Here’s What The Nearly $6 Billion Being Spent On The 2012 Elections Can Buy (INFOGRAPHIC)

The Center for Responsive Politics estimates that $5,800,000 will be spent on this year’s elections. That’s equivalent to the salaries of 137,727 public schoolteachers, 1,343,837 employees paying for their health care contributions for a year, and even the cost for the entire population of Texas to go skydiving.

Click on the interactive graphic below to see what else that money can buy:

The Dollars and Senselessness of Political Campaigning [Interactive Infographic]
Interactive Infographic
by MDG Advertising

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Kindle Fire HD named “best-selling product” across Amazon worldwide

This week the folks at Amazon have made it clear that they continue to mean business with their line of Kindle Fire tablets, today calling the Kindle Fire HD the “#1 best-selling product across all of Amazon worldwide.” We’ve had some suspicion rise up in comments and emails regarding Amazon’s press releases regarding their own sales suggestions such as this one, so until we’re certain Amazon actually does specify that the Kindle Fire HD actually literally did sell more units than any other product on the Amazon website, we’ll keep with the quotes. The term “best-selling” could also mean “sold as many as we made” or “did just as well as we expected it to.”

With the Kindle Fire HD, Amazon notes that they retain the crown for bestselling 7-inch tablet, that term once again not specified exactly. In this case though, selling the most of a 7-inch tablet wouldn’t be out of the question for Amazon, as the Kindle Fire line has been doing extremely well over the past year. This press update notes that they plan on continuing this trend with enhancements to the Kindle Fire HD already in consumers’ hands.

Today Amazon says they’ll be pushing a new free update to the Kindle Fire HD, software that will be coming to your device over-the-air. This means it’ll show up on your tablet as a notification and you’ll only have to press “yes” to get it on the device and loaded. This update includes Kindle FreeTime, a feature made specifically for kids.

This Kindle FreeTime allows parents to select the content that a kid can see and lock the tablet with a password. This update should keep the Kindle Fire HD Amazon’s “best-selling product since launch” up until the 8.9-inch tablet is launched. The Kindle Fire HD 8.9 will be shipping on November 20th and will be starting in at $299 USD. Get ready for that one with a lovely read of our first Kindle Fire HD review right now!


Kindle Fire HD named “best-selling product” across Amazon worldwide is written by Chris Burns & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Forgotten Presidential Debate Topics Are Remembered On HuffPost List

huffpost list

Remember when President Barack Obama and Mitt Romney stood on stage at the town hall debate yelling at each other, but neglected to do much yelling about an array of issues that matter to people? Well, this was not entirely their fault, as it turns out. As we head into Monday night’s debate — all foreign policy, all the time — let’s take a few minutes to remember the topics that were neither brought up by the debate moderators nor addressed by the candidates.

one HOUSING: For all the talk about how the economy either downright sucks, kinda sucks or is totally on the mend, there was little mention of the actual victims of the recession — y’know, that whole foreclosure crisis that is the worst since the Great Depression. The housing market is indeed on the rise again, but Obama hasn’t quite been in a place where he can own its recovery — and his Home Affordable Modification Program (HAMP), has been something of a bust. Surprised that Romney didn’t raise the issue or at least tout his own plan to boost the sector? Don’t be. His own plan is “not very new, and it’s not much of a plan.” Plus, he’s saddled with this statement: “Don’t try to stop the foreclosure process. Let it run its course and hit the bottom.” Chances are, both candidates are only too happy the topic never came up.

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Welcome To The Beta: Windows 8 Will Succeed, Despite All The FUD

fud

Microsoft is already screwing it up. Microsoft can’t win. Windows 8 is sunk. Seriously: to read the headlines this last week you’d think Microsoft wasn’t still one of the premier tech manufacturers in the world. While I would agree that it faces a number of challenges, both from Apple and its own OEM partners, Windows 8 will thud into the landscape with more a bang and much less than a whimper.

What we are witnessing, for better or worse, is the wholesale restructuring of the Windows paradigm. Just as Windows 95 changed the way we thought of computers (at least for those of us who focused primarily on PCs), Windows 8 will force us all to rethink what it means to run a Windows program and work within the paradigm set by this new interface. Most early users note that they feel like absolute novices when first using Win8 and that the change is too jarring. I’d wager, however, that the average user will simply take it in stride. Why? Because change, for at least most of the last decade, has been a near constant in the user experience game.

In truth, Microsoft can get away with his massive change for one simple reason: there is no such thing as an “old, familiar interface” anymore. Consider, for example, Windows 7 itself. Although the standard paradigm holds, there are plenty of odd, tacked on design elements that appear and disappear. When you run a game on a PC, Windows is all but gone, replaced by a full-screen experience of the designer’s choosing. Apps have their own design elements that aren’t related to Windows. Even OS X users now have full-screen interfaces for many popular apps. Dashboards pop up everywhere with clocks and widgets galore. In short, UIs are a hodgepodge in the first place. Users honestly won’t care if that hodgepodge appears in a set of colorful boxes on a screen or in a virtual machine running a 10-year-old shell.

This isn’t Microsoft BOB vs. Windows 98. This is a tweak. Our minds, I believe, have become so malleable to new interface techniques that they are considered beneficial tweaks and not offensive changes.

Consider the cognitive burden associated with iOS. After a short period of “You can’t multi-task!” the clear benefits of a single state interface became clear. As long as those interfaces were persistent i.e. you left mail, entered maps, and came back to the same screen you left mail, the perception of multi-tasking was maintained.

The same holds true of Windows 8. Those live tiles offer a bit of information – the tip of the iceberg, if you will – and a richer interaction underneath. Multi-tasking is more like multi-screen-tasking and the odd “dumps” back into Windows Vista will become less and less common as new apps appear. In short, we’re moving from a desktop environment to a more mobile one. Apple has tried to do this with LaunchPad (and they’ve consistently failed) but Microsoft is betting the farm on this new design.

What will happen? The early adopters will complain, OS X fans will gloat, and end users will begin experience Win8 on the new PCs they buy over the holiday. Average users will, in the end, find the Word and Excel icons and maybe run an alternative browser. All of the odd quirks – the “gems” that allow you to move back home and to share information with a click – will become more transparent and fade into the background. Windows, in short, will go back to being the leading desktop operating system and iOS may or may not follow suit with more unique interface paradigms.

Could I be wrong? Could my resigned optimism be misplaced here? Sure, but on the whole we have experienced so many shifts – from text interfaces on phones to rudimentary graphical UIs to the modern iOS and Android OSes we’re dealing with today – that UI is no longer static. Rather than looking at a monolithic whole – a great, dark rock called Windows – we are dealt a continuum of interface aspects that may or may not appeal to us immediately but will inevitably change as Microsoft’s user base changes. In short, Windows is now and will be henceforth always in beta. It may be a little jarring for the purists, but I doubt many users really care.


Beirut Bomb: Jennifer Shedid, Girl Hurt By Car Blast, Needed 300 Stitches

BEIRUT — Jennifer Shedid had just arrived home from school and she was hungry. As she asked her older sister what she could eat, a massive explosion shook their entire block and turned the glass of their 4th floor apartment into flying knives that slashed 10-year-old Jennifer from head to toe.

Their father Richard was climbing the stairs to the apartment on his way back from buying bread for the family when the car bomb struck on Friday afternoon less than 20 meters (yards) away, shaking doors and shattering his home.

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Bob Evans MSG Recall: Company Pulls More Than 1.5 Million Pounds Of Maple Links And Patties For Mislabeling

The Food and Drug Administration on Monday announced a recall of more than a million and a half pounds of Bob Evans Maple Links and Maple Patties because the labels failed to list monosodium glutamate — MSG — as an ingredient.

Columbus, Ohio-based BEF Foods, which produces the products, discovered the problem during an audit of its labeling. The company had removed MSG from the label when it reformulated its products and discontinued the use of a spice blend that contained MSG. However, it became apparent that individual establishments were still using the blend. In total, 1,768,600 pounds of meat have been recalled.

MSG is a controversial ingredient that been the subject of considerable backlash in recent decades. The common flavor enhancer, often used in canned foods and historically associated with Chinese restaurants, has been claimed to cause headaches, dizziness, nausea, heart palpitations and other symptoms in some consumers. The Mayo Clinic stresses, however, that “researchers have found no definitive evidence of a link between MSG and these symptoms.”

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11 Reasons Why ‘Community’ Should Kill Off Chevy Chase’s Character Pierce Hawthorne

Community” really can’t catch a break lately. The cult favorite NBC comedy has been bumped from NBC’s schedule yet again. And Friday, adding insult to injury, Chevy Chase created another controversy by dropping the N-word during his latest on-set diatribe.

Chase was reportedly upset about the even darker turn his character Pierce Hawthorne was taking in the would-be fourth season. But at this point, after all the off-camera drama Chase has brought “Community” already — from his feud with the show’s creator and former showrunner Dan Harmon, to his continued assertions that he doesn’t think the show is funny, to this latest fiasco — wouldn’t it make sense for the show’s writers to just kill off Pierce altogether?

Played-out characters and diva actors get killed off TV dramas all the time, so who says it can’t happen in a network comedy?

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There’s a New Google Wallet on the Way

Google Wallet is getting an overhaul, and Google has started accepting requests for invites to the new incarnation of its mobile payment platform. While there aren’t any details about what exactly will be new about the upcoming wallet, the invite process asks you whether you’re using Android, iOS, or “other devices,” which indicates some big changes allowing the system to work across platforms. More »

Kevin Mambo, Broadway Actor, Joins Zoe Saldana In Nina Simone Biopic

Blackfilm.com has learned that two-time Emmy winner and Broadway actor Kevin Mambo (‘Fela!) is the latest addition to the Nina Simone biopic, ‘Nina,’ which stars Zoe Saldana.

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Ohio County Gets Election Date Wrong In Notices To 2,200 Voters

With both presidential campaigns focusing their attention on the critical swing state of Ohio, officials in the northeastern county of Ottawa discovered late last week that they had sent out 2,200 notices telling voters that election day was Thursday, Nov. 8, instead of the actual date, Tuesday, Nov. 6., the Washington Post reports.

The Associated Press reported that Carol Ann Hill, deputy director of the county’s Board of Elections, said 7 percent of the 30,000 registered voters in the county were mailed incorrect postcards. Hill added that the relatively small percentage “doesn’t make it any better.”

The notice also included an incorrect listing for the location of a polling place. Election board director JoAnn Friar, a Republican, blamed the mistake on a computer glitch and told the Washington Post that new notices would be sent out to the voters affected. The county is on Lake Erie near Toledo and voted 52 percent for Barack Obama in 2008.

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