Category: News

  • Android This Week: Dell Readies a Line; the Cruz Tablet Is Unveiled; iPhone Gets Android

    Dell is readying a line of Android products, the computer maker said this week, which will include no fewer than four phones. The Android handsets will range from the budget-minded Aero to the Thunder superphone, which includes everything you’d expect in a high-end phone, plus a custom Hulu app. The Android line-up will also feature a 5-inch tablet dubbed the Streak. Dell plans to launch a larger model  — the Looking Glass — with Nvidia Tegra 2 technology later in the year.

    In the meantime, another 7-inch tablet running Android was unveiled. Due out in July, the Cruz Tablet , which is being produced by PC maker Velocity Micro, will have Android 2.1 running the show and a web browser with full Flash 10.1 support; memory expansion will be possible through USB and SD cards. While tablets running Android aren’t able to interact with the official Android Market, Velocity Micro says there will be a “Cruz Market” for distributing apps.

    Also this week, an enterprising individual was able to install Android on the iPhone. The hacked device works as a regular Android phone, yet retains the ability to boot into the iPhone OS — though the Google OS on the Apple device was said to be “a bit buggy and unstable.”

  • Multi-Processes in Browsers: Chrome, Internet Explorer, Firefox and WebKit

    With the web becoming such a big part of everyone’s life, the web browser is probably the most important piece of software in any computer or device. But, with great power comes great responsibility, browsers are constantly a target for nefarious individuals up to no good. Add to this the ‘unpredictability’ of web coding and buggy plugins and you have a recipe for disaster.

    With so many potential points of failure, it’s up to the browser makers to ensure tha… (read more)

  • You Could Not Make It Up: On the Hoax of the Climate Change Hoax by Jake Whitney Freelance journalist and contributing writer for Guernica Magazine

    Article Tags: You could not make it up

    Climate change ‘skeptics’ have been singing a victory song in recent months. Emboldened by this winter’s record snow, errors in the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s 2007 report, and the phony scandal they dubbed ‘ClimateGate,’ their growing clamor has taken a toll on public acceptance. According to a Gallup poll released last month, Americans are now about evenly split on whether the threat of global warming is exaggerated and whether scientists agree on its causes and dangers. This in the face of clear scientific consensus.

    Ninety seven percent of climatologists agreed that climate change is real and largely man-made in a poll released last year. At least 60 major scientific organizations across the globe also concur, while not one of any repute holds an opposing opinion. (A few have not yet committed.) As to the list of 700 dissenting scientists that Senator Inhofe and other skeptics frequently cite, an analysis by the Center for Inquiry found that less than 10 percent of them were climate scientists, and only about 15 percent had ever been published in peer-reviewed climate science literature. Moreover, another four percent seemed to agree with the scientific consensus and so were, presumably, mistakenly included. One of the “scientists” turned out to be a Kentucky weatherman without a college degree..

    Source: huffingtonpost.com

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  • After 40 years of Earth Day, we’re still surviving by Jon Ferry, The Province

    Article Tags: Opinion

    Well, I survived Earth Day. But only just. Thanks to all the hot air and greenhouse gases being spewed into the atmosphere, especially from that nasty Icelandic volcano, the global temperature likely went up by at least a couple of degrees.

    But here it was simply a lovely spring day, the kind that reminds us we live in one of the cleanest, most pollution-free cities on the planet (except, of course, when the potheads cloud it over during their annual toke-in).

    Nevertheless, the relentless drive to make the Lower Mainland ever cleaner and greener continues to consume our province’s most creative minds.

    The reason? There’s a lot of green in it, especially when you consider the hundreds of millions of dollars in grants and subsidies up for grabs by environmental insiders — and the excuse it gives government to grab those dollars back and more from regular taxpayers through various eco-levies.

    Source: theprovince.com

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  • Skype Director Supports Free Mobile Internet Access

    In a recent post on the official Skype blog, Jean-Jacques Sahel, the company’s European director of government & regulatory affairs, has shown his support for mobile Internet neutrality, as a response to the fact that more and more companies want to charge users for browsing the net when using mobile devices. Apparently, this action can … (read more)

  • Five myths about green energy by Robert Bryce, Washington Post

    Article Tags: Energy & Fuel

    Americans are being inundated with claims about renewable and alternative energy. Advocates for these technologies say that if we jettison fossil fuels, we’ll breathe easier, stop global warming and revolutionize our economy. Yes, “green” energy has great emotional and political appeal. But before we wrap all our hopes — and subsidies — in it, let’s take a hard look at some common misconceptions about what “green” means.

    1. Solar and wind power are the greenest of them all.

    Unfortunately, solar and wind technologies require huge amounts of land to deliver relatively small amounts of energy, disrupting natural habitats. Even an aging natural gas well producing 60,000 cubic feet per day generates more than 20 times the watts per square meter of a wind turbine. A nuclear power plant cranks out about 56 watts per square meter, eight times as much as is derived from solar photovoltaic installations. The real estate that wind and solar energy demand led the Nature Conservancy to issue a report last year critical of “energy sprawl,” including tens of thousands of miles of high-voltage transmission lines needed to carry electricity from wind and solar installations to distant cities.

    Nor does wind energy substantially reduce CO2 emissions. Since the wind doesn’t always blow, utilities must use gas- or coal-fired generators to offset wind’s unreliability. The result is minimal — or no — carbon dioxide reduction.

    Source: washingtonpost.com

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  • Watch: Lost Planet 2 preview

    You know you like ’em big and real I’m talking about monsters of course. Lost Planet 2 has generous helpings of some of the biggest monsters you’ll ever get to slay in-game. Gametrailers caught a preview

  • Alarmists keep ringing the bell by Richard Lindzen, The Australian

    Article Tags: Richard Lindzen

    IN November last year a file appeared on the internet containing thousands of emails and other documents from the Climatic Research Unit at the University of East Anglia in Britain.

    How this file got into the public domain is still uncertain, but the emails, whose authenticity is no longer in question, provided a startling view into the world of climate research.

    In what has become known as Climategate, one could see unambiguous evidence of the unethical suppression of information and opposing viewpoints, and even data manipulation.

    Moreover, the emails showed collusion with other prominent researchers in the US and elsewhere. The CRU supplies many of the authors for the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.

    One might have thought the revelations would discredit the science underlying proposed global warming policy. Indeed, the revelations may have played some role in the failure of last December’s Copenhagen climate conference to agree on new carbon emissions limits.

    Source: theaustralian.com.au

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  • The Distressing Gap Between New Home Sales and Existing Home Sales

    First a comment on the seasonal adjustment … on a Not Seasonally Adjusted (NSA) basis, the Census Bureau reported there were 38,000 new homes sold in March. That is up from 31,000 in March 2009.

    Some (or all) of the increase was due to a one time event – the tax credit that expires in April. The Census Bureau doesn’t know the number of homes sold due to the tax credit, so they report the Seasonally Adjusted Annual Rate (SAAR) assuming this is the underlying rate of sales. It isn’t.

    The April new home sales headline number will be distorted too, but the key is the actual underlying sales rate is much lower.

    Note: remember the tax credit shows up in the new home sales numbers when the contract is signed (March and April), and in the existing home sales numbers when the transactions are closed (April through June).

    The following graph shows existing home sales (left axis) and new home sales (right axis) through March.

    Distressing Gap Click on graph for larger image in new window.

    The initial gap was caused by the flood of distressed sales. This kept existing home sales elevated, and depressed new home sales since builders couldn’t compete with the low prices of all the foreclosed properties.

    The spike in existing home sales last year was due primarily to the first time homebuyer tax credit. Notice that there was also a bump last year in new home sales from the tax credit.

    We are seeing another bump this year with the expiration of the extension of the tax credit.

    The second graph shows the same information as a ratio – new home sales divided by existing home sales – through March 2010.

    Ratio: Existing home sale to new home sales The ratio increased because the tax credit impacts new home sales first. I suspect this ratio will be at or near the all time low later this year.

    Eventually this ratio will return to the historical range of new home sales being around 15% to 20% of existing home sales. However it will probably take a number of years to return to a more normal market.

    This post is reprinted from Calculated Risk.

    Join the conversation about this story »

  • ‘Colbert Report’: The Lindsey Graham Sex Tape

    ‘Colbert Report’: The Lindsey Graham Sex Tape
    Suddenly, South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham is under the microscope for maybe, potentially, being gay! What’s a conservative Southern senator to do? Well, as Stephen Colbert points out, hanging around with Sen. Joe Lieberman might help, but releasing a (straight) sex tape would be even better.

    Colbert

    Suddenly, South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham is under the microscope for maybe, potentially, being gay! What’s a conservative Southern senator to do? Well, as Stephen Colbert points out, hanging around with Sen. Joe Lieberman might help, but releasing a (straight) sex tape would be even better.

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    ‘You Shall Not Pass’
    It seems the GOP’s “make sure nothing happens in government” approach is still going strong, with Senate Republicans blocking an effort by Democrats to begin debate on widely popular legislation to regulate the nation’s financial system. Bickering over who was pre-empting which negotiations, Republican Senate leader Mitch McConnell claimed debate should not start on the bill until the two sides reach a true, bipartisan agreement. All this sounds wildly familiar to the health care reform debate, but would the Republicans really be that petty? —JCL The New York Times: Senate Republicans on Thursday blocked an effort by Democrats to start debate on legislation to tighten regulation of the nation’s financial system, and the two sides traded bitter accusations about who was standing in the way of a bipartisan agreement. The majority leader, Harry Reid of Nevada, asked Republicans to agree to begin debating the measure, which would impose a sweeping regulatory framework on Wall Street and big financial institutions. But the Republican leader, Senator Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, objected, saying Democrats were pre-empting negotiations to reach a deal. In response, Mr. Reid said he would call the first procedural vote on Monday in an effort to stop the Republican filibuster. That vote could test Republican resolve to oppose the measure in an election year, amid public dismay over big Wall Street profits and bonuses even as unemployment remains high. Read more

    It seems the GOP’s “make sure nothing happens in government” approach is still going strong, with Senate Republicans blocking an effort by Democrats to begin debate on widely popular legislation to regulate the nation’s financial system.

    Bickering over who was pre-empting which negotiations, Republican Senate leader Mitch McConnell claimed debate should not start on the bill until the two sides reach a true, bipartisan agreement. All this sounds wildly familiar to the health care reform debate, but would the Republicans really be that petty? —JCL

    The New York Times:

    Senate Republicans on Thursday blocked an effort by Democrats to start debate on legislation to tighten regulation of the nation’s financial system, and the two sides traded bitter accusations about who was standing in the way of a bipartisan agreement.

    The majority leader, Harry Reid of Nevada, asked Republicans to agree to begin debating the measure, which would impose a sweeping regulatory framework on Wall Street and big financial institutions. But the Republican leader, Senator Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, objected, saying Democrats were pre-empting negotiations to reach a deal.

    In response, Mr. Reid said he would call the first procedural vote on Monday in an effort to stop the Republican filibuster. That vote could test Republican resolve to oppose the measure in an election year, amid public dismay over big Wall Street profits and bonuses even as unemployment remains high.

    Read more

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  • 2010 Census Return Rate Hits 72 Percent, Matches 2000 Census Return Rate

    2010 Census Return Rate Hits 72 Percent, Matches 2000 Census Return Rate
    WASHINGTON — It’s down to the wire: With a few days left before final mail-in results are tallied, nearly three-fourths of U.S. households have returned…

    Miner Dies At Pocahontas Coal Mine Listed By Rep. George Miller
    A West Virginia man has died after being pinned against the wall of a coal mine, reports WOWKTV. According to an official with West Virginia…

    Oklahoma Abortion Bills Vetoed By Democratic Governor Brad Henry
    OKLAHOMA CITY — Oklahoma Gov. Brad Henry vetoed two abortion bills Friday that he said are an unconstitutional attempt by the Legislature to insert government…

    Two Senators And Larry Summers On Bank Size
    Bank size is suddenly the issue of the day — with politicians lining up to oppose any meaningful restriction on the size of our largest…

    Have Conservatives Gone Mad?
    Serious thinkers on the right have finally gotten around to a full and open debate on the epistemic closure problem that’s plaguing the conservative movement….

  • David Axelrod guests on Jay Leno. Video

    WASHINGTON–White House senior advisor David Axelrod in Los Angeles, was Jay Leno’s guest Friday on NBC’s “The Tonight Show.” Leno flies to Washington to headline Saturday’s White House Correspondents Association Dinner.

    Axelrod on SEC porn

    Axelrod on Biden using the F word

    Axelrod calls President Obama

  • Media Matters: Fox News’ ever-expanding ethics nightmare

    Media Matters: Fox News’ ever-expanding ethics nightmare

    Another week, another handful of ethical scandals that should permanently sink Fox’s claim of being a legitimate news organization.

    To recap: Last week, they gave us twin scandals starring Fox News stalwarts Bill O’Reilly and Sean Hannity. “Furious” Fox News execs pulled Sean Hannity from his planned show filming/fundraiser for the Cincinnati Tea Party after numerous news veterans and watchdogs called foul.

    O’Reilly spent last week reminding us of his willful ignorance by repeatedly falsely asserting that “no one” on Fox promoted the falsehood that “jail time” was a penalty for not buying insurance under the health care reform bill. He was outrageously wrong.

    Though Howard Kurtz reported that Fox plans to “keep a tighter rein on Hannity and others” in the wake of the tea party scandal, we remain skeptical. Fox has a long history of promising change in the wake of damaging ethics scandals, then failing to deliver on those promises.

    Indeed, despite cancelling Hannity’s tea party event, Fox News has yet to cancel a planned appearance by Fox Business host John Stossel at a paid event for a nonprofit organization with very close ties to the energy industry. If history is any indicator, Fox will hold its breath and hope that everyone forgets about the Stossel fundraiser.

    Of course, this being Fox News, Stossel’s planned fundraiser wasn’t even the cable channel’s biggest ethics scandal this week.

    While a great deal of attention has deservedly been given to Rupert Murdoch’s statement that Fox News “shouldn’t be promoting the tea party,” the rest of his comment — “or any other party” — is equally notable. So, how’s Fox’s supposedly frowned-upon promotion of that “other party” — the GOP — going? In a word: lucratively.

    As we detailed last week, Fox News hosts and contributors have raised millions of dollars for Republican candidates and causes using PACs, 527s, and 501(c)(4) organizations.

    In a follow-up report this week, we detailed the massive scope of Fox’s fundraising for the GOP:

    In recent years, at least twenty Fox News personalities have endorsed, raised money, or campaigned for Republican candidates or causes, or against Democratic candidates or causes, in more than 300 instances and in at least 49 states. Republican parties and officials have routinely touted these personalities’ affiliations with Fox News to sell and promote their events.

    In their defense, they did miss Wyoming.

    Were Fox an actual news organization that cared about journalistic standards, all of these ethics scandals would be excellent fodder for its weekly media criticism show, Fox News Watch. Unfortunately, as we noted last weekend, they ignored the O’Reilly and Hannity scandals in favor of such pressing stories as media coverage of the new Oprah bio. Forthcoming coverage of the Fox Newsers’ fundraising seems unlikely.

    Media Matters reporter and senior editor Joe Strupp pointed out that while Fox News Watch was once a source of legitimate media criticism, the show has increasingly transformed into yet another megaphone for GOP talking points. Strupp quoted former Fox News Watch host Eric Burns (no relation to Media Matters President Eric Burns) saying: “The show was getting to be more and more of a struggle to do fairly. There was a progression of interference to try to make the show more right-wing. I fought very hard against it.”

    As Media Matters President Eric Burns pointed out on MSNBC this week, “When you have a famed, well known Republican hitman — Roger Ailes — running a news network, this is what you’re going to get.”

    Fox News has a slightly different take, however. As Fox News Watch put it in the promo for its segment on Ailes’ new ratings high, “Fairness plus balance equals success.”

    Take note, CNN.

    Other stories this week

    If dishonesty won’t derail financial reform, maybe denial will

    Right-wing story time this week — brought to you by Frank Luntz — centered around the claim that financial reform legislation would encourage perpetual and permanent taxpayer bailouts. The genesis of this particular tall tale is Luntz’s January memo that advised opponents of financial regulatory reform to tie the issue to big bank bailouts. Message received. Driving the clown car was Glenn Beck, who appeared on Fox & Friends to decry the “insane” idea of using $50 billion to save failing firms; Michelle Malkin claimed the bill would “institutionalize and make permanent financial bailouts”; Fox Business’ Charles Gasparino said the bill contained a “slush fund” of “$50 billion to bail you out.” Actually, the $50 billion fund would be paid for by the financial services industry and would cover the costs of the orderly liquidation of failing firms, quite clearly the opposite of a bailout. No worries. The Wall Street Journal’s John Fund tried to argue that the bill was bad because it would bail out firms and because it let the government liquidate them. Rush Limbaugh complained that it was “a bailout bill, or a destroy ‘em bill.” Neat trick.

    Not content to distort the bill to push their talking points, media conservatives also trumped up the completely baseless allegation that the Obama administration colluded with the Securities and Exchange Commission to sue Goldman Sachs over alleged fraud, all to create a villain in the financial reform narrative. Now that would be big — bigger even than, say, allegedly failing to disclose to investors that the creator of a fund you were selling them is betting on its failure. And so it was, without a scintilla of evidence, that CNN contributor Erick Erickson claimed on his blog that the administration was “colluding to destroy Goldman Sachs.” Big Government said Obama was “in need of a villain to serve as a political piñata,” and Fox News aggressively pushed the baseless accusation, which SEC officials and the White House strongly denied.

    Right-wing media figures also sweated to the oldies while attacking financial reform this week, dragging out a greatest hits collection of anti-progressive attacks to criticize yet another reform bill. Karl Rove and Fox News claimed health care financial reform meant the government would soon by spying on individual bank accounts with a research office actually charged with analyzing risk across the financial sector. Fox News figures tried to undermine support for the stimulus financial reform by aggressively pushing the canard that affordable housing initiatives caused the housing crisis. Limbaugh whined that “the same people that gave you the DMV” will “be running our health care financial system.” (Sound familiar?)

    Dishonesty, distortion, baseless allegations and yesterday’s attacks. Wouldn’t it be easier to just bury their heads in the sand and pretend there is no “real crisis” at all?

    Fox News rallies for religious bigotry

    In October 2001, evangelical preacher Franklin Graham delivered remarks while dedicating a chapel in North Carolina, during which he touched on the September 11 attacks and the newly spawned war on terrorism: “We’re not attacking Islam but Islam has attacked us. The God of Islam is not the same God. He’s not the son of God of the Christian or Judeo-Christian faith. It’s a different God, and I believe it is a very evil and wicked religion.” Graham’s stance on Islam has not softened over the years, and he told CNN’s Campbell Brown just last December: “[T]rue Islam cannot be practiced in this country. You can’t beat your wife. You cannot murder your children if you think they’ve committed adultery or something like that.”

    Smearing the world’s second-largest faith as “very evil and wicked” and condemning that faith for the worst terrorist attack in American history is inflammatory and wildly offensive. So it should come as a surprise that Fox News rallied to Graham’s defense when religious freedom organizations protested Graham’s invitation to the Pentagon’s National Day of Prayer ceremonies this year. It should come as a surprise because for most, defending Graham’s religious bigotry would be unthinkable. But, unfortunately, Fox News does not operate under such standards of propriety, and has added yet another chapter to its long and undistinguished record of smearing the Islamic faith.

    Fox’s first stab at defending Graham backfired pretty badly, as the Fox & Friends crew invited Graham on to defend himself. He promptly counseled the Muslims that “they don’t have to die in a car bomb, don’t have to die in some holy war to be accepted by God.”

    Fox News personalities then turned to the role of apologists, and chief among them was legal analyst Peter Johnson Jr., who for two days running tried desperately to explain away Graham’s “evil and wicked” comments, including this excuse: “After 9-11, a lot of folks were making those statements.” He also offered this gem: “No one is out to make any excuses for the statements that Franklin Graham made. And they were made nine years ago, in the wake of 9-11. In the wake of 3,000 deaths. He doesn’t need excuses.”

    Johnson certainly wasn’t alone in the excuse-making department. Sean Hannity offered a full-throated defense of Graham, falsely claiming that he was only talking about “radical Islam” and going so far to accuse Graham’s critics of being “afraid to take on radical Islam.” After Graham was disinvited by the Pentagon from a National Prayer Day event, Fox News contributor Sarah Palin wrote: “Nation suffers … as Mr. Graham is uninvited to speak.” Fox News “Culture Warrior” Margaret Hoover felt that the Pentagon’s decision was “unfortunate.”

    So what, if anything, have we learned from all this? We’ve learned that there’s really no smear against Muslims or the Islamic faith that’s too outrageous or offensive to find a home at Fox News.

    This weekly wrap-up was compiled by Ben Dimiero, Jeremy Holden, and Simon Maloy.

  • GOP Rep. Promises Donors: ‘I Would Turn To You For Advice’

    GOP Rep. Promises Donors: ‘I Would Turn To You For Advice’
    Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen (R-FL) canceled a fundraiser after questions were raised about her promise of special access to donors.


    Touchy Subject: Steele Slammed For Criticizing GOP’s Southern Strategy
    Michael Steele’s charge this week that the GOP’s southern strategy has “alienated” minority voters may not have provoked as many headlines as a trip by young Republicans to a lesbian bondage club. But in the long run it could cause just as much trouble for him.

  • Why ‘I Feel It In My Heart’ Is a Terrible Justification for God’s Existence

    Why ‘I Feel It In My Heart’ Is a Terrible Justification for God’s Existence
    As vivid as the experience of our hearts and minds can feel, it’s unreliable and subject to bias.

    As vivid as the experience of our hearts and minds can feel, it's unreliable and subject to bias.

    Arizona Gov. Signs Sweeping Immigration Crack Down Into Law, Essentially Legalizing Racial Profiling
    Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer signed on Friday what is now the most punitive and sweeping anti-immigrant state law in the nation.

    Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer signed on Friday what is now the most punitive and sweeping anti-immigrant state law in the nation.

    Building a Climate Justice Movement
    The climate justice movement has taken up two enormous concerns: How to address ecological catastrophe and how to develop a new global economic model.

    The climate justice movement has taken up two enormous concerns: How to address ecological catastrophe and how to develop a new global economic model.

    Will President Obama Stand up for Real Financial Reform?

    “Ultimately there is no dividing line between Main Street and Wall Street. We rise or we fall together as one nation. So I urge you to join me,” President Obama to Wall Street Executives at Cooper Union, April 22, 2010. Now, in the wake of the Goldman Sachs lawsuit, is a golden moment for President Obama […]

    Wall Street’s Simple Formula for Staying Rich
    Through the Federal Reserve, the public is basically giving the mega banks free money and letting them make bundles on the difference with which they lend.

    Through the Federal Reserve, the public is basically giving the mega banks free money and letting them make bundles on the difference with which they lend.

  • What’s Holding Obama The Professor Back?

    What’s Holding Obama The Professor Back?
    Dahlia, many thanks for your generous words–and for your excellent question, which has to have occurred to our president from time to time, especially in recent months. Should he say more–should he say anything at all–about his understanding of…


    Supreme CourtUnited StatesBarack ObamaUnited States Supreme CourtHistory

    End occupation then start negotiations
    US President Barack Obama is about to take a political leap on the Palestine/Israel issue. Many American presidents took similar leaps and each and every one of them fell flat on their faces. The leap is the launch of a…


    Barack ObamaMiddle EastIsraelObama administrationUnited States

    Presented By:

  • President Obama official schedule and guidance, April 24, 25, 2010. Asheville, N.C. and Beckley, W. Va.

    THE WHITE HOUSE
    Office of the Press Secretary
    _______________________________________________________________________________________
    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
    April 23, 2010

    WEEKEND GUIDANCE AND PRESS SCHEDULE FOR
    SATURDAY, APRIL 24 AND SUNDAY, APRIL 25, 2010

    The President and the First Lady will spend the weekend in Asheville, North Carolina. There are no scheduled public events.

    On Sunday, the President and the Vice President will travel to Beckley, West Virginia, to participate in a memorial service for the miners lost in the tragedy at Upper Big Branch mine. President Obama will deliver a eulogy honoring the lives of those who perished and offering his deepest condolences to the loved ones they left behind. The service is open to pre-credentialed media. The deadline to request credentials has passed. Prior to the service, the President and the Vice President will meet with family members of the miners who lost their lives. This is closed press.

    The President will return to Washington, DC on Sunday evening.

    Saturday’s In-Town Travel Pool
    Wires: AP, Reuters, Bloomberg
    Wire Photos: AP, Reuters, AFP
    TV Corr & Crew: FOX
    Print: USA Today
    Radio: CBS

    Saturday’s Out-of-Town Travel Pool
    Wires: AP, Reuters, Bloomberg
    Wire Photos: AP, Reuters, AFP
    TV Corr & Crew: FOX
    Print: Tribune

    Sunday’s In-Town Travel Pool
    Wires: AP, Reuters, Bloomberg
    Wire Photos: AP, Reuters, AFP
    TV Corr & Crew: NBC
    Print: Wall Street Journal
    Radio: FOX

    Sunday’s Out-of-Town Travel Pool
    Wires: AP, Reuters, Bloomberg
    Wire Photos: AP, Reuters, AFP
    TV Corr & Crew: NBC
    Print: Washington Post
    Radio: CBS

    Saturday, April 24, 2010

    EDT

    No In-Town Travel Pool Call Time

    Sunday, April 25, 2010

    EDT

    1:50PM THE PRESIDENT departs Asheville, North Carolina en route Beckley, West Virginia
    Asheville Regional Airport
    Open Press

    2:40PM THE PRESIDENT arrives in Beckley, West Virginia
    Raleigh County Memorial Airport
    Open Press

    3:00PM THE PRESIDENT and THE VICE PRESIDENT meet with family members of miners who lost their lives at Upper Big Branch mine
    Beckley-Raleigh County Convention Center
    Closed Press

    3:30PM THE PRESIDENT and THE VICE PRESIDENT attend memorial service; THE PRESIDENT delivers eulogy
    Beckley-Raleigh County Convention Center
    Open to pre-credentialed media

    5:20PM THE PRESIDENT departs Beckley, West Virginia en route Andrews Air Force Base
    Raleigh County Memorial Airport
    Open Press

    5:30PM In-Town Travel Pool Call Time

    6:20PM THE PRESIDENT arrives at Andrews Air Force Base
    Out-of-Town Travel Pool

    6:35PM THE PRESIDENT arrives at the White House
    South Lawn
    Open Press (Pre-set 6:05PM – Final Gather 6:20PM – North Doors of the Palm Room)

    Schedule for Week of April 26, 2010

    On Monday, the President will welcome the World Series Champion New York Yankees to the White House to honor their 2009 season. Appearing at this event with the team will be Yankees coaches and staff. In the evening, the President will deliver remarks at the Presidential Summit on Entrepreneurship at the Ronald Reagan Building. At his June 4, 2009, speech in Cairo, President Obama announced that the U.S. Government would host a Summit on Entrepreneurship to identify how we can deepen ties between business leaders, foundations, and entrepreneurs in the United States and Muslim communities around the world. The President’s remarks will be streamed live on www.WhiteHouse.gov/live.

    On Tuesday, the President will continue the White House to Main Street tour with stops in Iowa. In the early afternoon, he will tour Siemens Energy Inc Facility in Fort Madison and then share ideas with workers for continuing to grow the economy and to put Americans back to work. He will then make a stop in Mt. Pleasant. Later in the afternoon, President Obama will hold a town hall meeting in Ottumwa at Indian Hills Community College. On Wednesday, the President will hold events in Macon, Missouri and Quincy, Illinois. He will return to Washington, DC on Wednesday night.

    On Thursday, the President will present the 2010 National Teacher of the Year Award at the White House.

    On Friday, the President will attend meetings at the White House.

    ##

  • GOP newsletter: ?Let?s take Betty Sutton out of the House and put her back in the kitchen.?

    GOP newsletter: ?Let?s take Betty Sutton out of the House and put her back in the kitchen.?
    The Medina County Republican Party in Medina, OH has put out a Spring 2010 edition of its newsletter titled the “Republican Review” that urges supporters to “slow the pace of President Obama’s slippery slide down the slippery slope toward a more socialistic society.” The newsletter names several Democrats that should be defeated and includes a […]

    The Medina County Republican Party in Medina, OH has put out a Spring 2010 edition of its newsletter titled the “Republican Review” that urges supporters to “slow the pace of President Obama’s slippery slide down the slippery slope toward a more socialistic society.” The newsletter names several Democrats that should be defeated and includes a sexist swipe at Rep. Betty Sutton (D-OH):

    This sexist belief that women don’t belong in the workforce is similar to a National Republican Congressional Committee press release that said House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) needs to be “put in her place” for expressing certain views on the war in Afghanistan. As Pelosi later responded, “I’m in my place. I’m the speaker of the House — the first woman speaker of the House.” (HT: Jamison Foser)

    ThinkFast: April 23, 2010
    The oil rig that exploded on Tuesday has now sunk into the Gulf of Mexico, “leaving a one-by-five-mile sheen of what the authorities said was ‘crude oil mix.’” A vice president for BP, which was leasing the rig, said “it certainly has the potential to be a major spill.” The most damage would come if […]

    The oil rig that exploded on Tuesday has now sunk into the Gulf of Mexico, “leaving a one-by-five-mile sheen of what the authorities said was ‘crude oil mix.’” A vice president for BP, which was leasing the rig, said “it certainly has the potential to be a major spill.” The most damage would come if the oil spill “were to reach the Louisiana coast, some 50 miles away.”

    Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer (R) has until tomorrow to decide how to act on the “nation’s toughest legislation against illegal immigration,” which reached her desk Monday. She can “sign, veto or allow it to become law without her signature.” Brewer hasn’t said what she will do, but her primary opponent “has called on her to sign the legislation.” Brewer is expected to sign the bill today.

    The Florida GOP is invoking the loyalty oath to forbid any party officials from supporting Charlie Crist’s possible independent bid for Senate. “[T]he Party Loyalty Oath forbids Republican Executive Committee members from supporting any candidate other than the candidate nominated by the voters of the Republican Party through its primary election,” FL GOP general counsel Jason Gonzalez wrote in a memo.

    Sen. Jim DeMint (R-SC) left the door open to a possible presidential bid in 2012. Saying it’s not “something I desire,” DeMint added, “There are a lot of changes I’d like to make in this country and I think Americans are going to be ready for someone to tell them the truth next election.”

    Sen. Chuck Schumer (D-NY) slammed the White House’s policies with respect to Israel, saying that it “has to stop” pressuring the Middle Eastern country on issues related to negotiations with the Palestinians. Responding to Schumer’s words, the New America Foundations’ Steve Clemons writes, “Has Chuck Schumer EVER criticized Israel or its leadership in the way he just unloaded on Obama?”

    Federal records show that “[f]inancial services companies increased their spending to influence Congress during the first three months of the year, while also hiring well-connected lobbyists to press their case on new Wall Street regulations.” Goldman Sachs spent $1.2 million in 2010’s first quarter, 72 percent more than last year, while Citigroup spent $1.4 million, a 13.5 percent increase.

    Democrats released their “long-awaited campaign finance bill,” which “would force top corporate executives, union officials and top donors to stand by political ads just like politicians must do.” The bill, whose main co-sponsors are Rep. Chris Van Hollen (D-MD) and Sen. Charles Schumer (D-NY), will be introduced next week; its backers expect it to be approved by July 4.

    “House Republicans have launched a new ‘real-time’ e-mail, Internet and media offensive aimed at fueling public opposition to Democrats’ climate proposals.” The effort is “designed to coincide” with the introduction of a climate bill in the Senate next week and the “upcoming annual summer spike in gas prices.”

    Several NATO allies are pressing the U.S. to “withdraw its aging stockpile of tactical nuclear weapons from Europe.” Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said the U.S. is not opposed to such a move, but “ruled out removing these weapons unless Russia agreed to cuts in its arsenal, which is at least paper”>10 times the size of the American one.”

    And finally: In honor of “Take our Daughters and Sons to Work Day,” House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) held a press conference yesterday with the “pint-size progeny of journalists and congressional aides.”

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  • LED-Pimped Vika Lauri

    Materials: Vika Lauri, Dioder

    Description:
    – Setup your Vika Lauri table
    – affix a string of white or multi-color Dioder LEDs to the inside, metal lip with the provided sticky tape
    – conceal wires along the same inside edge and mount control box also using sticky tape

    ~ Kevin Freitas, Tacoma, WA, USA

    See more of Kevin’s colour changing computer table.