You are here: Ads News »

Tag : news

Newt Gingrich Defends Michael Steele, Warns Against ‘Inside-the-Party Cannibalism’

Filed under: The Capitolist GOP Chairman Michael Steele began the week by candidly telling Sean Hannity that, while Republicans will certainly pick up seats in the House in 2010, they won’t win enough to close the Democrats’ massive 78-seat advantage. That golden nugget squarely fit the Washington definition of a gaffe, namely: telling the obvious truth that his allies don’t want to hear. Steele’s statement drew the unimaginable — a public rebuke from top Republicans, saying of course they can win enough seats to take back the House. Behind the scenes, Republican aides seethed at the chairman’s tin ear, and accused Steele of depleting the RNC’s coffers going into the midterm elections. But rather than backing down, Steele pushed back against his critics in a startling interview with ABC News , scheduled to air at noon Friday. In it, Steele says people taking shots at him should “get a life. That’s old Washington, that’s old ways, and I don’t represent that, and that kills them.” He added, ‘I’ve had enough of it. If you don’t want me in the job, fire me. But until then, shut up. Get with the program or get out of the way.” Although inside-the-beltway Republicans would love to fire him, Newt Gingrich came to Steele’s defense yesterday during a forum at the Atlanta Commerce Club. Gingrich said he’s a fan of Steele, who is “pretty close to what we need.” He also warned his fellow Republicans of “inside-the-party cannibalism.” Jim Galloway of the Atlanta Journal-Constitution has the story of Gingrich’s remarks at the club, including his answer to a question about Steele: “Michael Steele makes a number of old-time Republicans very nervous. He was the [GOP] chairman of a blue state, Maryland. He was the lieutenant governor of that state. “He comes out of a very different background — he spent six years at seminary. He is an African-American. He is a physically big guy who’s noisy, and I think there are a number of Republicans who wish they could just find a good, boring, old-time Republican to be in that job so he wouldn’t make them nervous. “On the other hand, I think he’s pretty close to what we need. He’s different, he’s gutsy, his book is tough, his book is honest. His book’s going to make a number of Republicans mad, because it says we deserved to lose in ‘06 and ‘08, and we better learn some lessons from it. “We have a lot of Republicans who don’t want to learn, don’t want to change, and don’t want to be told it was our fault. They’d like to think it was somebody else’s fault. I’m a fan of Steele. I think he is learning, I think he is smart, and I think he ultimately will be a very important part of where we’re going. “I think people ought to relax. There’s a group who are so mad at him, that they are feeding the news media and trying to start a fight over Steele. Steele is the chairman. The purpose of the Republican National Committee is to create a majority. They’ve done a very good job with finances. He’s raised a lot of money. We won the governorship of Virginia, we won the governorship of New Jersey. That strikes me as a pretty good starting year for him.”

Portugal hit by Ricardinho setback

 Portugal hit by Ricardinho setbackuefa.com/multimediafiles/photo/competitions/futsal/94/11/95/941195_small.jpg" />

Portugal’s preparations for the forthcoming UEFA European Futsal Championship in Hungary have suffered a significant blow with the news that Ricardinho has been ruled out of the finals in Hungary by a hip injury.

Originally posted here:
Portugal hit by Ricardinho setback

Live from Palm’s CES 2010 press event

96e7f555dfalm1dt.jpg 400x266 Live from Palms CES 2010 press event

We’re in our seats and the show is about to start… keep reading on for all the news! Continue reading Live from Palm’s CES 2010 press event Live from Palm’s CES 2010 press event originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 07 Jan 2010 13:50:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

Colorado’s Democratic Governor Bows Out to ‘Take Care of My Family’

bill ritter Colorados Democratic Governor Bows Out to Take Care of My Family

DENVER — “I’ve decided not to run for re-election for the sake of my family.” It’s a phrase spoken so often it’s clich

Samsung flirts coyly with 7-inch AMOLED Digital Photo Frame

5b2ecbcb25g9za8.jpg 400x266 Samsung flirts coyly with 7 inch AMOLED Digital Photo Frame

We know exactly what you were thinking when you first heard the news that Kodak was selling its OLED business to LG: 1) wait, Kodak had an OLED business, and b) who the hell will I buy my $1,000 OLED digital photo frame from now? The latter part of this conundrum has just been answered by Samsung who will unveil its 700Z Digital Photo Frame here at CES. Sammy’s offering boasts a 7-inch AMOLED display, 4GB of internal memory, Bluetooth with video support. Unfortunately, the frame’s million-to-1 contrast ratio isn’t enough to distract this product model from her dreams of beauty pageant stardom. Samsung flirts coyly with 7-inch AMOLED Digital Photo Frame originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 05 Jan 2010 08:50:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

Why Would Any Non-Psychopath Dance on Deborah Howell’s Grave?

42c7fa0db8ations.jpg 400x266 Why Would Any Non Psychopath Dance on Deborah Howells Grave?

Among the many things I do not understand – the appeal of the Coen brothers *, for instance, and the whole adventure known as mathematics – the impulse to append a “Woohoo, you’re dead!” comment to an online obituary looms large today. Why? Well, since you ask, on Saturday we ran a story about the death of Deborah Howell, a retired newspaperwoman who had a great career and was killed in a traffic accident in New Zealand, where she was on a long-planned vacation with her husband. Last night, I wandered into our comment section, as I often do, to get a sense of who is reading and what they are thinking. Bad move, though, because anger is contagious, and what I found in those comments, in response to Carl Cannon’s nicely-done appreciation of Howell, made me want to spit. There were some lovely tributes, both from folks who had known her and others who had not, but had still been moved to send her family condolences – you know, the way feeling people do. But there were also a shocking number of comments to the effect that since Howell was in the news business, she must have been a lefty, so how fabulous she’d been killed. There was joshing speculation about whether she’d been driving a hybrid, a joke about how liberals walking in lockstep really ought to be more careful, and a couple of cracks about how Republicans were sure to be blamed. “One less of those anti-US types to deal with” said one of several celebratory rejoinders from readers who by their own account had five minutes earlier never even heard of Deborah Howell. We can’t pretend this sort of thing is limited to one or other corner, either; Matt Lewis wrote here about how news of Rush Limbaugh’s chest pains had similarly gladdened some tiny liberal hearts, and our obit of Irving Kristol provoked disquieting comments, too. So, what to make of this? Assuming we are not becoming a nation of psychopaths, are we trading our humanity for a little negative attention? Do people just not think before they type? Or, even if they don’t really mean such meanness, do they not worry that someone who reads it might? Part of the problem, I think, is the way in which outrageous and hateful speech is rewarded here and now: Ann Coulter outdoes herself yet again? Well give that woman a book contract – and can we get her on the Today Show ? Or there’s comedian Wanda Sykes, invited to sit by the president and first lady at the White House Correspondent’s Association, joking about hoping Limbaugh’s kidneys fail. The relatively small differences between Republicans and Democrats – infinitesimal compared to the differences between political parties in other countries – are not only exaggerated but made to seem catastrophic, mostly because demonizing the political other is good for business if you’re a political performance artist or a fund-raiser. Because if the other side is not merely mistaken but a threat to life as we know it, who’s gonna pony up? Howell herself wrote about just the kind of irrational and destructive political rage I’m talking about. As ombudsman for the Washington Post in ‘06, she erroneously wrote that convicted lobbyist Jack Abramoff had donated to both political parties instead of only to Republicans. It was an honest mistake, but readers assumed she could only have written such a thing in the service of conservative ideology: “Nothing in my 50-year career prepared me for the thousands of flaming e-mails I got last week over my last column,” she wrote in response, “e-mails so abusive and many so obscene that part of The Post’s Web site was shut down…I have a tough hide and a few curse words (which I use frequently) are not going to hurt my feelings. But it is profoundly distressing if political discourse has sunk to a level where abusive name-calling and the crudest of sexual language are the norm, where facts have no place in an argument. This unbounded, unreasoning rage is not going to help this newspaper, this country or democracy.” Amen, sister. To readers who think it is their God-given right to throw rocks on our site, under the cowardly cover of anonymity, think again; this is a business, and some modicum of civility is our version of “no shirt, no shoes, no service.” It is also something more, and in our imperfect way, we are trying our best to give all sides their fair shake, and to make this one place where those who might not agree on the issues can at least, we hope, agree not to wish one another harm. And to those who are constantly threatening to take their clicks and go elsewhere when their more pungent, “Pls. die soon” comments are deleted, I say: Promises, promises. This is really not the site for you. *Blood Simple, Fargo and No Country not included.

Brit Hume: Tiger Woods Should ‘Turn to the Christian Faith’

Filed under: Religion , Media , Video On “Fox News Sunday” yesterday, Fox anchor Brit Hume suggested that Tiger Woods should trade his Buddhist faith for Christianity if he wants to make a personal comback. When host Chris Wallace asked the show’s roundtable to predict the biggest sports story of 2010, Hume said: “Tiger Woods will recover as a golfer. Whether he can recover as a person I think is a very open question, and it’s a tragic situation for him. I think he’s lost his family, it’s not clear to me if he’ll be able to have a relationship with his children, but the Tiger Woods that emerges once the news value dies out of this scandal — the extent to which he can recover — seems to me to depend on his faith. He’s said to be a Buddhist; I don’t think that faith offers the kind of forgiveness and redemption that is offered by the Christian faith. So my message to Tiger would be, ‘Tiger, turn to the Christian faith and you can make a total recovery and be a great example to the world.’” After a moment of awkward silence, fellow panelist Bill Kristol quipped, “Well, Brit’s concerned about Tiger’s soul, which is admirable, but I just made a more straightforward sports prediction, which was that he’ll come back and win the Masters.”

The Top 10 Religion/Politics Stories of ‘09: Catholicism at the Fore; Niebuhr’s Reemergence

1f4687e237resize1.jpg1 400x266 The Top 10 Religion/Politics Stories of 09: Catholicism at the Fore; Niebuhrs Reemergence

Filed under: Barack Obama , John Edwards , Religion , Abortion , Health Care , Gay Rights , Terror , Foreign Policy , National Security , Culture , Disputations , Ethics Despite America’s legal wall between church and state, the mixing of faith and politics is all but unavoidable. This past year was typical in the number of major stories with aspects of religion that had powerful public-policy and cultural implications. David Gibson and I, who filter the news stream for faith ‘n’ values items here at Politics Daily , have produced our top 10 list of religion-politics stories for 2009. We make no claim of infallibility, of course. Feel free to weigh in with your opinions in the comments section. But please, let’s be civil out there.

Engadget’s top posts, 2009

940bb8906a2009 3.jpg 400x191 Engadgets top posts, 2009

Wow. Can you believe it? We made it all the way through 2009! We truly had some of the most amazing and exciting coverage ever on Engadget this past 12 months — and we figured it’s time to take a look back at the heaviest hitters from the last 365. This was a big year for us, we got a whole new look , an iPhone app (with more on the way), hired some new staff, got ourselves a show , went on late night TV , and managed to snap up some killer scoops and keep the news rolling (better than ever before, actually — this was by far our heaviest year for traffic). So let’s take a moment to reflect on what caused all the fuss in 2009, and yes, we know this list is Apple heavy. We blame you guys. Top 20 most trafficked posts of 2009 (in order) Phil Schiller keynote live from WWDC 2009 Live from Apple’s ‘It’s only rock and roll’ event Live from Apple’s iPhone OS 3.0 preview event Live from the Macworld 2009 keynote iPhone 3GS review Motorola Droid review Palm Pre: everything you ever wanted to know Exclusive: first Google Phone / Nexus One photos, Android 2.1 on-board HTC Hero review Windows 7 review Palm Pre review Microsoft sucks at Photoshop Microsoft announces availability of Windows 7 Beta and Windows Live Steve Jobs is taking a leave of absence from Apple due to health reasons Video: Sony’s PSP Go leaks out before E3, is obviously a go Motorola Droid first hands-on Windows 7 Beta goes public Modern Warfare 2’s Prestige Edition includes fully functioning night vision goggles Snow Leopard review Live from Palm’s CES press conference And a few other statistics for 2009 (all related to Engadget Classic): $38,204.57 – Retail value of stuff we gave away to readers 12,681 – total number of posts for 2009 1,821 – Number of galleries on Engadget for 2009 454 – Number of hands-on posts 99 – Number of Engadget reviews 66 – number of podcasts 4 – number of Engadget shows Engadget’s top posts, 2009 originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 31 Dec 2009 23:59:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

Three awesome new technologies: Wireless power, dog armor, and beer-fed fish

29ed384d4bnlt001.jpg 400x249 Three awesome new technologies: Wireless power, dog armor, and beer fed fish

Wireless power In the photo you see above, the light bulb held in inventor Marin Soljacic’s hand is powered–via the air–by the black object sitting on the desk. S’right, no wires to the bulb. With two large magnetic coils, he found a way to throw 60 watts across a room, powering a lightbulb. MIT, his employer, quickly patented the technology and encouraged Soljacicto start a company. Soljacic was inspired by his wife’s Nokia cell phone, which would wake him up by beeping when it needed juice. He realized it was silly for something to be sitting so close to an outlet but with no way to access the electricity. The latest iteration of Soljacic’s invention, displayed in Tokyo earlier this year, “was able to power a 1,000-watt klieg light from across the room.” Dog Armor Military dogs can cost up to $50,000, and protective dog gear is both humane and financially prudent. Next year a company called K9 Storm is introducing “the K9 Storm Intruder, a bulletproof dog vest with a wireless camera, speakers and a microphone built in. The handler can see what the dog sees and issue commands through the audio system,” which increases the handler’s range to about 300 yards. Though you may never have heard of them, K9 Storm runs a business worth $5 million annually and has been around since the ’90s; years ago a story made the news whereby a police dog took two .45 rounds in its K9 Storm bulletproof vest, but kept fighting and subdued the shooter with no harm to itself. Pretty bad-ass! Beer-Fed Fish Okay, so the title’s slightly misleading. Here’s the deal: Free raw materials sounds good to manufacturers, and recycling waste products sounds good to environmentalists. Biologist Andrew Logan figured out a way to turn beer sludge (waste-water from beer factories) into high-protein fish food, using microbes. Brewers are only too happy to give Logan their sludge for free–it costs up to $3 million per year to get rid of the stuff otherwise–and the fish farm industry needs something to feed its 65 million tons of fish. It’s win-win, and Logan will probably become rich as a result. via CNN’s Next Little Thing (more…)

Excerpt from:
Three awesome new technologies: Wireless power, dog armor, and beer-fed fish