Wednesday, 31 October 2012

HTC One X+ review: it's the One X, and then some (video)

HTC One X review (UK version)

A spec bump in the middle of a product cycle? All the cool cats do it these days, even if they risk alienating customers who just bought what they thought was this year's flagship device. HTC has actually played this game for a while, first with the Sensation XE, which acted as a mid-term replacement for the original Sensation and now, with the One X+ which treads all over the One X's toes. However, with this latest handset, the manufacturer has some justification: the One X+ comes with 32GB or 64GB of internal storage, whereas the global One X maxed out at 32GB and the AT&T version was only 16GB. Since there's no microSD expansion on these phones, it's possible to argue that the One X+ is a sensible addition, which caters specifically to storage-hungry power users and audiophiles. (Note: We'll be reviewing the HSPA+ UK version of this handset here, and comparing it mainly to the HSPA+ One X. We'll test the US-destined LTE variant very soon.)

There are other improvements aside from the bigger storage option, of course. The NVIDIA Tegra 3 processor has had a speed bump to 1.7GHz -- perhaps in an effort to challenge the Galaxy S III's benchmarking might. There's a larger 2,100mAh battery to stay in step with that more power-hungry silicon; the front camera module has been replaced with a higher-res chip and better image processing; and, there's also some new audio circuitry to improve the speaker's sound quality. The One X+ also runs HTC's updated Sense 4+ skin, based on Jelly Bean, which will eventually arrive on older One-series phones as well. As for the rest of the spec sheet, all the good and not-so-good stuff from the One X has carried over -- the stunning 4.7-inch, 1,280 x 720 Super LCD2 display is still here, thank goodness, and so is the 8-megapixel f/2.0 rear camera. However, there's still only 1GB of RAM (LG and Samsung flagships boast double that). So, what's needed here is an upshot: if you haven't made the leap to a 2012 superphone just yet, how does the One X+ carry itself relative to its cheaper predecessor and the latest competition? Read on and we'll endeavor to find out.

Continue reading HTC One X+ review: it's the One X, and then some (video)

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HTC One X+ review: it's the One X, and then some (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 31 Oct 2012 10:30:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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MetroPCS intros first Rich Communication Services on LTE, touts universal contacts and chat (video)

MetroPCS, Joyn launch the first Rich Communication Services on LTE, aim for universal contacts and chat video

Smartphone users are well immersed in a world of contact syncing, media sharing, VoIP and video calls. They're just not used to finding everything in one place, let alone guaranteeing that any carrier-level features will work with other phones and providers. MetroPCS is hoping to put itself ahead on that front by offering a potentially universal fix. It's the first carrier anywhere to launch the Rich Communication Services standard on LTE, which provides a perpetually synced contact list that serves as the launching pad for everything else. Early adopters of the Joyn-branded service can chat through text, share media (including during calls) and start up WiFi voice or video calls without needing yet another specialized service and the extra sign-in that goes with it. Right now, the very young state of RCS on LTE leaves it behaving more like the isolated services it's trying to replace -- on MetroPCS, only those with the Galaxy Attain 4G and an after-the-fact Joyn app download can get the experience as intended. As long as more devices and carriers come onboard, though, the technology might be the long-term key to pulling us away from fenced-off conversations in Google Talk or Skype.

Continue reading MetroPCS intros first Rich Communication Services on LTE, touts universal contacts and chat (video)

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MetroPCS intros first Rich Communication Services on LTE, touts universal contacts and chat (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 31 Oct 2012 13:02:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Watch the First ?Angry Birds Star Wars? Gameplay Scenes [VIDEO]



Rovio Entertainment is giving us the first glimpse of the gameplay in Angry Birds Star Wars ahead of its Nov. 8 release on Android and iOS.

The teaser scenes show Red Bird as Luke Skywalker and the franchise's newest character, Pink Bird, as Princess Leia. Shot from their slingshot, they fly through intergalactic environments -- the Death Star, Tatooine and more -- filled with Storm Trooper Pigs.

SEE ALSO: ?Angry Birds? Turns Queen?s Freddie Mercury Into an Honorary Character

Rovio previously teased Angry Birds Star Wars with a GIF, a promo video, a Tumblr blog and a few trailers, but the above video is the first look at what people wil…
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Google Latitude check-in deals now available across the US

Recently, Google has been busy beefing up Latitude to make it more competitive with other location apps -- and more fun to use. Location history was added recently, iOS users can post check-ins via Latitude, and now Google has begun rolling out location-based deals which are tied to the service.

If you're in the U.S., you can now score local savings at participating merchants by checking in with Latitude. Google will also be offering "status deals," which users can unlock by visiting a particular merchant on a regular basis. Mashable notes three status levels: regular, VIP, and guru -- though partners can apparently customize those titles if they choose.

Right now deals are available from merchants like American Eagle Outfitters, Arby's, Finish Line, Macy's, Quiznos, and RadioShack.

Google Latitude check-in deals now available across the US originally appeared on Download Squad on Fri, 08 Apr 2011 08:18:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Windows 8 to feature adaptive Aero colorization, get it now on Windows 7

windows 8 aero colorization aura
While we've still yet to see anything truly Earth-shattering, the tandem of Rafael Rivera and Paul Thurrott continues to churn out insight about interesting new features they've discovered in Windows 8 milestone 3. The latest discovery is that Aero in Windows 8 will be able to automatically adapt itself to match your current wallpaper image. It's a bit like what Windows 7 already does with your taskbar icons: if a program alert needs your attention, the icon will glow using the predominant color (e.g. Firefox should glow orange).

And yes, you can already make Windows 7 behave this way if you like. Over at CodePlex, there's a little program called Aura that parks itself in your system tray and automatically adjusts your window borders to compliment your wallpaper images. The effect is quite nice, and you can try it out by minimizing your windows and cycling through your theme's wallpapers (right click on your desktop and choose next desktop background).

Windows 8 to feature adaptive Aero colorization, get it now on Windows 7 originally appeared on Download Squad on Thu, 07 Apr 2011 07:40:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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MetroPCS reports Q3 2012 earnings, $193 million in net income

MetroPCS

Most people haven't paid a whole lot of attention to MetroPCS prior to its announcement of merger plans with T-Mobile USA, but now the earnings may be worth a look. For the third quarter of 2012, the regional carrier posted net income of $193 million (operating income $292 million) on revenues of $1.25 billion. Net income was up substantially from the year previous, while revenues were nearly flat.

Subscriber churn remained high at 3.7-percent, although it was a decrease from 4.5-percent in the same period last year. Net subscriber losses of 312,291 for the quarter brought the total subscriber count just under 9 million. Even with the net losses in customers, ARPU (Average Revenue Per User) remained flat at $40.50, but on a good note CPU (Cost Per User) dropped slightly to $18.38.

This quarter was a bit of a mixed bag for MetroPCS. We'll see how things shape up as the merger comes closer to completion in 2013.

Source: MetroPCS Investor Relations



Moom for Mac simplifies window moving and zooming

Moom for Mac

Moom
is a Mac utility that aims to simplify the task of moving and sizing windows. Moom can run in three different modes, seen in the image above. The Standard mode will make Moom have a Dock icon as well as menu items in the menu bar. In Menu Bar mode, Moom will only show up in your menu bar, and in the Faceless mode you won't see any sign of its existence at all -- unless you hover over the green zoom button in any window, which is when Moom starts working its magic.

Moom has two ways in which it can be operated -- by using the mouse or the keyboard. Using the mouse, after you've hovered over the aforementioned green zoom icon, a Moom menu will pop-up (above left). From there you can select if you want the current window zoomed to full screen, or if it should only occupy the left or right half of the screen, or even the top or bottom half if you're feeling saucy. The arrow-like icon allows you to revert the window to its original position.

But wait, there's more! If you drag the width/height icons a few pixels instead of just clicking on them, they're transformed into even more options, allowing you to zoom the current window to a(ny) quarter of the screen. How exactly does this work? To make the window occupy the top left quarter, you drag the 'left half' icon up, and to assign it to the bottom left quarter, you drag the 'left half' icon down.

Keyboard mode lets you control Moom with a global hotkey and the arrow buttons. You can set any key combination to be your global Moom hotkey, and set any subsequent key press to do any action that Moom can accomplish. Using the keyboard also gives you the option of centering a window, something which can't yet be done with the mouse. Hit the jump for a screenshot of the entire keyboard shortcut configuration menu to admire the amazing number of ways in which you can customize your interactions with Moom. Last, but definitely not least, you can rest assured knowing that Moom does support multiple displays.

Moom works for 100 uses in its free demo mode, after which you can purchase it either directly from Many Tricks (the developer), or from the Mac App Store. The license costs $5.

Continue reading Moom for Mac simplifies window moving and zooming

Moom for Mac simplifies window moving and zooming originally appeared on Download Squad on Wed, 06 Apr 2011 12:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Star Wars Episode 7: Coming in 2015!!!

Tuesday, 30 October 2012

Benghazigate: Chapter Two

What more does anyone need to know than that Americans are under attack before ordering a military response to suppress the attack and possibly rescue our people?

Even if the initial response isn't exactly what you'd want it to be, even if you don't have every asset available that you might in a perfect world, isn't it your duty -- whether you're a lowly second lieutenant or the Secretary of Defense -- to do everything you can as quickly as you can?

Of course it is, at least unless you're President Obama and his minions. His two principal flunkies -- Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Defense Secretary Leon Panetta -- had a lot of options on September 11 during the seven-hour attack on our Benghazi consulate and the CIA house about a mile away. According to a Fox News report based on several sources, the people under attack pled with the CIA for help three times during the attack and all three pleas were refused. Team Obama did nothing to save their lives.

The accuracy of the Fox report is easily derived from other facts. One element of proof that the requests were made -- by people under fire -- comes from Panetta's whining. According to a Reuters report, Panetta said there wasn't enough information to responsibly deploy forces to Libya during the attack. "You don't deploy forces into harm's way without knowing what's going on, without having some real-time information about what's taking place."

Really, Mr. Secretary? Let's set aside the fact that one or more drones were over the consulate during the attack, sending back the information Panetta says he needed. But the drone issue begs the question: Panetta cannot really believe that sending armed aircraft from our base at Sigonella, Italy -- about 350 air miles away -- wouldn't have given him both the capability of suppressing the attack and whatever other information he thinks he needed. Panetta's whine is as evasive as his actions were treacherous.

President Obama was apparently so fearful of offending some Islamic mob that he preferred to let our people be killed than send a couple of F-18s from Sigonella to Benghazi. Flight time -- for fully armed aircraft at about 0.7 or 0.8 Mach -- is less than an hour. The attack went on for seven hours. If the fly-guys busted Mach, they could have been there in about a half hour. Plenty of time to pop a sonic boom over the consulate which -- as we've seen in Afghanistan many times -- is enough to send the terrorists running. And -- if there wasn't time for the first flight to be armed -- it would have been able to recon the situation and give the time for fully-armed aircraft to arrive about fifteen or twenty minutes later.

Obama's fingerprints are all over this refusal to come to the aid of our people when they were under attack. The CIA -- implicitly confirming the pleas for help -- denies that anyone in its chain of command rejected any such request. The specificity of the CIA denial gives us another proof that the requests were made, but it carries a second aspect of responsibility for the failure to send help. CIA Director David Petraeus must have passed the requests up the chain of command and someone higher than him -- the president is the only one higher than a cabinet member -- denied the requests.

Clinton has to have known what Charlene Lamb -- her head of embassy security -- knew during the attack. (Lamb testified at a 10 October congressional hearing that she was in real-time contact with the consulate during the attack.) So must have Petraeus, because his CIA operators -- former SEALs Tyrone Woods and Glenn Doherty among them -- were making the pleas for assistance and asking permission to rush to the consulate's defense. Woods and Doherty were told to "stand down." As Fox reports, the two apparently ignored the orders and rushed to the consulate to help. Unable to find the ambassador, they withdrew to their CIA outpost, which then came under attack. Both were killed there.

President Obama is still fumbling and lying about the whole incident including the refusal of the pleas for help. In a Denver TV interview on Friday, Obama ducked questions about the Benghazi incident twice. He's also saying that he ordered support for the consulate personnel as soon as he heard about the attacks.

Why, then, weren't the available forces deployed immediately to save American lives? If no one in the CIA chain of command refused aid, the failure has to be Obama's. No one else could have denied the real-time requests.

Charles Woods, father of Tyrone Woods, said that those who denied the requests for help murdered his son. Woods's anguish is understandable. His son was a hero, and paid with his life for Obama's failure to send military force to attack the enemy that was attacking him.

Naturally, Obama and his minions aren't owning up to their treachery and the media -- except for Fox News -- are burying the story.

The Washington Post and the New York Times -- both of which have endorsed Obama -- aren't reporting the story on the rejected pleas for help. ABC, CBS and NBC aren't either.

To its credit, CBS did break the story last week on the State Department emails that show Obama's administration knew that the Benghazi attack was made by terrorists, not some mob distracted from a protest against an anti-Islamic video. The other big liberal media -- i.e., most of the major media -- gave little or no coverage to the CBS scoop.

As huge a scandal as the Benghazi incident is, it's not possible for it to become an issue in the election unless Mitt Romney makes it one. So far, he hasn't and he isn't likely to in the final week of the campaign.

Don't expect to hear much about Obama's conduct of the Benghazi incident before the election or after, if he is reelected. The effect of Obama's refusal to come to the aid of people under attack is best understood by the terrorists still walking the streets of Benghazi, and their allies around the world.


Angelina Jolie Buys Her Kids "Adorable" Last Minute Halloween Costumes

Angelina Jolie
Photo credit: 
Getty Images

Angelina Jolie is getting into the holiday spirit!

The Oscar winner took three of her kids — Shiloh, Knox and Vivienne Jolie-Pitt shopping in Sherman Oaks to the Halloween Adventure Superstore to buy last minute costumes for Halloween according to People.

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"They spent almost an hour at the store in the morning," according to another shopper. "Angie looked gorgeous and was very sweet. The kids were excited and very adorable. The youngest ones were very into all the costumes, and the older kid seemed more into the Halloween decorations."

While Shiloh, 6, and the twins, 4, were into picking out their costumes, they were also good about listening to their mom.

OK! GALLERY: BRAD PITT LOOKS GREAT IN GRAY, FILMS THE COUNSELOR IN LONDON

"Despite all the excitement, the kids were very well-behaved, and Angie was great with them. She smiled at their excitement, but was at the same time good at saying no. The kids would have left with everything in the store if they would have been allowed," the observer added.

"Angie only let them pick out a present each, but the kids seemed very pleased with their picks." Shiloh scored a pair of new sunglasses  while "Vivienne left the store in a pink unicorn costume, and Knox clutched a plastic alligator toy."

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Although Angie's other three kids Maddox, 11, Pax, 8, and Zahara, 7 weren't on the shopping trip, they were not forgotten. Their mom bought toys for them which included decorative plastic spiders, a gothic count costume, a count makeup kit, and a sprayable spider web.

And Shiloh was quite the big girl when it came to her younger siblings.

"Shiloh acted like Angie's big helper and she took care of Vivienne when they walked back to the car after the shopping trip," a photographer said.

"Vivienne looked adorable in her unicorn costume, and she seemed very excited that she got to wear it out of the store. Knox was in his own world with the toy alligator, and Angie had to pick him up on the way to the car so he wouldn't get lost," the photog continued.

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The Maleficent star really wanted to make the holiday special for her clan.

"Halloween is a big deal for the kids. There are decorations everywhere at the house and the kids are already dressing up," a family source said. "They will have a party at school and will also go trick-or-treating with their friends on Halloween. The kids are all very excited."

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Banshee music player now works in Windows, supports Amazon MP3 downloads

A few moments ago, version 2 of the Banshee music player for Linux was released, bringing with it a whole slew of new features, and the addition of an official -- but alpha-quality -- Windows build. The Mac OS X build of version 2 is due later today.

The most notable new feature is support for the Amazon MP3 store -- you can buy and download music from within Banshee -- but unfortunately it's only available in the Linux build at the moment (OS X and Windows support are planned, however). There have also been some significant improvements to artist, album, and queue interactions -- and yes, you can finally right click a track, album or artist and select 'play after' to insert it into the queue.

Beyond actual playback, the user interface has been tidied up -- it now looks a whole lot smarter -- and the Ubuntu One Music Store and SoundMenu extensions have been made official. For a complete list of changes, additions and bug fixes, check the change log.

When Windows support initially appeared in February, we found it rough around the edges and fraught with stability issues. With version 2, Banshee for Windows is still a bit unstable, but it's shaping up to be a good alternative to Winamp, iTunes, or whatever other music library manager you use. It's almost as attractive as its GNOMEish brother, too!

Download Banshee 2 for Linux and Windows (Mac OS X coming soon)

Banshee music player now works in Windows, supports Amazon MP3 downloads originally appeared on Download Squad on Wed, 06 Apr 2011 11:35:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Oregon Poll Shows Obama Campaign Falling Apart

Earlier today, my colleague, Tony Lee, reported on a new poll from Oregon showing Obama up just 6 points over Mitt Romney. Surprisingly, Obama's support was only 47%, well below the 50% threshold deemed safe for incumbents. To say that Oregon wasn't expected to be competitive is a massive understatement. Obama won the state by 17 points in 2008. While he is certainly favored to win the state this year, his apparent struggles there are a sign of a campaign falling apart in the home stretch. 

With one week to go, presidential campaigns usually narrow down to a small handful of states. Candidates focus their time and resources into fewer battlegrounds to gain a decisive edge. This year, however, the battlefield seems to be expanding. Moreover, its expanding in a way that isn't favorable to Obama.

I've often noted that whichever states become competitive at the end of a campaign are a good indication on the overall trends of the election. Four years ago, traditionally Republican states were competitive, signaling that Obama had strong momentum. This year, however, its traditionally Democrat states that are now competitive. Obama has been forced to make significant ad buys in Wisconsin, Minnesota and Pennsylvania. Just a month ago, all three were considered "safe" Obama states. 

But, Obama's already been running ads in Oregon for weeks. This mostly had to do with potential complications from the Libertarian candidate, Gary Johnson, and a ballot initiative legalizing marijuana. Romney hasn't run any ads. Yet, Obama is still only at 47% even though he's had the airwaves to himself. 

Back during the Vice-Presidential debate I sent the following tweet:

No, I didn't have a crystal ball. But, I could see that Biden had not adequately stemmed the damage from Obama's disastrous first debate. The trend was clearly moving towards Romney. Romney's increasing advantage with Independents would start to show up, even in blue states. Oregon is among the weakest of the Democrats blue wall of support. 

Again, I think Obama still has the edge in Oregon and I doubt that Romney will really compete there. Romney is suffering almost an embarrassment of riches. So many states no one expected are now competitive that even a cash-rich campaign like his has to make careful choices. 

That said, if so many blue states are looking competitive, Obama's campaign is in deep trouble. If we are talking about Oregon one week from the election, its becoming a safer bet that Obama will lose next week.

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'The Hope and the Change' Reminds Obama 2008 Voters of False Promises

On Sunday, FOX News re-broadcast Sean Hannity's one-hour special about "The Hope and the Change." The documentary is about independent and Reagan Democrat voters who cast their ballots for Barack Obama in 2008 and will not do so in 2012. These voters feel betrayed by Obama's false promises of hope and lofty rhetoric. 

When it first aired in late August, the one-hour special was the most-watched such FOX News special program in the network's history. It's re-broadcast may have reminded Obama 2008 voters that Obama has tried to sweet talk them into voting for again in the campaign's final weeks, despite his false promises and lack of accomplishments. 

In the special, Hannity proclaims the movie, directed by Stephen K. Bannon and produced by Citizens United, is "the most powerful documentary I’ve ever seen in my life."

Pat Caddell, the former Jimmy Carter adviser who has railed against the establishments of both parties for leaving working class Americans behind, consulted on the film, proving the film was not a propaganda piece but a genuine documentary that gave voice to voters so often ignored by both parties and the elite mainstream media. 

Caddell told Breitbart News the movie was "meant to give them a voice for why they felt they felt let down after voting for Obama."

"It was allowing those voters who have no voice in this country because of the elite media and political class to actually speak powerfully about what they believe," Caddell said. 

Bannon told Breitbart News that since he "started listening to Obama voters in the focus groups in these key counties in the battleground states," it was clear they thought Obama was "in over his head" and "they are more inclined to stay home than to vote for him again."

"And that's why [Obama chief strategist David] Axelrod avoids ever talking about the issues raised by working class Americans in the film," Bannon said, noting that Axelrod "knows Obama has no counter" to the basic fact that so many independents and Reagan Democrats think he is "incompetent." 

Hannity interviewed Caddell, Bannon, and David Bossie of Citizens United in special in addition to some of the voters the movie featured. 

Caddell said the firm was "by far" the most effective approach to reach these voters who have decided every election since 1980 and emphasized the voters interviewed for the movie were "Democrats and independents" and the move was aimed at "soft Democrats." 

And a focus group agreed with Caddell's assessment, determining that the film had the greatest impact in convincing them to vote against Obama because the voters in the film reminded the focus group participants of themselves. 

Frank Luntz, who ran the focus group, determined Republicans should not waste resources on other movies and instead, if they were so inclined, use the resources to promote "The Hope and the Change" because it gave Republicans the best chance to bring former Obama 2008 voters to their side. 

Caddell lamented that the film could have gotten broader play and distribution and did not because so many in the Republican establishment would like to "entertain" themselves than win. he went on to lash out at the permanent political class on both sides for ignoring these "forgotten voters."

"Basically, they don't even know these people exist," Caddell said, saying Washington Democrats have become liberal "gentry elites who don't speak to the people" while the Republican wing of the political class in Washington has become the party of "K Street and Wall Street." 

If the Mitt Romney loses the November elections, Caddell said it will be "on the heads" of the elite, Republican establishment in Washington, D.C. who do not know how to effectively appeal to blue collar voters on Main Street.  

Caddell said the political elite on both sides of the aisle are "not interested in moving the country" and only "interested in what they can get for themselves," and Obama appealed to these voters in 2008 because he vowed to fight and change that system.

Of course, Obama has made the system worse, recently admitting to the spanish-language station Univision he could not "change Washington from the inside." 

"The Hope and the Change" resonates powerfully with regular Americans, Caddell said, because non-elites see in the voters profiled "what they were going through, what their hopes were, and how they were dashed."

When the Hannity Special on "The Hope and the Change" first aired in late August, it was the most-watched FOX News special in the network's history and drew more viewers than the combined viewership of all the other cable news networks in its time slot. 

World View: Banksters Seek to Save Europe's Carbon Trading System

This morning's key headlines from GenerationalDynamics.com

  • Banksters desperately seek to save Europe's carbon trading system
  • Libor-rigging banks face rash of lawsuits
  • Japan's economy may be in an inescapable decline
  • Poor health and draft-dodging plague Russia's army

Banksters desperately seek to save Europe's carbon trading system

Smokestacks in China
Smokestacks in China

The plan that was supposed to save the world from climate change disaster, Europe's Emissions Trading System (ETS), which allows companies to pay for carbon credits that permit the company to emit carbon, is close to collapse. The whole program was poorly designed in the first place by climate change fanatics, and Europe's financial crisis has made carbon credits so cheap that no one has any real incentive to cut back, even if they wanted to.

I've taken no position on whether climate change is occurring or whether human beings caused it. Some people claim it's "proven science," but I've read other articles that claim that global warming ended ten years ago, and that as the Arctic has gotten warmer, the Antarctic has gotten equivalently colder. I also take note of the fact that climate change fanatics never mention the Antarctic.

Whether global warming is occurring or not, or whether humans caused it or not, is irrelevant to the discussion. There is no technology on the horizon that's going to reduce carbon emissions. It's just a scam. Americans and Europeans will not give up their cars, China will not give up its massively growing collection of coal mines, and hundreds of millions of Africans and Indians will not give up cooking with their carbon-emitting charcoal stoves.

Basically, the climate change fanatics are like someone who, a century ago, was worried that the world was going to be covered with horse crap, and horse crap credits should be traded to eliminate the problem. The automobile came along to solve the horse crap problem, and it would have come along with or without horse crap credits.

I wrote about this subject in December 2007 ( "UN Climate Change conference appears to be ending in farce")

At that time, I wrote a lengthy profile about a bankster named Louis Redshaw, head of environmental trading at Barclay's Bank. This was just after the global credit crunch had begun, and the subprime real estate market was crashing. I quoted Redshaw at the time as saying that carbon credit derivatives were going to make banks a lot more money than the subprime mortgage derivatives had. Even in 2007, it was pretty obvious that climate change was a financial scam, and that the people driving it were banksters like Redshaw, and wealthy carbon emitters like Al Gore and the people lounging in air-conditioned conference rooms in Bali, attending a climate change conference. It was all pretty sickening then, but it's even more sickening now.

I quoted an article as saying:

"Fans reckon trading volumes will soon be worth many billions of pounds per year. James Cameron at the investment boutique Climate Change Capital said: “I think this is likely to get bigger than the interest-rate-swaps market within 10 to 15 years, particularly once America joins in.” ...

Louis Redshaw at Barclays Capital said: “We were the first British bank involved and are now the biggest banking participant. We handle transactions that are many multiples of the standard market size of 10,000 tonnes. A million-tonne transaction is not out of the question."

Now we can connect a couple of dots to see how sickening this all is.

Interest-rate swaps are a market with over $300 trillion dollars in synthetic security assets. Cameron and Redshaw want to create a carbon trading market that was bigger than that.

BUT, we learned a few months ago that Barclays bank was at the heart of a scheme, from 2004-2008, to manipulate Libor interest rates, and this affects the values of interest rate swaps. (See "17-Jul-12 World View -- Barclay's COO admits having rigged Libor, thought it was OK" from July.)

So at the time that banksters like Redshaw at Barclays were planning to use carbon trading to create a market bigger than interest rate swaps, the rigging of interest rate swaps was at its peak, and the banksters at Barclays would have known this. They knew that Barclays bank was already defrauding the public by using Libor to manipulate the prices of interest rates swaps, and they almost assuredly were dreaming up a similar scheme to defraud the public using synthetic securities based on carbon credits.

This is why I keep saying: The same Generation-X banksters that caused the financial crisis are still in the same jobs, finding new ways to defraud people, and Generation-X prosecutors refuse to investigate and prosecute other Gen-Xers, even for obvious crimes. After all these years, not a single bankster has gone to jail for the financial crisis, even though the evidence of massive, purposeful fraud is abundant. These leaves the banksters free to create new and bigger frauds, secure in the knowledge that they won't be prosecuted.

So, the European politicians and banksters are now looking for ways to salvage the collapsing Emissions Trading System (ETS), and they plan to do it with harsh new emission control regulations that will stifle business further, at a time when Europe's economy is collapsing. Does everyone understand why I call these people idiots? Spiegel

Libor-rigging banks face rash of lawsuits

In a case coming to court in London on Monday, Guardian Care Homes is claiming that they were defrauded by Barclays Bank, when the bank sold Guardian interest rate swaps during the credit bubble. Interest rate swaps are like insurance policies that pay off if interest rates go too far up or down. They're used by companies that want to protect themselves from losing money if that happens. Interest rates swaps are priced by an algorithm that includes the Libor rate, and Barclays bank admitted in July that it had fraudulently manipulated the Libor rate from 2004-2008 for its own gain. (See "17-Jul-12 World View -- Barclay's COO admits having rigged Libor, thought it was OK" from July.) Guardian is suing Barclays for 12 million pounds, claiming that it lost that much money from Barclays' Libor rigging. There are $300 trillion in interest rate swap contracts in portfolios around the world, and some experts claim that $230 trillion of those swaps were tied to Libor. All of those contracts are suspect because of Libor rigging by Barclays and 16 other banks. Other lawsuits are still in the planning stages, and some estimates are that banks will pay $6 billion in damages collectively. But the fallout goes beyond litigation costs. London's banks in particular have had to set aside billions of pounds to cover potential customer claims, and London's reputation has been severely damaged as a world financial center. Bloomberg

Japan's economy may be in an inescapable decline

With Japan's economy continuing to worsen, mainstream economists are increasingly accepting the belief that Japan is not just in a prolonged slump but also in an inescapable decline. Frankly, I hadn't expected this. Japan had a generational stock market and real estate crash in 1990, following a huge bubble throughout the 1980s, and I would have thought that by this time Japan would have recovered from it. (See "Japan's real estate crash may finally end after 16 years" from 2007.)

But maybe I should have expected this result. After all, America's stock market crash began in 1929, and there was no full recovery until the early 1950s -- at least partially because of World War II. So perhaps a country can't recover from a generational financial crisis without a generational crisis war. At any rate, Japan has the highest amount of debt of any country in the world in relation to GDP -- public debt is 229% of GDP. For comparison, Greece is ranked second at 163%, and the United States is at 103%. And Japan is headed for a major war with China. Washington Post

Poor health and draft-dodging plague Russia's army

20-60% of Russia's teenagers, male and female, are unfit for military duty because of reproductive illnesses, stemming from harmful habits, abortions, serious illnesses, and communicable diseases. This is one of the reasons being blamed for the failure of a four-year program to modernize Russia's armed forces. As a result, Russia is being forced to draft people as old as 27 years. Even so, large scale draft-dodging among the recruitment pool means that the army is far from its staffing goals, with the "permanent readiness" brigades may be undermanned by at least 30 percent. Jamestown and Healthy Russian Foundation


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Stormy Weather

Even after deducting 30 percent for media exaggeration, Sandy will be a horrendous event with human suffering and financial costs of near Biblical proportions. So we can take this seriously, and extend our prayers to those in harm's way, while still questioning why we must endure the additional storm of clich�s without number from the media and the stylized form of storm coverage.

Viewers visiting The Weather Channel, or just about any other TV news program, will surely encounter the young correspondent strapped to a utility pole, or staggering down a beach, while being lashed by wind and rain. He will tell us in the most serious tone that the wind is rising and the rain is coming down, which any fool could see without Jasper saying a word, or even being there, where he will surely be under the feet of first responders who have a legitimate reason for being there. We'll see the usual fools surfing in dangerous waves, or rubber-necking at unsafe beaches and sea walls. (If there is power next Tuesday where these people live, some of them will vote, which should give us all pause.)

Sandy, as all previous storms, will invoke the standard storm of TV news clich�s: People will "brace" for Sandy, though it's not clear how one does this. Some will even "batten down the hatches" while bracing and "hunkering down." We have learned that Sandy "packs dangerous winds" and that "authorities are urging extreme caution." We will learn that "some people are not heeding the warnings." I guess Republicans can take some tiny comfort in hearing something other than themselves described as "extreme." 

As I write this early Monday afternoon I have just heard President Obama in the White House press room telling us that Sandy is a "large and dangerous storm." Those just in from Mars or who had not watched television for three minutes over the past week would not have known this.

Speaking of our rookie president, he will certainly use this storm shamelessly to try to look presidential. This story would have shoved Benghazi off the front pages, even if the mainstream media considered Benghazi and associated abominations news, which they don't. Whatever good work any government agency at any level does over the next week, Obama will attempt to take credit for it. Stand by for a storm of law suits by lefties in any state that Mitt Romney wins where the power is off for any time at all.

In our current 24-hour news cycle, time always exceeds the amount of news needed to fill the time, so speculation is rife. We hear all manner of "worst case scenarios." We are also treated to endless film of people stripping food, water and batteries from stores in the storm's path and people boarding up their homes. This helps fill out the available time in a way clear answers to the important questions never can: Where is the storm? How bad is it? Where is it going? When will it get there? How long will it stay?

Of course the worst of Sandy will be the death and human suffering it causes, and this is the most important story and has the first claim on our attention and sympathy. But for some reason the speculators have hardly mentioned what the possible financial cost of Sandy could be. I shudder to think how much it will cost to repair the damage. Do the Chinese even have enough money to loan a broke America to cover the nut on this one? How many Army divisions will Obama have to de-activate, and how many Navy ships de-commissioned, in order to send FEMA trailers to Mystic, Connecticut, and other affected precincts? The cost of Sandy could well be a multiple of that of Katrina because of the densely populated area Sandy is aimed at (this is without all those doublewides sitting unoccupied in Mystic).

No matter how you measure it, this will be a tragic week for Americans in or out of Sandy's dangerous path, my aesthetic nit-picks about storm coverage aside. For those who believe in and have the habit of prayer, this is the time for it.