2012 NFL Picks wrap up this week with a few nail-biters and several awkward, cringe-worthy matchups.
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Danny Hafley, Kentucky Man, Defends Watermelon-Eating Obama Display: He ‘Might Get Hungry’
Posted in: Today's ChiliDanny Hafley of Casey County, Ky. said this week that people are reading the mannequin in his front yard depicting President Barack Obama eating a watermelon completely wrong.
“The way I look at it, it’s freedom of speech,” Hafley told Lex 18 in a recent interview, going on to state that he had included the watermelon not in attempt to play to any racist stereotypes, but because the statue “might get hungry standing out here.”
According to Hafley, the display is “popular” and a frequent draw for people passing by to stop and take pictures.
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Five-year-old Braydon Giles received a refurbished Nintendo 3DS for Christmas, which his father, Mark, purchased from GameStop. Unfortunately for all involved, the device wasn’t properly wiped of its previous owner’s content, which included porn. As such, Braydon discovered the images while playing with the device and asked his brother for help in getting rid of them.
His brother Bryton quickly recognized the images for what they were and took the device to their father, telling him that it contained porn. Mark, upon learning this, immediately called GameStop, and, we’re guessing, gave them an earful. He said in a 9 News interview, “You can’t un-see this. He’s five years old. Maybe when he’s 18 or 20 maybe he won’t know anything about it but he’s not going to forget about it tomorrow.”
As a result, GameStop sent the family a new Nintendo 3DS, as well as a handful of games. It then issued a statement that is is looking into the situation. “We have a rigorous quality control process in place to ensure that existing content is removed from all devices before they are re-sold. Out of millions of transactions each year, ones like this happen very rarely.”
Of course, this isn’t the first time devices have been sold with porn on-board. Back in October, for example, a girl discovered porn on her refurbished cell phone, an issue for which RadioShack, which sold it, was sued. The moral of the story? When giving your child a refurbished gadget, it might be a good idea to scan through the device first to make sure everything is kosher.
[via CNET]
5-year-old’s Nintendo 3DS Christmas gift filled with porn is written by Brittany Hillen & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.
METAIRIE, La. — Blame the bounty scandal.
That’s what many in New Orleans are doing, including some Saints.
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Do you often get bamboozled trying to figure out which cable is which when wiring up your home theater gear? While you could simply put color-coded dots on the cable ends, that’s just not nearly as cool or geeky as these new HDMI cables with light-up color-coding.
Coming soon from PDP, The Afterglow is a 6-foot-long HDMI cable that group four cables into one. The light-up LED heads make it easy to identify which cable is connected to which device, and just looks cool when connected.
What’s not clear is how much slack you’ll get at each end of the cable – since not all of your devices are going to be that close together. I can only imagine that the other end of the cable has a bit more distance between the connectors, but we’ll have to wait until PDP releases the full specs – which I’m guessing will turn up during CES in early January 2013.
The greatest development in the history of Christmas presents was the Magnavox Odyssey. It’s incontrovertible. Not for its success or awesomeness—it sorta flopped—but for beginning the worldwide institution of Video Games for Christmas. More »
U.S. Suspends Operations At Embassy In Central African Republic Due To Security Concerns
Posted in: Today's ChiliWASHINGTON, Dec 27 (Reuters) – The United States said on Thursday it was suspending operations at its embassy in the Central African Republic as rebels appeared poised to move on the capital of the impoverished but resource-rich nation.
U.S. State Department spokesman Patrick Ventrell said the U.S. embassy had temporarily suspended operations and that the U.S. ambassador and other embassy personnel had left the country.
“This decision is solely due to concerns about the security of our personnel and has no relation to our continuing and long-standing diplomatic relations with the CAR,” Ventrell said in a statement.
Huawei Ascend D2 reportedly spied while switched on, teases an upscale look
Posted in: Today's Chili
Huawei has already confirmed that we’re going to see its extra-large Ascend D2 at CES, but that doesn’t mean a sneak peek is unwelcome. ITHome is more than willing to sate our curiosity with a set of photos that purportedly show a fully functional version of the 5-inch smartphone. In a sense, we know what to expect from the software: the D2 appears to be using the same customized Android layer as the even larger Ascend Mate, just without that fifth column of icons. The shots do, however, suggest that Huawei is going for a design as premium-looking on the outside as it is high-powered on the inside. Not much else is known, but we’ll likely understand Huawei’s fuller ambitions in Las Vegas next month.
Update: Our brethren over at Engadget Chinese also received the same batch of photos, and they sure look legit.
Filed under: Cellphones, Mobile
Via: Android Central
Source: ITHome (translated), Engadget Chinese
Fiscal Cliff: House Republicans Resigned To Seeing Tax Increases In Debt Deal
Posted in: Today's Chili* Fears that an absence of spending cuts could doom deal
* House Republicans decide to return, but little else
By Richard Cowan and David Lawder
WASHINGTON, Dec 27 (Reuters) – Republicans in the U.S. House of Representatives are resigned to seeing some sort of income tax increase in legislation to avoid a “fiscal cliff,” but such efforts could be doomed in the absence of spending cuts, some Republican lawmakers say.
Congress and President Barack Obama are gearing up for a last-ditch attempt to avoid $600 billion in tax increases and spending cuts that could halt progress in the U.S. economy, which lately has been showing signs of gaining ground.
The White House said Obama will host a meeting on Friday with the four top congressional leaders – Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, House of Representatives Speaker John Boehner and House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi. The Republicans have a majority in the House, while Obama’s Democrats control the Senate.
House Speaker John Boehner informed his 241 Republican members on Thursday that the House would come back into session late on Sunday in anticipation of possible fiscal-cliff votes.
This Sunday’s session “was about the only thing decided” during a half-hour conference call among House Republicans, said Representative Jeff Flake of Arizona, who will leave the House at the year-end to join the Senate.
In an interview shortly after the phone call, Flake said Republicans in the House and Senate were resigned to seeing some sort of increase in top income-tax rates, although he did not specify a dollar threshold.
While he said he did not want to see any income tax rates go up, Flake said: “I’ve felt we should’ve moved a week or two ago to accept the top rate going up and tell the president ‘congratulations.'”
The bigger problem in avoiding the fiscal cliff, Flake said, would be if Obama demanded cancellation of the $109 billion in automatic spending cuts set to begin on Jan. 2 without alternative spending cuts to replace them.
“There will be resistance from a lot of House conservatives to a deal that does that,” Flake said.
Asked if the days leading up to next Monday, Dec. 31 could thus be fruitless, Flake said, “That is what I am afraid of.”
A Senate Democratic aide did not discount the possibility of some spending cuts being included in a limited bill to avert the fiscal cliff – even if they fell far short of the $1 trillion or so in cuts over 10 years that at one point was being discussed in talks between Boehner and Obama.
‘TIRED OF WAITING’
Representative Tom Cole of Oklahoma, who also participated in Thursday’s House Republican conference call, said its overarching theme was that the Senate should take the bill passed by the House earlier this year to extend all expiring income tax rates and amend it in a way senators see fit.
The House could then either accept that measure, or amend it, and bounce it back to the Senate.
“People are tired of waiting on the Senate to do things,” Cole said.
Senate Democrats counter that last July they passed a bill extending the Bush-era tax cuts – except on net household income above $250,000 a year.
Nevertheless, the Senate must still couple its tax-cut bill with Obama’s request for extending jobless benefits and possibly some other budget or tax measures.
“I assume the House would want to come back on Sunday knowing that we (the Senate) were going to do something on Friday or Saturday,” said Senator Roy Blunt of Missouri, a member of the Senate’s Republican leadership.
House Republican leaders informed their members that the chamber could stay in session dealing with the fiscal cliff through Wednesday, Jan. 2 – the last day of the current Congress and a day before the new Congress is sworn in.
Cole said Boehner “made very apparent he is not interested in passing a bill that didn’t have a majority of Republicans” supporting it.
But Cole said this was “not quite as elusive to achieve” as many people thought. He said Boehner had “over 200 votes” out of 241 Republicans for his failed “Plan B” – a bill extending lower tax rates except for millionaires – which everyone knew would not become law.
Thus, a bill with prospects of being enacted could attract more support, Cole suggested.
If a new bill came to the House floor to raise taxes on upper incomes, Boehner could force passage with a combination of Democratic and Republican votes.
With public opinion polls showing that Republicans would get most of the blame if the country were to go over the fiscal cliff, some House Republicans have become nervous about their political fortunes.
Both Flake and Cole told Reuters that during Thursday’s conference call, some Republicans urged Boehner to bring the House back to Washington sooner than Sunday – a request Flake described as being aimed at improving the “optics” of House Republicans being absent from Washington so close to the Dec. 31 deadline.
But Boehner stuck with his promise to give members at least 48 hours notice of a return.
Cole remained upbeat about a positive end to the fiscal-cliff mess that has gripped Washington for two months now.
“I’m a hopeless optimist. I still think there’s a chance we’ll get things done. All major deals get done at the end,” said Cole, who was one of the first House Republicans to say that he could go along with raising some income-tax rates.
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