Wednesday, February 29, 2012
FED: Lib donors get nothing in return: Hockey
AAP General News (Australia)
02-27-2008
FED: Lib donors get nothing in return: Hockey
CANBERRA, Feb 27 AAP - Political donors only give money to the Liberal Party to offset
unions' financial contribution to Labor, federal Opposition health spokesman Joe Hockey
says.
Mr Hockey denied donors to his party expected anything in return, such as better access
to ministers in a Liberal government.
"Not at all," he told Fairfax Radio Network today during a live debate with federal
Transport Minister Anthony Albanese.
"I think (they donate) because they look at these huge amounts of money that the unions
give the Labor Party and they …
mms to Unveil New Watchpoints Product
Wireless News
05-06-2011
mms to Unveil New Watchpoints Product
Type: News
mms, a provider of mobile engagement and messaging solutions, announced that it will launch its new Watchpoints product in May, a social viewing application for watching and interacting with your favorite television shows.
According to a release, the new proprietary Watchpoints technology autonomously monitors TV content as it simultaneously detects what show a viewer is watching by using mms' Audio Thumbprinting technology on their mobile phone, tablet or laptop. Once it has validation someone is tuned in to a program, Watchpoints creates a new second screen layer around the content for viewers to interact with on their mobile device. Just as Facebook places and Foursquare have created a virtual layer for the real world, Watchpoints creates a virtual layer for television.
Watchpoints creates a platform for interactivity and daily quests that drive engagement. Editorial content, user-generated content and advertising comprise the Watchpoints homescreen with elements that include viewer comments, show tune-in reminders; show-info; SMS voting; trivia games; sweepstakes; moderated chats; downloadable content and more. Watchpoints users can update and post all activity news on Facebook and Twitter walls. Viewers are rewarded for engagement with Watchpoints they can redeem for physical or digital goods and services.
According to a recent Yahoo study (01/2011) over 86 percent of viewers have their cell phones in their hands while watching TV. Nielsen has reported that 59 percent of U.S. Internet users browse the Internet and watch TV simultaneously (Nielsen, 2010) it via their mobile devices.
Watchpoints can create communities of people who want to discuss a show, topic, genre, anything. It can make it easier for them to tweet and post about it. For advertisers, the new Watchpoints technology enables them to interact with the audience on the second screen directly - offering value added services and show-related products that are engaging and relevant to the viewers.
"Watchpoints gives viewers a richer television experience by engaging them in real time with fun and rewarding ways to interact with content over their mobile devices without fast-forwarding through ads or sponsor messages," said Kai Buehler, CEO of mms North America. "Watchpoints' unique audio-matching technology creates an exciting platform for interactivity and daily quests that drive engagement."
((Comments on this story may be sent to newsdesk@closeupmedia.com))
Copyright 2011 Close-Up Media, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
n/a
FED:Heart patients 'fail to take medication'
AAP General News (Australia)
08-28-2011
FED:Heart patients 'fail to take medication'
A new study shows that cheap medicines recommended for cardiovascular disease patients
are being underused around the world, despite their effectiveness at saving lives.
Researchers estimate about 60 per cent of heart disease patients and up to half of
those who have had a stroke might not be taking any of the main four inexpensive preventative
drugs, including aspirin, recommended by doctors.
Not taking the drugs, as well as failing to make lifestyle changes, can increase a
person's risk of having another heart attack or stroke.
AAP RTV bt/wf
KEYWORD: HEART (SYDNEY)
� 2011 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
NSW:Raising my family was hard: Keneally=2
AAP General News (Australia)
02-16-2011
NSW:Raising my family was hard: Keneally=2
Ms Keneally also refused to concede she will be defeated at the election, despite an
opinion poll showing Labor could be reduced to as few as 13 seats.
The Nielsen poll, published in Fairfax newspapers on Wednesday, shows the Coalition
leading the ALP by a thumping 66 to 34 per cent, on a two-party preferred basis - a swing
of 18 per cent since the 2007 state election.
If the result is replicated at the March 26 election, Labor likely will be left with
as few as 13 lower house seats.
Ms Keneally admitted the government was in for a "tough election" but vowed she wouldn't
give up the fight.
"I'm going to fight every day until the poll that counts, the poll on the 26th of March,"
she told reporters.
Asked if she'd concede Labor would lose the election, Ms Keneally shot back: "Absolutely not".
AAP ab/wjf/cdh
KEYWORD: POLLNSW KENEALLY 2 SYDNEY (RE-OPENS)
� 2011 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
SA:Child dies on SA property
AAP General News (Australia)
12-02-2010
SA:Child dies on SA property
ADELAIDE, Dec 2 AAP - A young child has died after being hit by a car on a property
on South Australia's Eyre Peninsula.
Police say the incident occurred at about 8.10am (CDT) on Thursday on the property
about 35 kilometres east of Lock.
Officers from Cleve and Tumby Bay were on their way to the scene.
AAP tjd/nb
KEYWORD: CHILD
� 2010 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
Fed: Biebermania hits Australia
AAP General News (Australia)
04-26-2010
Fed: Biebermania hits Australia
Police have defended the organisers of this morning's cancelled JUSTIN BEIBER concert
in Sydney saying everyone was prepared for the crowds .. just not the fans ignoring their
instructions.
Mass hysteria quickly descended into chaos at Circular Quay where five thousand screaming
teenage girls .. and a few boys .. had gathered to see the 16 year-old pop sensation sing
at the free concert hosted by the Seven Network's Sunrise program.
Deputy Commissioner DAVE OWENS says the crowd wouldn't listen to their directions and
were left with no option but to cancel the concert.
Commissioner OWENS says it was also a concern so many girls were out at night without
their parents.
Several girls has to be treated by paramedics at the scene .. eight girls aged 12 to
16 were to be taken to hospital.
A spokesman form the NSW Ambulance says one had a fractured her knee cap while most
were being treated for hyperventilation.
AAP RTV kc/sw
KEYWORD: BIEBER (SYDNEY)
� 2010 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
NSW: Man stabbed by home intruder
AAP General News (Australia)
12-12-2009
NSW: Man stabbed by home intruder
SYDNEY, Dec 12 AAP - A man has been stabbed in a violent home invasion on the NSW south coast.
A 49-year-old man and his 15-year-old son returned to their Mount Warrigal home on
Friday night to find an intruder rummaging through a kitchen cupboard.
Police said the intruder attacked the man, stabbing him in the left arm before fleeing the scene.
The man called police and was treated for the wound.
The intruder, believed to be in his late 30s, is described as 178cm tall, of dark complexion
with short, dark curly hair.
He was wearing black runners, black pants and a black t-shirt, police said.
Anyone with information is urged to call Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000.
AAP pbc/goc/cjb
KEYWORD: INTRUDER
2009 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
VIC: Four arrested in counter-terrorism raids
AAP General News (Australia)
08-04-2009
VIC: Four arrested in counter-terrorism raids
MELBOURNE, Aug 4 AAP - Four people, all Australian citizens, have been arrested in
a joint counter-terrorism operation in Melbourne early on Tuersday morning.
The four are being interviewed and several others are assisting with inquiries, a joint
press release said.
The raids involved the Australian Federal Police (AFP), the Victoria Police, NSW Police,
the NSW Crime Commission and Australian Security Intelligence Organisation (ASIO).
The statement said the arrests followed the execution of 19 search warrants by 400
officers across Melbourne about 4.30am (AEST) Tuesday.
AFP Acting Commissioner Tony Negus said Australia's law enforcement and intelligence
agencies continued to work collaboratively to counter terrorism.
Supporting this Victoria Police Commissioner Simon Overland said: "I can assure the
Victorian community that we are doing everything in our power to ensure the state remains
one of the safest in the country.".
All of those arrested were Australian citizens, he said
Police are currently interviewing a 26-year-old Carlton man, a 25-year-old Preston
man, a 25-year-old man from Glenroy and a 22-year-old man from Meadow Heights..
Police also urged anyone with information they believe may be related to national security
to contact the National Security Hotline on 1800 123 400 or Crimestoppers on 1800 333
000.
AAP bwl
KEYWORD: TERROR VIC ARRESTS
2009 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
Cloud computing for the masses
Jerusalem Post
03-08-2009
Headline: Cloud computing for the masses
Byline: DAVID SHAMAH
Edition; Daily
Section: Economics
Page: 15
Sunday, March 8, 2009 -- Small businesses that want to save money (a major concern during a recession), as well as hassle (a major concern anytime), should look to the heavens - specifically, the clouds. Or rather, "the cloud," that ethereal place on the Internet that will eventually supply all our data and computing needs.
The cloud is ready for prime time, says Henry Broodney of InGrid Networks, which has come up with perhaps the first low-cost, enterprise-level system-recovery application/platform for small- and medium-sized businesses.
Usually, it's hard to find sentences in which the terms "small business" and "enterprise level" are used together. Hardware, software and service companies offer all sorts of enterprise-level products and services - because enterprises can afford to pay big money for those items. As a result, administrators of corporate data centers and networks can avail themselves of all sorts of backup, duplication, replication and recovery schemes, with data stored on site, off site, underground or across the sea, depending on the system's parameters and the company's needs.
Products designed for data recovery leave no stone unturned, ensuring large organizations - who can afford to pay for privilege - the ability to get back on-line within minutes of a disruptive event, like an earthquake, terrorist attack, etc. With a recovery system in place, workers can be moved to other sites and pick right up where they left off almost immediately, ensuring that the business - and income flow - continues.
Unfortunately for the small-business person - the accountant, the lawyer, the graphic artist - enterprise solutions that allow them to immediately recover from major outages are out of the question, mostly because of the cost. Instead, most small businesses rely on file backup - copying important files to CDs, or uploading them to an on- line backup server, like http://mozy.com/, or even using Google Docs (http://docs.google.com/), which gives you scads of free server space.
That's fine if you're looking for file backup, Broodney says, but it's hardly the stuff of enterprise level system recovery.
"If you use a specialized application in your business, for example, it's not enough to just have access to the file," he says. "You need to reinstall the application, and maybe the computer or server has to be configured a certain way to get it to work. So, you waste a lot of time and effort in getting back to work, and you may even end up having to hire a professional to set things up for you on a new system.
"In the US alone, annual data loss costs businesses $18 billion. One out of 15 PCs crashes every year, and each data-loss episode costs $4000. And yet, the majority of small-business PCs remain unprotected, and virtually no small business has a business-continuity plan in place."
That's where InGrid's products come in, Broodney says.
"Recovery, as opposed to backup, is what large organizations rely on, and this is the concept and product we are bringing to small business," he says. "For an extremely reasonable fee, users can install the InGrid recovery system, guaranteeing them a minimum of downtime due to lost or corrupt data or systems."
And while there are hundreds of backup systems for small businesses or individuals, there is no other recovery system out there that offers enterprise-level protection for those customers.
InGrid will offer a two-tiered recovery system; users will be able to avail themselves of local or remote backup. In the local system, Broodney says, the InGrid system will create a "local" cloud consisting of the free space in an organization's PCs.
"The backup system is dynamic, so it doesn't affect the ability to save new data," he says. "The organization's files and systems will be backed up using our software, with the actual data distributed on existing free disk space throughout the network. This saves small businesses the need to set up a dedicated backup system, saving them money, while still giving them an enterprise-level system, in which the recovery of entire servers and PCs takes just a few minutes in any scenario." There is redundancy as well: If a machine with some of the data goes off-line, the backup - and recovery - can continue, he adds.
Beyond the local virtual-backup device, Broodney says, InGrid will offer a recovery system where the user's computers will be replicated off-site - in the "cloud," specifically the one managed by Amazon, which provides on- line server space for all sorts of purposes (http://aws.amazon.com/ec2/).
"Amazon makes a lot of sense for a product like ours," he says. "It's a lot cheaper for customers to use an existing infrastructure rather than build one from scratch. Plus the Amazon cloud is already on-line, so customers can start enjoying the peace of mind we are helping to provide them sooner.
"Industry experts and analysts don't know which ones are going to succeed, but of one thing they are unanimous: Eventually, all sorts of services are going to move into the cloud, and there is no doubt that this is the future of backup and data recovery."
The company successfully raised money last year; the first service (local backup) is due to be released within a couple of months.
"We're actively seeking new investments now as well, but it hasn't been easy in recent months, as you can well imagine," Broodney says. Still, he is hopeful that the company will thrive, even during tough times.
"We offer an innovative product that fills a definite business niche, that we believe will be very popular with businesses and individuals who are seeking a comprehensive yet affordable backup and recovery system," Broodney says. "Once we get to market, I am sure the demand is going to be heavy, as we are already seeing increasing interest from our distribution partners."
startup@newsgeek.com
Keywords:
Copyright 2009 Jerusalem Post. All Rights Reserved
NSW: Parliament to be recalled next week - Iemma
AAP General News (Australia)
08-22-2008
NSW: Parliament to be recalled next week - Iemma
SYDNEY, Aug 22 AAP - The NSW parliament will be recalled next week to debate the sell-off
of the state's electricity industry, Premier Morris Iemma said today.
Mr Iemma said in a statement he had asked Speaker Richard Torbay to organise a sitting
of parliament on Thursday, August 28, and Friday, August 29.
The recall follows the release yesterday of the auditor-general's report on the electricity
sell-off proposal.
Auditor-General Peter Achterstraat found "no major issues" with it.
Delay would only cost the people of NSW more, Mr Iemma told the Fairfax Radio Network
earlier today.
The government could not put at risk the future electricity supplies of NSW, he said.
The recall of parliament will force the state opposition to state its position on the
proposed privatisation.
AAP nr/wjf/jlw/cjh/mn
KEYWORD: ELECTRICITY RECALL
2008 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
Qld: Deputy stands by Nelson
AAP General News (Australia)
04-16-2008
Qld: Deputy stands by Nelson
By Rosemary Desmond
BRISBANE, April 16 AAP - Deputy federal opposition leader Julie Bishop says taking
over the Liberal leadership after the election loss was always going to be tough for Brendan
Nelson, but he's doing a good job.
Senior Liberals are reportedly becoming increasingly frustrated with Dr Nelson's poor
polling and his inability to grab public attention.
Speaking at a Queensland Media Club lunch today, Ms Bishop said it was unfair to compare
Dr Nelson with his predecessor John Howard, the second longest-serving prime minister
in Australia's history, who lost his seat at the November 24 federal election.
The opposition had also lost its longest serving treasurer Peter Costello and longest
serving foreign minister, Alexander Downer, who were now backbenchers, she said.
"It was always going to be a massive challenge for a new leader, whoever that new leader
was, to fill the shoes of that extraordinary leadership trio over so many years," Ms Bishop
said.
"Brendan put his hand up for the job, he got the support of the majority of the party
and I think he's doing a very, very, good job."
Dr Nelson was tackling his role with energy, effort and commitment but the media was
unfairly comparing him with Mr Howard, she said.
"I think it's unfair to try to judge any leader of the opposition against a John Howard,
for example, and I think that's what's happening," she said.
Mr Rudd was receiving blanket media coverage to satisfy a public curious to know all
about their new government and prime minister.
"But then they (the media) do a poll saying Brendan Nelson is not rating in the preferred
prime minister stakes," Ms Bishop said.
"It is quite frankly ludicrous that we do this.
"So I think Brendan is doing a very, very good job and he's got the support of the
party and he will continue in that job."
Ms Bishop said it was up to Peter Costello whether he would change his mind and contest
the party leadership, after declining to take on the job following the election defeat.
"Whether Peter chooses to reconsider that down the track is obviously a matter for
him ... but at present he's being a very, very active local member," she said.
AAP rad/pjo/ldj/jlw
KEYWORD: LIBERALS BISHOP
2008 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
Main stories in today's 1300 2GB News
AAP General News (Australia)
12-12-2007
Main stories in today's 1300 2GB News
SYDNEY, Dec 12 AAP - Main stories in today's 1300 2GB News:
- Australia has been praised by the UN Secretary-General at a formal handover of Australia's
ratification of the Kyoto Protocol.
- Police have raided the office of a lawyer representing the mother accused of murdering
her two-year-old son Dean Shillingsworth.
- The premier says he'll vigorously contest the legal action by a convicted murder.
- The federal government is considering extending the controversial Northern Territory
indigenous intervention program into Queensland.
- Television journalist John Mangos has told a Sydney court he chatted to Marcus Einfeld
at a northern beaches restaurant the day former Federal Court judge's car was caught speeding.
- Andrew Symonds is confident of making Friday's Chappel-Hadlee trophy match in Adelaide
despite picking up an ankle injury in last night's Twenty20 win over New Zealand in Perth.
AAP nap/was
KEYWORD: MONITOR 1300 2GB
2007 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
Fed: New ads encourage Australians into private health insurance
AAP General News (Australia)
04-29-2007
Fed: New ads encourage Australians into private health insurance
The federal government has unveiled a series of advertisements promoting changes to
private health insurance in the hope of encouraging more Australians to take it up.
Health Minister TONY ABBOTT has launched a series of TV .. radio .. print and internet
advertisements about a number of recent improvements to the private health system.
The changes .. which took effect on April 1 .. allow patients with hospital cover to
receive rebates for medical procedures conducted outside hospitals.
They are also aimed at getting more Australians to buy private health insurance ..
as the take-up rate has stalled in the past few years.
AAP RTV acb/imc/
KEYWORD: INSURANCE (SYDNEY)
2007 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
Fed: National Museum damaged by hailstorm
AAP General News (Australia)
12-29-2006
Fed: National Museum damaged by hailstorm
EDS: Changes southern suburbs as the worst affected in today's storms, based on updated
advice from emergency services
By David Crawshaw
CANBERRA, Dec 29 AAP - A freak hailstorm in Canberra caused a ceiling to collapse at
the National Museum of Australia late today.
The museum would remain closed tomorrow while the damage was assessed, a spokesman said.
He said an administration block at the popular tourist attraction was damaged when
intense storms swept through the national capital shortly after 4pm (AEDT).
There was no damage to the museum's valuable collection of Australian materials and artefacts.
"What appears to have happened is that there's been some blockage in the drainage on
the roof, in the guttering. There's been a build-up of hail and water and that's crashed
through," the museum's director of public affairs Dennis Grant said.
"The damage has been confined to the administration block, so the collection is safe and secure."
Mr Grant could not put a figure on the damage, which he said was "all repairable".
There was no one in the administration area when the ceiling came down.
Strong winds, lightning and heavy rain lashed the capital for about half an hour today,
and the lawns of Parliament House were coated in hailstones up to one centimetre in diameter.
By 6pm (AEDT) the sun was shining again after the short downpour that delivered only
11mm of rain to Canberra, which is experiencing drought.
The ACT Emergency Services Agency said its volunteers received 22 calls for help following
the storms, with Canberra's southern suburbs the worst affected.
Most requests for assistance were for minor flooding damage and fallen trees, a spokesman said.
A severe thunderstorm warning remains in force for the ACT and surrounding regions.
A spokesman for the Bureau of Meteorology said showers and thunderstorms were likely
during the next few days.
The National Museum, opened in 2001, is considered one of Australia's most iconic buildings,
known for its distinctive architecture and prominent location on Lake Burley Griffin.
AAP dcr/jjs/cdh
KEYWORD: STORMS ACT NIGHTLEAD
2006 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
Highlights of the AAp National Wire at 1445 = 2
AAP General News (Australia)
08-21-2006
Highlights of the AAp National Wire at 1445 = 2
CANBERRA - Attorney-General Philip Ruddock says he and Prime Minister John Howard share
concerns over the length of time terror suspect David Hicks has been in detention. (Hicks
Ruddock )
CANBERRA - Australia should increase its military commitment and aid to Sudan to help
avert the collapse of the United Nations mission, a report says. (Darfur )
CANBERRA - Farmers' hopes of an end to the big dry may have been dashed, with research
predicting a strong chance of the dreaded El Nino weather pattern returning. (Drought)
CANBERRA - The Norfolk Island government has caved in to Canberra's demand for major
reforms of their governance and taxation systems. (Norfolk Governance. Also see Norfolk)
CANBERRA - The rorting of a UN aid program to recover an $US8 million debt for BHP
will be dissected by investigators when the inquiry into disgraced wheat exporter AWB
resumes tomorrow. (AWB)
SYDNEY - Guidelines on the treatment of meningococcal disease will not be changed to
recommend antibiotics for people who have only brief contact with a sufferer, an infectious
disease expert says. (Meningococcal Guidelines. Also see Meningococcal, Meningococcal
Iemma and Meningococcal Factbox)
Meningococcal N/L to come.
SYDNEY - A man accused of taking bribes to help Chinese nationals gain Australian citizenship
has been refused bail in a Sydney court. (Moon Lead)
Moon N/L to come.
SYDNEY - The police officer in charge of the investigation into the suspected murder
of Janine Vaughan failed to tell a NSW coroner that he had concerns about the alibi of
a suspect and fellow officer. (Vaughan)
Vaughan N/L to come.
SYDNEY - Heroin with a potential street value of $3.5 million has been found by police
inside a car in Sydney's south-west. (Heroin)
SYDNEY - Patrick Keating, the son of former prime minister Paul Keating, will face
a Sydney court next month on an assault charge. (Keating)
SYDNEY - A journalist has denied leaking information to the NSW opposition alleging
a former minister sought a bribe for the ALP over the Oasis development in Sydney's west.
(Obeid to come)
SYDNEY - Federal Health Minister Tony Abbott is ditching his day job for a few hours
this week to hand out prescriptions at a Sydney pharmacy. (Business)
MELBOURNE - The lawyer for Jack Terrence Thomas - the first Australian jailed under
new anti-terrorism laws and freed last week - says there is no new evidence to re-try
his client. (Thomas Lawyer)
MELBOURNE - Parents risk injuring or killing children by allowing them to use adult
seat belts in cars too early, a study has found. (Booster)
MELBOURNE - A Chilean man has claimed a 17th century artwork on display at the National
Gallery of Victoria (NGV) may have been looted from his grandfather by Nazis. (Painting)
MELBOURNE - A Melbourne teenager banned from wearing a crucifix to school returned
to class today still sporting the necklace, in defiance of school rules. (Cross)
MELBOURNE - The Coles Myer Ltd board holds its regular monthly meeting tomorrow but
there will only be one topic of conversation - the takeover activity swirling around the
retailer. (Coles)
INNISFAIL, Qld - Queensland Premier Peter Beattie says a re-elected Labor government
will spend $52 million on equipment and training for emergency volunteers to better prepare
for cyclones. (Poll Qld Cyclone Lead)
INNISFAIL - Queensland Premier Peter Beattie says he will examine parliamentary rules
that allow retiring MPs to keep thousands of dollars in allowances. (Poll Qld MPs. Also
see Poll Qld Flegg, Poll Qld Molloy, Poll Qld Apprentice)
Poll Qld Nightlead to come.
INNISFAIL - First there were Lady Flo's pumpkin scones - now there's Heather Beattie's
choc chip cookies. (Poll Qld Cookies. Pics available)
BRISBANE - Two brothers and their mate will be sentenced in the Supreme Court this
afternoon after being convicted of attacking a man and leaving him to die on the roadside
in Brisbane. (Bachelard to come).
BRISBANE - Gold Coast Deputy Mayor David Power is facing a summary trial over a charge
that he misled a Crime and Misconduct Commission (CMC) investigation into the Gold Coast
City Council. (Power. Pics available )
BRISBANE - A woman believed to be cleaning her balcony has plunged to her death from
the 36th floor of a Gold Coast highrise. (Balcony)
Seeking more.
BRISBANE - Former Brisbane Broncos rugby league forward Neville Costigan has faced
court on a drink driving charge. (Costigan)
BRISBANE - Vandals have pushed over and smashed up to 50 headstones during a "mindless"
rampage in a Brisbane cemetery, authorities say. (Headstones)
BRISBANE - The Queensland government has stood down two staff at a regional hospital
over allegations of fraud and drug theft. (Blackwater)
BRISBANE - A veterinarian says the use of .22 calibre rifles in harvesting wallabies
is inhumane and against animal protection laws. (Wallaby to come)
BRISBANE - Over 40s women release fabulous forties calendar for charity. (Forties to come)
ADELAIDE - Police say it is a miracle six school students escaped with only minor injuries
as steel girders speared through the windows of a bus in a collision with a truck in Adelaide.
(Bus Lead )
ADELAIDE - The elderly are prepared to risk their safety to maintain an independent
lifestyle, a university study has found. (Elderly )
ADELAIDE - NASA has revived hopes that Woomera, in South Australia's far north, will
be the launch site for rockets to supply and maintain the International Space Station
(ISS to come)
ADELAIDE - A research team at the University of Adelaide may have found a way to reduce
brain swelling, the most common cause of death after stroke. (Brain to come)
ADELAIDE - South Australians are being urged to drink more water, with statistics showing
many drink fewer than two glasses a day. (Drink)
PERTH - Australian paedophile Paul Thompson will appear in a Perth court today after
police arrested him following his deportation from Thailand. (Thompson)
Thompson N/L to come.
HOBART - The Red Cross Blood Service will defend its donor-screening policies in the
Tasmanian Anti-Discrimination Tribunal today as blood supplies reach dangerously low levels
across the nation. (Blood)
HOBART - It's windy enough to flatten your vegetable patch and it rains an average
of 249 days per year. (Maatsuyker)
LAUNCESTON, Tas - Judge sums up in the trial of man charged with murder and arson following
a fire at backpacker hostel. (Hostel to come)
SYDNEY - Interview with Melanie Hogan and Bob Randall, about new Australian documentary
Kanyini. (Kanyini to come. Pics available)
SYDNEY - Cleo Batchelor of the Year finalists photo call. (Batchelor to come. Pics available)
SYDNEY - Australian Kate Beahan has signed on to star in American indie film One of
Our Own. (Beahan to come. Pics available)
SYDNEY - Interview with Henry Singer, producer and director of ABC documentary The
Falling Man. The doco is about the controversial picture of the unidentified man falling
from the World Trade Centre on September 11. (9/11 to come. File pics available)
AAP br
KEYWORD: HIGHLIGHTS NATIONAL 2 SYDNEY
) 2006 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
Fed: Ministers at the AWB inquiry - much ado about nothing
AAP General News (Australia)
04-14-2006
Fed: Ministers at the AWB inquiry - much ado about nothing
By Doug Conway, Senior Correspondent
SYDNEY, April 14 AAP - The PM, the deputy PM and the foreign minister. They have been
the star attractions at the inquiry into the AWB scandal, the political tall poppies,
the big names the public could at last identify with.
It took more than three months of sittings before they appeared, and when they did
it was to a rock star reception from the media.
They did little to advance the sum of human knowledge about AWB, however, saying they
could not recall seeing diplomatic cables warning of what proved to be $290 million in
kickbacks paid to the insidious Saddam Hussein regime Australia was on the verge of waging
war against.
But their appearance did underline what precious little action was taken to investigate,
let alone prevent, the bribes being paid.
John Howard became the first prime minister since Bob Hawke 23 years ago to be "invited"
to a judicial inquiry, and Mark Vaile and Alexander Downer the first ministers in over
a decade.
The Cole inquiry's tentacles were indeed reaching, in the words of Opposition Leader
Kim Beazley, "all the way to the top".
It was a turn of events significant enough to lead news bulletins for over a week,
and media outlets fell over themselves, literally, to report their appearances.
Scores of photographers, cameramen and reporters scrambled for shots and quotes on
the footpath outside the Cole inquiry building in Sydney's busy Market Street, appropriately
next door to the State Theatre.
It was street theatre, outside and, at times, inside.
Mr Vaile, the first minister into the dock, chose to run the media gauntlet, letting
it be known he would make a brief statement.
For the benefit of the nightly news, he enthused that his appearance was proof of the
"openness and transparency" of the inquiry process.
Mr Howard got on the front foot, too, announcing early in the week how happy he was
to provide a written statement to the inquiry and, if required, to attend in person.
It was required, even if only briefly.
Mr Howard spent little more than half an hour being questioned, and commissioner Terence
Cole would not allow any cross-examination.
Mr Downer, gave media the slip and entered the inquiry by a back door.
In the process, he missed some more street theatre in the form of protesters complaining
Australian aid should go to the people who needed it, rather than the dictators and henchmen
who oppressed them.
The protesters had strewn Market Street with fake Monopoly money, and fashioned themselves
in the guise of key figures in the wheat export scandal - a bearded Saddam, a foreign
minister in fishnet stockings and a bare-chested AWB executive with a plastic gun tucked
into his pants.
Until the arrival of the politicians, it was the gun-toting, hard-of-hearing Trevor
Flugge who had attracted most of the publicity.
But if the inquiry room was full for Flugge, it was jam-packed for Messrs Vaile, Downer
and finally Howard as the doyens of the Canberra press pack perched uncomfortably on narrow
window sills at the back of the inquiry room.
The style of the politicians' delivery was in direct contrast to the substance.
They all seemed particularly pleased to be there.
Mr Vaile could have been a softly spoken minister of a different sort, briefly but
patiently answering tricky questions from a Sunday school class.
Mr Downer was at times downright jovial, enjoying a chuckle about the mundane nature
of most diplomatic cables and saying he only read daily cable summaries when "I'm stuck
on a plane and I've run out of everything else to read".
The questioning was gentle in nature, if occasionally pointed in content.
Mr Vaile was asked if he had never considered picking up the phone to demand answers
from AWB, rather than simply accepting the company's denials.
He was too "snowed under", he said at one stage, and in a neat spot of buck-passing
said he had no ministerial responsibility for the UN or its corrupt oil-for-food program
in Iraq.
Over to Mr Downer.
When he learned from a ministerial submission that a Jordanian trucking company used
by AWB might have paid kickbacks of its own volition, Mr Downer wrote: "This worries me.
How were AWB prices set and who set them? I want to know about this."
But he conceded he did not get a sufficient answer.
Despite their earnestness, confidence and apparent ease, the government heavyweights
were in fact conceding they did nothing to stop Australian bribe money flowing to Saddam
Hussein, and nor did anyone else.
AAP dc/sp/mon/sp
KEYWORD: AWB NAMES (AAP BACKGROUNDER) REPEAT
2006 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
Monday, February 27, 2012
Vic: Bail hearing adjourned to see if car boot victim lives
AAP General News (Australia)
04-07-2005
Vic: Bail hearing adjourned to see if car boot victim lives
A Melbourne magistrate has adjourned a bail hearing for a man charged with the attempted
murder of his wife to see whether she dies or survives her injuries.
Magistrate PAUL SMITH says if MARIA KORP dies, charges against her husband JOSEPH KORP
could be upgraded to murder.
Mrs KORP was found unconscious and near death in the boot of her car near Melbourne's
Shrine of Remembrance on February the 13th.
She remains in a vegetative state in The Alfred Hospital, where doctors say she has
little hope of recovery.
JOSEPH KORP and his former mistress TANIA HERMAN face charges including attempted murder
and conspiracy to murder.
KORP has appeared in Melbourne Magistrates Court for the second day of his bail hearing.
Mr SMITH adjourned the bail hearing until May the 25th.
AAP RTV mf/gfr/snp/jlw/wf/jjs
KEYWORD: KORP (MELBOURNE)
2005 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
Companies Provide High-Tech Support on Christmas.
By Jonathan B. Cox, The News & Observer, Raleigh, N.C. Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News
Dec. 27--The gifts are unwrapped and stockings unstuffed.
It's time for a long afternoon of fun with all the new gadgets littering your living room.
Unless, of course, the computer won't start, the digital camera demands a software driver or the cell phone sulks in silence. Then it's just time for a long afternoon.
Getting technical support on Christmas Day can be tricky. Many local technicians take the day off.
"I don't think anybody expects anybody to be working," said Richard Gidwitz, who runs the Richard Gidwitz On Site Computer Service from Butner.
And the neighbor's tech-savvy child likely will be playing with her own new toys.
Chuck J. Galantis, owner of Computer House Calls by Chuck, can help folks in the Clayton area, though not until after 5 p.m. "I have a 2-year old, so I have to do my Santa Claus thing," he said.
But don't fret. For those determined to solve technical glitches today, there is hope.
Computer and electronics manufacturers such as Gateway and Palm and national tech support hotlines have armies of workers standing by to tame the wires and devices that are taunting you.
"We're definitely anticipating a very busy day," said Daniel M. Sullivan, president of Speak With a Geek in San Diego, a year-old company that offers advice on a variety of products including personal digital assistants and about 2,000 software titles. Users are supposed to pay $34.95 for a monthlong subscription, but the company is offering a free five-day trial as "a Christmas present," Sullivan said.
Speak With a Geek resolves, on average, 1,000 issues a day and says no question is too tough. Once, a culinary student called to find out how to print a picture so it could be eaten. The company researched the matter and found an edible rice paper compatible with most popular printers. It even reviewed information about the ink to ensure it wasn't toxic.
"It does take a lot to surprise us, for us to say we don't know," Sullivan said.
Most questions on Christmas Day are far easier to answer.
"It's basically, `I got this device and I'm having difficulty,' " said Samuel Cho, senior director for global service and support at Palm, the Milpitas, Calif.-based company that makes the handheld computers known as personal digital assistants.
Callers are perplexed by myriad connections for digital cameras, printers and the like, software prompts that request a response and, in the case of cell phones, setting up voice mail.
"There's a lot of confusion," said Star King, director of customer service at Poway, Calif.-based Gateway, the third-largest U.S. maker of personal computers.
She advises customers to call no matter how simple an inquiry might seem. To illustrate, she recounts a call taken by a technician 12 years ago. A worried customer reported that his computer sat frozen waiting for him to press "any" key. He couldn't find it.
"There is no dumb question," King said. "If they truly are confused, the worst thing they could do is not call."
Gateway begins planning for the Christmas holiday in October and staffs its call centers based on historical trends, putting about 10 percent more workers on at this time of year. King said customers shouldn't have a problem getting help, though hold times later in the day might reach two minutes.
Dell Computer, the world's largest maker of personal computers, will be staffed appropriately, spokesman Venancio Figueroa said.
Palm has increased its staff for the holidays by 15 percent to 18 percent. Cho said the company, which will provide technical help from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. on Christmas, doesn't expect a big spike.
Dec. 26 is a different story.
"Truly the busiest day for technical support is the day after Christmas," Gateway's King said. "It's similar to the day after Thanksgiving in the retail world."
Call volumes usually remain high through January as customers continue to play with their new gifts and find new questions. That makes Christmas Day one of the best times to call.
And even though support representatives are working on the biggest holiday of the year, they should be in good spirits. Most large manufacturers and service providers such as Alltel, one of the largest mobile-phone companies in the Southeast, ask for volunteers instead of assigning people to work that day. The companies also typically provide food and music to keep the atmosphere light.
If you don't want to wait on hold, you can try e-mail or the Web. Many companies provide tutorials for frequent questions on their Internet sites and others, such as Palm, answer e-mail. Waiting for a reply to e-mail will likely take longer than waiting to speak to tech support, though.
For people who need a more personal touch, a handful of local technicians will be available. Mike W. Barskile, owner of Computer Service and Repair in Garner, says he could get seven or eight calls and will work until he gets tired.
"It's not a big day, but it's worthwhile," he said. He declined to provide specific rates, but said prices will be higher because it's a holiday. He serves Wake and Johnston counties.
Lynda L. Prediger, owner of A Woman's Touch Computer Support in Cary, expects few inquiries, but she'll take them.
"That might be kind of fun, working on Christmas day," Prediger said. "People would be in good spirits."
She charges at least $50 for a home visit, and prices rise depending on how far she travels.
So how do people react when they get assistance on Christmas?
" `Thank God you're open'; `I'm so happy I found someone'; or `You're a saint,' " Barskile said.
Those who don't want to admit shortcomings to a stranger, can't stomach hold music, but don't want to give up can take advantage of one solution suggested by technicians: Read the instructions.
"I know that's hard to do," Prediger said. "We all hate to read the manual, myself included."
TRY THIS FIRST
Here are some tips to follow before calling for help:
--Read the manual. Electronics manufacturers have worked hard during the past few years to make it easier to get started with their devices. Many computer vendors, for example, include posterlike sheets with step-by-step instructions and pictures.
--Check the connections. If you have followed the directions and you're still having problems, check the cords. They have to be inserted completely and sometimes, especially with new machines, require an extra push. Don't forget the power cord when you're making your checks, either. It's important and often overlooked.
--Charge the batteries. It's tempting to pull that new cell phone or digital camera right out of the box and start playing. But such electronics with rechargeable batteries require a little patience. Most manufacturers require you to fully juice up the battery before playing. That advice can be important. A battery that isn't charged properly can have a shorter life.
--Read the prompts. When computer software asks you for an action, it often already has highlighted the response it expects you to make. Be careful. Some technicians recommend that you always click cancel unless you're absolutely certain of the results.
--Go online. If all your efforts have failed, but you're unwilling to pick up the phone, try the Internet. Many equipment makers have tutorials for their products and sections that answer frequently asked questions.
WHERE TO TURN
Here's a list of places to find help if you get into a technology bind on Christmas Day -- or any other day.
--Alltel
(800) 255-8351
www.alltel.com/customer_service
--Apple
(800) 275-2273
www.apple.com/support
--AT&T Wireless
(800) 888-7600
www.attws.com/ocs/
--Cingular
(866) 246-4852
www.cingular.com
--Compaq
(800) 652-6672
www.hp.com
--Dell
(800) 999-3355
support.dell.com
--Gateway
(800) 428-3939
support.gateway.com
--Hewlett-Packard
Printers, cameras, home computers and laptops: (208) 323-2551; monitors, business products (970) 635-1000
www.hp.com
--Microsoft
For Xbox help, (800) 469-9269. For software questions and other issues:
support.microsoft.com/holiday
--Nintendo
(800) 255-3700
repair@noa.nintendo.com
www.nintendo.com
--Palm
(847) 262-7256
support@palm.com
www.palm.com/support
--Sony
(800) 222-7669
www.sony.com/support
--Verizon Wireless
(800) 256-4646
www.vzw.com
--Speak With a Geek
(866) 993-4357
$34.95 for month membership; five-day free trial with a credit card
www.speakwithageek.com
--Ask Dr. Tech
(800) 275-3783
$89 for year membership
www.askdrtech.com
--888 Geek Help
(888) 433-5435
Charges $1 a minute
www.geekhelp.com
--Computer Service and Repair
Mike W. Barskile
772-3959
Charges hourly and fixed rates. Surcharge for holiday help. Serves Wake and Johnston counties.
--A Woman's Touch Computer Support
Lynda L. Prediger
677-1987
Charges at least $50; rates vary depending on where she must travel.
--Computer House Calls by Chuck
Chuck J. Galantis
553-8419 or 868-7902
Available from 5 to 11 p.m. Christmas day in the Clayton area. Charges a minimum $50 and each hour after the first is $30.
--Computer Troubleshooters
Jason C. Barber
451-5468
Serves Northeast Raleigh. Charges $30 for the first half hour, the minimum charge, and $20 for each additional half hour.
To see more of The News & Observer, or to subscribe to the newspaper, go to http://www.newsobserver.com.
(c) 2002, The News & Observer, Raleigh, N.C. Distributed by Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News.
GTW, PALM, DELL,
Senators Again Target Microsoft for Hearings.
By John Hendren, The Seattle Times Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News
Jul. 25--WASHINGTON -- Key Democrats used their party's newfound control of the Senate yesterday to tentatively schedule antitrust hearings on Microsoft and to urge the government to block the debut of the company's latest operating system.
The development threatened early settlement talks between Microsoft and the government.
One day after Microsoft and Justice Department officials met to discuss the procedure for settlement discussions, Judiciary Committee Chairman Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., said he planned to hold hearings in September, one month before the Oct. 25 release of Microsoft's Windows XP.
The Senate involvement followed substantial lobbying by two New York-based companies, AOL Time Warner and Kodak, both of which say that software included in XP will compete unfairly with their own products.
The hearings would be the first since 1998, when Republican Sen. Orrin Hatch of Utah, whose state includes Microsoft rival Novell, oversaw a congressional debate on Microsoft's competitive practices.
A memo yesterday outlining the proposed hearings did not name Microsoft, but committee sources said the hearings were intended to target Microsoft. The memo specifically cited "desktop issues" -- an area dominated by Microsoft -- and "Web and Internet issues," the target markets of upcoming Microsoft products. The hearings will be "forward-looking" and also examine licensing issues, exclusive contracting and bundling of separate products, said the memo by Leahy spokesman David Carle.
The criticism by Democrats, who recently gained control of the Senate and its hearing schedule, could hardly have come at a worse time for Microsoft, whose executives have increasingly spoken favorably about settling the antitrust case out of court. Legal observers say Microsoft appears to be biding its time until the debut of XP, reasoning it would be harder for the government to recall the product once it's on the market.
In June, the Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia found some of Microsoft's marketing practices illegally exclusive and sent the case to U.S. District Court to fashion a remedy.
Microsoft last week opposed the government's effort to speed the case back to District Court before August, asking an appeals court to reconsider a technical issue and pondering whether to seek a Supreme Court review. The clock may run out before the Oct. 25 product launch because computer makers and retailers can begin selling XP as soon as they get their master copies.
"Bargaining is difficult as it is. It's best to be done in secret," said Nicholas Economides, a New York University economist. "It would be inappropriate and not beneficial for anyone if the bargaining stage becomes a Senate hearing. It is important (in reaching an agreement) for people to have the flexibility to step back."
A Microsoft spokesman said the company "does not believe the complaints of AOL and Kodak merit a congressional hearing," noting that more than 50 software makers in New York have products that will run on XP.
"We have repeatedly expressed our willingness to work with the government to resolve the remaining issues in this case," the spokesman said.
AOL and Kodak drew substantial support from committee member Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., who more than a year ago questioned a government plan calling for the breakup of the company. Schumer canceled a meeting with Microsoft officials to hold a news conference yesterday in which he urged Justice officials and state attorneys general to refuse to settle with Microsoft until the company agrees to change XP.
He cited what he said were "hard-wired preferences for Microsoft applications" over rival products by AOL, Kodak and others.
"I am writing today to urge you to expand your ongoing settlement negotiations with Microsoft to include negotiations over Windows XP," Schumer wrote to Justice Department antitrust chief Charles James yesterday. "It seems that Microsoft intends to maximize its monopolistic power, using XP to enter new lines of businesses -- such as digital photography, media players, and messenger services -- while limiting the choices consumers have."
Schumer has an ally in New York Attorney General Eliot Spitzer, a fellow Democrat whom Schumer on Monday urged to seek an injunction barring XP's debut.
The senator explained his change of heart over the past year or two in a separate letter to Microsoft Chief Executive Steve Ballmer. In it, he described himself as a "supporter of Microsoft" who had believed it to be "a consumer friendly company" until he learned details about XP.
He asked the company to voluntarily delay the XP launch until it made appropriate changes.
The initial settlement discussions in this round occurred Monday as Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates was in town for Washington Post Publisher Katharine Graham's funeral. Capitol Hill officials reported seeing an unusual number of Microsoft executives.
Kodak had complained that XP makes it difficult for consumers to use Kodak's digital-imaging software by presenting them with a "Scanner and Camera Wizard" that requires additional steps to gain access to the Kodak program and steers them instead to a Microsoft-approved vendor. Kodak and Microsoft remain in negotiations over the way the programs work together. Microsoft noted that America Online's Internet software includes only Kodak's photofinishing service.
AOL recently broke off talks with Microsoft over including AOL's service in XP, claiming the company insisted that AOL favor Microsoft's Windows Media Player over RealNetworks' rival RealPlayer, software that handles the playing of audio and video over the Web.
The two companies have also disagreed over the compatibility of their competing instant-messaging technologies.
Microsoft lobbyist Jack Krumholtz offered a point-by-point critique of AOL and Kodak complaints and suggested AOL was being hypocritical.
"Microsoft has urged AOL to open up its closed instant-messaging systems so that they could interoperate with others, but despite public commitments to the contrary, AOL has steadfastly refused," Krumholtz wrote.
To see more of The Seattle Times, or to subscribe to the newspaper, go to http://www.seattletimes.com.
(c) 2001, The Seattle Times. Distributed by Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News.
MSFT, AOL, EK, NOVL,
Incara CEO Interview on Liver Stem Cell Program Available on CEOcast.com.
RESEARCH TRIANGLE PARK, N.C., Aug. 24 /PRNewswire/ --
Incara Pharmaceuticals Corporation (Nasdaq: INCR) President and CEO, Clayton I. Duncan, was interviewed this morning to discuss the company's liver stem and precursor cell therapy program for the website CEOcast. The audio interview can be accessed over the internet at www.ceocast.com .
Liver stem and precursor cells are a subpopulation of cells in the liver that can differentiate into a variety of daughter cells that provide liver function. Incara is studying the use of transplanting human liver precursor cells for the treatment of a variety of liver diseases. The Company is completing preclinical studies and is evaluating alternatives for the cGMP cell purification process needed to perform clinical studies. During 2001, Incara plans to begin initial clinical studies of the injection of human hepatic precursor cells as a treatment for children with life-threatening inborn errors of metabolism and adults with chronic liver failure.
Incara Pharmaceuticals Corporation (www.incara.com ) develops innovative pharmaceutical products and treatments for major diseases afflicting large patient populations. The Company's three current programs include liver stem and precursor cell therapy for the treatment of liver failure, small molecule catalytic antioxidants for treatment of stroke and chronic bronchitis, and an ultra-low molecular weight heparin for the treatment of inflammatory bowel disease.
Incara's catalytic antioxidant program discovers and develops small molecule catalytic antioxidants for the treatment of CNS diseases, including stroke, and for treatment of chronic bronchitis. Assuming satisfactory completion of preclinical studies, Incara intends to initiate clinical trials in stroke with a catalytic antioxidant in mid 2001.
Incara has licensed OP2000, an ultra-low molecular weight heparin, for study as a once-daily treatment for inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). OP2000 has completed Phase 1 clinical trials conducted by Incara and the drug has been studied for another indication in over 150 subjects and patients in Europe with no significant unexpected side effects. Incara intends its next clinical trial for OP2000 to be a Phase 2/3 study at 28 medical centers nationwide in patients with ulcerative colitis, one of the two common forms of IBD.
The statements in this press release that are not purely statements of historical fact are forward-looking statements, and actual results may differ materially from those anticipated. These statements and other statements made elsewhere by the Company or its representatives, which are identified or qualified by words such as "likely," "will," "suggests," "expects," "might," "may," "believe," "could," "should," "would," "anticipates," or "plans," or similar expressions, are based on a number of assumptions that are subject to risks and uncertainties. Important factors that could cause results to differ include risks associated with the need to obtain funds for operations, uncertainties of scientific research, clinical trials and product development activities. These and other important risks are described in Incara's reports on Form S-1, Form 10-K, Form 10-Q and Form 8-K filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Readers are cautioned not to place undue reliance on these forward-looking statements, which speak only as of the date hereof. The Company assumes no obligation to update the information in this release.



















