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  • 2011 Audi A8 available with factory-installed wireless internet hotspot

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    2011 Audi A8 – Click above for high-res image gallery

    One day, we’ll be able to have wireless internet access from nearly every point on the globe. And while many cities and towns are making efforts to offer free wireless service across a broad range, automakers are now looking to bring WiFi connectivity to cars. Audi is on board, and it has just announced that the 2011 A8 will be available with factory-installed in-car wireless hotspot.

    The WLAN hotspot is located within the rooftop antenna, and passengers can connect to the internet via any laptop, netbook or new-age tablet, like the Apple iPad. Audi says that the network is capable of speeds up to 7.2 Mbit/sec and that WAP2 encryption is on hand in order to securely transfer data. Audi claims that this is the first such factory-installed system, although other automakers offer WiFi connectivity with dealer installed accessories.

    The new A8 is already packed to the brim with the latest and greatest in automotive technological achievements. Things like the automaker’s second-generation MMI control interface, the integration of Google Earth and an impressive LED lighting system up front set it apart from other vehicles in the class, and the addition of wireless internet will only strengthen the appeal to prospective buyers. The full details are available in Audi’s press release, after the jump.

    [Source: Audi]

    Continue reading 2011 Audi A8 available with factory-installed wireless internet hotspot

    2011 Audi A8 available with factory-installed wireless internet hotspot originally appeared on Autoblog on Mon, 24 May 2010 08:31:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • What is the Air Force doing with space? | Bad Astronomy

    The military uses for space travel are legion: besides the obvious utility of being able to launch weapons much more quickly at a target, it can be used to prevent military action through advanced intelligence gathering.

    X-37_uprightThe Air Force has long been in the vanguard of space based operations, but of course much of that is secret (and rightly so). I had heard of the X-37 B — aka the Flying Twinkie — for some time, but since there was so little info on it I didn’t write anything. But interestingly, through Slashdot I learned that amateur satellite spotters have seen the X-37 B from the ground. Not many people know you can spot all sorts of satellites from your front yard; all you need in most cases is knowledge of your latitude and longitude and a website with satellite listings.

    Info about the X-37 B is relatively tight, so it’s unclear what it’s being tested for. Surveillance is assured, since any satellite can be used for that. The Air Force says it has no offensive capabilities — I wonder if they mean the test shot launched last month, or the X-37 B itself — but it does have a payload capability for small satellites, and can be operated in orbit for at least 9 months. Its orbit takes it from -40° to +40° latitude. Go look at a globe and see what countries lie in that range that might be of interest to the military…

    airforce_scramjetAlso of interest is that the Air Force is planning a test launch of a hypersonic scramjet called the X-51A, an aircraft capable of flight at speeds of at least Mach 6 — about 7000 kph! That launch may happen as soon as May 25. Scramjets are fiercely complex technologically; while technically rockets, they use oxygen from the air instead of carrying it on board. This saves a lot of mass, and has a huge range of uses; military of course, but also civilian uses for aircraft.

    I saw an early version of a scramjet a few years ago, and was awed by it; Mach 6 is fast, and these things have an upper speed that may exceed that by quite a bit. When this tech tests out, it may revolutionize the whole world. Imagine getting from the US to Japan in an hour, or basically from any point in the world to any other point in just a few of hours! In a hundred years, statements like that may seem quaint, but for now, it’s the future.

    Some people may knee-jerk and think the military will abuse this tech, but I understand that developing and using this sort of thing can help prevent conflicts… and may lead to a revolution as profound as the invention of the car, the airplane, and the spaceship. I hope the military can get all this working. I still have hopes that the near future will look like the one I read about when I was a kid.

    X-37 B image credit: U.S. Air Force. Scramjet: Wikipedia, under the Creative Commons license.


  • Only two more days to pre-order Ashampoo Burning Studio 10!

    burning10-box.gifMany of us simply want to burn data to disc and, for this reason, there are few better tools than Ashampoo Burning Studio. If you’re one of the many users who rate this software very highly, you’ll be pleased to know there’s a new v10 due for official release at the end of May. Note that there’s already a beta version available to download and test.

    Between now and the 26th of May 2010, you can pre-order Ashampoo Burning Studio 10 and save 30% from the RRP! Get it for only $34.99 rather than the regular price of $49.99. Now, we know what you’re thinking – Ashampoo always discount their products deeply, so we’ll wait for the 75% off discount from a previous version. Problem is, Ashampoo have changed their pricing structure, so users now only get 20% from the RRP. This pre-order prices is the best price you’ll get for a long time….so pre-order now.

    Remember that the final release of Ashampoo Burning Studio 10 will be the end of this week.

    Ashampoo Burning Studio 10 link.

  • Talking About Tibet: An Open Dialogue Between Chinese Citizens and the Dalai Lama

    The Dalai Lama at the Cathedral Church of Saint John the Divine in New York, May 23, 2010

    Following is an English translation of an Internet dialogue between the Dalai Lama and Chinese citizens that took place on May 21. The exchange was organized by Wang Lixiong, a Chinese intellectual known for his writing on Tibet and for theorizing about how China might generate its own kind of democracy in the Internet age.

    The idea of promoting “free dialogue” on the Web between the Dalai Lama and Chinese citizens is an extremely bold notion. To China’s rulers, nearly every word in the phrase “free dialogue with the Dalai Lama” is anathema. The Dalai Lama, in their language, is a traitor, a “splittist,” an “enemy of the people,” a “monster,” a “wolf in monk’s robes.” The word “dialogue” has not fared well in Chinese Communist history, either. It is what student protesters were asking for in spring 1989 just before tanks and machine guns settled the question by massacre.

    So how did Wang Lixiong do it? First he asked representatives of the Dalai Lama, who is on a tour of the U.S., for an hour of time in which the Tibetan religious leader might answer questions from Chinese citizens. The Dalai Lama agreed to use the hour of 8 to 9 a.m. (EST) on May 21 for this purpose. Wang then arranged to open a Twitter page beginning on May 17 at 10:30 a.m. (Beijing time), onto which Chinese Web users could pose questions. In order to promote democracy in the questioning process, Wang decided to prioritize the questions using the program Google Moderator, which posts all questions on a Google Moderator page inside China. According to the program, any Web visitor can vote on which questions he or she prefers and only one vote from any one remote Web user is accepted (to prevent a cyber version of ballot-box stuffing); during the voting period, a running tally is published on which questions have received the most votes.

    This process went well until 4:07 p.m. (Beijing time) on May 18. At that moment access to the Google Moderator page inside China was blocked. Apparently the authorities had discovered the project. Many questions and votes had already been collected, however, and questions continued to pour in even after the blocking because many Web users in China know how to use proxy servers to “jump the great firewall” electronically. By 10 p.m. on May 20 (EST), which was the deadline Wang set for submitting questions and voting on preferences, 282 questions had been submitted and 12,045 votes for questions had been cast. Wang said that he was “very pleased” with this response and that the questions that rose to the top of the pile were indeed, in his view, a good representation of the actual concerns on the minds of Chinese citizens.

    The questions that had the most votes at the end were presented to the Dalai Lama Friday at 8:00 a.m. (EST). My English translations of the questions and answers, which follow below, are based on a Chinese-language transcript that has been approved by the Dalai Lama’s staff. More detail is available at Wang Lixiong’s Twitter account (twitter.com/wlixiong). The numbers attached to the questions refer to their rank order in number of votes received.


    Question 1: Your Holiness Dalai Lama, how are you? I want to ask you about the religious leadership of Tibet in the future. Please forgive my audacity, but what is your view on the possibility of “two successors” for you, as happened in the case of the 11th Panchen Lama [when Tibetan Buddhists chose one successor and the Chinese government arrested him and named another]? And what, by the way, is your view of the Panchen Lama that the Chinese government has appointed?

    Dalai Lama: In 1969 I issued a formal declaration that the question of whether the Dalai Lama system should continue is a question for the Tibetan people to decide. In 1992 I issued another declaration, making clear that as soon as Tibet might gain formal autonomy, I would hold no official position in a Tibetan government and that all Tibetan affairs would be continue to be handled by officials serving in their posts inside Tibet. Then, in 2001 the Tibetan government in exile adopted a system to elect leaders to five-year terms of office by popular vote of the Tibetan community in exile. In view of these developments, I have come to feel that the Dalai Lama system is no longer very important. I am going to continue to do my best in my role as long as my health holds up, but as for the Dalai Lama system, I have to say that the Chinese government cares more about this than I do (laughs). A problem like that of “the two Panchen Lamas” might indeed appear. But if such a thing happens, it will only cause confusion and not do any good.

    [On the government-appointed Panchen Lama], I understand that he is very bright and works hard at Buddhist cultivation. Believers remain skeptical about him, waiting to see whether he can cultivate himself to a high level. In my view this will be very important, and will depend upon his own efforts.

    Question 2: I would like to ask Your Holiness about the meetings between the Tibetan government in exile and the Chinese Communists. Why are these meetings always fruitless? What exactly are the questions that have been so intractable over the decades?

    Dalai Lama: The main problem is that the Chinese government continually insists that there is no Tibet problem, only a Dalai Lama problem. I have made no demands of my own, but am primarily concerned with six million Tibetans and their culture, especially their religion and their natural environment. If a day comes when Chinese leaders acknowledge a “Tibet question” in the same sense in which they recognize a “Xinjiang question,” and if they are ready to face the Tibet question and work for its solution, I will lend my full support, because our goals—to build, develop and unify Tibet—will then be the same. At present the Communists are relying on forcible methods. They repeatedly stress “stability” in Tibet. My belief is that true stability comes from inner confidence and trust.

    Question 3: Hello, Your Holiness. Regardless of what political path China takes in the future, the gap between ordinary Tibetans and ordinary Han Chinese is getting bigger all the time. Many Tibetan people are too simplistic when they say the problem is just that Hans rule Tibet. In fact we Han people are also victims of the same dictatorial rule. How do you view this problem? Do you have any way of maintaining good relations between Hans and Tibetans?

    Dalai Lama: Relations between the Han and Tibetan people did not begin in 1949 or 1950; they arose more than a thousand years ago. There have been times of harmony and times of conflict. We are now in a time of conflict, but the cause of the conflict has been the government, not the people. This why our people-to-people relations are so important. It is why we have set up “Tibetan-Han Friendship Associations” in many of the free countries of the world. These associations have seen some success.

    In my view the main difficulty [on the Chinese government’s side] has been the failure to carry out Deng Xiaoping’s “seek truth from facts.” Hu Yaobang also had the right idea when he stressed “understanding actual conditions.” Recently Wen Jiabao has praised the spirit of Hu Yaobang’s approach of relying not just on official documents but doing on-the-scene investigation.

    In China generally [not just Tibet], the pattern of ignoring actual conditions and living in non-transparent social structures causes many major problems. If there could be transparency and attention to actual conditions, much progress could be made, for example, in handling and reducing corruption and graft.

    As for how to maintain good relations between Hans and Tibetans, my experience, wherever I go, has been that I get a lot of respect and sympathy from people if I just approach them as one human being to another. If Hans and Tibetans approach one another in this way, on a basis of equality, many problems might be solved. When I meet people from mainland China, I always find them extremely sincere and find no barriers to communicating with them.

    The problems of doubt and suspicion between people are hardly limited to Tibetans and Hans. These problems exist everywhere in the world. This is why we need contact. We need it in order to get rid of suspicion and doubt. Whenever I meet someone, no matter where in the world it is, I emphasize harmony in person-to-person relations. There are two levels in any such meeting. The first is that we are all human beings. Only when that point is clear do I address differences of religion, culture, or language.

    When I was in Beijing in 1954 and 1955, I learned that Marxist theory emphasizes “internationalism,” which is a doctrine that people everywhere are the same. I entirely agree with this.

    Question 4: I would like to ask your Holiness about your “Memorandum on Achieving True Autonomy for All Tibetans,” in which you do not mention how to protect the rights of Han people living in Tibet. Would you, after autonomy, recognize the right of Han people who currently reside in Tibetan areas to continue living there? Can you publish a Memorandum describing how you would guarantee equal rights of life and livelihood to Han people in Tibetan areas? Many Han people believe that your “autonomy” is another word for independence and that an autonomous government would discriminate against Hans and drive them out.

    Dalai Lama: Han people were living in Tibet before [the CCP takeover in] 1950. There were Hans and Muslims living near the place where I was born. In the future, too, Hans will no doubt live in Tibet. The crucial question is whether Tibet will become like Inner Mongolia, where Mongols have now become a minority. When this happens the significance of self-rule is lost. In some Tibetan districts, where the Han population has grown large, the language and culture of Tibet are in great peril.

    Question 5: I would like to ask the Great Teacher why your description of earlier Tibet—as a harmonious Buddhist society—differs so radically from the Chinese government’s description of an evil slave society. There are many drawings and other visual materials that document a cruel and dark slave society. Can you explain why this discrepancy is so big?

    Dalai Lama: Tibet before 1950 was a “backward society” and its institutions were imperfect. We acknowledge this. No one ever said Tibet before 1950 was a paradise. I don’t think any Tibetan, inside Tibet or outside, even in their dreams, would want to restore the old system intact.

    On the other hand, the Chinese government’s widespread claims that old Tibet was a kind of hell are also very wide of the mark. For example the film called “People Denied the Right of Birth,” which was sponsored by the Chinese government, is pure propaganda and utterly unacceptable to most Tibetans because it departs so far from the truth. This is like the propaganda of the Cultural Revolution, with all its claims about “great victories”—which, once the true situation could no longer be covered up, melted into nothing. It is also reminds us of the Tiananmen events of June Fourth [1989], which the whole world knows about, but the Communists’ propaganda pretends not to have happened.

    The most important point is that every one of you [Han Chinese friends] should make fair, objective, and scientific investigation of questions. I often say the same to Tibetans. I tell them not to take what I say as automatically true and accept it uncritically; I say make your own observations and reach your own conclusions. As a Buddhist, I approach even the words of the Buddha in this spirit of analyzing thoroughly and reaching one’s own understanding.

    Question 6: If the regime were to allow you to return to Tibet, and were to grant self-rule to Tibet, what kind of political system would you like to see in Tibet?

    Dalai Lama: This question will be for Tibetans inside Tibet, especially intellectuals, in a spirit of “seeking truth from facts,” to decide for themselves. Our Tibetan society in exile, for the past 50 years, has already achieved democratization in its social system.

    Question 7: I would like to ask the Dalai Lama a sharp question. The fiercest criticism that Chinese government officials level against you is that you demand there be no troops in Tibet. This, they say, is evidence that you are asking for independence in disguise. Do you stick with your demand of “no troops in Tibet”? The right to station troops is a fundamental part of national sovereignty, and I am afraid that most Han people will not be able to agree to a “no troops” condition. Is there any possibility you will drop this condition?

    Dalai Lama: We do ask for “autonomy,” but we have repeatedly been very clear that foreign relations and military affairs would remain the responsibility of the central government. Many years ago I expressed an idea that when relations of friendship and mutual trust had grown among India, Nepal, and Tibet, we might form a sort of “peaceful region,” but this was little more than a distant ideal. The whole world, actually, holds this kind of ideal. So there truly is nothing to worry about.

    Question 8: In view of how things stand at present, the chances of a peaceful resolution of the problem of Tibet seem almost zero. May I ask how Your Holiness views the current prospects for Tibet?

    Dalai Lama: During 60 years of Chinese Communist rule, the eras of Mao Zedong, Deng Xiaoping, Jiang Zemin, and Hu Jintao have all been different. In fact there have been some very major changes. I feel confident that changes in [China’s] nationalities policy will come, and in particular that the Tibet problem can be solved on the basis of mutual interest. Some retired officials and Party members who used to work on Tibetan affairs—as well as some Chinese intellectuals—have begun to point out irrationalities in minority policy and the need for a re-thinking of nationalities policy. This is why I feel there will be changes in the not-so-distant future, and that problems can be solved.

  • Bret Michaels Named “Celebrity Apprentice”

    Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

    No brain hemorrhage nor hole in his heart could stop Bret Michael’s fight to win the third season of The Celebrity Apprentice.

    Michaels heard Donald Trump’s coveted phrase em>”You’re Hired” after beating out 11 other contestants — including Darryl Strawberry, Sharon Osbourne, and Cyndi Lauper — to make it to Sunday’s season finale.

    Michaels’ victory snagged $250,000 for his nominated charity, the American Diabetes Association. In second place, actress Holly Robinson Peete, who earned $250,000 her own HollyRod Foundation — which provides support for families with children facing serious illnesses.

    Michaels, 47, the frontman of glam rock band Poison, suffers from diabetes and underwent an emergency appendectomy two weeks before suffering a potentially fatal brain hemorrhage on April 25. In an appearance on The TODAY Show Monday, Michaels admitted that he still isn’t “100%” after battling a laundry list of medical aliments over the past month.


  • An Exploratory Karzai-Taliban Peace Summit?

    Thanks to al-Jazeera, footage has emerged of what may be a nascent or exploratory peace negotiation between the Afghan government, the Taliban and a Taliban affiliate and longtime guerilla leader, Gulbuddin Hekmatyar.

    For months, there have been occasional reports of representatives from the parties to the conflict — one stretching back nine, 15 or 30 years, depending on how continuous you wish to characterize the belligerents as fighting for similar causes — meeting in the Maldives, a placid Indian Ocean island nation neutral in the fight. But now, al-Jazeera cameras have captured images of a man described as an “Afghan governor” and several parliamentarians and foreign-ministry representatives meeting with men described as Taliban and Hekmatyar deputies:

    The network reports that the talks are informal. And they come in advance of President Hamid Karzai’s “consultative peace jirga” intended to define the contours of an olive branch to the Taliban — a summit that apparently will be delayed by a week. So even if the Maldives talks are informal, they at least represent a mechanism through which the peace jirga’s terms might be delivered to the insurgents, and through which a response might emerge.

    (Via Joshua Foust’s Twitter feed.)

  • Samsung Wave now available in UK, France, and Germany

    Samsung Wave S8500To all those Samsung enthusiasts living in Europe: this one’s for you.

    Samsung today announced that the Bada-powered Wave is now available in the UK and France (it has been available in Germany for about a week).

    UK Vodafone fans can grab the phone for free on a £25 per month plan, but no outright prices have yet been announced for the UK or France. However, eager Germans can pick it up for €429.

    In case you don’t know, the Wave is powered by a 1Ghz CPU, has a 3.3″ 480×800 AMOLED screen, 5MP autofocus camera with LED flash, and can record 720p Video. It also has GPS, WiFi b/g/n, Bluetooth 3.0, and a mysterious OS.

    Current rumours say that it will make its way to North America in June, but not with who, or for how much.

    But in the mean time, you can grab a Beta SDK to start developing for the new OS. Just don’t expect to get rich from it, mmmkay?

    [via The Unwired View]


  • New to the App Catalog, 24 May 2010

    Here’s what we’re digging from the new list today:

    • WeatherIcon dynamically changes its own icon to display the current weather. Hint: put it on your launchbar.
    • ClouDocs gives you access to view your Google documents and spreadsheets
    • IConvert looks like a pretty decent currency converter.

    All the rest are after the break!

    read more

  • From The Source: HTC, All Released Phones in 2010 to Receive Android 2.2

    Google’s conference is over and as you may have expected the official news of Android Froyo 2.2 was announced. With the announcement came the not so surprising news that Google’s flagship phone the Nexus One would be the first with the update, followed by the Motorola Droid, and….

    The purpose for the drop off is to show that no one knows who will receive the coming update of Android, especially after carriers such as Sprint just updated their line of Android devices to the almost mundane 2.1 firmware. Not to worry HTC lovers and users across the lands and seas; fear not about updates to 2.2, for HTC has silenced rumors and speculation before it has a chance to begin by saying that all phones released in 2010 will receive the update, namely the Droid Incredible, HTC EVO 4G, HTC Desire, and the My Touch 3G Slide.

    All phones before this and those that just received the update to 2.1 were failed to be mentioned. This story however gives some light and possible truth to the rumored out of the box over the air update of the HTC EVO 4G.

    Algadon Free Online RPG. Fully Mobile Friendly.

  • Finished before 830am!

    I got home around 8:30 this morning and realized I had already swam and ran. Now it is 9am and the day is still long. I go back to work tomorrow after being off for 11 days:/
    This morning I went to a Master’s Swim class. I had no idea what this would entail and I was super anxious and nervous. It is always intimidating to walk into a new place and try something you’re clueless about. The woman coach told me if I wanted stroke instruction, then it would be better to come on Tues and Thurs. For today, she suggest I just get in the water and get used to it. She then suggested I do some practice with the board to get my breathing right. I have a lot of difficulty with breathing. I need a lot of work. She just kept saying, “Don’t worry, everyone starts where you are.”
    This whole time, I thought that running would be the most difficult part of tri training, but now I am thinking it might be the swimming portion!!aaah.

    (Rockin’ the one piece..oh.yes.)

    I stayed for about 40 minutes, trying not to look like a dummy and doing my little exercise drills. Barely.
    I was feeling a bit defeated and hopeless, to be honest, so I decided to go ahead and do my last exercise of the WEEK 4 COUCH TO 5K.

    Funny that to boost my confidence, I went on a run. That was not me 4 weeks ago.
    I am now looking forward to week 5!! POSITIVE THINKING! Week 5 is supposed to be the most challenging with three different work outs each session, ending with a 20 minute run with no walks on W5D3.

    As for today’s run? I felt stronger than usual. I attribute it to training, but also going out there an hour earlier. The sun was not as high and it was not nearly as sweltering hot. I could actually breathe!

    I refueled with some oatmeal:

    I leave you with some random eats from the past couple of days, as well as some photos from DC.
    But first, I want to wish my wonderful boyfriend of 7+ years a HAPPPPPPYY 25TH BIRTHDAY!!! We’ll be spending the rest of the day eating cake:)

    Chana masala

    Whole grain pizza made my Mirza:)








  • Proverbe romanesti

    – Nicio fapta buna nu scapa nepedepsita! (proverbul meu preferat)

    – Ca romanu’ nu-i nici unu’, unde-s multi putea fi unu!!

    – Fie piinea cit de rea, tot ti-o fura cineva.

    – De urata nu-i frumoasa, da’i desteapta, proasta dracu’!

    – Cine e harnic si munceste are tot ce vrea.Cine-i lenes si
    chiuleste are tot asa. (sau chiar mai mult…mult mai mult;exemple gasiti la fiecare colt de strada sau la fiecare poveste de “succes” a “oamenilor de afaceri”)

    – Ne nastem goi, uzi si flaminzi. De abia dupa aceea
    lucrurile se inrautatesc. (-15%,-25%… -100% ?!?)

    – Cand nevasta tace, sa n-o-ntrerupi.

    – In viata sunt doua cuvinte care deschid multe usi:
    “trage” si “impinge” .

    – Omul intelept isi face vara sanie si iarna o pune pe foc. (daca tot au taiat subventiile la caldura …)

    – Cine fura azi un ou si se lasa prins…e bou!!!

    – Proverb marinaresc: “Iubeste-ti copilul ca si cum ar fi al tau”. (in caz ca nu v-ati prins : daca ai copil nu inseamana neaparat ca e al tau; get it ?)

    – Cum iti asterni, cum vine altul si se culca in locul tau.

    – Daca totul a iesit bine,inseamna ca ai gresit undeva.

    – Mama prostilor e mereu gravida…

    – Prietenul la bani se cunoaste.

    – Mai bine burtos de la bere decat cocosat de la munca! (principiul de baza al muncii)

    – Lasa pe maine ce poti face azi ca poate maine nu mai este nevoie.

    – Cand ai intrat in rahat pana la nas, tine-ti gura inchisa.

    – Nu esti beat atata timp cat poti sta intins pe podea fara sa te sprijini.

    – Pauzele lungi si dese, cheia marilor succese ! (principiul secundar al muncii…pentru cel de baza vezi mai sus)

    Sursa : mail

    Trimite si prietenilor:





    Related posts:

    1. Ziua Indragostitilor
    2. Principiul hidromecanic
  • Obama to Propose New Measure to Reduce Spending

    Mike Allen at Politico reports that President Barack Obama will unveil the Reduce Unnecessary Spending Act of 2010, a presidential check on Congressional bills.

    Under this new expedited procedure, the president would submit a package of rescissions shortly after a spending bill is passed. Congress would be required to consider these recommendations as a package, without amendment, and with a guaranteed up-or-down vote within a specified timeframe. The White House bills this as part of a larger effort the president has undertaken to rein in wasteful spending…. This expedited rescission authority would replace Part C of the Impoundment Control Act of 1974 — the line-item veto provisions struck down by the Supreme Court in 1998.

    But the new proposal comes at the same time that members of Congress — Republicans and Democrats both — are pressing for spending cuts and pay-go provisions. Lori Montgomery and Shailagh Murray report in the Washington Post:

    “It’s time to start paying for things,” said Rep. Kathy Dahlkemper (D-Pa.), a freshman who voted for last year’s economic stimulus bill but said she is likely to oppose the next spending package, scheduled to hit the House floor Tuesday. “We’ve done some good things, but one of the best things we could do right now is get control of our fiscal house.”

    With the national debt at its highest level in nearly 60 years, the question of whether to cut spending — and if so, how — is pitting liberals against conservatives, and Congress against the president. The White House has proposed a three-year freeze in programs unrelated to national security and warned House leaders Friday that it might go further, targeting the Defense Department for cuts. Meanwhile, House leaders unable to agree on a long-term budget blueprint are considering other ways to signal fiscal toughness, including a one-year budget plan that would cut 2011 spending even more deeply than Obama’s freeze.

    “We’re going to adopt that and may go farther,” said Rep. Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.), a member of the House leadership.

    Of course, having both the White House and Congress devising ways to slash government spending and cut benefits has economists worried. Consumer demand remains soft, and unemployment sky high. Until the economic cycle is virtuous and the turnaround clearly self-sustaining, the government reducing its budget could be disastrous. Someone needs to be spending for businesses to start hiring again, and if it is not the consumer, it needs to be Uncle Sam.

  • Google Creates a Permanent Home for Awesome Pac-Man Doodle

    Google’s Pac-Man celebrations turned out to be a great success. In many ways, it was a first for Google and there were definitely some risks involved, after all the Google homepage is one of the most trafficked web pages in the world, but it paid off big time. People really enjoyed playing Pac-Man inside the Google logo and the re… (read more)

  • Lindsay Lohan On Defensive Hours Before Court Hearing


    The Dog Ate My Passport and Other Creative Excuses From The Wacky World of Lindsay Lohan….

    Lindsay Lohan has gone on the defensive on everything from her fractured relationship with her father to rumors that she is back on drugs in an interview with Hollywood.tv — just hours before she is scheduled to face a hardnosed California judge in a long-delayed probation hearing.

    An arrest warrant was issued for the 23-year-old actress after she failed to appear in court for a progress report on her probation stemming from two arrests in 2007, claiming she was stuck in Cannes because her passport had been stolen.

    The arrest warrant was then recalled after Lindsay put up the S100,000 bond, she will now face a court hearing on Monday, where she is likely to be told to wear an alcohol-monitoring bracelet and submit to weekly drug tests.

    It’s all a little “unfair” and “disconcerting” if you ask Lindsay.

    “I don’t see what reason I would go to prison for. I have been more than in compliance with everything having to do with the court system. I would be done in two weeks and four days, because I missed one class (when) my uncle passed away. I stayed in New York to be with my family. I didn’t even go to the funeral because I came back (to Los Angeles) and did another class. I don’t see why I would have to go to prison and the only person who has ever suggested anything like that is my father.”

    She admitted she was heartbroken she could not see her little brother, Michael Lohan, Jr., graduate from Ithaca College in New York last week.

    “(I feel) upset. It sucks. It’s horrible. (Our relationship) is great. I’m proud of him; I wish I could be there.”

    In addition, LiLo responded to the growing controversy over a set of snaps — which appear to feature the actress, straw in hand, sitting beside a plate of cocaine. Lindsay insists she did not know the other individuals in the photographs and therefore is not aware of what the powder substance could have been.


  • Quit Facebook on Memorial Day with Your Friends

    A group of Facebook users seems to have had enough of Facebook’s privacy concerns and launched an initiative to inform and convince people to delete their Facebook accounts on Memorial Day (May 31st) this year. At this time, more than 14,200 people have committed on the website to quit the social network in an organized planned event and try to tr… (read more)

  • Backup your most important data using Genie Timeline Professional v2

    genie-box.gifBacking up the right kind of data is hard work for most business users. For example, how many times have we backed up our documents, accounts, other work files and user data, but forgotten vital files such as our font collection. If you purchase commercial fonts, you normally get a once-only opportunity to download and store on your computer. The aren’t cheap, either, particularly for a multi-seat commercial license. Make sure you safeguard important files such as this in a secure location.

    Genie Timeline 2.0 Professional is a superb backup application that enables you to choose the type of files you want to backup, such as your email, office files, documents and more, choose a destination, set a schedule and leave the files to backup. If you ever need to recover your data, you can reverse the progress. As the name suggest, the ‘timeline’ approach to backup enables you to quickly select a backup made previously, rather than a more recent backup.

    Best of all, we have Genie Timeline 2.0 Profesional within the V3.co.uk Software Store for only $39.95, rather than the RRP of $59.95!

    Genie Timeline 2.0 Professional download and V3.co.uk Software Store links.

  • Constant Contact Buys NutshellMail

    Ryan McBride wrote:

    Constant Contact, the Waltham, MA-based provider of online marketing software for small organizations, says today it has bought NutshellMail for an undisclosed sum. Menlo Park, CA-based Nutshellmail’s software enables small businesses to monitor social networking sites like Facebook and LinkedIn and get the results delivered to their e-mail inboxes, according to Constant Contact (NASDAQ:CTCT). Mark Schmulen and David Lyman, co-founders of NutshellMail, are expected to lead Constant Contact’s planned Bay Area office, which is slated to open later this year.

    UNDERWRITERS AND PARTNERS



























  • Venus Williams’ Disturbing Outfit at the French Open

    The first round of the French Open 2010 in Roland Garros, France was sizzling hot. Not just because of the weather and the exciting tennis matches, but also because of Venus Williams’ disturbing outfit during her game.

    Venus Williams won her first game with ease against Patty Schnyder of Switzerland with scores of 6-3, 6-3. But it was not her good performance that drew the most attention. She was wearing a lacy, lack overlay giving it the illusion of being see-through, and bright red trim on the bodice.

    After the game, her outfit generated more conversation than her play. The seven-time Grand Slam champion’s outfit was more like a lingerie than a tennis outfit.

    This is not the first time for Venus Williams to wear a weird tennis outfit. She wore a similar can-can style outfit earlier this year in Miami and a skimpy green uniform at the Australian Open in January.

    Is the tennis star’s on-court apparel too revealing? Do you think it’s appropriate for tennis matches? Let us know what you think.

    Related posts:

    1. French Open 2010: Schedule and Live Stream
    2. Henin, Nadal Back To Regain Lost Glory
    3. The Champions League 2010 final will bring to Madrid 50 million Euro

  • Fiat faz concurso para escolher o logotipo do 500 americano


    A divisão norte-americana da Fiat iniciou através do Facebook uma pesquisa para que os membros escolham o novo logotipo do 500, para ser vendido nos EUA. Entre as opções, vemos logos simples como o modelo de 1991, ou a mistura de letras e números.

    A idéia surgiu devido ao fato de haver muita confusão por parte do público americano ao se pronunciar o nome do carro, pois a pronúncia correta do nome é “cinquecento“, e muitas pessoas dizem “five hundred“, ou até mesmo “Fiat quinhentos” aqui no Brasil.

    Enquanto isso, as vendas do Cinquecento continuam ocorrendo normalmente no mercado norte-americano. Quais dos logos vocês acham mais interessante para memorizar o nome correto do carro?

    Via | Autoblog.it


  • Kindle application pre-installed on Asus laptops and netbooks


    Notebook and netbook maker Asus is pre-installing the Amazon Kindle for PC application, allowing Asus owners to access Amazon’s selection of e-books without having to suffer through the pain of software installation on their own time. Not much more to say about this, except that it further cements Amazon’s hegemony in the e-book market. How will Barnes and Noble respond, I wonder?

    Via I4U.