December 31, 2011

Eric Schmidt: ‘Google tablet coming within six months’

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Google’s Executive Chairman is good value for a headline-grabbing quote. Sitting down with Italian newspaper Corriere della Sera at the opening of the company’s new offices on the former NABISCO bakery, he said “in the next six months we plan to market a tablet of the highest quality.” Take the translation with a pinch of salt, but he either means the company will be launching a “marketing” push with all of its hardware partners, or we’ll be seeing Google-branded tablets like the Nexus range of phones by next Summer.

Eric Schmidt: ‘Google tablet coming within six months’ originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 19 Dec 2011 11:36:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Motorola MotoActv

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Marathon runners value their data, whether they call them “data” or not. They store maps, perhaps only mentally, but often also on websites like MapMyRun or with apps like RunKeeper. Calculations are used to compute pace. Training schedules factor in intensity, duration, and recovery periods. Running, and really any long-term commitment to physical activity, takes math and analysis.

What I like most about a little fitness gadget from Motorola called MotoActv ($249.99 for 8GB, direct) is its ability to output wonderful data. MotoActv is a touch-screen-based, GPS-enabled device and music player that correlates data beautifully. If you turn on music while working out, MotoActv can later plot your physical activity on a chart to show how your miles-per-minute ratio or strides per minute changed, by song, while running, jogging, walking, cycling, or using an elliptical machine. If you exercise outdoors and use the GPS feature, it syncs that same data to a map, which you can mouse over in a web application to see where you were geographically at different points in the graph.

Design and What’s Included
Motorola’s small black and red square gadget (1.75 by 1.75 by 0.25 inches?HWD) costs a small fortune?the 16GB version is $299.99. A same-capacity iPod nano?costs half that and includes an accelerometer and clock that can capture a lot of the same data, like distance and pace. When hooked into the Nike+ service and used in conjunction with compatible gym equipment, the iPod nano is very nearly the same product for much less. And it’s slightly more compact and fashionable.

MotoActv’s touch screen is much smaller than the plastic device itself, a little more than 1.5 inches wide by 1 inch tall.?The default screen on the bright display shows the date, time, steps taken (when working out), and number of calories you’ll burn in a day, which is your baseline calorie use according to height, weight, age, and sex, plus burned calories according to exercise. Scrolling through the screens with left-right finger swipes brings up menus for settings, workouts, music, and notifications. Within each of those options, additional menus and choices appear. For example, the workouts page lets you see information about the most recent exercise activities you completed and start a new workout.

MotoActv comes with very comfortable and flexible headphones, a USB cord and outlet adapter, and not much else. Accessories sold separately that came with my kit to test the device included an arm band ($29.99) and clip ($19.99), which I can’t imagine not having. If you’re moving around, they are essential to using MotoActv. I also got a stiff plastic watch band ($29.99)?the official description being “sports wrist strap”?which seemed too uncomfortable to actually wear.

Set Up
Downloading the free app for my computers (both Mac and PC) was equally simple and quick. The final two pieces of the puzzle were establishing a Web account with the standard username and password requirements, and customizing my profile to account for my height, weight, age, and sex to get more accurate estimations of calories expended during physical activity.

MotoActv lets you select a few more options, though it’s tough to tell what auto reminders and such you’re agreeing to or dismissing based on the textual descriptions. Later, when actually working out with the device, these options become more clear, and of course you can change them after the fact.

Loading music onto the device took nothing more than connecting it to my computer with the USB cord. iTunes was recognized as my default music playing software, which made it easy to choose playlists when prompted. MotoActv is compatible with all music files types, such as MP3, AAC, and really anything that works in iTunes.?Computers recognize MotoActv as a mass storage device, which means you can also drag and drop files onto it.?The music player also includes access to FM radio.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/sd0OwPfX_tQ/0,2817,2397538,00.asp

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NFL renews TV deals with CBS, Fox, NBC for nine more years, money reportedly involved

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Yeah, the NFL’s really great and everything, but you know what would make it even greater? More. Money. Fortunately for Roger Goodell & Co., that’s exactly what the league is due to receive, thanks to a slate of TV deals signed last week. The agreements, set to go into effect at the end of the 2013 season, effectively renew the NFL’s current agreements with CBS, Fox and NBC, extending the league’s TV contracts for a “record-setting” nine extra years. Not surprisingly, the deals will also funnel some extra pocket change through the NFL’s coffers — which will of course be coming from you, if you’re subscribing to cable or satellite TV. Currently, the three networks pay a combined $1.94 billion in annual rights fees, but according to the LA Times, the league will now receive an average of $3.1 billion per year, as stipulated under its renewed agreements. In a statement, Commissioner Goodell said the deals underscore his league’s “unique commitment to broadcast television,” with CBS Chief Executive Leslie Moonves adding that his network will benefit from the NFL’s “terrific, exciting programming,” and from the consistently high ratings that “no other franchise delivers.” The agreements, which come just a few months after the NFL inked a comparatively lucrative deal with ESPN, will also allow for the league to shift games between CBS and Fox, in order to bring “regional games to wider audiences.” Each network, moreover, will air three Super Bowls over the course of the nine-year contract, continuing the rotation currently in place. Tebow past the break for the full PR.

Continue reading NFL renews TV deals with CBS, Fox, NBC for nine more years, money reportedly involved

NFL renews TV deals with CBS, Fox, NBC for nine more years, money reportedly involved originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 19 Dec 2011 12:47:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Democrats complain bitterly about GOP opposition to tax break bill (Washington Bureau)

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National Zoo gets $4.5 million for panda breeding (AP)

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WASHINGTON ? The National Zoo announced a $4.5 million gift Monday to fund its giant panda reproduction program for five more years.

Philanthropist David M. Rubenstein visited the pandas with China’s ambassador to the United States to announce the gift. Rubenstein is a co-founder and managing director of the Washington-based private equity firm The Carlyle Group. He is also on the board of regents at the Smithsonian Institution, which includes the zoo.

“There are probably 10 million species on the face of the earth, and I doubt that any one of those species is more popular and more beloved than the giant panda,” Rubenstein said at a news conference by the zoo’s giant panda yard. He said the money is a holiday gift to the people of Washington and to the country because pandas make people happy.

“Hopefully this will result in more pandas being born here,” he said.

The zoo said it will name the giant panda habitat after Rubenstein. The gift will also fund fellowships for biologists in the United States and China to work to save pandas, which are an endangered species.

With the funding commitment, the zoo can proceed with a five-year plan established with Chinese wildlife officials to try to produce another cub after years of trouble. Washington’s pandas have produced only one cub, Tai Shan, who was sent to China to begin breeding.

The zoo said male panda Tian Tian has been showing early signs of breeding behavior. But the zoo is securing frozen semen from a now-dead panda at the San Diego zoo to use as a backup next year. The zoo is also making changes to the panda habitat, such as eliminating all artificial light at night and closing the indoor panda exhibit to the public by 4:30 p.m. each day to encourage natural breeding cycles that have come abnormally early for female panda Mei Xiang in years past.

David Wildt, a head reproductive scientist at the Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute, said chances of Mei Xiang having another cub may be slim because there have been five years of failed attempts to breed the panda couple. He said Chinese scientists wanted to try one more time before switching out one or both of the Washington pandas for new animals from China.

In January, the Smithsonian signed a new five-year, $2.5 million agreement with China to keep the popular pandas in Washington. Pandas date back nearly 40 years at the zoo. An earlier panda pair arrived in 1972 as a gift from China after President Richard Nixon’s historic visit.

The donation is unusual for Rubenstein, who has made large gifts to cultural institutions including museums and the Kennedy Center. A spokesman said Rubenstein travels often to China for business investments in industries ranging from fishing and forestry to insurance. Rubenstein also serves on the board of Tsinghua University in China.

Chinese Ambassador Zhang Yesui visited the zoo Monday and thanked Rubenstein for helping to continue research on panda conservation. He said he greeted Mei Xiang and Tian Tian as well.

“I’m very happy to see they’re in good shape and they were enjoying their breakfast,” he said. “I actually sent my Christmas and New Year’s greetings to them, and I also told them that their son Tai Shan is doing very well in Sichuan, China.”

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/us/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111219/ap_on_re_us/us_national_zoo_pandas

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Romney Defends Money Photo (Taegan Goddard’s Political Wire)

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FBI: Violent and property crime down in early 2011 (Providence Journal)

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Summary Box: Spain borrowing costs fall (AP)

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INVESTOR INTEREST: Spain saw its borrowing costs plummet in a debt auction, indicating renewed market confidence in its ability to handle its debt. Investors demanded an interest rate of only 1.74 percent to lend the government 3-month money, down sharply from 5.1 percent in the last such auction on Nov. 22.

TAKING CARE OF BUSINESS: Short-term credit conditions have eased significantly in recent weeks, helped by the European Central Bank’s offer of ultra-cheap loans to the financial sector as well as the promise by eurozone governments to accept tighter controls on their budgets.

MORE CUTS COMING: Spain has already made sharp cuts to its national spending to convince bond investors it will remain solvent despite the turmoil in European financial markets ? and more austerity moves are in the works.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/eurobiz/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111220/ap_on_bi_ge/eu_spain_financial_crisis_summary_box

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December 30, 2011

Finally, some bipartisanship ? oops, nevermind (AP)

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WASHINGTON ? Sen. Mitch McConnell does not high-five easily or often. But a deal to keep American workers’ taxes from rising on Jan. 1 was reason enough for the coolest negotiator in the Senate to lift a hand on camera and slap ? or pat ? some skin.

His celebration was premature.

Furious House Republicans said McConnell’s deal for a two-month extension of payroll tax cuts is 10 months too few. They are prepared to let everyone’s Social Security taxes rise an average $20 a week for a while if that’s what it takes to extend the cut for a year. And they are intent on dragging the vacationing Senate back to Washington to do it their way.

“I don’t care about the political implications,” Rep. Tom Reed, R-N.Y., said Monday.

Senate Republicans do, especially those up for re-election at a time when Americans are more apt to trust car salesmen than Congress.

“The House Republicans’ plan to scuttle the deal to help middle-class families is irresponsible and wrong,” said one, Sen. Scott Brown, R-Mass.

It was at least the third time in a year dominated by partisan standoffs that House conservatives, led by a nearly 90-member freshman class, brought GOP leaders up short on their plans to compromise. The first was last spring when they forced GOP leaders to rewrite spending bills to deepen federal spending cuts. Then there were objections in the summer over raising the nation’s debt limit, which brought the government to the brink of a first-ever default.

Now, the question of compromise is keeping a tax cut ? the stuff of Republican dogma ? hanging on the eve of the presidential and congressional election year.

At stake are Social Security payroll taxes paid by 160 million workers. President Barack Obama and the last Congress agreed to cut them by 2 percentage points a year ago, but only for a year. On Jan. 1, they go back up to 6.2 percent if Congress doesn’t act. Also, people without jobs for more than six months start losing benefits and doctors’ Medicare fees get cut by 27 percent.

House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, derided what he said was yet another instance of the Senate “kicking the can down the road” with only a two-month renewal of the status quo. Doing it for an entire year would mean more certainty “for job creators and others,” he said.

House Republicans huddled late into the night and planned to instead call Tuesday for formal negotiations with the Senate, rejecting the two-month version.

The dustup marked an unusual disconnect between Boehner and McConnell. Even before the 2010 elections made Boehner speaker, he and McConnell coordinated closely on tactics. This year, they’ve stayed in close contact, either by phone or by shuttling quietly between their office suites at the Capitol, their aides say.

Kentucky’s McConnell is no shrinking violet when it comes to partisan brinksmanship.

He’s vowed, for example, to use his perch as the Senate’s top Republican to deny Obama a second term. He considers cartoons mocking his hardcore negotiating style badges of honor, and posts them on his office wall. But even McConnell spoke up Saturday in favor of compromise on the payroll tax, lest another standoff drop Congress’ approval ratings the few points they have left to fall.

“In order to achieve something around here, we have to compromise,” he intoned just before the Senate’s vote Saturday on the two-month tax cut extension. “That is, in fact, what we have done. We have crafted a bill not designed to fail but designed to pass.”

It passed overwhelmingly, 89-10, and senators immediately bolted for a month-long recess, a year of sniping and ugliness finished at last ? or so they thought.

House Republicans immediately balked and insisted on their one-year version, six times more expensive and paid for in part by raising Medicare premiums for people whose incomes exceed $80,000 a year. Senate Democratic leader Harry Reid made clear he had no intention of calling the Senate back into session to vote on that or any other bill.

Fine, the House freshmen said. A two-month deal, they suggested, was not worth having because it did not afford business owners and others enough time to plan. They were outraged at the Senate ? including 39 of its 47 Republicans ? for voting for a two-month extension.

“The Senate just needs to do its job,” said Rep. Ann Marie Buerkle, R-N.Y. “What they sent us over was an insult to the American people.”

“That vote (in the Senate) had a lot more to do with getting out of Washington and going back home and spending time with our loved ones,” said Rep. Steve Womack, R-Ark.

So it’s all or nothing? House Republicans are prepared to let taxes rise on Jan. 1?

“We didn’t say it’s all or nothing,” Womack said.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/topstories/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111220/ap_on_go_co/us_congress_dysfunction_junction

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US stocks headed for higher open (AP)

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NEW YORK ? U.S. stocks are poised to rise Tuesday as encouraging signs from Europe’s largest economy gave some relief from overhanging fears of the eurozone’s troubles and a report showed that a surge in apartment construction gave builders more work last month.

German business confidence rose unexpectedly in December, while German consumers were resilient in the face of rising economic risks and the ongoing debt crisis.

“The main support factor here continues to be the robust labor market coupled with a solid upward trend in effective wages,” UniCredit Research economist Alexander Koch said in a note to clients Tuesday.

GfK, the German research institute that carried out the consumer confidence study, warned that while economic expectations are “defying the rising fears of recession,” that might change as the debt crisis becomes an increasing problem for Germany’s exports.

The Commerce Department said builders broke ground on a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 685,000 homes last month, a 9.3 percent jump from October. That’s the highest level since April 2010. Still, that’s far below the 1.2 million homes that economists say would be built each year in a healthy housing market.

Building permits, a gauge of future construction, rose by 5.7 percent. The increase was spurred by more apartment permits.

A debt auction in Spain was also encouraging for investors. Borrowing costs for 3- and 6-month notes fell sharply amid strong demand, indicating market confidence in the country’s ability to handle its debt is recovering.

Dow Jones industrial average futures are rising 130, or 1.1 percent, to 11,833, while Standard & Poor’s 500 index futures are climbing 15.80, or 1.3 percent, to 1214.80. Nasdaq futures are rising 1.2 percent, or 26.25, to 2239. European markets advanced amid thin holiday season trading.

The reassuring macroeconomic news reinforced improving market sentiment as the leadership succession in North Korea appeared to be progressing. North Korean state media have given clear indications that Kim Jong Un will succeed his father, late dictator Kim Jong Il, who died of a massive heart attack on Saturday.

The possibility of a power struggle in a country pursuing nuclear weapons and known for its secrecy and unpredictability have heightened tensions in the region and unsettled markets on Monday.

But at midday Tuesday, Germany’s DAX rose 1 percent to 5,723 while France’s CAC 40 index gained 1 percent to 3,005. The FTSE 100 index of leading British companies was steady at 5,362.50.

Markets shrugged off news after trading closed Monday that European Union finance ministers raised only three-quarters of the euro200 billion ($261 billion) that they wanted to provide the International Monetary Fund to help heavily indebted nations avoid default.

Countries that use the euro are hoping the extra IMF loans ? meant to be channeled into a special fund that will invest alongside Europe’s own bailout fund ? will encourage non-European countries to provide support for Europe via the IMF.

The failure to come up with the full amount that had been indicated at a summit of EU leaders just 10 days ago signals further rifts within the 27-country EU. At the summit, the 17 eurozone countries also agreed to set up a new treaty to create tighter fiscal rules for the currency union, which has been rocked by a debt crisis for the past two years.

In Asia, South Korea’s Kospi led regional gains, rising 0.9 percent to close at 1,793.06 a day after tumbling 3.4 percent on news of Kim’s death.

In currencies, the euro strengthened to $1.3080 from $1.3017 late Monday in New York. The dollar was stable against the Japanese yen.

Benchmark oil for January delivery was up $1.28 at $95.16 a barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The contract rose 35 cents to settle at $93.88 per barrel on Monday.

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Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/stocks/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111220/ap_on_bi_st_ma_re/wall_street

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