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Wednesday, January 7, 2009

Your Morning News 1.7.09

Posted by Josh in , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Steve Jobs should bring back his mustacheThe Israeli invasion of Gaza continues unabated, and the debate continues to rage internationally about civilian casualties. Yesterday. Israeli forces shelled a UN-run school filled with civilians, killing 40. It seems likely that the Israeli soldiers were returning fire at a few Hamas gunman who fired mortars from the school, but the incident underscores the fact that Israel is doing next to nothing to minimize civilian casualties.

Tom Friedman proves, yet again, that he writes for the New York Times and I don’t with a great column that put the Gaza conflict in the context of the greater Middle East. Raise a point from the article over lunch or in case your boss mentions the conflict to you and you will sound smart. Don’t feel bad about ripping off Times columnists, I do it all the time.

Senate Democrats, ever the masters of snatching defeat from the jaws of victory, are raising a stink over President-elect Obama’s choice of former Clinton Chief-of-staff Leon E. Panetta for CIA director . Obviously, the Obama team goofed by not consulting with the Senate Intelligence Committee, but it seems to me that there is no real basis for criticism of his pick. As Matt Yglesias twittered a few minutes ago, “The case for putting a CIA veteran in charge of the CIA would be more compelling were the CIA’s record not so unimpressive.” If this goes beyond a few nasty media quotes and the dems really try to derail the appointment, that would be stupid.

January means the Consumer Electronics show and Macworld. Despite the recession, many of the gadgets on display at CES are just as cool as previous years. While Apple announced some interesting new innovations (a new macbook pro and DRM-free music), CEO Steve Jobs had to bow out of the convention for health reasons. Applewaters and fanboys are trying to decide if the keynote was boring because there were no really mindblowing innovations or products or just because of Job’s absence. Also, this has raised the question that if Jobs even leaves the company or takes a less prominant role, will Apple be able to continue its market and media domination?

Wednesday, January 16, 2008

The Morning News 1.16.08

Posted by Josh in , , , , , ,

Clones

Is it any wonder that the same day the FDA approved cloning, Mitt Romney won the Michigan Primary? Just check out the Five Brothers (Above is Romney and his “sons”). Romney won his home state of Michigan, giving him his first primary win. All you really need to know is that this means there is still no clear front runner on the Republican side. If you want to sound savvy, say that the biggest winner yesterday was Rudy Giuliani. If people ask you what you mean, change the subject and ask them if they saw the love-fest that was the Democratic debate last night.

Macworld, one of the biggest consumer electronics events of the year, kicked off yesterday. We already talked about the big announcement. But, just a heads up, Steve Jobs is kind of a jerk.

The Secretary of Defense is criticizing the few allies we have left — that will go well. Meanwhile, the President is was in Saudi Arabia yesterday to discuss… well they didn’t talk about anything important but it looks like they are having a great time.

Apparently, the US is now the third-world country you go to in order to launder your euros. Also, Jay Z raps about Euros instead of Benjamins, can a recession be far behind?

Tuesday, January 15, 2008

MacBook Air: Seems pretty fair

Posted by Jeff in , , ,

MacBook Air

The much-anticipated MacBook Air emerged from Steve Jobs’ nerdy womb on stage in San Francisco today. Sumbitch is thin.

That’s pretty much the extent of its innovation, though: it’s little. I can’t imagine the multitouch trackpad being particularly useful, the Remote Disc wireless disc mounting seems wildly inconvenient, and you had better hope that battery lasts, because it sure isn’t replaceable by you.

Maybe it’s not fair to hold today’s keynote to the same high standards as last year’s revolutionary iPhone announcement – the Air certainly is a slick little subnotebook. The $1799 starting price point isn’t going to capture the same travel/secondary laptop crowd that the Asus Eee enjoys, but fashionistas won’t be able to keep away.