dial-up networking, stereo, phone book access, basic printing, basic imaging, object push for vCard and vCalendar, file transfer, and serial port
    * Built-in MP3 and WMA music player with music library, repeat and shuffle features, as well as stereo sound via headset or Bluetooth
    * Windows® Media Player 10 Mobile and video player for WMV, MP4, and 3GP formats
    * USB mass storage for file transfer between microSD card and PC
    * One-touch speaker phone and speaker-independent voice commands
    * Text to speech and voice-activated dialing for up to 4,000 entries

    Additional lifestyle features:
    * Dedicated task manager key for quick access to mobile Task Manager
    * Windows Mobile Device Center and ActiveSync allows users to synchronize Outlook®, Office® and contents from Microsoft Exchange Server® to keep personal information organized and updated
    * View and edit with Excel® Mobile, OneNote® Mobile and Word® Mobile or view important presentations with PowerPoint® Mobile
    * Scroll, zoom and view rich PDF content with Adobe® Reader LE
    * Global roaming frequency automatically switches from CDMA/EVDO to GSM/UMTS depending on geographic location
    * VZ Navigator® capabilities – Receive audible turn-by-turn directions to millions of points of interest and share the directions with others
    * VZ Navigator Global capabilities – Get turn-by-turn directions and maps in English while navigating through more than 20 destinations such as Canada, Mexico, France, Germany, Italy, Norway, Spain, Sweden and the United Kingdom. This easy-to-use application also marks distances in miles or kilometers and finds restaurants, gas stations, banks/ATMs and other popular spots using the Local Search feature
    * Wireless manager enables and disables wireless connectivity for Wi-Fi, Bluetooth and cellular network
    * Luminous sensor designed to adjust LCD backlight brightness depending on light conditions
    * Proximity sensor instantly locks touch screen buttons while talking on the phone
    * Text and send clear images and fun animations through Flash User interface support
    * International charger plus up to four different adapter clips for multi-country use
    * 3.2 megapixel autofocus camera and camcorder that includes:

    • Five different camera resolutions and three different video resolutions
    • Macro Mode for detailed, up close pictures
    • Panorama for three guided, sequential shots
    • Continuous shot for up to six consecutive photos
    • Scene mode for auto, portrait, landscape, sports and night settings
    • Image editor with zoom, rotate, resize, crop, added frames and stamps
    • Customizable brightness, white balance, shutter sounds and color effects and a self-timer
    • Choose between mute and unmute to record video with or without sound
    • Optimize video quality with normal, fine or super camcorder settings
    • Video recording time up to one minute for sending or up to one hour for saving

    Pricing and availability:
    The LG Fathom will be available in business sales channels beginning May 27 and in Verizon Wireless Communications Stores nationwide and online at www.verizonwireless.com beginning June 3 for $149.99 after a $100 mail-in rebate with a new two-year customer agreement. Customers will receive the rebate in the form of a debit card; upon receipt, customers may use the card as cash anywhere debit cards are accepted.

    LG Fathom customers will need to subscribe to a Verizon Wireless Nationwide Talk plan and an Email and Web for Smartphone plan. Nationwide Talk plans begin at $39.99 monthly access. Email and Web for Smartphone plans start at $29.99 for unlimited monthly access. Business customers interested in the LG Fathom can contact their Verizon Wireless Business Sales Representative at 1-800-VZW-4BIZ.

    For additional information on Verizon Wireless products and services, visit a Verizon Wireless Communications Store, call 1-800-2 JOIN IN or go to www.verizonwireless.com

    Via Engadget.com