Sanko DUALCAR 4 – Dual Camera Drive Recorder

Sanko DUALCAR 4

Keep yourself protected from fraudulent lawsuits on the road with this dual camera drive recorder ‘DUALCAR 4’ from Sanko. Installed directly on the windshield, this dual camera drive recorder is equipped with dual cameras (150-degree wide angle-lens w/ 1440 x 1080 @ 30fps front & 130-degree wide-angle lens w/ 1280 x 720 @ 30fps rear), a 2.4-inch color LCD screen, a microSD card slot (up to 32GB), a micro-USB port and an HDMI output port.

Powered by a built-in rechargeable battery, the DUALCAR 4 comes complete with 4x Infrared LED lights on the rear camera, GPS function, G-Sensor and built-in microphone/speaker. The Sanko DUALCAR 4 is available now for just 15,800 Yen (about $142). [Product Page]

The post Sanko DUALCAR 4 – Dual Camera Drive Recorder appeared first on TechFresh, Consumer Electronics Guide.

ASUS Radeon RX 560 Graphics Card With DirectCU II Cooling Solution

ASUS Radeon RX 560

ASUS is pleased to announce their newest graphics card, the Radeon RX 560. Produced using industry only Auto-Extreme Technology and Super Alloy Power II components for superior stability, this mid-range graphics card is configured with 1024 Stream Processors, a 128-bit memory interface, a core clock of 1326MHz (1275MHz reference) and a 4GB of GDDR5 memory set @ 7000MHz.

Codenamed ROG-STRIX-RX560-O4G-GAMING, the Radeon RX 560 comes equipped with ASUS’ DirectCU II cooling solution featuring dual patented Wing-Blade fans (IP5X compliant for dustproof) and provides 1x DVI-D, 1x HDMI 2.0 and 1x DisplayPort 1.4 output ports.

The ASUS Radeon RX 560 is available now for 21,500 Yen (about $193). [Product Page]

The post ASUS Radeon RX 560 Graphics Card With DirectCU II Cooling Solution appeared first on TechFresh, Consumer Electronics Guide.

The Republican Thieves Who Stole Health Care

In their desperation to provide $600 billion in tax cuts to their rich campaign contributors, the Republicans have decided to abandon all the standard rules by which Congress has governed itself. The actions might seem extraordinary, but we know how desperately the richest people in the country need tax cuts, so who can complain if the normal procedures are not being followed?

Unfortunately the debate over the “repeal and replacement” of Obamacare is being confused with a debate over health care. Paul Ryan, Mitch McConnell and the rest of the Republican caucuses in the House and Senate don’t give a damn about health care. This is about getting $600 billion in tax cuts for the people who pay for their campaigns and will offer them jobs as high paid lobbyists when they leave office. The fact that the tax cuts are associated with health care for tens of millions of people is just a coincidence.

This is about getting $600 billion in tax cuts for the people who pay for their campaigns and will offer them jobs as high paid lobbyists when they leave office.

If anyone thought the Republicans were interested in actually putting together a health care plan that was better than Obamacare, their actions show beyond any doubt this is not the case. After the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) projected that the first version of the American Health Care Act (AHCA) would increase the number of people without insurance by 24 million, the Republican leadership rushed a vote of the revised version before CBO had time to evaluate it.

This is the sort of behavior for which there is not an adequate reservoir of ridicule. How can the Republicans think that they will have a better bill if they don’t have input from CBO? Just to be clear, CBO has gotten many things wrong. There are reasons that people can reasonably object to a CBO assessment, as I have occasionally done.

But the manner in which serious people challenge CBO is by reviewing its projections and showing where they are likely to be wrong. They don’t just ignore them as the Republicans appear determined to do.

Senate Republicans have been willing to violate rules and norms even more blatantly than the House. The Senate has always been a body that reviewed bills carefully, with committee hearings and extensive debate before actually voting on them.

Majority leader Mitch McConnell apparently plans to hold no hearings on the latest version of the AHCA. It seems, the plan is to keep the bill a tightly guarded secret and then drop it on the floor at the same time it is put to a vote. McConnell will use the rules on budget reconciliation to allow the bill to be approved with 50 votes, thereby avoiding the need for 60 votes to overcome a filibuster and end debate.

The contrast with the process through which the Affordable Care Act (ACA) was approved is striking. This bill had dozens of hearings in both chambers. Members from both parties had the opportunity to offer amendments and many of the Republican amendments were approved and incorporated into the law. They also had had the benefit of CBO’s assessment of both the core proposal and scores for the major amendments that were proposed.

That is the way legislation is supposed to go through Congress. Incredibly, when the Affordable Care Act was passed, the Republicans still complained about Democrats had “rammed” it through, even with the extensive opportunity for Republicans to have input and voice their criticisms.

But the party of Donald Trump has no shame. The mission is to give as much of the country’s wealth as possible to the very rich, in as little time as possible, and they are not going to let any concerns about democratic procedures or people’s health get in the way.

The big question is the role of the media in this process. To a large extent, reporters are still acting as though everything the Republicans and Donald Trump are doing is normal. This would be like the sports announcer at a basketball game continuing to give the play-by-play even after one team’s coach has pulled out a baseball bat and knocked unconscious the star player for the other team and continued to wave the bat menacingly at anyone who made a move for the basket.

It’s very clear to anyone with open eyes – Paul Ryan, Mitch McConnell, and Donald Trump are about giving money to the rich. Nothing else matters to this crew. And apparently much of the media sees it as its job to try to pretend otherwise.

— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Black Bear Kills Teen Runner Midway Through Alaska Trail Race

A 16-year-old runner was fatally mauled by a black bear in the middle of a Sunday trail race south of Anchorage.

“This is the worst thing that could happen,” Brad Precosky, organizer of the annual Robert Spurr Memorial Hill Climb on Bird Ridge told The Alaska Dispatch News.

Patrick Cooper of Anchorage had run midway up Bird Ridge — the end point for junior racers — and was heading back down when he phoned his brother just after noon Sunday to say he was being chased by a black bear, reported KTVA in Anchorage. His brother, who was also running the race and was close to the finish line, quickly told Precosky, and a search was launched.

Cooper was found dead within two hours. He was about 500 yards off the trail in a heavily wooded area about a mile from the end of the race. He was declared dead at the scene and his body was airlifted out of the rugged terrain. Other young runners said that Cooper had veered off the trail during the race, Anchorage TV station KTUU reported.

“This has never happened. In the entire history of the race I’ve never known of any bear incidents,” Precosky told The Alaska Dispatch News.

It was the first fatal bear mauling in the state in four years, according to The Associated Press. The day after the race, a black bear also killed a worker at the Pogo gold mine, about 300 miles north of Anchorage. A second worker was injured.

Cooper couldn’t be reached when searchers first spotted him because the bear was guarding the body, officials told The Alaska Dispatch News. But the boy was likely already dead when he was first spotted, according to a witness.

“The bear was remaining in the area where the young man was laying,” said Chugach State Park Ranger Tom Crockett.

The bear was shot in the face by a ranger, but it fled. Rangers are continuing a search for the bear.

Other runners reported bear sightings during the race, according to KTUU. The area is currently closed to visitors.

Cooper was a participant in the junior division of the race. Adult runners crest the Bear Ridge mountain. Racers in the junior division run about halfway up before heading back down.

The Pogo Mine contract worker — who was attacked several miles from the main camp near Delta Junction in the interior of the state — has not yet been identified. Injuries sustained by the other employee were not life threatening. The bear was killed and all field workers have been called back to the main camp, reported The Alaska Dispatch News.

type=type=RelatedArticlesblockTitle=Related. Coverage + articlesList=5791c5b3e4b0bdddc4d4001d,578e7c5de4b04ca54ebf10dc,55e8a077e4b0aec9f356a4cd

— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Nintendo Switch update makes it easy to find missing Joycons

Nintendo’s latest Switch update doesn’t exactly come with anything mind blowing, but it has huge list of improvements people have been asking for. One of those is the ability to find paired controllers by making them vibrate. Unless they’re too far i…

Fill your SteamVR Home lounge with gaming collectibles

SteamVR established its Home as the service’s launch screen last month, a digital lounge for players to customize as they pore through their game libraries. Now you can start filling it with collectibles you unlock while playing through their respect…

Researchers map a building in 3D using WiFi-enabled drones

Turns out WiFi is good for more than just sharing cat GIFs with your friends. Researchers at the Mostofi Lab at UC Santa Barbara have created a system that “sees” inside buildings using two drones and WiFi.

Al Franken Warns On Impeachment: 'Zealot' Pence Would Be 'Worse than Trump'

function onPlayerReadyVidible(e){‘undefined’!=typeof HPTrack&&HPTrack.Vid.Vidible_track(e)}!function(e,i){if(e.vdb_Player){if(‘object’==typeof commercial_video){var a=”,o=’m.fwsitesection=’+commercial_video.site_and_category;if(a+=o,commercial_video[‘package’]){var c=’&m.fwkeyvalues=sponsorship%3D’+commercial_video[‘package’];a+=c}e.setAttribute(‘vdb_params’,a)}i(e.vdb_Player)}else{var t=arguments.callee;setTimeout(function(){t(e,i)},0)}}(document.getElementById(‘vidible_1’),onPlayerReadyVidible);

Sen. Al Franken (D-Minn.) has a warning for fellow progressives hoping to see President Donald Trump impeached. 

Vice President Mike Pence would move into the Oval Office, and Franken said that would lead to new set of problems.  

He’s ideological, I consider him a zealot,” Franken told International Business Times. “And I think that in terms of a lot of domestic policy, certainly would be worse than Trump.”

Franken said Pence, who ran the Trump transition, was responsible for some of Trump’s worst Cabinet choices, including Environmental Protection Agency head Scott Pruitt, Education Secretary Betsy DeVos, Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price, and Office of Management and Budget Director Mick Mulvaney.

On the other hand, Franken said, a Pence presidency might be better than Trump on foreign policy. 

“If you’re talking about how we handle North Korea or something like that, I’d probably be more comfortable with Pence ultimately making those decisions than Trump, because of Trump’s personality and character,” Franken said.

Franken, now in his second term, said he was concerned by Trump’s behavior because it’s “so outside the norm,” and said he worried that impeachment could make the president even worse.  

“I don’t know what he will do if he looks like he’s going to be impeached and he wants to deflect,” Franken said. “I don’t know what he’s capable of, and that really does concern me.”

Read the full interview at International Business Times. 

Franken spoke to the website at an event in Denver to promote his new book, Giant of the Senate.

— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Democrats Protest Senate Republican Healthcare Secrecy

U.S. Democrats took to the Senate floor on Monday to throw a spotlight on behind-the-scenes efforts by the Republican majority to repeal former President Barack Obama’s healthcare law, known as Obamacare.

In a series of floor motions, inquiries and lengthy speeches, Democrats criticized the closed-door meetings that Republicans have been holding to craft a replacement for Obamacare, formally known as the Affordable Care Act. They called for open committee hearings and more time to consider the bill before a Senate vote, which Republicans say could come in the next two weeks, although a draft bill has yet to emerge publicly.

Lacking the votes to derail or change the Republican process, the maneuvers by the Democratic minority seemed more aimed at highlighting Republican efforts on a controversial issue. Polls have said that a majority of Americans disapprove of the Obamacare replacement that has passed the House of Representatives and that Senate Republicans are now considering.

Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer said that the closed-door Republican meetings on healthcare amounted to “the most glaring departure from normal legislative procedure that I have ever seen.”

“Republicans are writing their healthcare bill under the cover of darkness because they are ashamed of it,” Schumer charged. The resulting legislation would likely throw millions out of health insurance, he said, while granting “a big fat tax break for the wealthiest among us.”

Senators are not obligated to hold meetings in the open, but Democrats pointed out that there were lengthy committee meetings and many days of floor debate on Obamacare before it passed in 2010.

Several Democrats moved for the healthcare legislation to be referred to Senate committees for hearings, but Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell refused.

McConnell said all Republican senators have been involved to some degree in healthcare meetings and that Democrats would have a chance to amend the legislation they produce, once it is brought to the Senate floor.

“We’re going to have a meeting on the Senate floor, all hundred of us, with an unlimited amendment process,” McConnell said. “So there will be no failure of opportunity.”

Senate Republican leaders would like a vote on healthcare legislation in July, before the July 4 recess if possible. But Republicans have struggled to coalesce around a bill, with moderates and conservatives pushing in different directions.

Senate Republicans also face pressure from the right. In the House, conservatives have written to McConnell to express concern about reports that say the Senate may water down the House bill.

— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Research finds deadly heatwaves will occur more often

A study published today in Nature Climate Change predicts that deadly heatwaves will become more frequent in the future. The study found that currently, around 30 percent of the world experiences life-threatening heat for at least 20 days per year. B…