House Votes to Continue Some Bush-Era Tax Cuts

The vote for the so-called middle class tax package was 234 to 188, with just three Republicans joining 231 Democrats in favor; 20 Democrats and 168 Republicans were opposed.

Under current law the lower tax rates are due to expire at the end of the year. The bill approved by the House on Thursday would let that happen for income above $250,000 a year for families and $200,000 a year for individuals ? in keeping with Mr. Obama?s campaign pledge to end tax breaks for the wealthy ? but would make permanent the lower rates for income under those levels.

The bill has no chance of passage in the Senate, where even some Democrats say the lower rates should be extended for everyone, at least temporarily, given the continued weakness in the economy.

The House Republican leader and soon-to-be House speaker, John A. Boehner of Ohio, derided the Democratic maneuver to force a vote on the bill in the House as ?chicken crap.?

Still, the measure held enormous symbolism for Democrats, including the outgoing speaker, Nancy Pelosi of California, who used the debate to accuse Republicans of standing for the rich. Extending the tax breaks for the top two income levels would add about $700 billion more to the deficit than Mr. Obama?s original plan, which would add about $3 trillion to the deficit.

?Giving $700 billion to the wealthiest people in America does add $700 billion to the deficit, and the record and history shows it does not create jobs,? Ms. Pelosi said. She chastised Republicans for insisting on the tax breaks for high earners while threatening to block an extension of unemployment aid for millions of Americans whose benefits are starting to run out.

But even as lawmakers were debating the bill on the House floor, negotiators including the Treasury secretary, Timothy F. Geithner, were discussing a plan that would temporarily extend the lower tax rates at all income levels.

Those talks are expected to continue into next week, but Senate Democrats said that in the meantime, the majority leader, Harry Reid of Nevada, would bring the House-passed bill to the Senate floor as quickly as possible. Aides said that votes would be held either Friday or Saturday on both the House measure and an alternative proposal that would raise the income threshold at which the lower rates would expire to $1 million from $250,000.

Neither version is expected to win the 60 votes needed to overcome a Republican filibuster.

Some Republicans were feeling so emboldened by the strength of their negotiating position that they called on party leaders to reject any proposal for a temporary extension of the lower tax rates, and said they should insist on making all of the lower rates permanent, including a permanent elimination of the estate tax, which lapsed this year but is set to return in 2011.

Congressional Democrats expressed deepening frustration with the White House, which they said had made numerous missteps, giving Republicans the upper hand. And they expressed worries that the administration was ready to give in quickly to Republican demands, in a bid to preserve time on the Senate calendar for ratification of an arms control treaty with Russia known as New Start.

?I don?t know what?s worse, that Republicans held the Start treaty hostage to get lower tax rates, or that we let them do it,? one senior Democratic Senate aide said, speaking on condition of anonymity because of the awkward tensions with the Democratic White House.

The lead negotiators for Congressional Democrats, Senator Max Baucus of Montana and Representative Chris Van Hollen of Maryland, were said to be making a final push to extract further concessions from the Republicans in exchange for a temporary extension of the tax rates at all income levels, including a continuation of jobless benefits.

But Republicans seemed unwilling to give much if any ground, especially with the tight Congressional calendar on their side.

On Wednesday, Senate Republicans said they would halt virtually all business on the Senate floor until the tax debate was resolved and Congress had approved a temporary spending measure to finance the government at least through the early part of next year.

That effectively put Democrats in a vice, leaving them with little choice but to accede to the Republicans? demands or face the prospect of accomplishing almost nothing between now and the end of the year, when they lose their majority in the House and six seats in the Senate.

In a floor speech on Thursday, the Senate Republican leader, Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, essentially mocked his Democratic colleagues for complaining about the blockade, noting that they had created their own logjam of issues by delaying the tax debate until the last possible moment.

?Yesterday, we watched a number of Democrat senators come to the floor and express their exasperation at not being able to do what they want to do around here,? Mr. McConnell said. ?Astonishing. Let?s face it: most Americans aren?t particularly interested in the things Democrat leaders have put at the top of their to-do list.?

He chided Democrats for wanting to pass legislation authorizing repeal of the military?s ?don?t ask, don?t tell? policy banning gay soldiers from serving openly, and to bring up an immigration measure that would create a path to citizenship for some illegal immigrants brought to the United States as young children.

?At the end of the month, every taxpayer suffers a pay cut, unless we stop it,? Mr. McConnell said, referring to the imminent expiration of the lowered tax rates. He added, in reference to Senate Democrats, ?They still don?t get it, and that?s why Republicans are insisting we put these things aside and finish the most important and urgent legislation, before time runs out.?

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Judge in Xbox 360 modding trial: what are we doing here?

US District Judge Philip Gutierrez berated prosecutors for half an hour over their conduct in the criminal case against Matthew Crippen, a California man who is charged with two counts of violating the Digital Millennium Copyright Act for modding Xbox 360s. Update: "The government has decided to dismiss the indictment," prosecutor Allen Chiu told the judge shortly before the jury was to be seated on the third day of trial. If convicted, Crippen would have faced a maximum five years for each count.

The judge said he had "serious concerns about the government's case" against Crippen for running a small business out of his Anaheim home which opened and modified the firmware on Xbox 360 optical drives so they could play pirated games. The case is the first to have a criminal jury examine the legality of jailbreaking a game console.

"I really don't understand what we're doing here," Gutierrez said according to Wired. "Maybe two of the four government witnesses committed crimes. I think it is relevant and the jury is going to hear about it - both crimes."

Gutierrez was especially concerned that the prosecution planned to use two witnesses who have allegedly broken the law themselves. Crippen's defense lawyers argued that one of the government's witnesses, Entertainment Software Association investigator Tony Rosario, violated privacy laws when he secretly video-taped Crippen allegedly mod an Xbox at his Los Angeles home. The second witness, Microsoft security employee Ken McGrail who analyzed two Xboxes Crippen allegedly modified, admitted to modding Xboxes himself in college. The government fought to keep the witness conduct a secret from the jury but the judge decided against doing so.

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Judge in Xbox 360 modding trial: what are we doing here?

US District Judge Philip Gutierrez berated prosecutors for half an hour over their conduct in the criminal case against Matthew Crippen, a California man who is charged with two counts of violating the Digital Millennium Copyright Act for modding Xbox 360s. Update: "The government has decided to dismiss the indictment," prosecutor Allen Chiu told the judge shortly before the jury was to be seated on the third day of trial. If convicted, Crippen would have faced a maximum five years for each count.

The judge said he had "serious concerns about the government's case" against Crippen for running a small business out of his Anaheim home which opened and modified the firmware on Xbox 360 optical drives so they could play pirated games. The case is the first to have a criminal jury examine the legality of jailbreaking a game console.

"I really don't understand what we're doing here," Gutierrez said according to Wired. "Maybe two of the four government witnesses committed crimes. I think it is relevant and the jury is going to hear about it - both crimes."

Gutierrez was especially concerned that the prosecution planned to use two witnesses who have allegedly broken the law themselves. Crippen's defense lawyers argued that one of the government's witnesses, Entertainment Software Association investigator Tony Rosario, violated privacy laws when he secretly video-taped Crippen allegedly mod an Xbox at his Los Angeles home. The second witness, Microsoft security employee Ken McGrail who analyzed two Xboxes Crippen allegedly modified, admitted to modding Xboxes himself in college. The government fought to keep the witness conduct a secret from the jury but the judge decided against doing so.

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Blog - Card Trick Leads to New Bound on Data Compression

Here's a card trick to impress your friends. Give a deck of cards to a pal and ask him or her to cut the deck, draw six cards and list their colours. You then immediately name the cards that have been drawn.

Magic? Not quite. Instead, it's the next best thing: mathematics. The key is to arrange the deck in advance so that the sequence of the card colours follows a specific pattern called a binary De Bruijn cycle. A De Bruijn sequence is a set from an alphabet in which every possible subsequence appears exactly once.

So when a deck of cards meets this criteria, it uniquely defines any sequences of six consecutive cards. All you have to do to perform the trick is memorise the sequences.

Usually these kinds of tricks come about as the result of some new development in mathematical thinking. Today, Travis Gagie from the University of Chile in Santiago turns the tables. He says that this trick has led him to a new mathematical bound on data compression

Gagie achieves this new bound by considering a related trick. Instead of pre-arranging the cards, you shuffle the pack and then ask your friend to draw seven cards. He or she then lists the cards' colours, replaces them in the pack and cuts the deck. You then examine the deck and say which cards were drawn.

This time you're relying on probability to get the right answer. "It is not hard to show that the probability of two septuples of cards having the same colours in the same order is at most 1/128," say Gagie.

He goes on to consider the probability of correctly predicting the sequence of cards pulled at random from a deck of a certain size and after a few extra steps, finds a lower bound on the probability of doing this correctly.

This turns out to be closely related to various problems of data compression and leads to a lower bound than has been found by any other means.

"We know of no previous lower bounds comparable to [this one]," he says.

That's impressive, a really neat trick in itself.

Ref: arxiv.org/abs/1011.4609: Bounds from a Card Trick

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Congress Approves Child Nutrition Bill

Michelle Obama lobbied for the bill as a way to combat both obesity and hunger. About half the $4.5 billion cost of the bill over 10 years is to be paid for by a cut in food stamp benefits starting in several years.

The House passed the bill by a vote of 264 to 157. It was approved in the Senate in August by unanimous consent. It now goes to President Obama, who intends to sign it.

In September, some liberal House Democrats and advocates for the poor railed against the bill, saying it was wrong to pay for the expansion of child nutrition programs by cutting money for food stamps, now known as the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program.

But the Democrats put aside their disagreements on Thursday, after concluding that it was better to take what they could get than to gamble on their chances of passing a modified bill in the next Congress. Republicans will control the House after Jan. 1, and the agenda is likely to be dominated by efforts to reduce the federal budget deficit.

Mr. Obama tamped down concerns by telling Democrats he would work with them to find other ways to pay for the bill before the cuts in food stamps take effect.

?The president will do everything he can do to restore these unconscionable cuts,? said Representative Barbara Lee, Democrat of California and chairwoman of the Congressional Black Caucus.

Democrats and a few Republicans praised Mrs. Obama. ?She has been an incredible champion for our children, particularly in the areas of nutrition and obesity,? said Representative Jim McGovern, Democrat of Massachusetts.

Mr. McGovern, who is co-chairman of the House Hunger Caucus, said: ?Hunger and obesity are two sides of the same coin. Highly processed empty-calorie foods are less expensive than fresh, nutritious foods.?

School meal programs have a major impact on the nation?s health, and supporters of the bill said it could reduce the prevalence of obesity among children. The school lunch program feeds more than 31 million children a day.

Representative Rosa DeLauro, Democrat of Connecticut, said, ?The bill sets national nutrition standards that will finally get all of the junk food infiltrating our classrooms and our cafeterias out the door.?

Republicans complained that the bill would increase federal spending. Moreover, said Representative Lincoln Diaz-Balart, Republican of Florida, ?it is paid for with funds that are borrowed by the federal government.?

Representative Paul Broun, Republican of Georgia and a physician, said: ?This bill is not about child nutrition. It?s not about healthy kids. It?s about an expansion of the federal government, more and more control from Washington, borrowing more money and putting our children in greater debt. The federal government has no business setting nutritional standards and telling families what they should and should not eat.?

The bill gives the secretary of agriculture authority to establish nutrition standards for foods sold in schools during the school day, including items in vending machines. The standards would require schools to serve more fruits and vegetables, whole grains and low-fat dairy products.

In addition, for the first time in more than three decades, the bill would increase federal reimbursement for school lunches beyond adjustments for inflation ? to help cover the cost of higher-quality meals. It would also allow more than 100,000 children on Medicaid to qualify automatically for free school meals, without filing paper applications.

One of the most contentious provisions of the bill regulates prices charged for lunches served to children with family incomes that exceed the poverty level by more than 85 percent, a threshold that works out to $40,793 for a family of four.

?This provision would require some schools to raise their lunch prices,? the Congressional Budget Office said.

Representative John Kline, Republican of Minnesota, said that the price provision was tantamount to a tax increase on middle-class families. The National Governors Association and local school officials objected to it as a new federal mandate.

But Margo G. Wootan, director of nutrition policy at the Center for Science in the Public Interest, a research and advocacy group, said: ?The price of paid lunches needs to go up. Schools are not charging enough to cover the cost. As a result, money intended to provide healthy food to low-income kids is being diverted to subsidize food for higher-income children.?

School districts that comply with the new standards can receive an additional federal payment of 6 cents for each lunch served. The National School Boards Association, representing local board members, said ?the actual increased cost of compliance? was at least twice that amount.

The bill was written mainly by Senator Blanche Lincoln, Democrat of Arkansas and chairwoman of the Senate Agriculture Committee, who lost her bid for re-election.

Passage of the bill followed years of studies by the National Academy of Sciences and negotiations by advocates for children and the food industry. It was supported by health, education and religious groups, labor unions and the food, beverage, dairy and supermarket industries.

The bill rounds out the tenure of Speaker Nancy Pelosi, Democrat of California. When she took the gavel in January 2007, she was surrounded by the children of House members, and she called the House to order in the name of ?all America?s children.? On Thursday, though she left the supervision of preliminary votes in the House to others, Ms. Pelosi took back the gavel to personally declare the bill passed.

Ms. Pelosi said the child nutrition bill, besides being ?important for moral reasons,? would increase the nation?s economic competitiveness and military readiness. Millions of young adults are unable to serve in the armed forces because they are overweight, she said.

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mflow announces new social music web interface, adds news features [TNW UK]

We are big fans of mflow, the UK-based startup that focuses on the social elements of music sharing, encouraging you to share the music you are listening to with your friends and receive recommendations back in the process.

mflow has announced a new feature that it hopes will allow its users to interact with its service more often, delivering a new web-based version of its platform, which gives users the option to share, tag, listen and ultimately buy tracks they have either searched for or have been recommended via users on the mflow website.

The new web-based platform is crafted completely in HTML5, allowing for seamless music playback on a variety of different browsers and platforms. Finding new music via the platform, as well as its downloadable application, enables users to download tracks for free, tag bands and tracks, enouraging users to actively promote the acts they like so they don?t have to pay.

It?s a twist on traditional music services like iTunes, to the point that mflow has already been able to strike deals with major UK music publications Clash, Q, Kerrang, Mojo and NME, also offering ?pro profiles? to prominent UK DJ?s including BBC Radio One?s Zane Lowe and Greg James, hip hop DJs Cut La Roc and MistaJam, indie experts Matt Everitt and Phill Jupitus to help promote the sharing of music and highlight just how well the service works.

mflow hopes to push its new web platform live in the first quarter of 2011 but encourages its users to sign into its beta version from December 3 to test and help shape development of the service by interacting with other users, sharing music and recommending tracks to others.

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Micro blog marketing set to take off in China [TNW Asia]

Sites like Sina Weibo, China?s largest micro-blogging website,  have been quick to capitalize on the void left by the blocking of Twitter by the Chinese government.

Projections suggest that there will be nearly 150 million micro blog users in the country by the end of next year.  This fact has been picked up by several major multi-nationals like Nokia, Dell and China?s own Lenovo who are already seeing the potential of micro blogs as an advertising platform and are using them to promote their products.

One example is Nokia?s October news briefings that were held completely on social networking websites, mainly in micro blogging services. Micro-bloggers could wear a 3D eyepiece to watch Nokia?s online 3D promotion video and interact with the company through its micro blog on Sina Weibo, .

?Micro blogs provide a new tool for us to interact with our potential consumers here in China,?  Yang Weidong, head of marketing for Nokia in China.

According to Nokia, at least 400,000 users ?attended? this online event wich resulted in more than 1,000 orders for Nokia?s N8 smartphone making the experiment a success for the company.

Another international company eyeing the potential for micro blog marketing is US computer manufacturer Dell which has already run successful campaigns on Twitter in America and has now set up its own micro blog on Sina Weibo that has received ?hundreds of thousands? of visits and responses from Chinese micro-bloggers.

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Zotac intros HTPC AMD motherboards with USB, SATA 3.0

Zotac isn't a newcomer to the compact computing scene having released various nettops, HTPCs and related hardware. Today, the company has added two more products to its portfolio: the M880G-ITX WiFi and 880G-ITX WiFi. Both are ITX motherboards based on AMD chips with similar features overall, but each utilizes a different CPU technology.

The M880G ships with a dual-core 1.5GHz AMD Turion II Neo K625 (designed for notebooks), while the 880G comes with an empty AM3 socket that supports Phenom II, Athlon II, and Sempron desktop processors with up to a 95W TDP. As the product names indicate, the boards use AMD's 880G chipset, which sports Radeon 4200 series integrated graphics.


Both also feature two DDR3 DIMM slots with support for up to 8GB of RAM, as well as one PCIe x1 slot, HDMI and DVI outputs, 802.11n wireless, gigabit Ethernet, six USB 2.0 ports (two via headers), two USB 3.0 ports, and S/PDIF-out. The Turion-based board has six SATA 6Gb/s ports, while the AM3 model has four. No word on pricing or availability yet.

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House Votes to Continue Some Bush-Era Tax Cuts

The vote for the so-called middle class tax package was 234 to 188, with just three Republicans joining 231 Democrats in favor; 20 Democrats and 168 Republicans were opposed.

Under current law the lower tax rates are due to expire at the end of the year. The bill approved by the House on Thursday would let that happen for income above $250,000 a year for families and $200,000 a year for individuals ? in keeping with Mr. Obama?s campaign pledge to end tax breaks for the wealthy ? but would make permanent the lower rates for income under those levels.

The bill has no chance of passage in the Senate, where even some Democrats say the lower rates should be extended for everyone, at least temporarily, given the continued weakness in the economy.

The House Republican leader and soon-to-be House speaker, John A. Boehner of Ohio, derided the Democratic maneuver to force a vote on the bill in the House as ?chicken crap.?

Still, the measure held enormous symbolism for Democrats, including the outgoing speaker, Nancy Pelosi of California, who used the debate to accuse Republicans of standing for the rich. Extending the tax breaks for the top two income levels would add about $700 billion more to the deficit than Mr. Obama?s original plan, which would add about $3 trillion to the deficit.

?Giving $700 billion to the wealthiest people in America does add $700 billion to the deficit, and the record and history shows it does not create jobs,? Ms. Pelosi said. She chastised Republicans for insisting on the tax breaks for high earners while threatening to block an extension of unemployment aid for millions of Americans whose benefits are starting to run out.

But even as lawmakers were debating the bill on the House floor, negotiators including the Treasury secretary, Timothy F. Geithner, were discussing a plan that would temporarily extend the lower tax rates at all income levels.

Those talks are expected to continue into next week, but Senate Democrats said that in the meantime, the majority leader, Harry Reid of Nevada, would bring the House-passed bill to the Senate floor as quickly as possible. Aides said that votes would be held either Friday or Saturday on both the House measure and an alternative proposal that would raise the income threshold at which the lower rates would expire to $1 million from $250,000.

Neither version is expected to win the 60 votes needed to overcome a Republican filibuster.

Some Republicans were feeling so emboldened by the strength of their negotiating position that they called on party leaders to reject any proposal for a temporary extension of the lower tax rates, and said they should insist on making all of the lower rates permanent, including a permanent elimination of the estate tax, which lapsed this year but is set to return in 2011.

Congressional Democrats expressed deepening frustration with the White House, which they said had made numerous missteps, giving Republicans the upper hand. And they expressed worries that the administration was ready to give in quickly to Republican demands, in a bid to preserve time on the Senate calendar for ratification of an arms control treaty with Russia known as New Start.

?I don?t know what?s worse, that Republicans held the Start treaty hostage to get lower tax rates, or that we let them do it,? one senior Democratic Senate aide said, speaking on condition of anonymity because of the awkward tensions with the Democratic White House.

The lead negotiators for Congressional Democrats, Senator Max Baucus of Montana and Representative Chris Van Hollen of Maryland, were said to be making a final push to extract further concessions from the Republicans in exchange for a temporary extension of the tax rates at all income levels, including a continuation of jobless benefits.

But Republicans seemed unwilling to give much if any ground, especially with the tight Congressional calendar on their side.

On Wednesday, Senate Republicans said they would halt virtually all business on the Senate floor until the tax debate was resolved and Congress had approved a temporary spending measure to finance the government at least through the early part of next year.

That effectively put Democrats in a vice, leaving them with little choice but to accede to the Republicans? demands or face the prospect of accomplishing almost nothing between now and the end of the year, when they lose their majority in the House and six seats in the Senate.

In a floor speech on Thursday, the Senate Republican leader, Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, essentially mocked his Democratic colleagues for complaining about the blockade, noting that they had created their own logjam of issues by delaying the tax debate until the last possible moment.

?Yesterday, we watched a number of Democrat senators come to the floor and express their exasperation at not being able to do what they want to do around here,? Mr. McConnell said. ?Astonishing. Let?s face it: most Americans aren?t particularly interested in the things Democrat leaders have put at the top of their to-do list.?

He chided Democrats for wanting to pass legislation authorizing repeal of the military?s ?don?t ask, don?t tell? policy banning gay soldiers from serving openly, and to bring up an immigration measure that would create a path to citizenship for some illegal immigrants brought to the United States as young children.

?At the end of the month, every taxpayer suffers a pay cut, unless we stop it,? Mr. McConnell said, referring to the imminent expiration of the lowered tax rates. He added, in reference to Senate Democrats, ?They still don?t get it, and that?s why Republicans are insisting we put these things aside and finish the most important and urgent legislation, before time runs out.?

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mflow announces new social music web interface, adds news features [TNW UK]

We are big fans of mflow, the UK-based startup that focuses on the social elements of music sharing, encouraging you to share the music you are listening to with your friends and receive recommendations back in the process.

mflow has announced a new feature that it hopes will allow its users to interact with its service more often, delivering a new web-based version of its platform, which gives users the option to share, tag, listen and ultimately buy tracks they have either searched for or have been recommended via users on the mflow website.

The new web-based platform is crafted completely in HTML5, allowing for seamless music playback on a variety of different browsers and platforms. Finding new music via the platform, as well as its downloadable application, enables users to download tracks for free, tag bands and tracks, enouraging users to actively promote the acts they like so they don?t have to pay.

It?s a twist on traditional music services like iTunes, to the point that mflow has already been able to strike deals with major UK music publications Clash, Q, Kerrang, Mojo and NME, also offering ?pro profiles? to prominent UK DJ?s including BBC Radio One?s Zane Lowe and Greg James, hip hop DJs Cut La Roc and MistaJam, indie experts Matt Everitt and Phill Jupitus to help promote the sharing of music and highlight just how well the service works.

mflow hopes to push its new web platform live in the first quarter of 2011 but encourages its users to sign into its beta version from December 3 to test and help shape development of the service by interacting with other users, sharing music and recommending tracks to others.

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Source: http://thenextweb.com/uk/2010/12/03/mflow-announces-new-social-music-web-interface-adds-news-features/

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