More U.S. Soldiers Killed Themselves Than Died in Combat in 2010

Infographic, US Soldeir deaths, Military, Veterans, Afghanistan, Iraq
For the second year in a row, more American soldiers—both enlisted men and women and veterans—committed suicide than were killed in the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Excluding accidents and illness, 462 soldiers died in combat, while 468 committed suicide. A difference of six isn't vast by any means, but the symbolism is significant and troubling. In 2009, there were 381 suicides by military personnel, a number that also exceeded the number of combat deaths.

Earlier this month, military authorities announced that suicides amongst active-duty soldiers had slowed in 2010, while suicides amongst reservists and people in the National Guard had increased. It was proof, they said, that the frequent psychological screenings active-duty personnel receive were working, and that reservists and guardsmen, who are more removed from the military's medical bureaucracy, simply need to begin undergoing more health checks. This new data, that American soldiers are now more dangerous to themselves than the insurgents, flies right in the face of any suggestion that things are "working." Even if something's working, the system is still very, very broken.

One of the problems hindering the military's attempt to address soldier suicides is that there's no real rhyme or reason to what kind of soldier is killing himself. While many suicide victims are indeed afflicted with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder after facing heavy combat in the Middle East, many more have never even been deployed. Of the 112 guardsmen who committed suicide last year, more than half had never even left American soil.

"If you think you know the one thing that causes people to commit suicide, please let us know,” Army Vice Chief of Staff General Peter Chiarelli told the Army Times, "because we don't know what it is."

PSP successor is official, codenamed ‘NGP’ (Next Generation Portable)

Mock it up, talk it up and leak it out all you want, only Sony has the power to actually bring the so-called “PSP2” into the world — and that moment has come. The “sequel” to the PlayStation Portable was made official today (like, just now!) during a press event in Japan, looking every bit as — well, that thing looks like the PSP, doesn’t it?

Codenamed “NGP” — that’s “Next Generation Portable” Entertainment System — the device has been designed with five core tenets buzz phrases in mind, according to Sony: Revolutionary User Interface; Social Connectivity; Location-based Entertainment; Converging Real and Virtual; and PlayStation Suite Compatibility.

But what does that mean? For starters, the new hardware features dual analog sticks; a 5-inch OLED display (with 960×544 resolution — four times the PSP’s); a front touchscreen and rear touchpad (woah!); 3G, WiFi, Bluetooth and GPS; and, for good measure, the same six-axis motion system that propels the Move, plus a three-axis compass — oh, and we can’t forget the front and rear cameras (those come standard these days). Of course, the NGP plays games, too, which will be offered on new flash memory-based cards (so long UMD!) that feature added storage for DLC and game saves.

The NGP is coming this holiday season.

Update:
Complete hardware specs, provided by Sony, are posted after the break.

Continue reading PSP successor is official, codenamed ‘NGP’ (Next Generation Portable)

JoystiqPSP successor is official, codenamed ‘NGP’ (Next Generation Portable) originally appeared on Joystiq on Thu, 27 Jan 2011 01:32:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink | Email this | Comments

Travel The Oregon Trail and Find Carmen San Diego On Facebook in Early February

I’ve never played a Facebook game. I once signed up for ESPNU College Town, but then I didn’t touch it.

I might have found the Facebook game for me, though, because Blue Fang and The Learning Company are set to release new versions of Where in the World is Carmen San Diego and The Oregon Trail on Facebook. The Oregon Trail will be out on February 2, which is six days from now, and Carmen San Diego will hit a week later on February 9.

This word comes from Blue Fang dev Darius Kazemi, who was extremely excited to share this with the world, as he should be.

It’s important to note that these are not the same version of these titles you’re used to. But that’s totally cool, because we’ve all played this s–t so much we need them to be changed up a bit. And, naturally, they’re going to incorporate some social bulls–t since it’s Facebook. Oh, and here are some trailers that’ll let you know what you’re in for.

I wonder if the power of nostalgia is enough to topple Cityville.

via Edge

Desktop notifications for emails and chat messages

Posted by Andrew Wilson, Software Engineer

Many of us are guilty of constantly switching back to Gmail to check for new messages. And if you’re like me, you’ve probably missed an important chat message because you weren’t looking at your Gmail window when it came in. If you use Google Chrome, these days can be over since we just launched HTML5 desktop notifications which display pop-ups whenever a chat message or new email arrives.


To turn them on, click on the Settings link in the top right corner of Gmail and scroll down to the “Desktop Notifications” section. If you just want to get notified about chat messages, or if you use Priority Inbox and only want to get notifications for important messages, you can customize your settings from there too.


This functionality is currently only available for people using Google Chrome, but we’re working to make notifications part of the standard Web platform.

Android 3.0 Honeycomb preview emulator hands-on

So we’ve just installed Google’s first public-access preview of its tablet-focused Android 3.0 Honeycomb operating system, an early build of the platform’s SDK that features “non-final” code and APIs; it’s intended primarily for developers who want to get a head start on making their tablet app dreams come true, but naturally, we needed to install it and take it for a test drive ourselves. Here are our quick observations:

  • Like Android SDK emulators before it, Honeycomb’s is extremely slow — nearly to the point of uselessness in this case. We’ll give them a mulligan since this is a preview build, but seriously, we wouldn’t recommend installing this unless you enjoy pulling your hair out.
  • There appears to be some sort of orientation bug that prevents us from going landscape, which is what we really wanted. Sorry about that! We’ve shot the video sideways and rotated all of our images; if we’re able to figure it out or a newer build is released with orientation properly working, we’ll update.
  • The browser looks great — specifically the UI, which is going to make desktop browser users feel right at home perhaps more than any other tablet browsing experience to date. As with the rest of the emulator, it was too slow to really use — and it kept crashing on us — but we’re digging the look.
  • The system for adding and managing widgets is a joy to use — it makes your entire desktop accessible from a single screen, and we like the amount of detail you can preview for each widget before deciding whether to use it and where to place it.
  • In general, the window animations and screen transitions seem cool, but none were smooth or fast enough in the emulator to know for sure. Jury’s still out until this gets faster or we’re using Honeycomb on actual tablets.
  • We’re not in love with the dim, squashed segmented display that Google is using for the time in the lower right; we’re hoping there are plenty of alternative fonts available.

Since the emulator doesn’t provide a “Google experience” build with access to the Android Market, Gmail, or other “branded” Google apps, we weren’t able to deep-dive on how real-world applications are going to look on the platform — but with any luck, Motorola’s Xoom should be shipping within a few weeks. In the meantime, check out a video after the break!

Update: We’ve figured out the orientation trick — you need to uncheck automatic orientation in Settings, then flip the emulator from landscape to portrait (counterintuitive, we know). We’ll be updating the media as soon as we can!

Update 2: Second video (in the correct orientation this time!) added after the break.

Continue reading Android 3.0 Honeycomb preview emulator hands-on

Android 3.0 Honeycomb preview emulator hands-on originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 26 Jan 2011 16:56:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments

Kongregate Arcade Back in Android Market, Slightly Tweaked

Just a week after being pulled by Google from its Android Market for breaking the developer agreement, Kongregate’s game-distributing Android app is back, after going through some changes.

The app, called Kongregate Arcade, makes more than 300 of the Flash games available on Kongregate.com available to Android-running smartphone owners. The app was in the Android Market a week ago, but Google pulled it the day it was released because its developer agreement forbids apps from distributing other apps, which it claimed Kongregate Arcade was doing.

Kongregate has tweaked the app some, using the Android browser cache to save game files rather than downloading them to a separate location, and running its Flash games full-screen in a Webkit browser while ditching the address bar from the top, thereby limiting what users can do with it. The idea is to make Kongregate more browser-like, allowing it to run Flash games like Android would other websites, and without downloading files that might constitute “distributing apps.”

There’s a trailer for the newly fixed app from Kongregate below, and Android users can find the new version of Kongregate Arcade in the Android Marketplace now — though for how long is impossible to say. Kongregate hopes the changes will meet Google’s requirements, but if not, you can still download the original Kongregate Arcade straight from kongregate.com.

Via Joystiq.


Android 3.0 Honeycomb SDK preview goes live

It’s still going to be a little bit before you can get your hands on a Xoom, but if you’d like to start playing with the Honeycomb SDK right now — and hey, developers, we’d encourage you to do just that — Google’s now made it possible. A version of the Android 3.0 SDK billed as a “preview” is now available for download, featuring “non-final” APIs and system images that will help would-be Android tablet devs get their feet wet as they prepare for an inevitable onslaught of these things over the next few months. So go on, get it while the gettin’s good.

[Thanks, D]

Android 3.0 Honeycomb SDK preview goes live originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 26 Jan 2011 14:43:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceAndroid Developers  | Email this | Comments

Will Future BlackBerrys Run Android Apps?

playbook front close.jpg

Say you’re Research in Motion and you’re looking to up the app offering on your platform. There are a couple of ways to go about this. You could attempt to convince more developers of the validity of your operating system, getting them to develop applications for your devices as they develop for more popular operating systems like iOS and Android.

Or, you could find a way to get applications from one those aforementioned mobile OSes to play directly on your device. Word is that RIM may be looking at the latter option. The company is reportedly discussing its virtualization options with Dalvik, the same virtual machine used by Android. Adopting such an option could mean that future BlackBerry devices (phones and tablets and such) could also play Android apps, meaning support for all of those Google products Android owners have come to take for granted.
Boy Genius Report, who first got the tip off of the above information, speculates that one of two things could happen in that eventuality–either RIM ignores Google altogether, or the two companies strike some kind of deal. Of course the latter would be a mutually beneficial–if surprisingly bold–decision, broadening RIM’s available app selection, while getting more Google apps in the hands of smartphone and tablet users.

Facebook Boosts Security With Friend Identification and HTTPS Encryption

Facebook Security

This couldn’t have been planned any better. The morning after Zuckerberg’s fan page was hacked, Facebook announced a pair of new security features to keep hackers at bay. The site can now be accessed entirely over an encrypted HTTPS connection. In addition, Facebook has introduced a “social authentication” feature that asks you to identify friends in photos, instead of making you struggle to decipher a captcha when extra authentication is required.

Facebook Boosts Security With Friend Identification and HTTPS Encryption originally appeared on Switched on Wed, 26 Jan 2011 12:17:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink | Email this | Comments

Exclusive: Sony Ericsson Xperia Play (PlayStation Phone) preview

Oh yes. After all the unbearable teasing since we unveiled the first ever photos of the PlayStation Phone, we’ve finally managed to get hold of the real deal for an in-depth preview. Honestly, we couldn’t wait any longer with this thing floating around in China; we’d otherwise have to wait until MWC, where we expect the phone to be launched as the “Xperia Play” (and we shall refer to this name henceforth). Before you pop the cork for us, do bear in mind that what we’re seeing here is subject to changes, so don’t be alarmed by any missing features or exposed cables in our preview. When you’re ready, head right past the break to find out what Sony Ericsson’s cooking up.

Continue reading Exclusive: Sony Ericsson Xperia Play (PlayStation Phone) preview

Exclusive: Sony Ericsson Xperia Play (PlayStation Phone) preview originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 26 Jan 2011 12:03:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments

Gretzky’s greatness gets better with age

As Wayne Gretzky passes one of life’s significant signposts and turns 50 Wednesday, his accomplishments and milestones remain virtually untouched, increasing appreciation for the man most consider the greatest hockey player in history.

Mark Zuckerberg's Facebook Fan Page Hacked

Thumbnail image for Mark Zuckerberg.jpg

Of course, being Time Magazine’s Person of the Year isn’t all roses, Chuppahs, and long distance wedding invitations. It also means the occasional Facebook Fan Page hacking. Yesterday someone apparently hacked into Mark Zuckerberg’s Facebook page (we all assume), leaving the following truly bizarre note,

Let the hacking begin: If facebook needs money, instead of going to the banks, why doesn’t Facebook let its users invest in Facebook in a social way? Why not transform Facebook into a ‘social business’ the way Nobel Price winner Muhammad Yunus described it? [Link redacted] What do you think? #hackercup2011

TechCrunch caught wind of the bizarre posting and noted that, after a few minutes, 1,800 people liked the thing, commenting 500 times,despite the fact that it pretty clearly didn’t come from Zuckerberg himself–unless, of course, the executive had his Network moment for all the world to see.

Facebook took the page down fairly quickly, but has yet to issue an official statement regarding what precisely happened on Mark Zuckerberg’s Facebook Fan Page.

Samsung takes aim at Apple’s notebook crown, projects 60 percent increase in laptop sales in 2011

Samsung has sought to take market share from all manner of iProducts over the years, and it seems the company is now shooting to steal Apple's MacBook thunder in 2011. Sammy sold ten million laptops in 2010 — only 150,000 less than Jobs & Co. through the first nine months of the year — and purportedly plans to move between sixteen and seventeen million portable machines in 2011. That is a massive increase in sales, but if the Korean company's 9 Series is an indication of what’s to come, we can’t say it’s a completely unrealistic goal. Whether they move more product than Apple is still to be determined, but given its record Q4 earnings, there’s no indication that the Cupertino crowd will be slowing down any time soon. Game on, fellas.

Samsung takes aim at Apple’s notebook crown, projects 60 percent increase in laptop sales in 2011 originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 26 Jan 2011 08:27:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Electronista  |  sourceDigitimes  | Email this | Comments

Dealing With Computers Should Require Anger Management [Comic]

Sometimes computers just get the best of us. Of course, if computers were easy, nobody would read How-To Geek, so we can’t complain too much!

Got an opinion to share? Click here to join the discussion


Discover Card Motiva Application

Latest Features How-To Geek ETC