Sunday Show 8/10/14
New Jersey church orders bats in their attic to leave
The bats in the attic of a historic church in New Jersey are being evicted. The creatures have made Tranquility United Methodist Church in Green Township their bat cave for years. But church officials have wanted to do something about them since replacing a porous slate roof damaged by Tropical Storm Irene and Hurricane Sandy, the Newark Star-Ledger reported Sunday.
Read More
HS bibble banner lawsuit heads to Texas Supreme Court
A group of high school cheerleaders from southeast Texas asked the state Supreme Court on Wednesday to rule on whether banners emblazoned with Bible verses that they display at football games is protected free speech.
Read More
California school district shelves sex education text that prompted parents outrage
A Northern California school district is shelving a controversial sex education textbook with racy references to masturbation, sex toys and bondage.
Read More
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles tops box office
Studio estimates say "Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles" sliced off $65 million at the weekend box office. The Paramount comic-book adaptation featuring Megan Fox alongside computer-generated renditions of the pizza-eating, sewer-dwelling superheroes lunged into first place in its debut weekend.
Read More
Nixon resigns Presidency
On August 9th 1974, President Richard M. Nixon resigned in the wake of the Watergate burglary scandal. He was the first president in American history to resign.
Read More
Ford is inaugurated
On this day in 1974, one day after the resignation of President Richard M. Nixon, Gerald R. Ford is sworn in as president, making him the first man to assume the presidency upon his predecessor's resignation.
Read More
Major player in Obama eligibility booted from office
In an election-year stunner, Gov. Neil Abercrombie of Hawaii was ousted from office Saturday by state Sen. David Ige, who crushed the incumbent in the Democratic primary, despite a last-minute push for Abercrombie by President Barack Obama. Although he has been outspent by about 10 to 1, Ige defeated Abercrombie by a margin of 67 to 32 percent.
Read More
Feminists declare war on transgenders
Women are not the same as men. That’s obvious to most. But a stunning conveyor of that message is radical feminists, who according to the New Yorker, are objecting to claims to womanhood made by men, otherwise known as transgenders.
Read More
Former postmaster blasts USPS stamp choices
A former postmaster general and prominent stamp collector is accusing the U.S. Postal Service of “prostituting” its stamp program, sacrificing cultural icons for pop culture in a wrongheaded search for “illusory profits.”
Read More
Smartphone App to help you avoid dangerous areas is obviously racist or something
What if you were moving to – or visiting – a city where you didn’t know your way around? And what if you were worried about wandering into a high crime area, but didn’t know the layout of the city?
Read More
11 year old Cancer survivor invents chemo backpack for pediatric patients
An 11-year-old cancer survivor has used her own experience to invent a device that she hopes will make chemo treatments a little easier for other kids battling the disease, KDVR.com reported.
Read More
Great Gift for Grandma? Retirees Love Tablets
Figures just out from communications regulator Ofcom suggest that tablets are becoming increasingly popular among the over-55s. It seems 28% of this group own one and for many, it has become a go-to main device.
Read More
Astronauts cannot sleep properly in space
A new study by Harvard Medical School has found many astronauts suffer serious levels of sleep deprivation that could be putting their lives in danger. Scientists studied the sleep patterns of 64 astronauts on 80 space shuttle missions and 21 International Space Station (ISS) crew members before, during and after spaceflight.
Read More
Showing posts with label apps. Show all posts
Showing posts with label apps. Show all posts
Wednesday, August 13, 2014
Sunday, August 18, 2013
Show Notes 08/15/2013
Report Outlines Changes
for IRS To Ensure Accountability, Chart a Path Forward; Immediate
Actions, Next Steps Outlined
Obamacare Provision:
“Forced” Home Inspections
“Clearly, any family
may be visited by federally paid agents for almost any reason.”
According to an Obamacare provision millions of Americans will be
targeted.
No Conference
Chuck Schumer has spent
the better part of a year saying how essential it is that immigration
reform be dealt with in a comprehensive bill. But he has had a sudden
change of heart.
Florida Launches Drone
Warfare Against Mosquitoes
Hey, it looks like we
found something useful to do with drones besides serving lukewarm
sushi to unsuspecting customers.
Squealer state
Stop-sign camera
heralds new era in surveillance
Hey, it looks like we
found something useful to do with drones besides serving lukewarm
sushi to unsuspecting customers. City officials in Florida Keys are
testing using the unmanned aerial vehicles to track down and take out
the flying devils, a.k.a mosquitoes.
Hackers target light
bulbs
In the modern world,
everything is online -- and unsafe. That's the message from
researcher Nitesh Dhanjani, who discovered a vulnerability in Philips
new line of smartphone-controlled light bulbs that would allow a
hacker to remotely turn them on and off, an action that could have
major consequences in hospitals and other public venues, he said.
Who Ya Gonna Call?
Mobile App Conjures Spirit World
Sending and receiving
messages from beyond the grave used to require a caftan-wearing
medium hosting a séance in a dark, candlelit room.
http://www.livescience.com/38734-mobile-app-spirit-story-box.html
Labels:
apps,
David Webb Show,
drones,
ghosts,
GOP,
hackers,
immigration,
IRS,
Obamacare
Saturday, February 02, 2013
Show notes 01/312013
Uncooperative Radio Show Notes:
Thursday 01/31/13
30 population control quotes that show
that the elite truly believe that humans are a plague upon the earth
The following are the last 13
population control quotes which show that the elite truly believe
that humans are a plague upon the earth and that a great culling is
necessary...
Arrest numbers signal 9 percent jump in
illegal immigration in 2012
Even as President Obama travels to Las
Vegas Tuesday to call for legalizing illegal immigrants, the latest
numbers from the U.S. Border Patrol suggest that the flow across the
nation’s southwest border jumped by 9 percent last year.
Japanese scientists develop humanoid to
keep astronauts company
The 13-inch android is scheduled to be
completed by next summer and will be sent to the orbiting ISS shortly
before astronaut Koichi Wakata arrives, according to officials of the
Kibo Robot Project. Currently being developed by a consortium of
companies, including Toyota, Robo Garage Co. and the Japan Aerospace
Exploration Agency, the robot will weigh around 2.2lbs and be able to
recognise Wakata's facial features.
The App driven life: How smartphone
apps are changing our lives
"There's an app for that" is
more than just Apple's marketing mantra. Apps have become an American
lifestyle. "I'm using my phone when I'm sleeping," says
Amanda Soloway. Every night, Ms. Soloway turns on an iPhone
application called Sleep Cycle and tucks her smart phone into bed
with her. The app monitors her sleep patterns and wakes her at the
optimal moment – within a 30-minute time frame she has selected.
Star Trek tractor beam created by
scientists
A team of scientists has created a
real-life miniature "tractor beam" - as featured in the
Star Trek series - in a development which may lead to more efficient
medical testing.
The microscopic beam - created by
scientists from Scotland and the Czech Republic - allows a source of
light to attract objects.
Obamas' jobs council shutting down on
Thursday
As new weekly jobs numbers emerged
Thursday showing a jump in unemployment claims and a report released
the previous day showed the economy shrinking in late 2012, President
Obama is effectively laying off his jobs council.
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)