America’s Understanding of Emancipation Proclamation On Its 150th Anniversary Too Simple For Country’s Own Good

Abraham Lincoln, the tall president with the stovepipe hat, the full beard and the grief-stricken eyes, slipped away from the White House’s annual New Year’s celebration with a few members of his administration. Lincoln steadied his nerves, then his hands.

After a few minutes, he took a pen, signed the Emancipation Proclamation and ushered in the beginning of the end of two and a half centuries of American chattel slavery, some of its attendant violence and human degradation. Exactly 150 years ago today, the Emancipation Proclamation — a monumental document written on both sides of an ordinary sheet of White House paper — declared slaves living in most of the South “forever free.”

For many American adults, it’s also the moment when universal, legal freedom became a reality for an estimated 4 million black slaves. But scholars who have studied the document, Lincoln and Civil War history say the limited understanding of how slaves became free citizens led to a national habit of thinking about complex issues like race and equality simply, like finite challenges already wrestled with and resolved.

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Conan Reveals 2012’s Least Viral Videos

Gangnam Style and Call Me Maybe parodies might have been some of the most shared videos during 2012, but Conan O’Brien decided to dig into the deepest bowels of YouTube and unearth the least viral videos of the past year. If you’re a fan of topless old men sleeping and cable access shoe shine shows, you’re in for a real treat here. [YouTube via GeeksareSexy] More »

Eric Cantor On Fiscal Cliff: GOP Leader Opposes Senate Bill

WASHINGTON — The No. 2 Republican in the House leadership says he opposes a Senate-passed measure to avert the so-called fiscal cliff.

Virginia Rep. Eric Cantor told reporters after a two-hour closed-door meeting Tuesday with his GOP lawmakers that he did not support the bill.

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LG outs a new series of Home Entertainment speakers and a Smart BD Player ahead of CES

LG announced today a new series of Home Entertainment devices ahead of CES including the BH9430PW a 9.1Ch multi-directional and 3D Surround speaker set as well as the BP730 a compact Smart Blu-Ray Box that like Smart TVs is compatible with LG’s set of Apps and give you direct access to the internet that comes with Sound To Phone a new technology from LG that will forward your BD Player audio directly to your phone and phone headphones as well as NFC Support for Machine to Machine Video …

Samsung Releases robotic vacuum cleaner “Smart Tango Corner Clean”

Samsung launched robotic vacuum cleaner “Smart Tango Corner Clean” with upgraded dust removal capability for corners on the 2nd. Unlike the previous versions of robotic vacuum cleaners with fixed side brushes, Smart Tango Corner Clean has the world’s very first “pop out brush” to enhance the efficiency by giving the possibility to this new little Tango to access corners and other difficult areas!

Pop-Out Brush Arms Let This Robo Vac Defeat Dusty Corners

As smart as they may be at mapping out their surroundings and cleaning almost every inch of your home’s floors, the design of most robot vacuums makes them useless at tackling corners. A failing that Samsung may have just eliminated with its new Smart Tango Corner Clean vacuum that the company will supposedly officially unveil at CES. More »

My Hope for 2013: Some Small Company Successes

I’m fed up with the technology industry. As great as some products are from companies like Apple, Samsung, Sony, and Microsoft, there are countless devices and services in the wild that come from no-name firms that have been ignored.

There was a time in the technology industry that it didn’t matter how much a company had in its marketing budget. If a company’s products were really great, they would be discovered by the tech addicts out there, and then eventually shared with the rest of the world. It was our job as tech lovers to find the good stuff and tell the “average consumer” why they needed something special.

rooting_for_the_underdog

Over the last several years, though, we’ve let our guard down. We’ve allowed companies like Apple and Samsung to get us too excited, and forgotten about the smaller companies that deserve attention. While we’re telling everyone to get an Apple TV, we forget about recommending a Slingbox. Such scenarios play out across the industry.

So, in 2013, I can’t help but hope that small companies find some more success. The real innovation in the marketplace is not coming from Apple or Microsoft, but from companies run by energetic entrepreneurs that have a really great idea. And each year at the Consumer Electronics Show, those people are packed into corners of the showroom floor hoping that just one or two of us will actually pay attention.

I’ll be the first to admit that I’ve fallen into the trap. I’ve spent too much time focusing on my iPhone and iPad, and not enough time trying to hear about the really great products from companies I’ve never heard about. Once upon a time, those companies were Apple, Google, Samsung, and Sony. And it’s important that I don’t forget that.

“Innovation was once the element that determined success; now it’s a forgotten art”

Unfortunately, the technology industry has grown in such size that money matters more than ever. Companies that spend billions of dollars in advertising every year are far more likely to increase sales than those who only have a few hundred thousand. And although innovation was once the key element that determined success, nowadays, it’s a forgotten art.

There’s also the issue of acquisitions. The big companies keep getting bigger. And as they do, they’re finding it much simpler to acquire a small upstart before it gets too big rather than try to compete. The result? That really great product idea is incorporated into something else, and we never see it again.

I know what I’m hoping for is something that will likely not happen. But why shouldn’t we try? Chances are, the people reading this column are as tech-obsessed as I am. And when they come across a really great product, they can’t help but tell the world.

So, rather than looking in the obvious places, why don’t we spend 2013 checking out the unique, unknown products out there. We might just reveal to the world the next great company.


My Hope for 2013: Some Small Company Successes is written by Don Reisinger & originally posted on SlashGear.
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Northwestern Bowl Losing Streak Ends With Win Over Mississippi State In 2013 Gator Bowl

JACKSONVILLE, Fla. — Behind huge interceptions early and late, No. 21 Northwestern beat Mississippi State 34-20 in the Gator Bowl and snapped college football’s longest postseason losing streak Tuesday.

The Wildcats (10-3) earned their first bowl game win since 1949, ending a nine-game losing skid that was tied for the longest in NCAA history. They also celebrated double-digit victories for the first time since the 1995 Rose Bowl season.

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Samsung Unveils Premium Touch-Screen Monitor for Professionals and Consumers Alike

Samsung today debuted two new additions to its lineup of premium monitors, putting professional-grade picture quality within reach for professional and consumer audiences alike. The innovative Series 7 SC770 Touch Monitor comes optimized for Windows 8, while the Series 7 SC750 features a slim, ergonomic design and premium picture quality.
Series 7 Touch (SC770): Touch-Sensitive Monitor
The Series 7 SC770 Touch Monitor is Samsung’s first multi-touch display optimized for Windows 8. …

U.S. Fiscal Cliff Deal Leaves House Republicans Angry, Deal In Jeopardy

WASHINGTON — A high-stakes, multi-layered game of chicken is underway in the Capitol, as House Republicans grapple with how to handle a fiscal cliff bill sent their way by an overwhelming bipartisan vote, even while it’s wildly unpopular within their conference.

A vote that had been scheduled on the bill immediately to follow a conference-wide meeting was postponed indefinitely, reflecting the uncertainty surrounding the process. Republicans emerging from the meeting said that the most likely scenario is that the House will amend the bill to add spending cuts, then send it back to the Senate.

“I’ll be shocked if this isn’t sent back to the Senate,” said Rep. Spencer Bachus (R-Ala.), leaving the meeting. “I don’t think that’s out of the realm of possibility,” said a senior House GOP aide, confirmed by other high-level aides.

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