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Obama Talks Mother-in-Law, BlackBerry and Jessica Simpson
Matt Lauer scored an exclusive interview with President Obama yesterday, before the Super Bowl. Barack said he loves working in a "home office" and that he sees his family now more than he has in the two years he was on the campaign trail. He jokingly said he loves having his mother-in-law live with him because she takes his side when Michelle comes down on him. He didn't bring his super-secret new BlackBerry to the interview, which disappointed Matt, but he did say it's like Inspector Gadget, with lots of thrilling features. But hardly anyone has his email address -- even Oprah didn't get it. At the end of the clip, at the 10:45 mark Matt shows him the cover of US Weekly and he's sort of forced to notice the Jessica Simpson weight controversy, which seemed to surprise him, noting "it appears she's having some kind of weight battle" after reading the headline. Take a look:
Posted on February 2, 2009
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Barack Obama Wants to Keep his BlackBerry
President-elect Barack Obama is extremely likely to lose his BlackBerry when he takes office but he's still fighting the inevitable. In a recent interview Obama says he's still clinging to his BlackBerry and "they're going to have to pry it out of my hands."
"I'm still clinging to my BlackBerry," Mr. Obama said Wednesday. "They're going to pry it out of my hands."
Of all the fights facing Mr. Obama as he prepares for the White House, one of the most maddening for him is the prospect of losing the BlackBerry that has been attached to his belt for years. It is, he has vigorously argued, an essential link to keeping him apprised of events outside his ever-tightening cocoon.
"This is a concern, I should add, not just of Secret Service, but also lawyers," Mr. Obama said, speaking in an interview with CNBC and The New York Times. "You know, this town's full of lawyers. I don’t know if you’ve noticed."
President Bush had to sign off permanently from AOL when he took office. It's understandable that Obama wants to keep this last connection to the outside world but he will ultimately part with his BlackBerry for security and legal reasons.
Posted on January 8, 2009
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Barack Obama's Blackberry Will Be Confiscated on January 20, 2009
Being the leader of the free world is pretty cool, but there is one big drawback: you don't get to use a Blackberry anymore. Barack Obama is almost never without his: he has it attached to his belt and gets emails all day and late into the night. He also loves to text message friends. But all that will come to an end when he is sworn in as president on January 20.
There are two reasons the president of the United States doesn't get to use a personal email or text service. First, there's the security risk. And second, under the Presidential Records Act all of the president's correspondence is entered into the official record and will ultimately be made available for public review. That kind of puts a damper on an IM conversation between friends, that's for sure. Right before he took office President Bush had to send a sad goodbye email to all his friends explaining why he was signing off his AOL account.
Mr. Obama is the second president to grapple with the idea of this self-imposed isolation. Three days before his first inauguration, George W. Bush sent a message to 42 friends and relatives that explained his predicament.
"Since I do not want my private conversations looked at by those out to embarrass, the only course of action is not to correspond in cyberspace," Mr. Bush wrote from his old address, G94B@aol.com. "This saddens me. I have enjoyed conversing with each of you."
But in the interceding eight years, as BlackBerrys have become ubiquitous - and often less intrusive than a telephone, the volume of e-mail has multiplied and the role of technology has matured. Mr. Obama used e-mail to stay in constant touch with friends from the lonely confines of the road, often sending messages like "Sox!" when the Chicago White Sox won a game. He also relied on e-mail to keep abreast of the rapid whirl of events on a given campaign day.
Mr. Obama's memorandums and briefing books were seldom printed out and delivered to his house or hotel room, aides said. They were simply sent to his BlackBerry for his review. If a document was too long, he would read and respond from his laptop computer, often putting his editing changes in red type.
His messages to advisers and friends, they say, are generally crisp, properly spelled and free of symbols or emoticons. The time stamps provided a window into how much he was sleeping on a given night, with messages often being sent to staff members at 1 a.m. or as late as 3 a.m. if he was working on an important speech.
In the modern world, it seems kind of ridiculous that the president of the United States can't text message his daughter to say hi without it becoming a national record. But that's the law and there are good reasons for that law. All the president's correspondence is saved for posterity. We guess it's more of a "public office" than we ever realized.
The other issue is whether Obama will become the first emailing president. For official correspondence he can send email from a government address and it will all be recorded on the White House server. He has said he wants a laptop on his desk in the Oval Office, which will be yet another first in this new administration.
Posted on November 16, 2008
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