By Zack Adams, RP Staff, on Fri Jun 22, 2012 at 3:00 PM ET The Politics of Tech
In the biggest tech news in quite a while Microsoft has announced their upcoming foray into the tablet market with the Surface. [The Verge]
“Department Of Justice Realizes That Comcast & Time Warner Are Trying To Prop Up Cable By Holding Back Hulu & Netflix” Yeah, I think this has gone on about long enough. We can start taking it seriously now. [TechDirt]
Oracle is getting exactly ziltch from all those patent claims they used against them. A swing and a miss. [Examiner]
Google is reporting an “alarming” rise in requests by governments to censor political content. Here’s hoping they stay strong in their anti-censorship stance. [Guardian]
Here’s an interesting and disturbing piece of news: Making a call using Skype or Google Voice in Ethiopia could get you a 15 year prison sentence. [Venture Beat]
This is just cool – check out the lightshow created during a Coldplay concert by LED lit wristbands. [Mashable]
By Chris Schulz, RP Staff, on Fri Jun 22, 2012 at 1:30 PM ET There are mixed messages about the what you should do concerning the level of pesticides in fruits and vegetables. [npr.org]
New data on the Higgs Boson Particle could be revealed in early July. Physicists are working to interpret new data right now. [nytimes.com]
Some interesting pictures of a sardine run off of South Africa. This is a buffet opportunity for many animals. [grindtv.com]
By Zack Adams, RP Staff, on Thu Jun 21, 2012 at 1:30 PM ET The Politics of Laughter
Quack Quack [LoadingArtist]
Music humor [picture]
This one cracks me up. [picture]
OK Dad, so the pool is hot lava and I have to get across. You watchin’? [gif]
C4!C4!C4! [picture]
By Patrick Derocher, on Wed Jun 20, 2012 at 3:00 PM ET Governor Andrew Cuomo is once again coming to blows with New York’s union leaders over proposed education reforms.
With a teacher evaluation plan, New York Governor Andrew Cuomo finds himself once again at odds with some of the same unions that helped get him elected two years ago. The governor is facing off with Democrats in the state legislature over a provision that would allow parents to see their children’s teachers’ evaluations, including the teacher’s name. Names, however, would be withheld on the publicly available evaluation database. If the governor and legislature don’t come to an agreement by the time an evaluation system is agreed upon (which may not be any day soon), then all information will be visible in the state databases. The only person pushing for that setup? Mayor Michael Bloomberg. [NY Daily News]
Here is some interesting insight into the state of Florida’s Republican Party. The subject of the piece is former Pinellas County Sheriff Everett Rice, who is running for his old job in the large, politically moderate, suburban Tampa county. Rather than running on his record, Rice has embraced some of the furthest right of the far right wing, questioning President Obama’s citizenship, declaring ObamaCare a socialist plot, and entertaining the notion of Agenda 21 as a move toward World Government. All this for a sheriff’s seat. [Tampa Bay Times]
The Virginia GOP finds itself in an interesting position, as evidenced by its underwhelming convention in Richmond last week. To be sure, it got the business of the convention done, but without any of the usual pageantry such events normally entail – none of the state’s highest-profile Republicans, including Governor Bob McDonnell and House Majority Leader Eric Cantor, was in attendance. One interesting piece of news came out of the meeting: Next year’s gubernatorial nominee will be selected at convention, a maneuver that places firebrand Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli at an advantage over Lieutenant Governor Bill Bolling. [Washington Times]
A California Assemblyman has found a novel way of fundraising in an era of austerity – for the low price of $1,000, he will shine your shoes. Das Williams, a Santa Barbara Democrat in his first term, is hosting a 38th birthday fundraiser at Russo’s Shoe Repair, across the street from the California State Capitol. Tickets start at $1,000 and go for as much as $3,900, the state limit for a general election campaign, but Williams has said he will let invitees attend for less. [Sacramento Bee]
By Kristen Hamilton, RP Staff, on Wed Jun 20, 2012 at 10:00 AM ET
Top Shop goes green! [sheFinds]
Once upon a time, Apple made clothing. Take a drip down memory lane and relive the “glorious” fashion created by the technology giant: [Racked]
According to a recent study, shoes speak louder than words. Didn’t you know? [Fashionista]
Kim Kardashian finally makes her way onto Vogue – Vogue Italia, that is. Check out her interview here: [Vogue]
By Zack Adams, RP Staff, on Thu Jun 14, 2012 at 3:00 PM ET
“In Less Than 1 Year Verizon Data Goes from $30/Unlimited to $50/1GB” [Public Knowledge]
Here are the winners and losers from Apple’s 2012 Worldwide Developers Conference. [MSNBC]
After the announcement of the new Macbook Pro it has been named “the least repairable laptop [ever].” [ifixit]
“US judge says America’s refusal to return Megaupload users’ data is ‘outrageous'” [stuff.co.nz]
We going to start seeing more and more of these: The Top 10 Failed Attempts by the Government to Control the Internet. [Activist Post]
By Zack Adams, RP Staff, on Thu Jun 14, 2012 at 1:30 PM ET
Watch out Rex Grossman. RGIII is reportedly picking up the Redskins’ offense faster than expected. [PFT]
Is the Left Tackle position starting to decrease in importance? Faster passing attacks and more mobile quarterbacks could make it so. [Yahoo!]
After being released by the Patriots Chad Ochocinco has signed with the Dolphins. [PFT]
What is going on here? [picture]
Commissioner Roger Goodell attempts to quell a growing DUI issue in the league. [CBS Sports]
Pacman Jones will speak at the Rookie Symposium. [Twitter]
By Zack Adams, RP Staff, on Wed Jun 13, 2012 at 3:00 PM ET
Possibly the best way to begin a book. [picture]
Monolith [picture]
Laundry Day [comic]
Homemade Father’s Day card [picture]
Beautiful wedding photo [picture]
Kitty Litter [comic]
By Patrick Derocher, on Tue Jun 12, 2012 at 12:30 PM ET Florida has run afoul of the US DoJ for at least the second time under governor Rick Scott, this time for the purgation of some 100,000 Floridians from voting rolls.
Florida finds itself in hot water with the US Justice Department yet again after purging some 100,000 names from its voting rolls. Although states re allowed to remove ineligible voters from the roll, DoJ has said that Florida did not comply with legal standards, citing “critical imperfections, which lead to errors that harm and confuse eligible voters.” Moreover, some are arguing that the purge targeted minorities and other Democratic-leaning voters ahead of what is sure to be a very tight presidential race in Florida this November. [CNN]
It’s not just Wisconsin. California is entertaining the possibility of a regulation that would ban corporations and labor unions from contributing directly to campaigns. Additionally, it would stop paycheck reductions from being used for political purposes. Unions, who use paycheck deductions to fund the majority of their political endeavors, would see their influence slashed dramatically, and all this on the heels of the Wisconsin recall vote that was seen by many as an affirmation of unions’ diminishing power. [Sacramento Bee]
Illinois politicians’ struggles with the law are well known. It is, after all, the state with not one but two former governors in jail. What is less well known is the bipartisan pair of State Representatives who have been sitting on ethics panels together. After presiding over the investigation into former governor Rod Blagojevich, Barbara Flynn Currie, a Chicago Democrat, and Jim Durkin, a Republican from suburban Cook County, will investigate ethics charges being brought against Derrick Smith, also a Chicago Democrat. [State Register-Journal]
Rick Perry may not even belong in Texas at this point. The governor and former Presidential candidate was booed at the state convention last week after declaring his support for Lieutenant Governor David Dewhurst, who is running for US Senate in a run-off with Tea Party favorite Ted Cruz. [CBS Houston]
By Chris Schulz, RP Staff, on Fri Jun 8, 2012 at 1:30 PM ET If you are tired are living on this planet then you will shortly be able to begin the application process to be one of the first humans to live on Mars. [yahoo.com]
The infamous Exxon Valdez is causing controversy again as it is about to be dismantled for scrap. [latimes.com]
A look at the effort put forth to research Hawaiian songbirds. [nytimes.com]
Hopefully you got a look at Venus earlier this week. These astronomical movements are still teaching us much about the universe. [npr.org]
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