Apr 28 2009

Specter condemned Jim Jeffords' party switch in 2001 – Los Angeles Times


New York Times

Specter condemned Jim Jeffords' party switch in 2001
Los Angeles Times
When the Vermont Republican became an independent, Specter lost a committee chairmanship in the Senate's resulting power shift.
Video: Senator Arlen Specter on Switching Parties C-SPAN
100 days – and shock defection – boosts Obama's grip on power Times Online
CNN – Reuters – FOXNews – The Associated Press
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Apr 28 2009

Former Mulroney aide says he sought to clarify Schreiber deal – CBC.ca


CBC.ca

Former Mulroney aide says he sought to clarify Schreiber deal
CBC.ca
A former advisor to Brian Mulroney said he took it upon himself to craft a memo describing the business relationship between the former prime minister and Karlheinz Schreiber to settle any ambiguity over their dealings – even though the nature of their
Doucet says he tried to 'clarify' Mulroney-Schreiber deal CJAD
Doucet memo mentions Airbus TheChronicleHerald.ca
Globe and Mail – Toronto Star – Edmonton Sun – Ottawa Citizen
all 112 news articles  Langue : Français
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Apr 28 2009

Linux Boxee users get Hulu relief

The Linux version of Boxee’s eponymously-named multimedia platform has finally been updated to include several new features introduced into the OS X and Windows versions over the past few months. Key additions include an “App Box” and restored support for Hulu.

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Apr 28 2009

Phone lets you kiss and make up

Who else but a Frenchman would decide that a phone needs the ability to send kisses?

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Apr 28 2009

Top 10 Coolest Touch Screen Applications

Remember when the iPhone came out? Cool huh? Well, you haven’t seen anything. Here is the top 10 of the craziest, funniest and most innovative touch screens applications in the industry today.

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Apr 28 2009

OIN Posts Details of Microsoft’s Anti-Tom Tom Patents

number6x writes “LinuxDevices.com is reporting that the Open Invention Network has posted the details of three of the eight patents used by Microsoft in the Tom Tom suit (which Tom Tom settled last month), asking the community for prior art. These patents cover aspects of the FAT file system. You can find them on Post-Issue.org — see numbers 5579517, 5758352, and 6256642. OIN CEO Keith Bergelt believes that these three patents are of tenuous validity and will probably not survive a review. Bergelt believes that there’s a good chance that the USPTO may well invalidate them before the end of the year.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


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Apr 28 2009

Apple May Bring a Non-iPhone To Verizon Wireless

The Narrative Fallacy writes “According to BusinessWeek, Verizon Wireless is in talks with Apple to distribute two new iPhone-like devices that are not iPhones. (Apple has created prototypes.) AT&T’s contract with Apple, which has not been made public, is believed to cover all models of the iPhone, but only the iPhone. So if Apple builds something that isn’t an iPhone — and perhaps doesn’t even make cellular calls — they won’t be violating their exclusivity contract with AT&T, which runs through at least 2010. One device is a smaller, less expensive calling device described by a person who has seen it as an ‘iPhone lite.’ The other is a media pad, said to be smaller than a Kindle but with a bigger screen, that would let users listen to music, view photos, watch high-definition videos, and make calls over a Wi-Fi connection. (And read books?) Apple could use the prospect of an iPhone-esque device as leverage to prevent Verizon Wireless from introducing the Palm Pre, or at least to delay its introduction on Verizon’s network. ‘The media pad category might go to Verizon,’ said one person who has seen the device. ‘We are talking about a device where people will say, “Damn, why didn’t we do this?” Apple is probably going to define the damn category.'” Reader stevegee58 writes with word that Verizon may be playing both ends against the middle. Marketwatch reports that Microsoft and Verizon are in talks to develop a touch-screen mobile phone that would run on Windows Mobile.

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Apr 28 2009

Should the US Go Offensive In Cyberwarfare?

The NYTimes has a piece analyzing the policy discussions in the US around the question of what should be the proper stance towards offensive cyberwarfare. This is a question that the Bush administration wrestled with, before deciding that the outgoing president didn’t have the political capital left to grapple with it. The article notes two instances in which President Bush approved the use of offensive cyberattacks; but these were exceptions, and the formation of a general policy was left to the Obama administration. “Senior Pentagon and military officials also express deep concern that the laws and understanding of armed conflict have not kept current with the challenges of offensive cyberwarfare. Over the decades, a number of limits on action have been accepted — if not always practiced. One is the prohibition against assassinating government leaders. Another is avoiding attacks aimed at civilians. Yet in the cyberworld, where the most vulnerable targets are civilian, there are no such rules or understandings. If a military base is attacked, would it be a proportional, legitimate response to bring down the attacker’s power grid if that would also shut down its hospital systems, its air traffic control system, or its banking system?”

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Apr 28 2009

A $99 Graphics Card Might Be All You Need

Vigile writes “With the release of AMD’s latest budget graphics card, the Radeon HD 4770, the GPU giant is bringing a lot of technology to the table. The card sports the world’s first 40nm GPU (beating out CPUs to a new process technology for the first time), GDDR5 memory, and 640 stream processors, all for under 0. What is even more interesting is that as PC gaming has evolved it appears that a graphics card is all you really need to play the latest PC titles — as long as you are comfortable with a resolution of 1920×1200 or below. Since so few PC gamers have screens larger than that, could the world of high-end PC graphics simply go away?”

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Apr 28 2009

Senator Arlen Specter Becomes a Democrat

Akido37 was one of many readers letting us know that US Sen. Arlen Specter has changed parties to become a Democrat. This gives the Democrats 59 seats in the Senate, and 60 if and when Al Franken gets seated from Minnesota. However, Specter said in his announcement that he will not be an automatic 60th vote for breaking Republican filibusters. While the senator’s move seems to have surprised many Republicans, it is understandable to moderate Republican Sen. Olympia Snowe of Maine, who said, “You haven’t certainly heard warm encouraging words of how they [Republicans] view moderates. Either you are with us or against us.” Specter noted that in his home state of Pennsylvania, 200,000 formerly Republican voters switched party allegiance last year.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


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