Qualcomm unveils quad-core MSM8626 and MSM8226 processors

Qualcomm has unveiled two new quad-core processors, the MSM8226 and the MSM8626. These 28nm silicon chipsets offer support for 13-megapixel cameras and feature an Adreno 305 GPU, which can handle video playback and recording up to full HD 1080p. Both of these processors and their Qualcomm Reference Design versions will make their appearance in Q2 of 2013.

Both the MSM8626 and MSM8226 offer multi-SIM support, including Dual SIM/Dual Standby and Dual SIM/Dual Active. Also featured is a WTR2605 multi-mode radio transceiver, which is tuned to China’s TD-SCDMA, CDMA, and HSPA+ networks. The chipsets have a built-in GPS that supports Beidou and GLONASS.

The WTR2605 transceiver is 60-percent smaller than comparable past offerings, and uses 40-percent less energy. Also slated for release are the Qualcomm Reference Design QRD8226 and QRD8626 processors. With QRD, manufacturers will receive “comprehensive handset development resources,” as well as access to hardware/software that has been tested specifically for QRD devices.

Qualcomm’s Executive Vice President and Co-President of Mobile and Computing Products Cristiano Amon offered this statement. “The expansion of our Qualcomm Snapdragon S4 family extends our leadership in performance and low power for the high-volume smartphones. This expanded roadmap provides our customers with a differentiated feature set upon which to build compelling smartphones for budget-conscious consumers.”


Qualcomm unveils quad-core MSM8626 and MSM8226 processors is written by Brittany Hillen & originally posted on SlashGear.
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Foursquare refreshes iOS app for streamlined exploring, speedier check-ins

DNP Foursquare refreshes iOS app for streamlined exploring and checkins

Building upon redesigned version 5.0, Foursquare has updated its iOS app (sorry, Android users, our guess is that you’re coming up next). The refresh provides a number of cosmetic changes, including a tighter check-in screen that omits addresses in favor of a map view of your surroundings (and seems to forget that we have that elongated iPhone 5 screen nowadays). We also get a more robust Explore tab featuring recently opened businesses, validating the app co-founder’s insistence that Foursquare is primarily a “discovery and recommendation engine.” Head to the app store at the source link below to download version 5.3.5, which Foursquare duly notes is its first palindromic version number since 3.0.3. Roy, am I mayor?

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Via: TheNextWeb

Source: App Store

The Tip Box Is Back: Give Us Your Dirt

It’s been way too long. Our tips hotline has been sitting cold, neglected, mostly forgotten. Screw that—we’re online, and we want to hear everything you’ve got. And we mean everything. More »

Rogers Anyplace TV Home Edition lets Canadians steer DVRs, watch live TV from iOS

Rogers Anyplace TV Home Edition lets Canadians steer live TV, DVRs from iOS gear

Mobile apps that blend DVR control and live TV are thriving in the US and elsewhere, so you can imagine the frustration Canadians have felt going without an official option from local telecom giants. A new version of Rogers’ Anyplace TV Home Edition app for iOS redresses that problem, if not quite in a radically different way than its US peers. iPad, iPhone and iPod touch owners can now manage DVR recordings on their NextBox hubs, and iPad owners can watch live TV from the same app — but only from 25 cleared channels, and only when they’re at home on a Rogers internet connection. It’s not quite a liberation from the TV status quo, then, and Android users will have to wait for their own fix sometime during the last few weeks of 2012. Still, it’s hard to object to a free bonus for an existing subscription.

Continue reading Rogers Anyplace TV Home Edition lets Canadians steer DVRs, watch live TV from iOS

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Source: App Store (iPad), (iPhone)

Obama Remains Firm On ‘Fiscal Cliff’ Amid Republican Disarray

* Obama won’t budge on tax rate increase for wealthiest

* President suggests 2013 tax reform could yield lower rates

* Republican DeMint says Boehner offer will “destroy jobs”

* Tea Party conservatives booted from House panel

By David Lawder and Thomas Ferraro

WASHINGTON, Dec 4 (Reuters) – President Barack Obama held his ground on the “fiscal cliff” on Tuesday, insisting on higher tax rates for the wealthiest Americans, while Republicans showed increasing disarray over how far they should go to compromise with Obama’s demands.

With less than a month left to confront the budget cuts and tax increases that will begin taking effect in January unless Congress acts, Obama dangled the possibility of lowering tax rates as part of a broad U.S. tax code revamp in 2013.

But he again insisted, in an interview with Bloomberg Television, that tax rates for the wealthiest 2 percent of taxpayers must rise in any deal by the end of the year to avert the assorted measures known as the fiscal cliff.

Obama, a Democrat, may face resistance from his own party if and when he’s forced to be specific about how he would cut the cost of entitlements, such as the Medicare health insurance program for seniors.

For the moment, however, the overall political picture Tuesday reflected a relatively solid front of Democrats versus an increasingly shaky group of Republicans.

Mitch McConnell, the Republican minority leader in the Senate, even avoided endorsing the negotiating position of his House of Representatives ally, Speaker John Boehner.

“I think it is important that the House Republican leadership has tried to move the process forward,” McConnell told reporters trying to get his views on a proposal Boehner and the House Republican leadership sent to Obama on Monday.

Outside the capital, concern mounted about how and when – not to mention if – the politicians might put their disagreements behind them and deal conclusively with an issue that economists say could trigger another recession.

Corporate chief executives were scheduled to meet with Obama later on Wednesday. The Business Roundtable, a lobbying group for corporations, has arranged the meetings. In addition to prompt action on the fiscal cliff, the group is seeking tax cuts for their companies.

Boeing Co. CEO Jim McNerney, who chairs the group, said its members want “a balanced solution to the nation’s fiscal cliff and long-term deficit and debt issues … including meaningful and comprehensive tax and entitlement reforms.”

The manufacturing sector contracted in November and posted its weakest performance in three years, a report showed on Monday. Companies taking part in the survey said uncertainty over the negotiations in Washington was a factor.

U.S. stocks slipped on Tuesday as investors fretted about Washington’s ability to avoid a year-end budget crisis.

REPUBLICAN DISARRAY

On Capitol Hill, conservative South Carolina Senator Jim DeMint attacked Boehner, a fellow Republican, over Monday’s fiscal cliff offer, which included $800 billion in revenue increases from overhauling the tax code, along with spending cuts and entitlement revisions, as part of a deficit reduction deal.

That amount, which Boehner informally accepted during previous debt-ceiling negotiations in 2011, was not enough to satisfy Obama. But it was too much for DeMint and other Republicans who have made opposition to tax increases of any kind a central part of their politics for many years.

“Speaker Boehner’s $800 billion tax hike will destroy American jobs and allow politicians in Washington to spend even more,” DeMint said in a statement on Tuesday.

Signaling some worry about fragmented sentiment in the House, Republican leaders took the unusual step of removing two hard-line Tea Party conservatives, Tim Huelskamp of Kansas and Justin Amash of Michigan, from the House Budget Committee, where elements of a fiscal cliff deal are likely to be considered.

A few House Republicans, such as Mike Simpson of Idaho and Steve King of Iowa, have said tax increases on the wealthiest may be tolerable under certain conditions.

OBAMA PRESSES ADVANTAGE

The president pressed his agenda on Tuesday, reiterating his openness to unspecified reforms in entitlement programs.

He repeated that as part of any deal, low tax rates on 98 percent of taxpayers should be extended, but that taxes on the top 2 percent should rise. “Let’s let those go up,” Obama said, referring to a “down payment” for future negotiations.

“And then let’s set up a process with a time certain, at the end of 2013 or the fall of 2013, where we work on tax reform, we look at what loopholes and deductions both Democrats and Republicans are willing to close, and it’s possible that we may be able to lower rates by broadening the base at that point.”

Fueling concerns among some Republicans about resisting compromise are surveys, like one released by the Pew Research Center on Tuesday, which showed that about 53 percent of those polled said they would hold Republicans more responsible than Democrats for going over the cliff; 27 percent said they would hold Obama responsible.

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Jeff Biggers: Arizona Celebrates Week Without Governor Brewer or Her Gaffes

While it is not clear if Acting Governor Bennett, who once challenged the validity of President Obama’s birth certificate in Hawaii, can refrain from carrying on Brewer’s weekly gaffes, the state is hopeful.
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Ka Pasasouk, Three Others Arrested In Northridge, Calif. Boarding House Murders

LOS ANGELES — Four suspects have been arrested in Las Vegas in connection with the slaying of four people who were found in the yard of an overcrowded, unlicensed boarding house in Los Angeles, police said Tuesday.

The arrests were made at the Silverton Hotel in Las Vegas.

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Kathleen Kolodziej’s Murder A 38-Year Mystery

Thirty eight years after the body of teenager Kathleen Kolodziej was found dumped in upstate New York, investigators are making a renewed effort to find who stabbed the 17-year-old college student to death.

In a joint endeavor to generate new leads, New York State Police, New York Crime Stoppers, and the Cobleskill Police Department have erected a billboard on Route 7 in Richmondville. The billboard highlights Kolodziej’s murder and a reward of up to $2,500 for information leading to the arrest and conviction of those responsible.

The unsolved homicide investigation of the only child who grew up on Long Island in Ronkonkoma, N.Y., has outlived both of Kolodziej’s parents. While those who once knew the teen have moved on with their lives, time stands still for Kolodziej’s case. The young woman, according to New York State Police Maj. William S. Sprague, was the victim of a brutal homicide and detectives are anxious to close the books on it.

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Leigh Weingus: Witnessing a Tragedy on My Way to Work

I stood on the corner of 49th Street and 7th Avenue completely stunned. I had just seen a man die. No, I had just seen a man killed. I leaned against the wall of a building, trying to catch my breath as the sun beat down on my face.
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Fox News Pushing Karl Rove, Dick Morris Off The Air

Karl Rove’s familiar 2012 presence on Fox News appears to be coming to a halt.

New York Magazine reports that President Roger Ailes is limiting Rove and fellow contributor Dick Morris from the lineup for the time being. A Fox News representative affirmed the situation to NYMag, adding that programming chief Bill Shine conveyed “the election’s over.”

Rove turned heads with an Election-night meltdown on Fox News, where he questioned the network’s “premature” decision to call Ohio and, subsequently, the race for President Barack Obama. Fox News Executive Vice President of News Editorial Michael Clemente told the Associated Press the morning after that Rove’s argument proved his value.

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