среда, 29 февраля 2012 г.

NSW:Madeleine's school offers counselling


AAP General News (Australia)
08-04-2011
NSW:Madeleine's school offers counselling

SYDNEY, Aug 4 AAP - Specialist police have begun a minute search of streets surrounding
the home of Madeleine Pulver where the Sydney student endured a ten hour strapped to
what was believed to a bomb.

The 18-year-old, who is in the midst of final school year, is back with her family
after spending several hours in hospital after her ordeal ended around midnight on Wednesday.

Senior year trial exams at her school, Wenona High School, have been postponed and
counselling has been offered to other students.

The young woman was confronted by a masked man at her family's home in Mosman, on Sydney's
lower north, about 2pm on Wednesday, and spent the next ten hours petrified as police
worked to remove a device from around her neck.

Police on Thursday said the bomb had been found to be a hoax.

Six officers from the Public Order and Riot Squad (PORS) were conducting a line-search
of the lower end of Burrawong Avenue in Mosman on Thursday, closely examining undergrowth
and bushes.

Nearby streets remained cordoned off although well-wishers dropped flowers outside
the home or handed them to police to pass on to the family, one of Sydney's wealthiest.

Dr Briony Scott, the principal of the young woman's school, has advised students not
to speak to media and to stay clear of social networking sites.

"The Year 12 Trial HSC exams scheduled for today and tomorrow have been postponed,"

she said in a statement posted on the school's website.

"All students have been offered counselling at a school assembly this morning.

"Our staff will be able to provide additional support to Year 12 and extra counsellors
will be at the school today."

Dr Scott also advised students not to speak publicly about the incident or discuss
it over the internet.

"As police continue their investigations we ask that the school community respects
the integrity of their inquiries as well as the privacy of the family, by not indulging
in public commentary through the media or social networking sites," she said.

A parent of one student told AAP staff have "put the fear of god into them about talking
to the media".

The mood at the school appeared calm, orderly and collected, with teachers keeping
vigil outside and ushering students through the gates.

Prime Minister Julia Gillard said she was in disbelief when she first heard the story.

"The first thing I said was `it's like a Hollywood script, the kind of thing you would
see at the cinema or on TV'," she told Fairfax Radio in Perth.

"You would never expect it to happen in real life in Australia."

NSW Premier Barry O'Farrell said he was relieved Madeline's ordeal had come to a safe
end, and he praised the efforts of the police involved as "extraordinary".

"I'm happy to wait for all the facts to come out but no-one would want any member of
their family to go through the ordeal this woman did," he told reporters.

NSW Police Assistant Commissioner Mark Murdoch said the lengthy operation was justified
until bomb disposal experts determined the nature of the device.

"It was affixed to her by a chain or something similar, which eventually took us a
fair while to remove ... and that added to the trauma that Madelaine experienced and prolonged,"

he said outside the Pulver home, where Madeleine lives with her parents William and Belinda.

"There were some instructions left by the offender at the scene last afternoon and
those instructions will provide us with further lines for inquiry.

"Those instructions also limited us somewhat last night in how quickly we could proceed.

"Certainly the instructions were precise, they were such that led us to believe that
we were dealing with a very serious and legitimate threat."

Madeleine's parents had no idea why their daughter had been targeted, he said.

After Madeleine's family contacted police, saying their daughter needed help, a general
duties police car with two officers went to the scene.

"What they saw was a very distressed young lady with what we believed to be at the
time an improvised explosive device attached to her body," Mr Murdoch told Fairfax radio.

Nearby residents were immediately evacuated and bomb technicians, negotiators and detectives
were summoned to the scene.

The man had been disguised when he put the device around Madeleine's neck, he said,
but he declined to give any details of the disguise.

The young woman's father is chief executive of Appen Butler Hill, which provides linguistic
and voice-recognition services for many organisations including governments.

Detectives are still waiting to formally interview the teenager, police confirmed shortly
after midday on Thursday.

Mr Pulver is expected to speak to the media later in the day.

AAP vpm/tr/bwl

KEYWORD: BOMB 4TH UPDATE

� 2011 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

Can someone help me with computer problem.

Provided by 7DAYS.ae

I would appreciate if any 7DAYS reader could help me with this computer related problem I have

1. I went on the Internet to check my Inbox on www.eimmail.aeA through the Outlook Express

2. Suddenly two windows appeared on my screen saying that the programme has to close unexpectedly and if I chose to End Now option any unsaved data will be lost. I opted for Cancel .

3. Now the Outlook Express shows only a new Welcome to Outlook Express 6 message in the Inbox and all data in the Inbox, Outbox , Sent, Deleted , Drafts etc are blank with no past messages in view. All search efforts are in vain.

4. I have tried fiddling with the Settings but without success. Being a senior citizen I am not computer savvy at all and will appreciate if anyone can guide me to restoreA the earlier data or is it lost for good and cannot be recovered.

IT Challenged

Dubai

[c] 2007 Al Sidra Media LLC

Provided by Syndigate.info an Albawaba.com company

NSW:Labor's 15-MP shadow cabinet named =5


AAP General News (Australia)
04-08-2011
NSW:Labor's 15-MP shadow cabinet named =5

"The portfolios of Climate Change and Water will be reinstated, and Luke Foley as Shadow
Minister for the Environment and Climate Change will reclaim policy responsibility for
Marine Parks and Catchment Management Authorities," Mr Robertson said.

Labor has also reinstated the portfolios of Housing, Industrial Relations and Volunteering
and Youth.

Cherie Burton will look after Volunteering and Youth, Fair Trading, and Healthy Lifestyles.

Overall, there will be six women in the cabinet, including former deputy leader Carmel
Tebbutt who is responsible for Education and Training.

Former premier Nathan Rees has made a comeback to the front bench, as spokesman for
Police and Emergency Services and the Arts.

MORE klm/nb

KEYWORD: LABOR NSW 5 SYDNEY

� 2011 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

VIC:Boy, 14, missing in Melbourne


AAP General News (Australia)
12-19-2010
VIC:Boy, 14, missing in Melbourne

MELBOURNE, Dec 19 AAP - A teenage Melbourne schoolboy has been missing since his father
dropped him off at school on Friday morning.

Police and the boy's family say they are worried about the safety of the 14-year-old
boy named Sam from Maidstone in Melbourne's west.

Sam was last seen at Sunshine Secondary School on Northumberland Road, Sunshine, at
about 8.30am (AEDT) after being driven there.

Police have been told Sam did not attend school that day and he hasn't been seen since.

He is described as being of Middle Eastern appearance, more than 180cm tall, medium
build, with spikey black hair and dark eyes.

He was last seen wearing a grey, hooded long-sleeved shirt with vertical red stripes,
blue jeans and black shoes.

Anyone who may have information regarding his whereabouts is urged to contact police
or Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000 or visit: www.crimestoppers.com.au

AAP gr/ao

KEYWORD: MISSING

� 2010 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

FED:Coalition plan provides choice


AAP General News (Australia)
08-11-2010
FED:Coalition plan provides choice

Labor parliamentary secretary MIKE KELLY has welcomed coalition plans for broadband
.. saying it gives voters distinctly different choices.

The coalition will scrap Labor's 43 billion dollar national broadband network if it
wins office .. replacing it with a six billion dollar alternative involving the private
sector.

But Dr KELLY says that option would betray rural and regional constituents .. and he's
accused the coalition of not understanding the basic technology of telecommunications.

He's told ABC TV the opposition frontbench is from Jurassic Park and still coming to
grips with the telephone .. and doesn't understand how important the network is.

AAP RTV cj/rl/crh

KEYWORD: POLL10 BROADBAND (CANBERRA)

� 2010 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

Fed: Gold Coast to take on Sri Lanka for Com18 Games


AAP General News (Australia)
04-01-2010
Fed: Gold Coast to take on Sri Lanka for Com18 Games

By Tony Bartlett and Steve Gray

GOLD COAST, April 1 AAP - Gold Coast mayor and Olympian Ron Clarke says Sri Lanka's
decision to bid for the 2018 Commonwealth Games could play right into Australia's court.

The Nigerian city of Abuja failed to lodge its expected bid by the deadline of March
31, leaving the Gold Coast to compete against the obscure Sri Lankan region of Hambantota.

Hambantota is located on the south coast of Sri Lanka and has a population of around 500,000.

It is building a 25,000-seat international cricket stadium as the host of two 2011
Cricket World Cup matches.

Mr Clarke said no one had anticipated a bid from Sri Lanka.

"It still means there's a bidding contest and you really have to take everybody seriously,"

he said.

"No doubt they've done their sums and they know that they've got some support, but
you wonder because normally they rotate around areas and it's going to be New Delhi in
a few months' time.

"So you have virtually the same area bidding for the 2018 Games.

"I wouldn't say I'd rather be bidding against Sri Lanka than anyone else, but I'll
be interested in looking at the details of their proposal."

Mr Clarke said he was confident of the strength of the $1 billion Gold Coast bid.

CEO of the Australian Commonwealth Games Federation, Perry Crosswhite, said Sri Lanka
would put up a competitive proposal against the Gold Coast bid.

"We certainly welcome the bid by Sri Lanka and it's disappointing about Nigeria," Mr
Crosswhite said.

"Nigeria's a very strong sports nation and I don't know why they didn't bid in the
end, but there's reports of some unrest there, certainly political unrest.

"Sri Lanka is a strong sports-loving nation, just look at the cricket and some of the
other various events.

"They're going to put a good bid up."

Nigerian news service Next reported the country's acting president Goodluck Jonathan
had removed national sports commission chairman Sani Ndanusa from his position and pulled
his country out of the Commonwealth Games Federation.

Confirmation was being sought from the CGF and the Nigerian High Commission in Canberra.

Mr Crosswhite said the Sri Lankan government was developing Hambantota as a sports hub.

"I've no doubt they're on a mission that will certainly test us, for sure," he said.

The Gold Coast's formal bid was signed by Australian Commonwealth Games Association
president Sam Coffa, Queensland Premier Anna Bligh and Mr Clarke on Wednesday.

The state government will spend $11 million on its bid and invest more than $1 billion
in infrastructure over the next eight years, including an upgraded aquatic centre, new
velodrome and athletes' village.

The winning bid will be announced in November 2011.

Melbourne was the last Australian host of the Games in 2006.

The next Games are in Delhi in October this year and Glasgow in 2014.

AAP bart/pjo/ht/de

KEYWORD: COM18 WRAP

2010 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

NSW: 300 hydroponic cannabis plants discovered in Sydney homes


AAP General News (Australia)
08-20-2009
NSW: 300 hydroponic cannabis plants discovered in Sydney homes

SYDNEY, Aug 20 AAP - More than 300 hydroponically grown cannabis plants, worth about
$650,000, have been discovered in homes in Sydney's west, police say.

Officers allegedly uncovered 328 plants on Wednesday after searching properties in
Smithfield, Cabramatta and Cabramatta West.

A 25-year-old woman and two men, both aged 26, were charged with various drug offences.

The trio was refused bail to appear at Fairfield Local Court and Liverpool Local Court today.

Police are continuing their investigations into the matter and have urged anyone with
information to contact Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000.

AAP bzs/srp

KEYWORD: CANNABIS

2009 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

FED: Nut recall follows US salmonella scare


AAP General News (Australia)
04-09-2009
FED: Nut recall follows US salmonella scare

SYDNEY, April 9 AAP - An Australian company is pulling its range of pistachio nut-based
products off store shelves, after a salmonella scare hit its American supplier.

South Australia-based Nocelle Foods is conducting a voluntary recall of its nut and
yoghurt products. A company spokesman said it was a precautionary move and no Australians
had fallen ill.

"This voluntary recall is being undertaken to ensure the safety of our customers, as
an ongoing commitment to maintain the highest possible standards of safety and product
quality at all times," the spokesman said in a statement.

The recall takes in all packets of "Natures Delight Pistachios" along with "Setton
Farms"-brand bulk boxes of salted nuts or kernels.

Pistachio products sold under "The Market Grocer" label are also withdrawn including
its pistachio, cranberry and honey yoghurt.

Supa Barn Cranberry, Pistachio, Honey and Yoghurt is also recalled.

"Consumers are asked not to consume this product," the spokesman said.

"If consumers know they have the affected product they should return it to the place
of purchase for a full refund."

AAP dr/ss

KEYWORD: PISTACHIO

2009 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

Fed: Hockey says share the love but Libs don't get the message


AAP General News (Australia)
12-05-2008
Fed: Hockey says share the love but Libs don't get the message

By Kate Hannon, National Political Editor

CANBERRA, Dec 5 AAP - Joe Hockey exhorted his enemies to share the love because, "quite
frankly, sharing the love is not a bad thing".

The avuncular manager of opposition business in the House of Representatives was talking
on Thursday about being kind to his opponents in the dying days of parliament as the festive
season approaches.

However within seconds of his comment he hoed into Labor backbencher James Bidgood
calling on Prime Minister Kevin Rudd to dump the MP after he took a photo of a man who
had doused himself in petrol as part of a protest and then offered the pictures to a media
organisation.

An apology in Parliament was not enough, said Hockey, Bidgood should go.

While Hockey was on message on the hapless Bidgood, he might have considered directing
the "share the love" vibe towards his own colleagues.

Some, or possibly only one, of them made much of the week hell for deputy leader and
shadow treasurer Julie Bishop who was the subject of a whispering campaign that she was
underperforming and would soon be moved.

The love was also missing when coalition senators split as they fell into a collective
heap sometime after midnight on Thursday and failed to make good their original intention
and amend the government's bill to set up its nation building funds.

The Senate debacle ended the week with what former Howard government minister Bronwyn
Bishop described as "not a good look".

The sudden lack of discipline in the Senate is not a good omen for Opposition Leader
Malcolm Turnbull as his party learns to deal with relying on support from cross-bench
senators to amend government bills.

It follows Turnbull's sacking of Nationals Senator Fiona Nash as a shadow parliamentary
secretary on Tuesday after she and her colleagues planned to cross the floor over a bill
providing tax breaks on the planting of trees for carbon sinks.

Turnbull will want them to be on song next year with the Fair Work and emissions trading
bills due to come into the Senate in the first half of next year.

But this will not be as easy as it looks with the four Nationals senators led by Queensland
maverick Barnaby Joyce who is known for his independent thinking.

Despite the compliments heaped on one another in their parliamentary valedictory speeches
on Thursday, the issue of behaviour, both ordinary and generous, became a theme of the
final days of the Rudd government's first year of Parliament.

In keeping with the tradition of a final sitting week, both Rudd and Turnbull gave
their respective party rooms a pep talk on the year just gone and what to expect in the
future.

Turnbull painted a picture of a government which had lost direction, resorting to insults
and abuse.

"Mr Rudd's bad behaviour in parliament is not a sign of triumph, he is rattled," Turnbull
told the party room.

"Next year the economic phoney war will end and the focus will be on Mr Rudd's performance."

While Turnbull was forced to defend the performance of his deputy more than once in
interviews during the week he tried hard to turn the attack onto Deputy Prime Minister
and Workplace Relations Minister Julia Gillard.

In one radio interview he described her as "very vicious and insulting" towards Bishop
in the House.

"I reckon if she spent less time rehearsing the nasty lines about Julie Bishop in front
of the mirror and more time focussing on her job we'd get some better outcomes in terms
of the government," Turnbull scolded.

Bishop, who took on the role of shadow treasurer after Turnbull succeeded Brendan Nelson
as opposition leader in mid-September has had a few stumbles since with accusations of
plagiarism and of being unprepared.

But she dug in this week and went head to head with Treasurer Wayne Swan and then Gillard
when both women stood in for their leaders in question time on Thursday.

The clash became heated on Tuesday when during a rowdy session Bishop made a hand gesture
of a cat's claw in response to comments by Gillard.

The next day in question time, when Bishop rose to ask a question of Swan a small number
of juvenile-minded government backbenchers made meowing noises.

But by Thursday the atmosphere had calmed and with both acting for their respective
leaders there was a more respectful even jocular approach from both sides.

One of the messages Turnbull relayed to his troops earlier in the week was the opposition
had come through its turbulent year with a leadership change and was no longer "demoralised".

But it would probably do for the opposition to have another look at applying the Hockey
message to itself.

As Hockey says, "There's lots of love going around, we're full of love."

AAP keh/rl

KEYWORD: NEWSCOPE FEDERAL (AAP NEWS ANALYSIS)

2008 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

FED: Bed-wetting nose spray linked to convulsions in kids


AAP General News (Australia)
08-02-2008
FED: Bed-wetting nose spray linked to convulsions in kids

Authorities say a nasal spray designed to stop bed-wetting has triggered seizures in
more than a dozen Australians .. including seven children.

The Therapeutic Goods Administration says it's received 68 reports of adverse reactions
linked to the drug .. desmopressin .. which is used to limit urination in children ..

and after injury and surgery.

There were 17 reports of convulsions and a further 10 of hyponatremia .. a condition
of dangerously low salt levels in the blood.

The drug's also sold in oral tablet form .. but the TGA say the side-effects are mostly
seen with the the nasal spray formula.

The authority says the product won't be removed from sale .. but is warning doctors
to prescribe the product only when a bed-wetting alarm device has failed to work.

AAP RTV tam/af/ibw/wz/fdf

KEYWORD: WETTING (SYDNEY)

2008 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

Vic: Police locate missing man


AAP General News (Australia)
12-30-2007
Vic: Police locate missing man

An elderly Greek man .. missing since early this afternoon in Melbourne's inner suburbs
.. has been found safe and well tonight.

The 82-year-old left his Richmond home this morning to attend a church service nearby
.. and was last seen sitting on a bench in Coppin Street about one pm (AEDT).

The man suffers from dementia and requires medication for a medical condition .. raising
police concerns for his welfare.

But he's been located by police safe and well .. in Richmond .. and has been returned
to his family.

AAP RTV jrd/tm

KEYWORD: SEARCH FOUND (MELBOURNE)

2007 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

NSW: Main stories in today's Sydney newspapers


AAP General News (Australia)
08-22-2007
NSW: Main stories in today's Sydney newspapers

SYDNEY, Aug 22 AAP - The main stories in today's Sydney newspapers:

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH

Page 1: APEC organisers are bracing for protests from a range of radical groups.

Page 3: Sydney's Darling Harbour Convention and Exhibition Centre and the showgrounds
could double in size in the next 10 years under a billion dollar plan to make Sydney the
business conference capital of the world.

Page 5: Coles and Woolworths are pushing up the price of groceries to subsidise their
petrol discounts.

World: Hurricane Dean strengthened into a massive category five storm yesterday.

Business: The Seven network has left the door open to appeal its costly C7 court loss.

Sport: Telstra stadium officials accused Wests Tigers of narrow-mindedness for refusing
to transfer Sunday's match against South Sydney from Leichhardt Oval.

MORE krc/it

KEYWORD: MONITOR FRONTERS NSW

2007 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

NSW: Seven charged over string of break and enters


AAP General News (Australia)
04-06-2007
NSW: Seven charged over string of break and enters

Seven people have been charged over a string of break and enters in the past four months
.. at homes in Port Macquarie on the northern New South Wales coast.

Police say they searched several homes in the Port Macquarie area yesterday .. seizing
more than 1.3 kilograms of cannabis .. amphetamines and stolen property.

The property .. believed to be worth more than 160 thousand dollars .. was allegedly
stolen by the group since December last year.







Three boys and two men will appear in Port Macquarie Bail Court later today.

Two other are due to appear in Port Macquarie Local Court on May 7.

AAP RTV acb/rt

KEYWORD: BREAK (SYDNEY)

2007 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

SA: Car industry looking at second best year


AAP General News (Australia)
12-05-2006
SA: Car industry looking at second best year

By Tim Dornin

ADELAIDE, Dec 5 AAP - Australia's car industry will have its second best year on record
after surviving the twin evils of rising interest rates and high petrol prices in 2006.

The Federal Chamber of Automotive Industries (FCAI) said today sales for the full year
were expected to reach 970,000 vehicles, just marginally below the record 988,269 retailed
in 2005.

Releasing officials figures for November, the FCAI said 83,297 cars and trucks were
sold last month, down 0.3 per cent on the 83,538 sold in November last year.

The result took demand on a year-to-date basis to 885,603 vehicles, down 2.6 per cent
or 23,389 vehicles on the same period in 2005.

FCAI chief executive Peter Sturrock said the industry was looking for a strong result
from the traditional end-of-year retail push to take it to the forecast total of 970,000
vehicles.

"In a year when fuel prices have reached record levels and we've had a succession of
interest rate rises it's remarkable that the Australian motor vehicle industry is still
likely to finish with its second-best ever sales result," Mr Sturrock said.

It was the high price of fuel and finance which helped the light car segment become
the main driver of the market this year, with demand in the sector rising 18.8 per cent
last month.

"The light car boom is undoubtedly one of the major motor vehicle sales stories of
2006," Mr Sturrock said.

"Throughout the year, the motor industry's smallest models have been the biggest growth
trend, propelled by spiking fuel prices, rising interest rates and the exceptional value
and convenience these cars now represent."

Toyota was the top selling company in November with 20,247 vehicles ahead of 12,866
for Holden and 9,201 for Ford.

That stretched Toyota's overall lead to more than 60,000 units, assuring the company
of market leadership in 2006.

With one month to go, Toyota had sold 196,200 vehicles ahead of Holden on 135,010 and
Ford on 107,096.

Toyota senior executive director of sales and marketing, David Buttner said the company
was the only one among the four top-selling brands in Australia to lift its sales this
year.

"Toyota has been able to achieve market growth in tough conditions as a result of many
factors, including our great dealer body and product strength across many segments in
both the passenger and commercial vehicle markets," he said.

Holden had the top selling car in November, selling 5,238 Commodores.

The next best was the Toyota Corolla with 3,899 units followed by the Ford Falcon on 3,447.

Other top selling models were the Mazda 3 (2,922), Toyota Yaris (2,812), Toyota Camry
(2,603), Toyota HiLux 4x4 (1,865), Toyota HiLux 4x2 (1,636), Holden Astra (1,606) and
the Toyota Aurion (1,543).

AAP tjd/jt/cdh

KEYWORD: MOTOR SALES NIGHTLEAD

2006 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

Vic: Prisoners spend more than three years on remand - report


AAP General News (Australia)
04-30-2006
Vic: Prisoners spend more than three years on remand - report

MELBOURNE, April 30 AAP - Delays in preparing cases for Victorian courts have meant
some prisoners have spent up to three-and-a-half years on remand before facing a judge.

The backlog is related to staffing issues at the state's Forensic Science Centre, where
evidence is tested, The Sunday Age reports.

The spokeswoman for Attorney-General Rob Hulls, Liz Armitage, told the newspaper four
people sentenced last year spent more than 1,000 days on remand.

All four were remanded for murder and received sentences of more than 15 years, Ms
Armitage said. "The four were involved in a long and complex investigation and trial involving
multiple defendants with complications, including the need for interpreters."

A Victorian Department of Justice document said, on average, remandees who were sentenced
last year spent 114 days on remand. This ranged from one day to 1,250 days.

Ms Armitage said time spent on remand was taken into account when judges decided jail terms.

The Department of Justice spokeswoman said figures were not kept on the time those
who were later acquitted spent on remand.

Liberty Victoria's Brian Walters SC said three years on remand was "a radical problem
in the criminal justice system".

AAP jat/rs

KEYWORD: PRISONERS

2006 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

FEd: Aust ambassador to US lobbied Congress to drop AWB probe


AAP General News (Australia)
02-01-2006
FEd: Aust ambassador to US lobbied Congress to drop AWB probe

Australia's ambassador to the United States reportedly lobbied Congress to drop a probe
into allegations the AWB paid kickbacks to SADDAM HUSSEIN'S regime.

The Sydney Morning Herald reports Foreign Minister ALEXANDER DOWNER'S office has confirmed
then-US ambassador MICHAEL THAWLEY met Senator NORM COLEMAN in September 2004 and argued
strongly against a US Senate inquiry into the AWB.

A statement from Mr DOWNER'S office said the Australian government had been very concerned
AWB would be treated unfairly .. and had no reason to believe it was behaving anything
but properly.

The probe was ultimately dropped .. reportedly due to the fierce resistance from the
wheat exporter .. and following Mr THAWLEY'S meeting with Senator COLEMAN.

AAP RTV ajc/jv

KEYWORD: AWB THAWLEY (SYDNEY)

2006 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

понедельник, 27 февраля 2012 г.

NSW: Two killed in separate accidents on NSW roads


AAP General News (Australia)
04-22-2005
NSW: Two killed in separate accidents on NSW roads

Two people, including a 17-year-old P-plater, have died on New South Wales roads during
the past 24 hours.

The teenager was killed when his sedan and a four-wheel-drive collided on the Pacific
Highway at Emerald, on the New South Wales north coast, about 12.20am (AEST) today.

Police say the 17-year-old P-plater, from Safety Beach, died at the scene, while the
63-year-old driver of the four-wheel-drive was taken to hospital suffering seatbelt-related
injuries.

Further north, a 31-year-old man was killed in a separate incident at Nimbin yesterday.

Police say it appears the Port Macquarie man had lost control of his vehicle and struck a tree.

AAP RTV kp/lm/wf r

KEYWORD: TOLL NSW (SYDNEY)

2005 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

NSW: National Christmas road toll rises to eleven


AAP General News (Australia)
12-25-2004
NSW: National Christmas road toll rises to eleven

The national Christmas holiday road toll has risen to eleven, with the death of a young
man in Melbourne and a 63-year-old man in Western Australia.

Police say the 21-year-old, from Airport West, died when the car he was driving hit
a tree in Essenden about 5.30am (AEDT).

An 18-year-old male passenger has also suffered minor injuries.

In the West Australian outback town of Marble Bar, a 63-year-old man has died when
the car he was a passenger in rolled about 6pm yesterday (WST).

Two children in this care have been treated for minor injuries.

Police in Victoria have also charged an 18-year-old male driver of car that crashed
in Clayton yesterday, leaving two teenager passengers dead and a third in hospital.

These deaths bring Victoria's holiday road toll to five.

In New South Wales, three people have died on the roads -- including two teenagers yesterday.

Police say a 17-year-old boy was burned to death when his Honda Civic crashed into
a tree near Murwillumbah, in the north of the State.

And a 19-year-old man died when his car rolled near Queanbeyan, on the border with the ACT.

Western Australia's road toll stands at two, Queensland's is one, but no road deaths
have been recorded in the Northern Territory, South Australia, the ACT or Tasmania.



(Eds: National road toll figures are for the period 0001 December 23 to 2359 January
3. Some states and territories have different periods.)

AAP RTV jo

KEYWORD: TOLL NATIONAL (SYDNEY)

2004 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

Joliet’s future: Tax hikes, more job cuts

Res ipsa loquitur. In legal jargon, the term means "the thing speaks for itself." Sometimes in court proceedings, the source of fault is so obvious, so plain to a reasonable observer, no amount of argument or rationalization can explain it away. In other words, the thing speaks for itself.

In the city of Joliet's case, the "thing" is the payroll list. At the bottom of this column, you'll find an Internet link to Joliet's 2010 payroll ranked by annual compensation, not including insurance benefits. You must travel 315 names down the list — 39 percent of the city's full-time workforce — to reach the $100,000 line. Seventy-five percent of Joliet's full-timers top $80,000.

Will any Joliet city council candidate publicly acknowledge the truth? Joliet has insufficient revenue to fund its compensation structure and, as a consequence, layoffs and tax increases are imminent.

This might be news to political neophytes running for office, but it's no revelation to council incumbents. They've known this scenario was inevitable for several years, yet refused to act, fearing election retribution from union voting blocs.

We've heard the rationalizations — the numbers include overtime (it's only 13 percent of total payroll, actually); that Joliet workers purportedly make comparable wages to other cities' employees; that life safety personnel deserve every penny they get.

We've heard the attacks on people who frankly discuss Joliet's plight, usually from employees understandably trying to protect their own paychecks. They'll eagerly tell you that I have a government teaching job, good insurance and a future pension. That's true, and I've provided the link to my salary, too.

But you know what? No amount of explaining, debating or finger-pointing matters. Joliet is still broke.

I don't fault one employee — union member or not — for taking every dollar the council gave away. In the end, nine people are Joliet's sole decision-makers. Don't blame employees, unions, former or current city managers or anyone else. The situation comes home to roost on the council dais. Council members have nearly bankrupted our city by willingly engaging in a systematic game of one-upmanship between city unions, with other employees piggy-backing for the pay-and-benefits ride.

The ride is over. Joliet is out of options — jobs will be cut and taxes raised.

Does any candidate have the guts to tell the truth and stop lying by omission? I could vote for a person with that kind of backbone — perhaps even an incumbent.

How did our council turn the greatest revenue windfall in Joliet's history into a $27 million deficit? Look at the list. Res ipsa loquitur.

Find Joliet's 2010 payroll at slideshare.net/JolietCitizen/joliet-2010-payroll.

Find Illinois teacher salaries at familytaxpayers.org/salary.php.

E-mail Tim Placher at

timplacher@yahoo.com.

WeatherBug Turns Online Advertising on Its Head, Giving Consumers Power to Select Ads They Want to See; One of the Internet's Top News/Information Sites Debuts 'Sponsor Select' Capability.

GAITHERSBURG, Md. -- A new form of interactive advertising gives consumers the power to select the ads they want to see. This unique and straightforward online advertising model, called Sponsor Select(TM), was introduced today by WeatherBug (http://www.weatherbug.com/). WeatherBug is an online software application that streams live local weather data and forecasts to more than seven million registered users. It is one of the Internet's most popular news/information sites, according to Jupiter Media Metrix (November 2001). At launch, nearly 50 advertisers have signed on to participate in the program.

"With Sponsor Select we are reinventing the relationship between the advertiser and the consumer. This is quite literally a silver bullet for advertisers," said Andy Jedynak, Vice President, Business Development for AWS Convergence Technologies, which owns and operates WeatherBug and the weather network that supports it. "When people have the power to choose the advertising they see, sponsors benefit because they pay only when users select to view their ad and they get more qualified leads. In addition, our research shows that users prefer to have control over what ads they see," he added.

Under the new program, consumers who download WeatherBug are asked to select their sponsor from a list of choices during the required registration process. WeatherBug users can then preview and accept their chosen sponsor company and its advertisement, or go back and select another.

Once the WeatherBug application is up and running, the selected sponsor's ads will be displayed during the first 24 hours of usage via a patent-pending format called the BrandWrap(TM). A BrandWrap seamlessly integrates the sponsor's advertising message and the weather content together. This format dramatically aids brand recall to as high as seventy percent, according to AWS user surveys.

New users also receive a welcome e-mail message from WeatherBug in which the sponsor's ad is embedded. In total, advertisers in the Sponsor Select program reach consumers a minimum of four times - at the time they confirm their choice of sponsor, as the WeatherBug application downloads, once the WeatherBug software runs and in the confirmation email.

"Our Sponsor Select campaign generated extremely qualified leads -- the results were tremendous," said Craig Smith, Director, Business Development for Service Magic. Service Magic, a WeatherBug sponsor, is a leading online marketplace that connects homeowners and property managers with prescreened and customer-rated contractors, handymen and maids. "We have benefited from numerous WeatherBug advertising platforms. With our BrandWrap, we were able to target a specific user base -- this has been very successful. And the Sponsor Select campaign not only generated a higher number of leads, but generated leads that were highly qualified," he added.

For more information about WeatherBug advertising opportunities, contact Shane Lundy at slundy@aws.com or (301) 258-8390 x1627.

About AWS Convergence Technologies, Inc.

AWS Convergence Technologies, Inc. (http://www.aws.com/) owns and operates the largest network of weather stations in the world. This real-time network gathers comprehensive, up-to-the-second weather information from more than 5,000 communities and powers the company's various products and services, including: WeatherBug(TM), an online weather service that provides live neighborhood conditions to more than seven million PC users; WeatherNet for Broadcast, which delivers real-time weather information to more than 80 million US households through partnerships with 105 local television stations; WeatherNet for Education, which provides engaging weather information and educational tools to schools and colleges, including an innovative set of online lesson plans and software called WeatherNet Classroom; and AWS Data Services which uses AWS' unique weather network and software to provide high- value solutions for vertical industries such as energy, retail, and transportation.

    Contact:    Steve Rubel    CooperKatz & Company    212-455-8085    srubel@cooperkatz.com    Andrea Martone    CooperKatz & Company    212-455-8016    amartone@cooperkatz.com 

Contact: Steve Rubel, +1-212-455-8085, or srubel@cooperkatz.com or Andrea Martone, +1-212-455-8016, amartone@cooperkatz.com - both of CooperKatz & Company

Website: http://www.weatherbug.com/ http://www.aws.com/

First impressions can go straight to your bottom line.(new customer will judge you)(Brief Article)

How important is a first impression? Does it matter if you blend into the crowd or if you stand out from the others? How do you want people to think of you when your company name is mentioned?

If you are an hvacr contractor looking to retain your customers and add to your base, you have to believe that first impressions are extremely important. What a customer thinks of you and your business has a direct affect on how much you can charge for your services and how well you can compete against the guy down the street who seems to be doing everything right, too.

"I think that if you look professional and clean, you automatically can demand a slightly higher price" said Alan Barnes Jr. of Aircond Corp., Smyrna, GA. "Customers pay for value and when they see a professional and clean-looking technician and vehicle, they perceive that they are getting more value, compared to a technician with only a uniform shirt, operating out of the back of a pickup truck.

"We are not the cheapest in town, nor do we look cheap."

A first impression can be the voice on the end of the phone, greeting customers and answering questions for them. It can be that moment a customer's door opens wide to a smiling service tech, who is making his first visit to the home.

It could be how the service tech explains every detail of his work, so the customer has a complete understanding of the labor and material involved. It can be the way a business markets itself through direct mail, advertising, and now, the Internet.

The point is, people remember first impressions and contractors will improve their bottom line if they remember the keys to making a good first impression.

"We want to reaffirm with our customers [with our impression] that they made the right choice when calling us," added Vince DiFilippo of DiFilippo's Service Co. in Wayne, PA.

The News asked some contractors what they did to make a good impression and how they continued to bring in new business via happy customers, word-of-mouth customers, and web-browsing customers.

THE FIRST IMPRESSION

In most cases, the first time a customer comes in contact with your company, it is by way of the telephone. One contractor puts a heavy emphasis on the importance of telephone contacts.

"First impressions start with the person who answers the phone" said Paul Stellick of Stellick Plumbing & Heating, Colorado Springs, CO. "They must be courteous and professional. Your representative must have the knowledge to answer the customer's questions."

"Response from first impressions has not changed over the years," said Joe Gennari of IBS, Fort Lauderdale, FL. "It is still the most important part of gaining a new customer.

"Your first impression sets the stage for the customer to hear your story and, more importantly, to listen to it. Clean trucks, dress, literature, and speech are of the utmost importance."

Felix Famularo of Robert Refrigeration Service, Inc., New Orleans, LA, thinks that contractors should respond to the needs and expectations of their customers and their potential customers.

"When your customer is an upscale homeowner who shops at Dillards or Eddie Bauer's, they expect, are entitled to, and will pay for, a professional contracting team with clean uniforms, clean trucks, ID badges, letters of reference, etc." he said. "Even those customers who do not expect these things are entitled to them.

"So let's all practice proper presentation of our companies and ourselves to all of our customers no matter where they shop."

"Image is so important" added DiFilippo. "The first phone contact is very important and the service person must be clean and professional. We don't use typical uniforms. Our people wear black pleated slacks, red shirts, shoe covers, and carry ID badges."

DiFilippo only has three trucks on the road and he doesn't use manufacturer's logos on any truck, preferring to "sell ourselves, not our equipment." He added that it looks like they have 30 trucks because of the distinct and impressionistic look.

That's true for another contractor, Barnes. He said his customers comment that they see his trucks "everywhere."

"Our vans are very distinctive looking and we require that our technicians keep them clean" said Barnes. "We look at our vehicles as `moving billboards' and keep them in great condition.

"We provide our techs with their own vans. We also provide them with uniforms [shirts, pants, overalls, jackets, safety boots, hats, etc.]. We place a high emphasis on how we look to the customer.

"I strongly feel that the first impression is what gets you in the door and keeps you there."

INVOLVING THE CUSTOMER

Do your technicians take the time to talk about their test instruments and provide a checklist of the services they provided? Many customers prefer to open the door, let in the service tech, and wait upstairs until the service has been completed. They are often indifferent to what has been done.

However, many contractors believe good service techs should be able to spot the customers who take a genuine interest in what they are doing and have questions about the "gadgets" and the maintenance checklist.

"If the customer wishes to know what the gadget is and what it does, we are happy to explain," said Famularo. "A customer base better educated in hvacr is our goal. After all, don't you start every call by talking with the customer and learning from them what the symptoms and problems are?

"Wouldn't it be nice if they actually steered your technician in the right direction, because you educated them over time?"

Famularo added that his techs explain each item on the maintenance checklist if the customer has the time. He believes it is another way to educate the customer.

Contractor Gennari said that there are two good reasons for informing customers about the gadgets and the checklist -- trust and justification for services rendered.

"Taking the time to show the customer these types of tools gives them [the customer] a trust level and shows that you are serious about your trade" said Gennari. "A checklist is a very important part of an accurate hvacr maintenance service.

"Customers today want to be informed to the details of a checklist to ensure that they are getting the service they are paying for."

Meanwhile, Barnes believes that using "professional looking" tools goes hand-in-hand with a professional looking appearance.

"If we have professional looking tools and use things that help us work faster, then we bring more value to the customer" he said. "A good example is the infrared gun that our technicians use to point and shoot at any object to get an instant temperature reading. This type of device speeds up our performance and looks `high tech.'"

Barnes added that the use of a checklist is important depending on the type of customer.

"Checklists are typically geared towards simple and common equipment [residential]. In the commercial-industrial world, the uncommon equipment is the norm and checklists would be difficult to use" he said.

Contractor Stellick believed there are those homeowners who are satisfied with a working system -- and not a checklist.

"Most customers don't care about every point," he said. "They just want to know if their system is safe and working efficiently."

TAPPING THE INTERNET

There has been an infusion of websites that allow visitors to learn about local businesses and schedule service-maintenance calls with the click of a mouse. Has this convenience reached contractors yet? Some have it and some are looking forward to getting it.

"IBS has an online call screen that allows customers to place service calls directly to our call center and get e-mail confirmation,' said Gennari. "Websites are not as active in our trade as they will be in the future, but we use this time to try different things and are changing it constantly."

"We have a few customers who contact us via e-mail for service" said Famularo. "It still isn't the most efficient way, but if it is an emergency, the convenience factor is usually what drives our customers to the Net."

Meanwhile, Barnes said that an interactive website is definitely in the works for his company.

"Our first phase in web development is to create a website that our customers can browse and get good information on the company and the services we provide" he said. "At some point in time, we will have the capability where the customer can check the progress of a project, place a service call, and check the status of a service call."

INTY: It's official -- Britain's workforce is sm smelly, rude and noisy.

M2 PRESSWIRE-19 July 1999-INTY: It's official -- Britain's workforce is smelly, rude and noisy (C)1994-99 M2 COMMUNICATIONS LTD

RDATE:190799

Britain's workplace is made up of smelly, rude people who make too much noise and are driving their colleagues to distraction, according to a new report.

The survey, conducted by NOP on behalf of Internet management company intY, asked workers about their top office irritants. And the results don't paint a pretty picture of the average office.

Over half of those questioned claimed that their colleagues are rude, with 51 per cent complaining about co-workers'noise. While everyone is enjoying the summer heat-wave, it looks set to bring out the worst in the office environment - 43 per cent of workers claim that their colleagues smell.

Dishwater tea and coffee is also high on the list with nearly a quarter of respondents complaining about unsatisfactory beverages in the office. And when it comes to eating in the workplace, one in 10 has a big problem with the sight and sound of colleagues munching away.

Too many meetings is predictably a major bugbear. Nearly half of those questioned would prefer to spend less time discussing work and more time getting on with it.

"While this research is quite fun, there is a dark underbelly to the findings," said Mark Herbert, managing director, intY. "The stress and anxiety that is associated with seemingly trivial issues as well as more fundamental ones such as a lack ofsupport or inadequate and unreliable technology, can have serious implications for employers. Recent court rulings show that underestimating stress in the workplace can prove very costly."

From a list of 11 irritants, rude and noisy colleagues appeared at number two and number three respectively. The number one frustration named however was a lack of support in the working environment. When examined more closely, this often equated to poor, unreliable technology which often lets workers down. In fact 39 per cent of those questioned felt that computer crashes made them feel angry, frustrated, irritated and helpless.

Many office workers criticised the lack of investment in efficient and up-to-date technology. Around 82 per cent of those surveyed spend anything up to 10 per cent of their time tackling technology failure, so it's not surprising that nearly a third question their company's priorities when it happens and two thirds are accustomed to technology failure.

A quarter of those questioned admitted that technology failure makes them grumpy and snappy with colleagues and almost a third felt that it affected their work performance, making it harder to concentrate on issues and needs relating to colleagues.

"This survey presents modem offices as seething hot-beds of frustration, a lot of which could be alleviated by effective and simplified systems," stated Mark Herbert, managing director, intY. "Technology should be a tool - to most of the survey respondents it has become a taskmaster. Who'd accept this level of unreliability from any other office equipment?"

Internet technologies, which are becoming more and more of an office essential, are also unreliable, with 38 per cent of workers experiencing problems collecting e-mail. Inty, which specialises in easing problems associated with Internet and e-mail is confident that it is the solution.

"By offering an all-inclusive package, intY offers the assurance that if there's a problem, we can solve it," commented Herbert. "We don't refer our customers to software developers, Internet service providers or hardware vendors if there is an Intemet issue. Because we manage everything, we are able to provide network administrators with a stress-free, simple solution."

Top eleven office irritants

1. Lack of support (56 per cent) 2. Rude colleagues (55 per cent) 3. Noisy colleagues (51 per cent) 4. Work being behind the times (49 per cent) 5. Having too much work (46 per cent) 6. Too many meetings (44 per cent) 7. Smelly colleagues (43 per cent) 8. Technology failure (39 per cent) 9. Hot desking (27 Per cent) 10. Bad tea and coffee (22 per cent) 11. Colleagues eating (8 per cent)

The NOP survey was conducted in April 1999, among office workers representing both small, medium-sized and large companies.

CONTACT: Sue Bischoff/Leah May, Band & Brown PR Tel: +44 (0)117 927 2444 e-mail: leah@bbpr.com

*M2 COMMUNICATIONS DISCLAIMS ALL LIABILITY FOR INFORMATION PROVIDED WITHIN M2 PRESSWIRE. DATA SUPPLIED BY NAMED PARTY/PARTIES.*

воскресенье, 26 февраля 2012 г.

IN THE SHADOW OF THE SENATE: A NEW TAX EMERGES.

WASHINGTON, DC -- The following information was released by FreedomWorks:

By Abraham Hamadeh

In the midst of chaotic negotiations between the Senate and the House over the debt ceiling, Senator Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) had another priority: introducing the Main Street Fairness Act, a new quasi-federalized Internet sales tax. Senator Durbin has been planning to introduce this bill for months and discreetly proposed it on Friday night, hoping to go unnoticed, much like he did with his legislation that introduced price controls on debit card "swipe fees." Senator Durbin's bill hopes to lead a federal and state partnership to implement the Internet sales tax bill across all fifty states.

The new Internet sales tax hurts businesses and consumers alike, by overburdening companies with new regulations that will be passed on to consumers to the extent possible. It's no surprise some of the bill's most outspoken supporters are big-box retail stores such as Walmart, Target, Sears, Home Depot, and Best Buy. The bill ultimately hurts innovation and threatens to stifle Internet entrepreneurship.

Senator Dick Durbin doesn't have to look too far to see the ramifications of his new Internet sales tax bill. FatWallet, a small Internet start-up company was forced to relocate from Illinois to nearby Wisconsin due to the prospect of losing nearly 30% of its revenue from new regulations and taxes imposed by Illinois's statewide Internet sales tax passed earlier this year.

FreedomWorks has already helped defeat similar proposals in Tennessee and Texas this year and will continue to fight the new taxes at both the state and federal level. Tell your Senators, don't tax the Internet!

Telecom auditing.(Operations: CardFile)(Directory)

* Cost Management Solutions Group (www.cmsgi.com)--Telecom audits for clients with $5/000+/month in bills; fee contingent on savings.

* DataDrillers (www.datadrillers.com)--Comprehensive "Telecom Checkup," with analysis of rates offered by other carriers; $1,500.

* Business.com (www.business.com/directory/telecommunications/business_ solutions/phone_rate_audit)--List of rate comparison resources and auditors.

* InfoCall (www.infogrp.com)--Cost-management software, consolidates and allocates bills for multiple telecom services; ASP or license pricing.

* US Army Audit Guide (www.asafm.army.mil/fo/fod/ir/prir/audit-gds/rtcsag. pdf)--In-depth checklist to spot excessive telecom spending.

* Telecom Audit, by Missy Sue Mastel--How to save 40%-60% on telecom bills; $60.

* Complaints.com (www.complaints.com)--Stories of abusive customer service and overcharges by major telecoms.

Telecom Cost Saving Tips, DataDrillers, 800 Tully St., Houston, Tex. 877/866-4061. Web: www.datadrillers.com.

Fed through after early scare.

Provided by 7DAYS.ae

ROGER FEDERER needed a set to get going before he blasted his way into the third round of the French Open with a 6-7, 6-1, 6-0, 6-4 win over Albert Montanes. The world No.1 looked out of sorts in a first set made difficult for both players by cool conditions and rain. He saved two sets points at 4-5 down on his own serve before players, fans and officials alike were sent scurrying for cover as the rain intensified.

Ninety minutes later it was 27-year-old Montanes who was faster out of the blocks, lifting the tie-breaker 7/5 with Federer's usually devastating forehand looking wobbly due to the heavy balls. But with the sun starting to shine Federer found his form and soon easily saw off his Spanish opponent.

And he said he found the early going tough.

"The conditions were difficult in that first set with all the rain and he played well. But once I got ahead in the second and third sets I felt more and more comfortable," Federer said. He now faces big-serving Croatian Mario Ancic and he insists he is not going to take the former top-ten player lightly.

"He's a tough opponent - he has a good name and it should be exciting. He's been playing OK and is on the comeback trail. He is a good friend of mine on the tour," said Federer.

Meanwhile, claycourt king Rafael Nadal brushed aside French qualifier Nicolas Devilder 6-4, 6-0, 6-1 to take his Roland Garros record to 23 wins in 23 matches as he continued his campaign to emulate Bjorn Borg as the only man to win four titles in a row.A Earlier, sixth seed David Nalbandian and seventh seed James Blake went down to surprise defeats.

Former semi-finalist Nalbandian suffered a humiliating loss to world No.145 Jeremy Chardy after being two sets up. And American Blake also made an early exit in Paris, crashing out 7-6 (7-2), 3-6, 7-5, 6-3 to Latvian teenager Ernests Gulbis.

[c] 2007 Al Sidra Media LLC

Provided by Syndigate.info an Albawaba.com company

RFE'S ALLNUTT REVIEWS 'THE FILTER BUBBLE'.

PRAGUE, Czech Republic -- The following information was released by Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty:

Google knows that my wife and I are expecting our first child. Our recent search history goes something like this: "things you need to buy for your first baby"; "why do my fingers get fat when I'm pregnant?"; and "is it worth buying a diaper bin?"

I noticed that in my in-box I was getting lots of baby-related emails; the ads showing up in my Gmail account mostly pertained to infants. No matter how many different ways we searched, all avenues seemed to lead back to the same products. It was as if the Web knew what we wanted.

This is what Eli Pariser, in a fascinating new book about the increasingly personalized Internet, calls The Filter Bubble. Search engines weight our search results to our own preferences. (My search results won't look like yours.) Sites will filter our news (without asking us) to bring us what they think we want.

Pariser, a former executive director of the advocacy group MoveOn, pulls back the curtain on the dark arts of search and Internet advertising. There is "behavioral retargeting," which means that you might check out a pair of shoes in an online store and leave without making a purchase - only then to find their ads following you around the Internet. Or advertising based on your "persuasion profile," which isn't just concerned with the types of products you like but "which kinds of arguments might cause you to choose one over another."

With 36 percent of Americans under 30 getting their news through social-networking sites, personalization also affects the news we consume. Ever wonder why you don't see updates from some Facebook friends in your News Feed? It's due to an algorithm, partly based on the amount of time you spend interacting with that person.

The consequences of this social engineering, Pariser argues, is that we interact more with people who think like we do. Rather than fulfilling the early Internet dreams of diversity and freedom of choice, we are living in an echo chamber. As a result, there's less room for "the chance encounters that bring insight and learning." Where once we had human news editors who would temper the Britney coverage with a foreign war or two, now algorithms select our news for us based on what we click on and what we share.

The idea that the Web is an echo chamber is almost as old as the Web itself. But there still isn't much empirical evidence to suggest that the Internet is narrowing our collective horizons. A new Pew report, "Social Networking Sites and Our Lives," found that there is no relationship "between the use of social networking services and the diversity of people's overall social networks." Nor were Internet users less likely to consider both sides of an issue.

While not exactly a techno-pessimist, Pariser falls into the techno-pessimist's trap of the Imagined Analogue Past. It is a rose-colored world that always forms the backdrop to books about the effects of the Internet. A world without digital distractions, with enlightening serendipitous encounters, where civic-minded news producers made sure we saw reports about famine in distant lands. In the Imagined Analogue Past we all had meaningful offline friendships, devoid of any superficiality.

But of course we never really lived like that. If our worlds are echo chambers now, what were they before, when every day we read the same newspaper, with its inherent biases in politics and scope? If the Internet is an echo chamber, what about the churches or progressive book clubs we attend? If you do live in an Internet echo chamber then that's probably of your own making; in the pre-digital world you would have lived in one too. And anyone who has never experienced serendipity on the Internet has never been on YouTube.

Where Pariser's book is most effective is in deconstructing the myth of "disintermediation" - the idea, popular among techno-utopians, that the Internet

would "flatten society, unseat the elites, and usher in a kind of global utopia," where we would no longer need gatekeepers such as newspapers, cable television, or even politicians. Pariser eloquently makes the case that we might have gotten rid of a few gatekeepers, but we've just replaced them with new ones (namely Facebook and Google).

"The Filter Bubble" is less clear, though, about what we should do about it. One of Pariser's proposals - and it's a good one - is for tech companies to make their filtering practices less opaque and be more up front about the way in which they are collecting and using our information. The author goes further, suggesting "filtering systems to expose people to topics outside their normal experience." But is such social and civic engineering really the job of businesses like Google or Facebook? Paternalism aside, there is an irony in engineering more randomness. Google's "I'm Feeling Lucky," after all, isn't based on luck.

Pariser writes beautifully about the new digital world in which we find ourselves but, ultimately, he doesn't show us a future that seems to be any bleaker than the past.

Texas Among Top Six States Reporting Software Piracy to BSA; Scott & Scott, LLP Says Texas Businesses Should Prepare for Software Audit.

Southlake, TX (PRWEB) May 24, 2011

Texas was one of six states that accounted for nearly 50% of all software piracy reports the Business Software Alliance received in 2010. Scott & Scott, LLP, a Texas-based intellectual property and technology law firm with a practice area devoted to software license defense shares what Texas companies need to know when receiving a software audit request.

According to the Business Software Alliance, Texas and five other states were the source of 49.3% of all software piracy reports the BSA received in 2010. The BSA recently identified California, Texas, Florida, New York, Illinois and Michigan as their source of nearly half of the software piracy tips.

The Business Software Alliance (BSA), a global software industry trade association owned and funded by big name companies, including Adobe, Apple, Autodesk, Microsoft, and Sybase, conduct copyright enforcement actions on behalf of its members. The BSA advertises for software piracy leads on the Internet and in radio campaigns nationwide.

"While we understand the Business Software Alliance's desire to protect the intellectual property rights of its software publisher members, the firm believes the association has done nothing to simplify or standardize the license agreements of its member companies, which are all unique, lengthy and complex. This leaves the onus of compliance entirely on the end user", said Robert J. Scott, Managing Partner of Scott & Scott, LLP.

"In my opinion, many of the Business Software Alliance's practices are questionable. The BSA entices disgruntled employees, many of whom were responsible for any license compliance gaps, to report their current and former employers with the promise of cash rewards," Scott continued

Companies are not required to cooperate with a request for a software audit either from the publisher or their trade associations, but avoiding litigation is highly unlikely without an agreement to participate in a voluntary audit. The legal and financial implications of software audits can be enormous. The costs, even those that are resolved successfully, are substantial. Businesses that are most prepared will have the greatest success in defending the inevitable software license audit and save money.

The following two common mistakes have been observed based on the many clients Scott & Scott, LLP has represented in software license disputes:

1. Failure to compile and produce accurate installation information.

(a) Even in small environments, a manual process to review the software on each computer is time-consuming and unreliable. Carefully select an automated software discovery tool that will produce results in a format that you can interpret. Discovery tool selection is critical to the success of the audit initiative.

(b) Use of free tools provided by trade associations. These tools, more often than not, inaccurately report the data and fail to exclude information that is outside the scope of the audit request.

2. Relying on internal IT staff to respond to a software audit request.

Members of IT departments typically prepare audit reports containing information that is incorrect or beyond the scope of what is required to adequately respond. If the technology department improperly reports the software installations, the monetary portion of the settlement may be inflated.

For additional information and free resources visit http://www.scottandscottllp.com, http://www.bsadefense.com/resources.asp.

About Scott & Scott:

Scott & Scott, LLP (http://www.scottandscottllp.com and http://www.bsadefense.com) is a boutique intellectual property and technology law firm with an emphasis on software disputes, technology transactions, brand protection, and federal litigation. Our lawyers and technology professionals take a principled approach to each engagement, leveraging our experience to provide value. Our clients range from mature small businesses to publicly traded multi-national corporations who work proactively with us to creatively solve business and legal issues. We regularly work as part of a team of in-house and outside attorneys managing large-scale legal projects. We take the time to listen to a client's objectives and understand its business before developing a custom strategy and project plan designed to give the client visibility into the process and the potential outcomes.

###

Read the full story at http://www.prweb.com/releases/2011/5/prweb8476998.htm

New Findings Reported from University of Liverpool Describe Advances in Influenza A Virus, Subtype H5N1.

Data detailed in 'Preventable H5N1 avian influenza epidemics in the British poultry industry network exhibit characteristic scales' have been presented. "Epidemics are frequently simulated on redundantly wired contact networks, which have many more links between sites than are minimally required to connect all. Consequently, the modelled pathogen can travel numerous alternative routes, complicating effective containment strategies," investigators in Liverpool, United Kingdom report.

"These networks have moreover been found to exhibit 'scale-free' properties and percolation, suggesting resilience to damage. However, realistic H5N1 avian influenza transmission probabilities and containment strategies, here modelled on the British poultry industry network, show that infection dynamics can additionally express characteristic scales. These system-preferred scales constitute small areas within an observed power law distribution that exhibit a lesser slope than the power law itself, indicating a slightly increased relative likelihood. These characteristic scales are here produced by a network-pervading intranet of so-called hotspot sites that propagate large epidemics below the percolation threshold. This intranet is, however, extremely vulnerable; targeted inoculation of a mere 3-6% (depending on incorporated biosecurity measures) of the British poultry industry network prevents large and moderate H5N1 outbreaks completely, offering an order of magnitude improvement over previously advocated strategies affecting the most highly connected 'hub' sites. In other words, hotspots and hubs are separate functional entities that do not necessarily coincide, and hotspots can make more effective inoculation targets," wrote A.R. Jonkers and colleagues, University of Liverpool.

The researchers concluded: "Given the ubiquity and relevance of networks (epidemics, Internet, power grids, protein interaction), recognition of this spreading regime elsewhere would suggest a similar disproportionate sensitivity to such surgical interventions."

Jonkers and colleagues published their study in the Journal of the Royal Society, Interface (Preventable H5N1 avian influenza epidemics in the British poultry industry network exhibit characteristic scales. Journal of the Royal Society, Interface, 2010;7(45):695-701).

For additional information, contact A.R. Jonkers, Dept. of Earth and Ocean Sciences, Jane Herdman Laboratories, University of Liverpool, Liverpool, UK..

Keywords: City:Liverpool, Country:United Kingdom, Region:Europe, Agricultural, Agriculture, Avian Flu, Avian Influenza, Bird Diseases, Bird Flu, H5N1 Subtype Influenza A Virus, Influenza A Virus, Subtype H5N1, Influenza A virus, Influenza in Birds, Intranet, Networks, Orthomyxoviridae Infections, Poultry Diseases, RNA Virus Infections, RNA Viruses, Vertebrate Viruses.

This article was prepared by Agriculture Week editors from staff and other reports. Copyright 2011, Agriculture Week via VerticalNews.com.

суббота, 25 февраля 2012 г.

Ziff Davis Enterprise Updates on Traffic.

Ziff Davis Enterprise, a provider of enterprise IT media and engagement solutions, announced that its enterprise IT news and reviews site, eWEEK.com, has been experiencing exponential "organic" traffic growth due to its enhanced and integrated editorial focus, new technologies and SEO initiatives.

According to a release, in direct response to the rapid changes surrounding enterprise IT, eWEEK has strategically changed its editorial focus and incorporated new features to deliver the most relevant and current information surrounding the three technologies reshaping today's IT landscape, specifically, cloud computing, mobility, and business applications. The exclusive eWEEK Labs, and the quality reviews its audience demands, has added a full array of editorial news and opinion coverage about these key technologies.

"The business technology segment is undergoing the greatest change since the advent of the World Wide Web. Cloud computing, the mobile Internet and rapid business application development are reshaping the technology marketplace. We are bringing our readers critical, actionable and authoritative information to guide their decision process and our efforts are reinforcing our position with existing readers and bringing in new readers," said Eric Lundquist, Senior Vice-President of Editorial.

In June 2010, Ziff Davis Enterprise partnered with Morpheus Media to optimize the site for Google News and maximum organic search returns, the Company said. In response to these aggressive and strategic changes, monthly traffic from non-paid search on eWEEK.com has doubled, and is up nearly 350 percent year-over-year.

"Thanks to our expert editorial and development teams and our partnership with Morpheus Media, we have been able to increase market share and user engagement. When content has become a thing with little to no barriers to entry, our strategy has proven the strength of premium content and the eWEEK.com brand in the industry," said Vice President of Digital Media Cheryl Stump. "We have also used the powerful growth results to inform site and product initiatives across our network, including social media, mobile and emerging platform planning," she continued.

More information:

www.ziffdavisenterprise.com

((Comments on this story may be sent to newsdesk@closeupmedia.com))

WILTON MANORS RESIDENT SENTENCED TO 30 YEARS ON CHILD EXPLOITATION CHARGES.

WASHINGTON -- The following information was released by the FBI:

Jeffrey H. Sloman, United States Attorney for the Southern District of Florida; John V. Gillies, Special Agent in Charge, Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), Miami Field Office; and Anthony V. Mangione, Special Agent in Charge, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), Office of Investigations, announced that defendant Scott Joseph Smith, 50, of Wilton Manors, was sentenced today by U.S. District Judge William P. Dimitrouleas to 360 months' imprisonment and a life-long term of supervised release.

On January 28, 2010 the defendant plead guilty to charges of production of child pornography, distribution of child pornography, and possession of child pornography, in violation of Title 18, United States Code, Sections 2251(a), 2252(a)(2), and 2252(a)(4)(B).

According to court documents, an undercover FBI agent downloaded numerous images and video files depicting child pornography from Smith's computer via a peer-to-peer file sharing program. A search warrant was executed at Smith's place of business. A forensic review of Smith's computer by ICE special agents revealed numerous images and video files depicting child pornography. Further investigation by the FBI revealed that Smith sexually molested several minor victims at multiple locations in Broward County and Palm Beach County and recorded one instance of molestation via a digital camera.

This case was brought as part of Project Safe Childhood, a nationwide initiative to combat the growing epidemic of child sexual exploitation and abuse launched in May 2006 by the Department of Justice. Led by United States Attorneys' Offices and the Criminal Division's Child Exploitation and Obscenity Section (CEOS), Project Safe Childhood marshals federal, state, and local resources to better locate, apprehend, and prosecute individuals who exploit children via the Internet, as well as to identify and rescue victims. For more information about Project Safe Childhood, please visit www.projectsafechildhood.gov.

Mr. Sloman commended the investigative efforts of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, ICE's Office of Investigations in Miami, the Broward County Sheriff's Office, and members of the South Florida Internet Crimes Against Children Task Force. The case is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney Strider Dickson.

VMB selects VocalTec for VoIP network rollout.(VocalTec Communications Ltd.)(voice over internet protocol)(Brief article)

VocalTec Communications Ltd. announced that VMB, a city carrier in St. Petersburg, Russia, has selected VocalTec's solutions for its VoIP network rollout. Performed in partnership with SATEL, a system integrator in Russia, the deployment is focused around the migration of VMB's infrastructure into an advanced packet-based Class 4 and Class 5 network.

VocalTec's solutions will enable VMB to offer its customers new and innovative services based on a highly reliable and field-proven VoIP network, while at the same time reducing costs, enhancing flexibility, and increasing network efficiencies. The deployment includes VocalTec's Essentra CX Trunking solution, offering seamless connectivity to PSTN/SS7 services; the Essentra EX Peering Manager, enabling secure IP-to-IP routing and service mediation; and the Essentra BAX Application Server and class 5 softswitch, which provides cost-effective residential and enterprise VoIP services.

"VocalTec successfully met all our needs, including meeting a tight deployment schedule and support for Sigtran M3UA/IUA. This enabled us to consolidate SS7 and PRI interfaces on the same gateways thereby providing extensive cost savings," said Chegodaev Dmitry, business development manager at VMB. "We are satisfied with VocalTec's approach and ability to customize a solution specific to our needs."

CALLING THEIR BLUFF AT WORLD SERIES OF POKER EVENTS, AMATEURS FROM ALL OVER - INCLUDING MADISON - GET A SHOT AT TAKING DOWN THE MICHAEL JORDANS OF THE GAME.(77 SQUARE)

Byline: JEFF RICHGELS The Capital Times jrichgels@madison.com

LAS VEGAS -- Chris Gibbons and Scott Erickson are two of the best bowlers in the Madison area.

Gibbons is a former pro who won a title on the Pro Bowlers Association Regional circuit - pro bowling's minor league. And he and Erickson are on the team that ended up third in the top event at the 2008 United States Bowling Congress Open Championships.

That said, neither has much interest in putting up the entry fee of a few hundred dollars to compete in tournaments against top pros like Walter Ray Williams Jr. and Pete Weber.

Yet Gibbons, Erickson and thousands of other amateur poker players from around the globe paid anywhere from $1,000 to $10,000 to compete against top pros like Madison native Phil Hellmuth at World Series of Poker events in Las Vegas. This despite the fact that both say their bowling skills well exceed their poker skills.

They are far from alone; almost 7,000 people entered this summer's competition, which begins airing on ESPN on Tuesday.

Which begs the obvious question: Why are so many recreational poker players willing to pay to compete against those who make a living playing the game?

"Obviously," Erickson said, "the big draw for poker is the hundreds of thousands of dollars on top, where in bowling it's just $100,000 to win (the top events). And I think your chances playing against the top poker players in one event or at one table is better than even one game against the top pro bowlers on those (PBA lane) conditions," which are much more difficult than the typical league bowling condition.

While pros do dominate poker, the fact that a lucky turn of a card can negate even the most masterfully played hand has stoked the dreams of amateurs.

"If you don't think you can win, why enter?" said Gibbons. "Obviously, the odds are stacked against you, but amateurs win all the time and lightning can strike."

The Moneymaker effect

The most notable bolt in poker history was amateur Chris Moneymaker's victory in the 2003 WSOP Main Event. The Main Event is the Super Bowl of the WSOP series, which sanctions 55 events nationwide.

Seth Palansky, director of communications for the Sports & Entertainment Division of WSOP owner Harrah's casino in Las Vegas, said Moneymaker's $2.5 million dollar win - achieved after winning a qualifier with just a $39 entry fee - was part of a confluence of events that led to poker's boom, which continues with another record total number of WSOP entries this year.

With the advent of the camera that allowed TV viewers to see players' hole (hidden) cards in 2002, Moneymaker's win "was really the public's first exposure to a guy who was bluffing all the way and everyone could see the crazy bluffs he was doing and that really captured people's imaginations," Palansky said.

The Internet poker boom also had begun, and those factors together helped the WSOP Main Event grow. There were 839 entries the year of Moneymaker's win; this year's Main Event had 6,844 entries and prize money of more than $64 million, Polansky said.

At this year's WSOP, pros won 38 of the 53 events prior to the Main Event, most of which are Texas Hold'em formats, with semi-pros taking three and amateurs 12. In contrast, there have not been 12 amateur winners in the 49-year history of the PBA Tour - a stat that backs up the sentiments of Gibbons and Erickson.

The superior success of poker pros does prove that poker is not a game of chance, pros like Hellmuth say.

"There is more skill than the world fully understands," Hellmuth said in an e-mail interview with 77 Square. "Check out how many pros are winning this year despite enormous fields! Reading players and good tactics will carry you a long way at the WSOP."

Bluffs and busts

Still, there's enough chance of success for amateurs to draw them to Vegas by the thousands.

Although he has failed to win money in three WSOP events, Gibbons did win a June 2007 tournament at Binion's, earning a spot on the wall of the famed downtown casino that originally hosted the WSOP before selling the franchise to Harrah's. The event was part of a miniature version of the WSOP that draws some highly skilled pros but generally not the elite like Hellmuth.

Gibbons pocketed about $5,800 for the win, which came after more than 12 hours of play and a decision by the six finalists from the 330-person field to split the prize money, although they still played to a winner for the prestige of the title.

"All of a sudden it was like lightning striking - I'm getting these hands and winning," said Gibbons, who describes himself as a serious recreational player. "That was definitely the highlight of my poker career."

In contrast, his Vegas trip this June was a washout, with the lowlight being busting out after just 45 minutes of a $1,500 buy-in No Limit Hold'em WSOP event.

"I played the worst possible poker I could play," Gibbons said. "I played way too aggressive early."

Gibbons said poker and bowling have several similarities: a significant luck factor that is slightly higher in poker (hitting cards in poker and pin action in bowling), the fact that you're competing with "imperfect information" (other players' hidden hole cards in poker and invisible lane oil in bowling), and making educated guesses (betting decisions in poker and adjusting to the lane conditions in bowling).

Whatever the game, the thrill of competition is what it's about, Gibbons said.

"It's a rush hitting that card or getting that bluff to win that pot - it's like striking out in the 10th (frame) to win a game," he said. "You get instant gratification. You also get the other end of it, too, which I've had more than my fair share of."

An indescribable scene

At the WSOP, thousands of players compete at dozens of tables in one gigantic room that is incredibly brightly lit but also quite chilly. Aside from the occasional player outburst or official announcement, the only sound is the constant clicking of players "riffling" their chips.

Charismatic stars like Hellmuth, Phil Ivey and Daniel Negreanu draw large crowds around their tables.

"It's definitely something I don't think you can do justice to by describing," said Erickson, who played in the same WSOP event as Gibbons in 2007 but failed to cash and didn't play this year.

Meanwhile, Ryan Beckwith, an aspiring poker pro from Stoughton, took a shot at a $1,500 Buy-in No Limit Hold'em event at the WSOP in early July after winning enough in other tournaments to cover his expenses.

Beckwith lasted several hours before a tough loss crippled him. In that hand, his hole cards of an ace and a king were superior to his foe's ace and six, but the three community cards included a 6 that gave his foe the win.

"It's something I've wanted to do for a long time," Beckwith said of competing in the World Series of Poker. "I think I played really well."

The loss didn't dampen Beckwith's desire. He plans to return in 2009.

Swimming with the 'sharks' The chance to play against famous pros like Hellmuth is one of the obvious draws of the WSOP.

"That's what makes this so unique," said Palansky, the Harrah's publicist. "You can't buy your way onto an NBA court but you can buy your way here and be sitting next to the Michael Jordan of poker, Phil Hellmuth, or someone else at that level."

Beckwith got to play a few hands with famed pro Humberto Brenes, an ESPN and fan favorite who carries a little shark with him that he uses as a prop when he is munching on opponents and chips.

Hellmuth: Bring 'em on

Hellmuth, 44, whose nickname is "Poker Brat" for his legendary blow-ups, some of which have come at the expense of amateurs he's played against, advises the novices at his table to "have fun and enjoy the moment."

"Those 'Poker Brat' moments are purely the heat of the moment for me. I love the amateurs that challenge themselves to play with the best. As far as I'm concerned, the more the merrier!" said Hellmuth, who has written instructional books on poker and recently rolled out an online course, "How to win the World Series of Poker."

The huge numbers of entrants make it harder to win WSOP titles than years ago. But Hellmuth, the all-time leader with 11 titles, said he prefers today's version.

"It was more of a convention back then where all of the great players gathered to play for bracelets, history, and cash," he said. "I love the spotlight of the world on us now, illuminating the skill, subtlety, and beauty of Texas Hold'em."

CAPTION(S):

Casey Fessler Photo

Chris Gibbons is one of thousands of amateur poker players who paid to

compete in the World Series of Poker in Las Vegas.