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25
Jun

Get your groove on in this week’s comment thread!


Sit back, relax and chat about stuff because it’s the weekend!

Hey hey! Another week is done and we’re all closer to _________ (fill in the blank there with retirement, graduation, or whatever). Hopefully, you had a good one.

We did because we get to live through yet another OnePlus launch and the internet fun-times that always go with them. It seems like a great phone. A great phone that may be too expensive, or cheat at benchmarks, or tell fibs about camera specs or whatever. You know, that regular OnePlus drama. Don’t think that people in OnePlus’ marketing department aren’t loving seeing the words OnePlus 5 in every online discussion about Android …

On top of that circus, we get to play with Bixby. Sort of, at least in a preview kinda way. Which is better than a not-at-all kind of way. Oh, and yeah, English or Korean only. ¡Lo siento!

It seems decent. Good with the on-device stuff and a start on the broader finding information from the internet stuff. Makes sense, right? Samsung is all about their hardware and getting Bixby to work with it had to be their first priority. The rest will come.

south_seas_island_resort%2C_captiva_isla

Photo credit Dan Perry, CC BY 2.0.

I’m excited this weekend, because right now while you’re reading I’m on my way for a week’s R&R in Captiva, Florida. A week’s worth of swimming with manatees, collecting seashells, exciting nightlife in nearby Ft. Myers, or just sitting on my butt in a cabana sipping fruity drinks with tiny umbrellas in them. Probably the latter.

Seriously, it will be a great week spent with family and minus stress. There’s even a new little one to see, and that gets me excited. I hail from the area, and it’s always nice to go back. Especially in the winter, but June is good, too.

What are y’all up to this weekend? Talk about it, or anything else in the comments down below.

25
Jun

In 2017, tweets are official presidential statements


Does a tweet count as an official response to a federal inquiry? Unsurprisingly, the White House thinks so. As reported by Reuters, the White House sent a letter to the House of Representatives Intelligence Committee claiming that a pair of Trump tweets on Thursday were the president’s official response to an inquiry from the committee. At question is the existence of any recordings or memos of Trump’s conversations with fired FBI director James Comey, and Trump’s latest tweets claim that he “did not make, and do not have, any such recordings.”

It’s hard to keep up with all the back-and-forth, but after Trump unexpectedly fired Comey in early May, he then tweeted that Comey had “better hope that there are no ‘tapes’ of our conversations before he starts leaking to the press!” In his early June testimony, Comey essentially said he’d welcome the existence of those tapes, indicating that they’d exonerate him and show that he’s been telling the truth about his accounts of his interactions with the president.

The House of Representatives Intelligence Committee, which has been investigating the extent of Russian hacking and influence on the 2016 election, asked the White House counsel on June 9th about the existence of any such tapes and said the White House had until June 23rd to respond. Trump’s tweets went out on the 22nd, and the White House says they’re sufficient response to the inquiry, calling them a “statement” from the president.

…whether there are “tapes” or recordings of my conversations with James Comey, but I did not make, and do not have, any such recordings.

— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) June 22, 2017

Of course, Trump could delete the tweets at any time — he’s already deleted a handful of tweets during his presidency. Representatives Mike Conaway and Adam Schiff, the leading republican and democrat on the committee, don’t agree. Conaway said that the tweet wasn’t a sufficient response, while Schiff noted that Trump’s tweet stopped short of denying that the White House had recordings and said he wanted a response in writing.

Given the fleeting nature of Twitter, it’s not surprising that the committee wants a more traditional response. The question is whether or not the White House will provide it — and if they don’t, how these tweets will hold up to legal scrutiny in the ongoing investigation. That’s not to mention the fact that Trump has since indicated that his original tapes tweet was meant to essentially influence Comey’s public comments and testimony, something some believe could qualify as witness intimidation or obstruction of justice — something the president is already believed to be under investigation for.

“If the president had no tapes, why did he suggest otherwise? Did he seek to mislead the public? Was he trying to intimidate or silence James Comey?” Schiff said on Friday. “And if so, did he take other steps to discourage potential witnesses from speaking out?” While it’s almost impossible for charges to actually be brought against Trump, these developments could certainly feed into the obstruction case and eventual potential punishment from Congress.

Source: Reuters, The Washington Post