A financial regulatory reform bill has at least one supporter outside of Congressional Democrats, Lloyd Blankfein, the head of investment bank Goldman Sachs.
“I’m generally supportive,” Blankfein told the Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations. Wall Street will benefit from the bill because it will make the market safer, Blankfein said. “The biggest beneficiary of reform is Wall Street itself,” he said. “The biggest risk is risk financial institutions have with each other.”
Hewlett-Packard Co. is placing a nearly $1 billion bet that it can do more with Palm Inc.’s critically lauded but commercially troubled mobile software than the embattled smartphone pioneer could do by itself.
H-P is making a large move into the smartphone world with its agreement to acquire Palm for $5.70 a share in cash, which represents a 23% premium to Wednesday’s closing price. Including debt, the deal is valued at $1.2 billion.
Palm has been the subject of takeover speculation for the past several months as its business has slumped and new products failed to catch on with consumers.
Advanced Micro Devices has introduced a six-core desktop processor about six weeks after Intel launched a more powerful competitor, but at a much higher price.
The AMD Phenom II X6 1090T Black Edition, released Tuesday, is a 45-nanometer processor that works with existing AM3 and AM2+ socket motherboards running older AMD products. Swapping chips requires only a bios upgrade, AMD said.
The trend among chip vendors is to release new processors with more cores, faster clock speeds, and larger internal caches to boost performance over previous generations. However, most software makers haven’t kept up with the trend, with the exception of some game makers and vendors such as Adobe, which makes professional graphics tools and video-editing products.
The Phenom II X6 includes AMD OverDrive technology which enables computer enthusiasts to tune system performance, customize settings, and tune memory. AMD says its 890FX chipset is the “premier complement” to the Phenom II X6, featuring the company’s ATI CrossFireX graphics technology. The chipset also can support up to four ATI Radeon HD graphics cards.
Key architectural features of the Phenom II X6 include 6 MB of shared L3 cache and 512KB L2 cache per core. The processor includes AMD’s HyperTransport technology that delivers up to 8 GB per second of input/output bandwidth.
Other features include an integrated memory controller that delivers up to 21 GB per second of memory bandwidth when working with the DDR3 system memory. Finally, AMD’s CoolCore technology reduces energy consumption by turning off unused parts of the processor.

Gen. Stanley A. McChrystal, the leader of American and NATO forces in Afghanistan, was shown a PowerPoint slide in Kabul last summer that was meant to portray the complexity of American military strategy, but looked more like a bowl of spaghetti.
“When we understand that slide, we’ll have won the war,” General McChrystal dryly remarked, one of his advisers recalled, as the room erupted in laughter.
The slide has since bounced around the Internet as an example of a military tool that has spun out of control. Like an insurgency, PowerPoint has crept into the daily lives of military commanders and reached the level of near obsession. The amount of time expended on PowerPoint, the Microsoft presentation program of computer-generated charts, graphs and bullet points, has made it a running joke in the Pentagon and in Iraq and Afghanistan.
“PowerPoint makes us stupid,” Gen. James N. Mattis of the Marine Corps, the Joint Forces commander, said this month at a military conference in North Carolina. (He spoke without PowerPoint.) Brig. Gen. H. R. McMaster, who banned PowerPoint presentations when he led the successful effort to secure the northern Iraqi city of Tal Afar in 2005, followed up at the same conference by likening PowerPoint to an internal threat.

- Idiotic debate over the “lost” iPhone continues unabated. Nobody is defending Gizmodo.
- US Senate getting on the Facebook case.
- Apple buys Intrinsity. Why not buy ARM?
- Motorola Android is the top Android.
- Courts to take on violent video game issues.
- Apple App store porn upsets people.
- Nokia N8 getting attention.
- SIMS coming to consoles.
- McAfee dealing.
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Given the wide public support for reform, this seems like a losing strategy, unless public be damned, we’re helping our friends is the only concern. If you like reform but not this bill, how would you change it?
Republicans voted unanimously Monday to block an effort to overhaul financial regulations from reaching the Senate floor, pledging to hold out for significant changes to the bill even as they acknowledged the political risk of appearing to obstruct a popular cause.
The 57 to 41 vote in favor of beginning debate, short of the 60 needed, was expected, although Democrats did suffer an unanticipated defection when Sen. Ben Nelson (Neb.) joined Republicans as a no. Senate Majority Leader Harry M. Reid (D-Nev.) was prepared to call further votes Tuesday, Wednesday and beyond.
“We need to keep the pressure on to get a deal as quickly as possible,” Reid spokesman Jim Manley said.
About two-thirds of Americans supported stricter regulations on the way banks and other financial institutions conduct their business, according to a Washington Post-ABC News poll. Majorities also backed two main components of pending Senate bill: greater federal oversight of consumer loans, and a proposed fund paid for by the financial industry that would go toward dismantling failed firms that put the broader economy at risk.
Given the public support for tougher Wall Street rules, the unanimity that Republicans demonstrated Monday may not endure.
This clip is raw from Camera E-8 on the launch umbilical tower/mobile launch program of Apollo 11, July 16, 1969. This is an HD transfer from the 16mm original. The camera is running at 500 fps, making the total clip of over 8 minutes represent just 30 seconds of actual time.

A new level of control freakishness from Apple, methinks.
A US gamer has been banned from ever buying another iPad. Why? He reached his “lifetime limit”.
Who knew that such a limit existed?
Using the handle Protocol Snow, the now-banned iPad buyer tells his story of intrigue in a personal blog post.
[…]
It seems Snow wanted to pass a few iPads to fellow NeoGAF gaming forum members outside the US who were craving their own “magical and revolutionary” devices, but whose hopes had been dashed by Apple’s decision to delay international iPad sales by a month.And so, being a Good iSamaritan, he took it upon himself to buy multiple iPads and ship them to his fellow gamers, charging them only enough extra to cover tax, shipping, insurance, and Paypal credit card fees.
But it was not to be. After buying just a few iPads and shipping them off to his friends, Snow was thwarted in his attempt to continue his mission of multitouch mercy.
We need to stop listening to racist pigs like Stephen Hawking. If we are going to get along in the universe we have to stop judging people be the color of their skin or what planet they were born on. For years people from other planets have become productive citizens of Earth. While it is true that we have taken jobs in the computer design and software development industry, we only design the chips and write the software that no one else wants to do, working for free in to Open Source world.
I know many of you are afraid that we are just here to breed your women and use our mind control powers to make you vote for people who no one had ever heard of like Barrack Obama and Sarah Palin. But we just want to be treated like people no matter if our skin color is white, brown, black, yellow, invisible, or green. We should not be forced to carry identifier chips to be scanned by police robots to prove that we are legally allowed to be here on this planet.

- Gizmodo editor raided by the police. I tell you about the structure of the courts.
- Violent video games to be regulated.
- Blackberry makes numerous announcements.
- Hawking hates aliens.
- Nexus One doomed to not work with Verizon.
- iBook reader showdowns coming.
- Sony ending the productions of the 3.5-inch floppy disk.
- New death panel coming.
- XP still worse than Vista and Win 7 insofar as security is concerned.
Go to www.eharmony.com
and use the code EHTECH for a great discount.
For a non-Flash version, click here to listen.
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Police raided the home of Gizmodo editor Jason Chen late Friday, busting down the door to serve a search warrant that suggests that the site’s role in obtaining an iPhone prototype is being investigated as a felony, according to a post and documents published on the Gizmodo website.
The search, which wreaks of violating journalists’ protections against such warrants, involved the seizure of four computers and two servers, among other things, from Chen’s home, which doubles as his workplace.
The warrant was approved by a judge in San Mateo County, home of the bar where Apple software engineer Gray Powell lost a prototype of Apple’s yet-to-be-revealed next iPhone. Cupertino, which is home to Apple HQ, is in neighboring Santa Clara County. Chen lives in Alameda County, which is just across the bay from San Mateo County.
Geithner has worked in government his whole life. Before becoming Treasury secretary, he was president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, which is a government job but is closely associated with Wall Street. The New York Fed president is selected by a board of private sector bankers and other private sector officials but has to be approved by the Federal Reserve Board in Washington. Almost all of the New York Fed’s profits get turned over to the U.S. government.
“What I say is that I never had a real job,” Geithner joked.
The Street View service is under fire in Germany for scanning private WLAN networks, and recording users’ unique Mac (Media Access Control) addresses, as the car trundles along. Germany’s Federal Commissioner for Data Protection Peter Schaar says he’s “horrified” by the discovery.
“I am appalled… I call upon Google to delete previously unlawfully collected personal data on the wireless network immediately and stop the rides for Street View,” according to German broadcaster ARD.
Spooks have long desired the ability to cross reference the Mac address of a user’s connection with their real identity and virtual identity, such as their Gmail or Facebook account. Google has not published the WLAN map, or Street View in Germany; Google hopes to launch the service by the end of the year. Google CEO Eric Schmidt recently said internet users shouldn’t worry about privacy unless they have something to hide.
I love these wannabee snoops and their bogus rationale. That said, you are broadcasting the signal.
Found by Aric Mackey.