Sunday, March 4, 2012

METS EARN A SAVE IF A-C STAYS HERE.(Sports)

Byline: Staff and wire reports

Chants of "Let's Go, Mets" probably won't be heard in Heritage Park this season, but perhaps they should be.

The New York Mets will deserve a lot of the credit if the Albany-Colonie Yankees stay put after this season, and indications are that they will.

A baseball committee late Tuesday rejected the proposed move of the Double-A Yankees to Suffolk County for the 1994 season. The Mets opposed the transfer, citing that interest in their club could be reduced by the presence of a Yankees affiliate on Long Island.

The head of professional baseball's executive council said Wednesday the move wasn't rejected for a …

Proteome sciences, IDEXX enter deal to develop BSE diagnostic.

LONDON -- Proteome Sciences plc is making strides in its bid to commercialize its proteomics research, entering a licensing agreement that grants exclusive rights to bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE) blood biomarkers to IDEXX Laboratories Inc., one of the world's largest veterinary diagnostics company.

A company spokesman told BioWorld International, "We had people queuing up to do a deal with us. We chose IDEXX because they are the biggest." The terms were not disclosed but the spokesman said it was a significant deal including up-front and milestone payments and double-digit royalty rates from the Westbrook, Maine, company.

Developing a test around the …

Business events scheduled for the coming week

MONDAY, Jan. 9

WASHINGTON — Federal Reserve releases consumer credit data for November, 3 p.m.

BERLIN — German Chancellor Angela Merkel meets French President Nicolas Sarkozy to discuss the eurozone debt crisis.

BERLIN — Germany releases export and import data for November and industrial production figures.

TUESDAY, Jan. 10

WASHINGTON — Commerce Department releases wholesale trade inventories for November, 10 a.m.; Labor Department releases job openings and labor turnover survey for November, 10 a.m.

WEDNESDAY, Jan. 11

WASHINGTON — Federal Reserve releases Beige Book, 2 p.m.

BERLIN — Italian Premier Mario Monti meets Chancellor Angela Merkel …

Whitman unveils Bush's Great Lakes renewal plans

MUSKEGON, Mich.--Christie Whitman, chief of the EnvironmentalProtection Agency, visited this Lake Michigan city on Tuesday toannounce a Bush administration plan to clean up and restore the GreatLakes.

She said the plan addresses the most serious problems facing thefive lakes, including sediment contamination, the proliferation ofnon-native species, loss of habitat and the production of fish unsafefor eating.

The plan sets specific goals for the cleanup and calls on thefederal government to work more closely with state and localgovernments.

It includes monitoring contaminants in fish, requiring …

Driver held for forcing schoolgirl into his flat.

Byline: Badea Abu Al-Naja

MAKKAH: The Commission for Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice in Makkah arrested a man after receiving a complaint from a girl's mother that the man coerced her 10-year-old daughter to enter his apartment, according to a commission statement yesterday.

"The woman had an agreement with a man in the neighborhood to drive the girl to school every day," Abdul Rahman Al-Doalej, director of the commission in Makkah, said in the statement.

"On the second day while returning from school the man asked the girl …

Saturday, March 3, 2012

TCBY AGREES TO $140M BUYOUT.(BUSINESS)

Byline: -- Associated Press

LITTLE ROCK, Ark. -- Want some yogurt with those cookies? TCBY Enterprises, which sells yogurt at 3,000 locations worldwide ranging from airport carts to stand-alone stores, has agreed to a $140 million cash buyout by an investment partnership organized by a firm that controls Mrs. Fields' Holdings. Mrs. Fields' owns Mrs. Fields and Great American cookies and the Pretzel Time, Pretzelmaker and Hot Sam Pretzel brands.

Chattanooga, Tenn., Automotive Firm to Sell Two Downtown Buildings.

Byline: Dave Flessner

Jan. 12--Two of Chattanooga's most historic buildings will soon be sold as part of the liquidation of the city's oldest manufacturer.

North American Royalties Inc., the parent company of Wheland Automotive Industries which filed for bankruptcy protection last November, gained approval Friday to sell both the Dome Building and the old Carnegie Library Building in downtown Chattanooga. The historic buildings at Georgia Avenue and East Eighth Street have served as NAR's corporate headquarters since 1969.

"Both of these buildings are a part of the historic fabric of this community," said Mike McGauley, president of Fidelity Trust …

US militant vows to avenge bin Laden's death

MOGADISHU, Somalia (AP) — An American fighting for an al-Qaida linked militant group in wartorn Somalia is threatening to avenge the death of Osama bin Laden.

Omar Hammami, known as Abu Mansur al-Amriki, or "the American," said Wednesday that bin Laden's death does not mean the end of attacks against U.S. interests.

Hammami is among hundreds of foreign fighters in the …

POWER PROJECT PURCHASE

Destec Energy, Inc. (NYSE: ENG), a leading independent power producer based in Houston, Tex., said November 28 that it has acquired a minimum 55% ownership interest in a 236-megawatt power project in the Dominican Republic:

* Destec acquired its interest in the fuel-oil fired, simple-cycled project from Turbine Energy, Inc., of Wadesville, Ind. The project, under construction, involves repowering the existing Los Mina Generating Station in Santo Domingo. …

Victim alleges plot in assault.(Capital Region)

Byline: MICHELE MORGAN BOLTON Staff Writer

ALBANY - The Albany County district attorney's office is investigating allegations of a conspiracy at a Rensselaerville juvenile detention facility where a female kitchen worker was raped, beaten and kidnapped.

The case will go before a grand jury if evidence surfaces that management and workers colluded to cause the woman harm, District Attorney David Soares said.

The probe comes as the state Department of Labor has confirmed its own inquiry into the Dec. 28 incident.

The woman had just finished a dinner shift at Camp Cass that evening when she was attacked by 16-year-old Michael Elston. The teen pleaded guilty to …

SAF-1 regulates cell cycle progression through p21 induction.

2004 JUN 7 - (NewsRx.com & NewsRx.net) -- SAF-1 regulates cell cycle progression through p21 induction.

According to researchers in the United States, "[i]nflammation-responsive transcription factor, serum amyloid A-activating factor 1 (SAF-1), has been shown to regulate several genes, including serum amyloid A, gamma-fibrinogen, and matrix metalloproteinase 1, whose abnormal expression is associated with the pathogenesis of arthritis, atherosclerosis, and amyloidosis."

"Prolonged high level expression of SAF-1 in cultured cells failed to produce any stable cell line that overexpresses SAF-1. To test the fate of SAF-1-overexpressing cells, the cells were …

N.Y. Times reporter named in court filing: Bridgeview man interrogated in Israel says Miller watched

An alleged fund-raiser for Hamas who claims a confession he gavethe Israeli government was coerced during 1993 interrogations thatwere observed by Judith Miller named the former New York Timesreporter in court filings Monday, questioning her credibility andprofessionalism.

Attorneys for Muhammed Salah, of Bridgeview, said two weeks agothey wrote a letter to Miller -- also recently embroiled in the WhiteHouse leak investigation involving CIA operative Valerie Plame --asking for information about the interrogation.

Miller has refused to cooperate, said Salah's attorney, Michael E.Deutsch.

Salah, along with Abdelhaleem Ashqar, of Alexandria, Va., arecharged …

SARATOGA BAR ELECTS OFFICERS.(CAPITAL REGION)

BALLSTON SPA -- The Saratoga County Bar Association has elected Anne B. Stapleton, an attorney practicing in Saratoga Springs, as its president for 1997.

Other officers recently elected are Christopher N. Luhn of Clifton Park, vice president; Amy Elizabeth Hanigan of Saratoga Springs, treasurer; and David A. Harper of Saratoga Springs, secretary.

The county bar association has about 260 members. During Law …

Friday, March 2, 2012

WIPO ASSIGNS PATENT FOR "METHOD, SYSTEM & SERVICES FOR ELECTRONIC & PHYSICAL BUSINESS CARD DESIGN, PROCUREMENT, PRINTING, BILLING, ELECTRONIC STORAGE; AND CONTACT ADMINISTRATION, MANAGEMENT, EXCHANGE & TRACKING, FOR BOTH INDIVIDUALS & ORGANIZATIONS" (SINGAPOREAN INVENTOR)

GENEVA, June 15 -- Publication No. WO/2011/005217 was published on Jan. 13.

Title of the invention: "METHOD, SYSTEM & SERVICES FOR ELECTRONIC & PHYSICAL BUSINESS CARD DESIGN, PROCUREMENT, PRINTING, BILLING, ELECTRONIC STORAGE; AND CONTACT ADMINISTRATION, MANAGEMENT, EXCHANGE & TRACKING, FOR BOTH INDIVIDUALS & ORGANIZATIONS."

Inventors: Zee Sye Lee (SG).

According to the abstract posted by the World Intellectual Property Organization: "A system (1000,1200), method (1300,1400,1500,1600,1700,1800) and service solution for enhancing business or name card design, procurement, electronic storage, contact management and exchange on a centralized, distributed and personal database over N-tier architecture. Users (1015,1018) are able to access the web server (1100) and the database server (1105) to obtain electronic business or name card and contact information. Users (1015,1018) can exchange the electronic business or name card and contact information through intranet, internet, telecommunication (3G or higher, MMS, SMS) and wireless mode (Bluetooth, infra-red, etc). Users (1035,1060) can scan business or name card and input contact information into their personal computers and database server (1105). Users (1035,1060) can engage (by subscribing to and requesting) a scanning service provider (1120) to scan the business or name card(s) and input contact information into the database server (1105), and subsequently Users (1035,1060) download and synchronize these information with user's personal computer (1030,1055) contact database manually or automatically through the system setting. Users (1035,1060) can also synchronize their mobile or portable devices' (handphone, smartphone, PDA, smartcard, wireless, etc) electronic business or name card and contact information with their computers (personal database, server database, internet database, email address book, web address book). Users (1035,1060) can also exchange electronic business or name card and contact information with each other and other contacts. Organization or Corporate Users (1025,1035) can design and make business or name card procurement through their company. A service provider (1075,1090) can edit, print and supply the printed business or name card, as well as, bill the user company accordingly. On the other hand, Public users (1050,1060) can design or select the design template from the system, and make business or name card procurement with a service provider (1075,1090), and make on-line payment directly or post-paid payment upon delivery of the business or name card and billing by the service provider. Additionally, the database server (1105) will store and link all old and new electronic business or name card and contact information indefinitely, such that the user's network of contacts such as friends, colleagues (current and former), business contacts, social contacts and those met once only shall still be able to retrieve and identify a lost contact using either an old or a new contact information of the said user."

The patent was filed on June 23, 2010 under Application No. PCT/SG2010/000236.

For further information please visit: http://www.wipo.int/pctdb/en/ia.jsp?ia=SG2010/000236

For any query with respect to this article or any other content requirement, please contact Editor at htsyndication@hindustantimes.com

USPTO ISSUES TRADEMARK: MODERN TIMES

ALEXANDRIA, Va., Jan. 29 -- The trademark MODERN TIMES (Reg. No. 3910266; International Reg. No 0970082) was issued on Jan. 25 by the USPTO.

Owner: MODERN TIMES SA anonymos etairia (ae) GREECE Papandreou 1, Voula GR-166 73 Athens GREECE.

The trademark application serial number 79056029 was filed on Oct. 2, 2007 and was registered on Jan. 25.

The description of the mark registered is "The color(s) red, orange, purple and pink is/are claimed as a feature of the mark. The mark consists of the colors red, orange, purple and pink, with the color orange appearing in the left cog, the color red appearing in the smallest cog, the color pink appearing in the remaining cog and the color purple appearing in the words "MODERN TIMES"."

Goods and Services: Musical sound recordings and audiovisual recordings featuring children's educational and amusement programs, motion pictures and television programs in the field of children's entertainment; Digital media, namely, prerecorded audio tapes, video tapes, digital audio tapes, audio discs, CDs, DVDs and laser discs featuring music, motion pictures and television programs in the field of children's entertainment; Pre-recorded optical and magneto-optical discs featuring music, text, data, still images and motion pictures in the field of children's entertainment and children's educational and amusement programs; phonograph records featuring music, motion pictures, television programs in the field of children's entertainment and children's educational and amusement programs; children's educational software, software featuring musical sound recordings and musical video recordings and computer game software

Printed publications, namely, fiction and non fiction books on a variety of topics, children's books, comic books; magazines in the field of entertainment and children's education and amusement; posters; stationery

Advertising; business management, business advice and information; business services in the field of music, entertainment, media and publishing; business management of companies involved with music, entertainment, media and publishing

Telecommunication services, namely, audio and video broadcasting via the Internet and electronic transmission of audio, video material and data via the Internet

Providing online entertainment, namely, providing nondownloadable prerecorded musical sound recordings and audiovisual recordings featuring children's educational and amusement programs and motion pictures featuring children's educational and amusement programs all online via a global computer network; education services, namely, providing a website featuring education and entertainment material for children; organising artistic events in the nature of musical concerts, art exhibitions, concerts, theatrical plays; television and cinematographic studios; production of musical sound recordings, audiovisual recordings featuring children's educational and amusement programs and cinematographic films; on line distribution of musical sound recordings, audiovisual recordings featuring children's educational and amusement programs and cinematographic films; rental of musical sound recordings, audiovisual recordings featuring children's programs and cinematographic films

For any query with respect to this article or any other content requirement, please contact Editor at htsyndication@hindustantimes.com

What boards should know about today's business issues with IT: A conversation with Harvard's James Cash

A conversation with Harvard's James Cash

The importance of information technology (IT) has become a business constant. However, the issues related to managing the business use of IT can change fast, especially when economic conditions are volatile and technological advances are frequent and often confusing. Vaughan Merlyn of The Concours Group recently sat down with Dr. James Cash of Harvard Business School to discuss some contemporary executive team and board level issues in IT management. As a director of General Electric, Microsoft and other companies, Dr. Cash brings a unique perspective to IT business issues.

Vaughan Merlyn: The Concours Group has for some time been encouraging corporations to recruit board members with technology perspectives and a broad understanding of information technology management issues (Directorship, July/August 1997). How much attention is IT getting at the board level these days?

James Cash: The amount of direct attention depends, of course, upon the relative strategic importance of information technology to the company's strategy, products and services. At GE, for example, the board is regularly apprised of the company's strategic reliance on IT. But with more than 20 business units in a wide range of industries, the role of IT varies a great deal. Most visible at the board level is the overall corporate "digitization" effort, which drives detailed use of technology across the businesses. The strategic value of "digitizing" business operations and customer relationships forms a big part of the argument for continuing commitment to IT. An April 2001 Forbes article ("Lion in Winter: Let Competitors Cut Back on High Tech") described how GE and a few others are "keeping the faith" in terms of IT investments. GE's commitment to digitization is reflected in double-digit year-to-year growth in IT spending, while most others are keeping increases in the 3-4 percent range, or are not increasing spending at all.

The situation at Microsoft is quite different, for the obvious reason that they're an information technology company. There the activities of the IT organization are less visible at the board level, but we pay a great deal of attention to the overall IT industry, our customers' perceptions of IT, and the role of IT in our product strategy.

The ubiquity of technology has caused the tide of boardlevel interest in IT to rise pretty much everywhere, and more boards are, indeed, recruiting members with technology perspective. I see even hard asset-driven businesses with tangible, capital-intensive, products paying more attention to IT because they are seeing more of their profits derive from after-sale services, which tend to be IT-intensive. For example, companies sell industrial elevators for less than their costs to manufacture and deploy the product. These companies also sell a remote monitoring system with the elevators, which extends the mean time between outages (for maintenance or failure) that generates substantial customer savings.

Merlyn: Given the pervasive corporate dependence upon information systems and communications technologies these days, how has the aftermath of September 11 impacted IT issues that are being raised?

Cash: A lot of companies are glad they went through the Y2K exercise, because they had recently taken inventory and revisited their processes for recovery from business and systems disruptions. Because of Y2K, they were betterprepared to deal with disasters and they know what their priorities are.

How different companies responded to the September 11 attacks would make for an interesting comparative study. I've read accounts of companies in the World Trade Center that were ready with backup facilities in New Jersey immediately following the attack. The crisis in the airline industry and associated reduction in capacity generated a sudden spike in demand and opportunity for bus companies, rental cars and other transportation alternatives. Some companies filled this need, but others weren't ready. Very significant attention was paid in board meetings as business continuity questions surfaced: What would we have done? How quickly could we recover if we had a major business center destroyed?

One clear lesson of September 11 is that business recovery encompasses much more than IT systems and facilities. It's about people and working relationships. A major financial services firm recently walked me through its disaster recovery plan. It included who would call which customers and other business partners. They don't want customers and suppliers sitting on their hands-they want everyone getting back to work.

Merlyn: With the rise of the Internet, the expanding capabilities of enterprise systems and the increasing sophistication of the technological tools for collaboration and management, there's no shortage of potential opportunities to put IT to business use. What should directors know about some of the CEO's biggest concerns and challenges around IT deployment?

Cash: By far the most challenging issue continues to be resource allocation. How do we make effective decisions related to allocating scarce IT resources? How do we assess the value of IT investments? Even people who have refined management processes for articulating the business cases, and later for monitoring results, still don't feel that they have all the information and evaluation methods needed for making resource allocation decisions up front. Most senior executives are simply not comfortable or confident with the IT resource allocation process, and this seems to happen even when there's strong leadership in the IT function. I expect the CEOs and chief information officers of the future to be absolutely overwhelmed with ideas for putting technology to business use. This puts tremendous pressure on the quality of decisions and the process by which ideas get submitted, evaluated and acted upon.

A second challenge is the selection of the CIO. When looking at the attributes of a person who could most effectively lead the IT function, some CEOs have a bit of a blind spot. It's similar to what happens when American companies expand into a new country and look for local management-after interviewing candidates they will tend to select people with the best command of English, not necessarily those with the best minds or skill sets. The same happens with IT leadership. Companies are looking for people who can translate between business and technology issues, communicate effectively, "speak English." But the CIO needs to be able to do more than that. There are some really critical architectural decisions being made these days, and if the IT leaders don't know how to make those decisions, they risk leading their companies into dead ends.

Similarly, many companies are moving to a twenty-four by seven business environment and finding it easier to say than to do without the right IT leadership in place.

There can be a similar blind spot regarding the organization of the IT function. I see this happening in both the private and public sectors. Senior executives sometimes have preconceived notions about a singularly effective organizational form, especially if they happen to come from highly centralized or highly decentralized environments. The right structure for IT can vary a great deal across corporations, and the right structure doesn't necessarily parallel that of the business. What often seems to work in IT these days is a model where people with specialized expertise come together to work on a problem, then disband and reorganize to address a different problem. Employees are administratively attached to "centers of expertise," but may be affiliated with more than one. For example a wellrun hospital or consulting firm works this way, and their technology infrastructure must be designed to enable this flexibility.

Merlyn: As with many general management positions these days, we seem to be asking a lot of the CIO in terms of both background and ability. Has "CIO" in a large corporation become too big a job for one person?

Cash: The CIO role seems to have grown to the point where it's unlikely that one person will have the full range of skills needed. Someone who's a generalist may lack the depth to make all the key decisions that arise. A common distinction today is between CIO and chief technology officer. Depending on the company, these roles may overlap a great deal, or may be quite distinct. But creating a CTO role may not accomplish what you need.

I think about three different pockets of information technology management activity, and all three have implications for the competitive position of the business. First is managing the operations of the IT function, its process improvements and its administration. Second is leading the work of embedding information technology into the products and services that the business sells. This is a full-time and very senior job in large companies today. I can't imagine how someone would handle that and have responsibility for the everyday business support provided by IT. Third is looking to the outside. This includes ongoing assessment of what other companies are doing in the technology arena, what the possibilities are and how they use technology to increase business flexibility. And because analysts are starting to ask questions about systems performance and infrastructure, this role is part of the public face of the company-how it represents itself to Wall Street.

For one individual to have responsibility for all of that in a large and diverse enterprise may be too much to ask. But no matter how you define the CIO role, you've got to make sure that your IT leadership team includes expertise in all these areas. By the way, all three of these roles involve spending significant time with the real customers of the business.

Merlyn: One of the profound effects of modem communications technology and the Internet has been to enable much more networked business models. Companies increasingly rely on expert business partners for everything from payroll processing to turnkey logistics services. Given the often-significant capital and operating expense involved, IT has long been a candidate for outsourcing. How far do you recommend corporations go in the outsourcing of IT?

Cash: I don't believe that you can outsource everything. Every time we think we've reached the point where we can, something else comes onto the IT plate. There's always some potential competitive advantage to employing technology uniquely, and we see this most clearly when a new technology set comes into play. With the Web and all of the collaborative technology out there, companies still do for themselves the things they feel are the basis of competitive advantage. Once the competitive advantage has disappeared, they feel more comfortable farming the systems out.

There are also functionality gaps to fill. We see this with enterprise resource planning (ERP) systems. Some people had hoped an ERP could cover the entire enterprise computing spectrum, but there are always gaps that require local patches to fill. So there always seems to be something else you need to pull inside the company for organizational learning purposes, for competitive advantage purposes, or simply to provide special functionality. That forces you to stay in systems integration mode, coupling inside resources with outside ones. And systems integration remains a big challenge for many companies, no matter how much they try to outsource.

Meanwhile, IT outsourcing is part of the broader pattern of companies' increasing reliance on outside expertise and external collaboration. When business conditions are volatile, and you can't rely on normal demand patterns, collaboration can really pay off. GE Plastics has encouraged customers' design engineers to run design programs on GE's systems in order to directly drive GE's manufacturing processes. Conceptually, there's really nothing new-we saw this, in theory at least, with electronic data interchange (EDI). The key is what this does in periods of high volatility. Providing transparency to what is happening with its customers gives GE a real sense for forecasting. It's worth huge amounts of money because it helps avoid excess inventory and other problems.

Merlyn: Given all of the business demands and pressures on the IT function, what's your advice to today's CIO on how to succeed?

Cash: One important lesson we highlighted in the Concours research project Leading IT in Internet Time has to do with time management. Because information technology is linking companies in a collaboration mode so much more than in the past, the CIO should be spending more time with external customers, not just internally focused. This requirement is significantly more important in companies that embed information technology in their products and services, as well as their business processes.

At the top of the list, and more important than any tactical challenge, is the personal challenge of managing lifelong learning. The role of CIOs and their associated challenges are changing so fast that explicit plans must exist for selfassessment and continuous improvement of their skills and knowledge, both in the short term and over their careers. Their success with this requirement will determine their long-term viability.

CIOs who are well equipped for one business and technology era are often not equipped to succeed in the following era. Like any senior executives, CIOs can never rest on their laurels. The one thing you absolutely have to do is stay ahead of the game personally and professionally.

Merlyn: How can boards help their ClOs succeed?

Cash: In the board's evaluation, a CIO succeeds when the company exploits information technology successfully (note that this does not always mean using leading-edge technology). And the leading indicator of successful exploitation of IT is a very active and engaged executive team. So the starting point for the board is to make sure that the company hires and retains and promotes technology-savvy business executives who have high aspirations and expectations for the use of IT. Next, the board must ensure that the CIO has the skills, knowledge and personal attributes to facilitate IT-related discussion, decision-making and resource allocation among the executive team. The board must pay close attention to the career development and assignment patterns of CIO succession candidates, just as with other key executive candidates. Finally, the board must ensure that the CIO's organizational placement (where he or she reports), performance evaluation and compensation are designed to attract and retain a high-quality individual-one who can enable the corporation to succeed in exploiting IT.

[Author Affiliation]

Dr. James Cash is the James E. Robison Professor of Business Administration at the Harvard Business School, where he has served as chairman of the MBA program. He is an expert in the strategic use of information technology in the service sector, and in the development of performance measurement systems for large information technology organizations. He sits on the boards of several major corporations, including General Electric and Microsoft, and is an advisor to The Concours Group.

[Author Affiliation]

Vaughan Merlyn is a vice president of The Concours Group, a management consulting, research and education firm that specializes in turning human and technological assets into business performance and value. He has 30 years of experience as an IT industry executive and management consultant and is an expert in technology-enabled business strategy, performance improvement and organizational effectiveness.

The production of hydrogen from renewables is the best use for surplus power and would boost our economy

At present we have a subsidy-driven renewable industry which getsmoney for generation and also for not generating, which is a licenceto print money. It should be a requirement of all intermittent formsof generation to have a set percentage of available storage withinthe schemes proposed and so investing in the infrastructure ratherthan just sucking money out of the public purse.

Storage of intermittently produced renewable energy is the onlyway to remove baseline coal, oil and nuclear power production fromthe grid. An industrialised country working only when the wind blowsis not a possibility. There are few viable options. Gordon Murrayrefers to compressed air storage but this runs at an efficiency of40 to 50% and at present requires air-tight caverns produced bysolution mining of salt (Letters, May 7). I am aware of no suchsites available in Scotland. Pumped storage is possible and existsbut it is land-hungry and is about 65% efficient. Batteries can beused to even out load but are high-maintenance and have a limitedlife span. Fly wheels are useful for evening out wind production butuseless for long-term storage.

Hydrogen production is possibly the best use for surplus power asit can be stored for later utilisation and gas-fired power stationscan be built quickly and relatively cheaply. These displace normalfossil stations and produce only water as a by-product. If locatedin urban settings their efficiency can be improved dramatically byusing waste heat to heat homes and businesses. As a fuel source forvehicles, hydrogen could reduce or replace the need for oil andcould be used as a fuel in homes.

Offshore production would require the gas to be pumped ashore buta network of pipes exist for oil/gas collection already and we havethe expertise to do it. The present problem of balancing the gridwith more than 20% wind power is resulting in constraining of supplywhen there is too much wind for the grid to cope. Localised hydrogenproduction would reduce the strain on the grid and make it easier tobalance. Hydrogen can be stored in depleted oilfields as well as insalt domes. The efficiency rate is 50-60% if used to generateelectricity but it also creates a high-density storable fuel whichis easy to utilise. A hydrogen-based economy would provide energysecurity and we have much of the infrastructure and expertise tomake it work.

Renewable energy is expensive because it requires so much baseload to be kept in reserve to ensure continuity of supply. Onceproduced hydrogen can be stored and used when it is required eitherto produce electricity, or for heating, or as a renewable fuel forvehicles, thus producing multiple markets for the resource.

The production of hydrogen from renewables removes most of theirdisadvantages and could make us world leaders in a hydrogen-basedeconomy.

Cameron D Gibson,

The Green House, Hughton, Kiltarlity, Inverness.

Gordon Murray's letter is a perfect example of the reason we non-experts need unbiased information on the whole question of energypolicy. He advises us that the reserves of uranium are so limited asto make nuclear energy unsustainable in the medium to long term. SoI turned to the book Sustainable Energy - Without The Hot Air (whichcan be downloaded free on the internet) by Professor MacKay of theCavendish Laboratory, who seeks to address the issues in a totallyobjective fashion. It turns out that there is more to the questionof uranium availability than Mr Murray is prepared to acknowledge inhis letter; for instance Professor MacKay discusses the option ofrecovering uranium from sea-water and using thorium instead ofuranium.

I am not arguing from a pro-nuclear stance but from theperspective of a lay person asking for all the facts and not just aselection. I am anxious to know how much reliance I can put on thecurrent feasibility of the type of large-scale storage Mr Murrayseems to favour.

John Milne,

9 Ardgowan Drive, Uddingston.

Value employees for the sake of your customers

THERE is no doubt that Simon Murdoch knows a thing or two aboutstart-ups and the internet. As a co-founder of amazon.co.uk and aserial entrepreneur specialising in internet businesses, he is asgood a person as anybody to ask about what sort of business works inthis area.

"I like businesses that are very customer-centric," he says. Ashe notes, the internet has come a long way since the days when hestarted Bookpages as a UK equivalent of the then fledglingAmazon.com back in 1996. Murdoch spent two years with amazon.co.uk(as Bookpages became), and he witnessed a transformation from tinystart-up to a business with millions of pounds in sales, andhundreds of staff.

But he recalls that Jeff Bezos, the Amazon founder, instilled instaff the principle that whatever the company did, it had to be"completely customer-centric".

Murdoch has since moved on. For the past decade, he has been aserial entrepreneur and business angel investor specialising ininternet-related businesses.

Last month, he joined Octopus Ventures and through his role assenior investment partner has become chairman of GetLenses.co.uk,which claims to be the country's leading online supplier of contactlenses.

He says he was drawn to the business because it "provides a goodservice".

He added: "But as we got bigger, we noticed something else. Wefound that our customers valued us for something else. They valuedus because we treated them like customers, not like patients."

This makes sense. But how can a company make the idea of customerservice a reality? Particularly when it is, by definition, neverface-to-face with customers.

One potential answer comes in a book with a title that suggestsit has got little to offer in this regard. Employees First,Customers Second (Harvard Business Press, Pounds 17.99) mightchallenge the received view about the route to success in business,but author Vineet Nayar believes this is too simplistic. He said:"In any service business the true value is created in the interfacebetween the customer and the employee.

"So, by putting employees first, you can bring about fundamentalchange in the way a company creates and delivers unique value forits customers."

Nayar argues when a company puts employees first, the customeractually does ultimately come first and gains the greatest benefit.

What today's Australian newspapers say-Friday, August 27, 2004


AAP General News (Australia)
08-27-2004
What today's Australian newspapers say-Friday, August 27, 2004

SYDNEY, Aug 27 AAP - All fair-minded Australians will welcome the fact that, after
more than two years in detention at Guantanamo Bay, David Hicks has been brought to trial,
The Australian said today in an editorial.

Mr Hicks, who was captured in Afghanistan among Taliban forces in December 2001, has
been charged by a military tribunal with conspiracy to commit war crimes by training with
al-Qaeda, aiding the enemy during the war to remove the Taliban, and attempted murder
of coalition troops, including Australians.

It is true that, as an unlawful enemy combatant, Mr Hicks' civil rights have been curtailed
and he does not enjoy all the benefits of a trial in a civil court. However, he is receiving
an open trial with full legal counsel, the presumption of innocence and the right to remain
silent.

For him to be convicted, four of the five judges must find him guilty. And to demonstrate
he is not without rights and resources, Mr Hicks won the opening round yesterday, being
granted a trial date early next year, rather than the September date pressed by the prosecution.

Ample evidence for a travesty of justice can be found in the proceedings at Guantanamo
Bay, The Age said.

Mr Hicks faces grave charges based on alleged involvement with the Taliban and if found
guilty of such offences should be prosecuted to the full extent of the law, the newspaper
said.

But by holding the hearings on a military base at Guantanamo Bay, the Bush administration
has contended it is outside the jurisdiction of US or international law.

The editorial said it was misleading for the Howard Government to suggest the proceedings
accorded with Australia's criminal justice system.

In a shameful irony, Australia is the only western nation that agreed to submit its
citizens to the US military's kangaroo court.

This travesty of a judicial process is itself an attack on the freedoms that the coalition
of the willing has gone to war to defend, the newspaper concluded.

The Herald Sun newspaper devotes its entire editorial space today to hurdler Jana Pittman,
who it says is following in Cathy Freeman's footsteps.

The green and gold "Aussies always dare" message on her knee spelt out a philosophy
that saw Pittman run her heart out, the newspaper said.

The newspaper said it was incredible that a former gold medallist suggested on talkback
radio that Pittman was a drama queen who made it all seem worse than it was.

Jana Pittman is an emotional young woman. She cares and she dares, the paper said.

The words on her knee will wash away, but her self-belief will carry her through another
four years.

Sometimes, no matter how much we wish it, no matter how much it seems the fates should
intervene to ensure the right results, the longed-for happy ending doesn't happen, The
Daily Telegraph said.

Yesterday, we were supposed to celebrate the most remarkable victory of all time -
Jana Pittman in the 400m hurdles. The script had been written and until the last 10 seconds
everyone was following the prompts.

Exactly three weeks ago, Jana injured the cartilage in her right knee during a routine
warm-up race in Zurich, and the immediate assessment was that she could not possibly compete
in Athens, so the Olympic dream was over, it seemed.

But the sporting gods had no appetite for such a simple storyline, instead it was written
that Jana would undergo surgery and work for a miraculous recovery so she could keep her
date with Olympic Games destiny.

And so it was, but the conclusion was not the one we had longed to see.

The fury of Sally Robbins' eight team mates when she stopped rowing and slumped in
her seat in their Olympic final was an understandable reaction, the main editorial in
The Advertiser said.

The newspaper said the crew had devoted four years to winning a medal in Athens but
saw their chance evaporate with an unpredictable action by one member of the team.

It is not fair to blame Ms Robbins, to hang her out to dry, the editorial said. She
has her reasons and must live with her own demons.

But her team-mates have a right to do what they did, to express their disappointment
and annoyance. They would be less than human to react in any other way, the editorial
concluded.

Sydney Harbour is the playground for much of the city and in more ways than one, its
lifeblood, The Sydney Morning Herald said.

Now the government wants to establish a comprehensive set of ground rules to control
its foreshores. Getting it right cannot be left to happenstance, as the hodgepodge of
rules for development along differing parts of the harbour testifies.

Eyesores such as the Blues Point Tower, for example, have removed for generations the
chance to develop a natural partner to the Opera House on the western side of the Harbour
Bridge. And as we have seen increasingly over the past few years, tussling over plans
for sites up and down the harbour is now part and parcel of the city's commercial life
- all the more so as the value of what is at stake continues to escalate.

When the anti-heroes of Elmore Leonard's crime novels plea-bargain their way to some
easy state time, they're still at the sentencing judge's mercy, The Australian Financial
Review said.

The settlement of an action under the Trade Practices Act for a civil penalty is not
exactly a plea bargain, but it has parallels. Roger Gyles is the second federal court
judge in two years to take the Australian Competition and Consumer COmmission to task
for presenting a lenient settlement of a case against a company that has owned up to an
offence under the TPA to the court as a fair accompli. The judge said on Wednesday that
the $1.5 million civil penalty the ACCC sought from George Weston, which had admitted
- after four years of denials - to an unsuccessful attempt to fix the price of flour was
"very much at the low end of the range for "typical cartel behaviour". This was notoriously
difficult to detect and deterrence accordingly demanded a heavy penalty, he explained.

The Queensland government's official response to the deliberate rundown of the state's
electricity distribution network has moved from appalling to out-of-control, Brisbane's
Courier-Mail newspaper says.

Rather than concentrate on recruiting qualified staff, Energex has resorted to hiring
expensive spin doctors to brief Members of Parliament on improvements to the system.

Both the Government and the power authorities seem unable to grasp the fact that the
problems will not be overcome and the network will not reach optimum performance levels
by an ill-conceived propaganda exercise, the editorial says.

While the government blames everything from accounting issues, to a media beat-up for
the problems, consumers will continue to be victims of political priorities.

The Beattie Government has rapidly destroyed its credibility and goodwill with the
electorate in its handling of this issue, and in its refusal to acknowledge it played
a major role in creating the problems, it says.

"Mr Beattie and the power authorities will need more than a team of highly paid public
relations consultants to deflect the anger. Voters have memories."

AAP cmc

KEYWORD: EDITORIALS (REISSUING)

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

NSW: Man charged with attemped murder


AAP General News (Australia)
04-21-2004
NSW: Man charged with attemped murder

SYDNEY, April 21 AAP - A 30-year-old Auburn man has been charged with attempted murder
following a stabbing in Sydney's west.

The 27 year-old victim, also from Auburn, was badly injured in a confrontation at a
block of units in Auburn about 8.30am (AEST) on Monday.

He was taken to Westmead Hospital where he remains in a serious condition.

The alleged offender, who was detained by a member of the public, was also treated
at the hospital for minor injuries.

He was released from hospital yesterday and was subsequently charged with attempted
murder, malicious wounding and possession of a knife.

He was refused bail and will appear at Burwood Local Court today.

AAP kjd/it

KEYWORD: UNIT

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

NSW: Govt pledges $500,000 to heritage listed synagogue


AAP General News (Australia)
02-13-2004
NSW: Govt pledges $500,000 to heritage listed synagogue

SYDNEY, Feb 13 AAP - Australia's oldest mainland synagogue has received a $500,000
cash injection towards its restoration program.

The NSW government, which has contributed money for works on St Andrew's and St Mary's
cathedrals, pledged $500,000 for repairs to the heritage listed Great Synagogue in central
Sydney.

The synagogue, which aims to raise $3 million, was built in 1878.

Its stonework, floors, gates and the carved timber around the ark are all in need of
repairs. The building also need repainting.

The fundraising drive is being carried out under the auspices of the National Trust
of Australia because the building is heritage listed.

NSW Premier Bob Carr said the synagogue was a key piece of Sydney architecture.

"It has been the home to Sydney's Jewish community for more than 125 years and one
of the best known and most admired Jewish buildings in the country," Mr Carr said in a
statement.

"As well as being a place of worship, the great Synagogue is one of the most important
parts of Sydney's architectural heritage."

NSW Jewish Board of Deputies president Stephen Rothman said the synagogue was an asset
to the wider community.

"The Great Synagogue is indeed a bridge linking the Jewish and non-Jewish communities," he said.

"Like our own Harbour Bridge, it needs constant maintenance."

AAP sal/cjh/jlw

KEYWORD: SYNAGOGUE

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

FED: PM gets ticking off from Santas over entitlements


AAP General News (Australia)
12-15-2003
FED: PM gets ticking off from Santas over entitlements

Six Santas have marched on the prime minister's Sydney residence demanding full protection
of workers' entitlements.

The six transport workers in full Santa suits marched on Kirribilli House carrying
sacks labelled JOHN HOWARD'S EMPTY PROMISES.

A group of about 50 joined them on their march, including members of the Transport
Union Choir who led a Christmas carol session at the gates.

One of the Santas, former Ansett worker DAVID LUPTON, says 100 per cent of workers'
entitlements should be protected by the government.

Mr LUPTON says employers who misuse workers' entitlements should face harsher penalties.

The Transport Worker's Union wants a scheme set up to safeguard workers' entitlements
and guarantee full payouts in cases where companies have failed to meet their responsibilities.

Mr LUPTON says Ansett workers are also angry that more than $90 million of the Ansett
ticket levy will be used by the government to upgrade airport security.

AAP RTV apw/nf/jas/rp

KEYWORD: SANTA (SYDNEY)

2003 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

Fed: Quotes of the week

00-00-0000
Fed: Quotes of the week

SYDNEY, Aug 8 AAP - Quotes of the week

"The action of the defendant, Amrozi, is an act of terrorism that goes against theorder of civilised men ... and I bring down the death penalty." - Chief Judge I Made Karna,passing sentence on the Bali bomber.

"I hope this verdict provides some sense of comfort for those who lost their lovedones in this tragedy, and that they feel in some way justice has been done." - Prime MinisterJohn Howard.

"I had a preference for him to rot in jail but if they want to shoot him that's fine."

- Jake Ryan, 22, who lost five of his friends and half of his left foot in the bombing.

"I don't believe in the death penalty and I would hate to think that somebody's lifewas going to be taken in my son's name." - Adelaide magistrate Brian Deegan, whose sonJosh died in the Sari Club blast.

"It is yet another reminder that the fight against Jemaah Islamiah and other groupsgoes on." - Prime Minister John Howard on the bombing of the Marriott hotel in Jakarta.

"It's clear now we weren't crying wolf." - ABC managing director Russell Balding onbudget cuts following the government's refusal to provide an extra $250 million over thenext three years.

"Marriage ... is about children, having children, raising them, providing for the survivalof the species. If the same status is given in our society to gay unions we will weakenthat bedrock institution." - Prime Minister John Howard.

"We have spent so long listening to some whitefellas telling us we are stupid, lazyno-hopers that the majority of my people actually believe it." - Tania Major 22, ATSIC'syoungest ever regional councillor.

"The holy ghost was working through me in this film, and I was trying to direct traffic."

- Australian actor and director Mel Gibson on his new movie The Passion about the last12 hours in the life of Jesus Christ.

"Smithy old son, we made it. Charles." - Engraved message on a cigarette case givenby Charles Ulm to Charles Kingsford Smith after they completed the first trans-Pacificflight in 1928. The gold case fetched $23,254 at auction.

AAP tr/jc

KEYWORD: QUOTES

Thursday, March 1, 2012

Qld: Indigenous people on the warpath against chronic disease

00-00-0000
Qld: Indigenous people on the warpath against chronic disease

By Jordan Baker

TOWNSVILLE, Feb 27 AAP - Indigenous people have a new weapon in the fight against debilitatingchronic disease - pedometers.

Patients at Townsville's Aboriginal and Islanders Health Service are wearing the step-measuringdevices in a bid to boost their health and fitness.

The new program involves counting the number of steps volunteers take each day, thenencouraging them to slowly boost their activity.

The extra exertion could include things as small as getting up to change the TV channelinstead of using the remote control.

Townsville resident …

NSW: Police seize record ecstasy haul worth $45m

00-00-0000
NSW: Police seize record ecstasy haul worth $45m

By Kim Arlington

SYDNEY, Dec 27 AAP - Police believe they may have cracked an international drug smugglingring with the seizure of a record haul of ecstasy in Sydney this week.

Police seized 250kg of the drug, with an estimated street value of more than $45 million,in Australia's largest ever ecstasy haul.

A joint task force, comprising officers from the Australian Federal Police, NSW Policeand the NSW Crime Commission, conducted a four-month surveillance operation before raidinga property in Sylvania, in Sydney's south, on Christmas Eve.

Three men, alleged to be members of an international drug trafficking syndicate, havebeen arrested in connection to the record seizure.

Detective Superintendent Mark Wright, of the NSW Police Special Crime Unit, said investigationswere continuing across Australia and overseas and more arrests could be made.

He told reporters today that about 750,000 ecstasy tablets were discovered in the backof a van parked in a garage in Mowbray Street, Sylvania.

The tablets, with a street value estimated by police in excess of $45 million, wereconcealed inside lengths of PVC piping.

Det Supt Wright said the ecstasy's origins were still unknown, but the Australian taskforce was liaising with police in the Netherlands, a country known to be a source of highgrade amphetamines.

Intelligence suggested the drugs were destined for the Sydney market, he said.

Federal Minister for Justice and Customs, Senator Chris Ellison, said the seizure wouldhave a "devastating effect" on criminals dealing in ecstasy.

"Any criminal organisation dealing in the drug would feel a hit of this magnitude,"

Senator Ellison said today.

"It's a significant seizure of ecstasy, the biggest ever.

"Certainly it will have a big effect on the national supply of ecstasy ... it equatesto around 750,000 tablets which will not be reaching the streets of Australia."

Senator Ellison said that with New Year's Eve approaching the seizure of the partydrug was timely.

"Any organised criminal syndicate dealing in drugs would have its eye on when drugusage is likely to be high and no doubt the holiday time is when they're looking at that,"

he said.

Senator Ellison commended the cooperative efforts of the police involved in the investigationand their dedication over the Christmas period.

"They're still on the beat and showing that if you try to bring drugs into the countryor deal in them you'll get caught," he said.

Francis Ballis, 56, of Bondi, Wayne Moore, 52, of Sylvania and Canadian Carl Hinke,48, living in Cronulla, appeared in Parramatta Local Court on Christmas Day, charged withdrug offences under the Customs Act.

They did not seek bail and have been remanded in custody to reappear at Central LocalCourt on January 15.

AAP ka/ph/de

KEYWORD: ECSTASY NIGHTLEAD

NSW: Police target car hoons in Sydney's south

00-00-0000
NSW: Police target car hoons in Sydney's south

Five people have been charged with drink-driving and one man's been caught doing nearly60 kilometres per hour over the speed limit in a police operation in Sydney's south.

Operation Vikings Eight, targeting car hoons, ran from 6pm to midnight (AEST) aroundBrighton-le-Sands.

More than 70 officers, including the police dog squad, Polair and highway patrol, wereinvolved in the operation.

A police spokesman says officers issued 49 speed infringements, including one to a22-year-old Rockdale man who was clocked doing 147 kilometres per hour in a 90-kilometreper hour zone.

Of 34 vehicles inspected, 33 were issued with defect notices for a range of offences.

Last night's operation follows a similar crackdown in Brighton-le-Sands last month.

AAP RTV nf/jmt

KEYWORD: HOONS (SYDNEY)

Fed: Macfarlane to face grilling on range of eco issues

00-00-0000
Fed: Macfarlane to face grilling on range of eco issues

Federal MPs of all parties plan to question Reserve Bank chief IAN MACFARLANE intenselyabout future moves in interest rates.

When Mr MACFARLANE appears before the House of Representatives Economics Committeenext month, it will be the first time in more than a year that he has had to face openquestioning.

Committee chairman DAVID HAWKER says he wants Mr MACFARLANE's view on the next movefor interest rates.

The Reserve Bank lowered its official cash rate to 4.25 per cent in December last year,but Mr MACFARLANE has said the rate will rise to a more normal level over the next 12months.

Mr HAWKER says he wants to know what Mr MACFARLANE thinks is normal.

Labor members of the committee want to question him about foreign currency swaps whichcould lose the government $5 billion.

AAP RTV sw/wjf/jas

KEYWORD: ECONOMY (CANBERRA)

NSW: Attention turns on how to honour firefighters

00-00-0000
NSW: Attention turns on how to honour firefighters

Celebrations recognising the efforts of the state's 20,000 bush firefighters will notonly centre on Sydney.

New South Wales Rural Fire Service Commissioner PHIL KOPERBERG says …

NSW: Upper house MP cleared of hacking = 3


AAP General News (Australia)
08-30-2001
NSW: Upper house MP cleared of hacking = 3

Mr Lynn, who had not yet seen the police report, said he believed the investigation
had raised more questions than it answered.

"If they are saying his computer had hacking software on it but that it was more likely
to have been used for testing security than hacking, all I can say is that only a flying
pig would believe that," he said.

"This has got all the hallmarks of a whitewash."

Mr Lynn said he would consider calling in the federal police to examine the matter.

He said he would also consider calling for an upper house inquiry.

"Once I get a copy of the report, I will go through it with a fine-tooth comb but if
it's a case of them having found password sniffing software on it, then I will be taking
further action," Mr Lynn said.

"I will call in the federal police, demand an upper house inquiry, whatever is needed
to get to the bottom of this."

Mr Lynn said he was still furious at not having been told about the allegations when
they first arose late July.

The state opposition claimed they were made aware of the alleged incident around two
weeks after parliamentary staff had been informed.

AAP ls/jjs/ns/sbb

KEYWORD: HACKING CLEARED 3 SYDNEY (REOPENS)

2001 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

NSW: India s software association found dead in hotel = 3


AAP General News (Australia)
04-13-2001
NSW: India s software association found dead in hotel = 3

During its visit, the Indian delegation, which also included representatives from about
20 Indian IT companies, met with federal Minister for Communications and Information Technology,
Richard Alston, and Australian industry counterparts.

Yesterday, Mr Mehta signed a memorandum of understanding with his Australian counterpart,
Rob Durie, the executive director of the Australian Information Industry Association (AIIA).

The agreement was designed to cover further understanding and cooperation between Australia
and India in areas including the software industry, IT services, internet and e-commerce.

Mr Durie said Mr Mehta had worked extremely hard to further the cause of India's IT industry.

"Dewang was an energetic, enthusiastic person and has been working very hard for the
Indian software association (NASSCOM) for the last seven to eight years," Mr Durie told
AAP.

"His organisation had 800 to 900 member software companies. India has the most successful
software industry outside of the US."

Mr Durie said Mr Mehta had appeared to be in fine health yesterday (Wednesday) during
a meeting between their respective associations.

He said he had left to catch a flight to Canberra in the middle of a speech by Mr Mehta
and that had been the last he saw of his counterpart.

"I said to him long before I left that I planned to meet him again at a meeting of
Asian IT industry associations in Myanmar (Burma) in early May," he said.

AAP as/was

KEYWORD: MEHTA LEAD 3 SYDNEY

2001 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

Fed: AHA says hoteliers hurting from GST impact


AAP General News (Australia)
02-01-2001
Fed: AHA says hoteliers hurting from GST impact

CANBERRA, Feb 1 AAP - Hoteliers say the inflationary impact of the GST which lifted
beer prices overnight has just added to their existing troubles.

Beer, cigarette and petrol prices rose at midnight after excise increases in line with
inflation came into effect.

The latest tax rises will add about five cents to the price of a pot of beer or middy,
20 cents to a packet of cigarettes and 1.7 cents a litre to the price of petrol.

Australian Hotels Association (AHA) spokesman Simon Birmingham said hoteliers were
already feeling the impact of the rises, before the midnight price hike.

"Last July when the major increase came in with the new tax system excise pushed the
prices for the average drink up by around 20 cents in that area," Mr Birmingham told ABC
radio.

"So that's of concern.

"This is on top of that.

"And it really is starting to be felt out there amongst many hoteliers."

The Australian Automobile Association has accused the government of blatant profiteering.

AAP lm/sp

KEYWORD: TAX BEER

2001 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

Inktomi Buys Internet Broadcast Co.

MICHAEL LIEDTKE, AP Business Writer
AP Online
09-13-2000
Inktomi Buys Internet Broadcast Co.

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -- Inktomi Corp. is adding to its toolbox of technology that powers some of the Internet's most popular sites with its planned $1.3 billion purchase of online broadcasting company FastForward Networks.

Inktomi believes the Web broadcasting technology developed by privately held FastForward will give it a leg up in the race to deliver the type of live high-quality video and audio that will attract more traffic to Web sites and ultimately generate more revenue.

``We felt it would take 20 to 30 of our scientists two years to develop what FastForward already has,'' Inktomi chief executive David Peterschmidt said during a conference call with analysts. The San Francisco-based FastForward ``has a significant first-mover advantage here.''

Analysts applauded the deal, announced Wednesday.

``It's a highly strategic, pretty exciting move,'' said Lehman Brothers analyst Michael Stanek. ``If you lose in this battleground, you are in huge trouble.''

Foster City-based Inktomi will pay for the acquisition with 11.9 million shares of stock. Inktomi's shares fell $2.19 to $108.813 in trading Wednesday on the Nasdaq Stock Market.

The acquisition continues Inktomi's evolution from one of the Internet's pioneering search engine companies to a diversified networking business. Besides providing search engines, Inktomi also supplies online traffic management tools that speed the content delivery over the Web. Inktomi's customers include America Online and ExciteAtHome.

As the online pipes delivering data through the Internet are widened, analysts expect the online broadcasting market to grow rapidly. By some analysts estimates, the market for live Internet broadcasts could soar from virtually nothing today to $40 billion in 2003.

Inktomi believes FastForward will add $35 million to $40 million in revenue in 2001. Inktomi earned $4.5 million on revenue of $61.5 million in the quarter ended June 30.

Internet broadcasts so far largely have been unsuccessful. One of the most ballyhooed disappointments came last year when Victoria's Secret promised a live online broadcast of a fashion show, but the transmission crashed when too many people tried to watch.

FastForward's technology is supposed to avoid those kinds of crippling bottlenecks. FastForward most recently provided a live online video and audio feed of a college football game between the University of Nebraska and San Jose State University during Labor Day weekend without any major hitches.

FastForward CEO Abhay Parekh declined to say how many people watched the football game on the Web, but said the broadcast received high marks.

Digital Island and The Real Broadcast Network have been FastForward's biggest customers so far. Besides helping to deliver the broadcast, FastForward's technology also enables Web sites to measure the audience size -- a key factor for calculating advertising and subscription rates down the line.

FastForward, formed in 1998, has 75 employees, all of whom will be asked to join Inktomi after the deal closes later this year. Inktomi, formed in 1996, has more than 1,000 employees.

------

On the Net:

http://www.inktomi.com

The information contained in the AP News report may not be published, broadcast or redistributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press.

Copyright 2000 The Associated Press All Rights Reserved

QLD: Minister tries to justify extra speed camera sites


AAP General News (Australia)
04-18-2000
QLD: Minister tries to justify extra speed camera sites

Queensland Transport Minister STEVE BREDHAUER says the state's speed cameras have saved
100 lives and wiped $100 million off the state's social costs since their introduction
in 1997.

The government yesterday announced approval for an additional 2,000 speed camera sites
around the state, up from the 1,300 previously approved.

It follows a big rise this year in Queensland's road toll with 91 fatalities - 20 more
than at this time last year.

Mr BREDHAUER says the government has acted on recommendations from Queensland Transport,
the RACQ, Main Roads and the police.

Queensland police have 14 speed cameras and another 10 are on order.

Mr BREDHAUER says revenue from speed camera fines is spent on eliminating highway danger
areas and on health care for crash victims.

He says cost savings come in hospital and health care services, emergency services
and lost time at work.

AAP RTV geb/dmc/rt

KEYWORD: CAMERAS (BRISBANE)

2000 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

WA: Missing group safe, police count search cost


AAP General News (Australia)
02-02-2000
WA: Missing group safe, police count search cost

By Andrea Mayes

PERTH, Feb 2 AAP - Five people including an eight months pregnant woman have been found
safe after a two-day search in rugged outback, but police accused the group of ignoring
basic survival rules.

Karen Glass, her partner Peter Breese, their two daughters aged two and five and family
friend Tonia Benton failed to return from a fishing trip on Sunday in Western Australia's
harsh north-west.

There had been fears Ms Glass would go into stress-induced labour and an intensive
aerial search was mounted, using four aircraft.

Police sergeant Ron Clarke said the group, from Port Hedland, had become bogged but
had managed to make their way to a waterhole.

They were found there at around 1am today by friends, who had mounted their own search
using four-wheel-drive vehicles.

He said police were unable to find them from the air because they had become lost off
the main track they were originally thought to be on, about 100km east of Port Hedland
near the De Grey River.

Police had not mounted a vehicle search because the area they were lost in was too
vast and it was not known exactly where to look.

"They had only minimal supplies with them and their water was running very low by the
time they were found," he said.

Sgt Clarke said they were lucky to have been found since they had not told anyone of their plans.

"They've learnt a lot of lessons from this the hard way," he said.

"It would have been so much easier if they'd taken basic precautions like telling someone
exactly where they were going and the time they were due back."

He said the group had taken no communications equipment with them, no food and no shovels
or car jacks.

Their four-wheel-drive vehicle had become bogged on Sunday and they had managed to
free themselves only late yesterday after digging the car out by hand.

"The area had dried out considerably after the heavy rains and they had planned to
stay overnight at the waterhole and try to drive back home today," Sgt Clarke said.

They had been listening to the radio and were aware that a search had been mounted for them.

Sgt Clarke said six officers had worked full-time on the search and a plane had been
sent up from Perth, making it an expensive excercise.

He said costs could exceed $10,000.

AAP alm/sd/ej/bwl

KEYWORD: BOGGED FOUND LEAD

2000 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

Fed: Howard suggests time zone shakeup


AAP General News (Australia)
12-01-1999
Fed: Howard suggests time zone shakeup

Queensland could be forced on to daylight saving under a shake-up of Australian time
zones suggested by Prime Minister JOHN HOWARD today.

Aside from a brief flirtation earlier this decade, Queensland has resisted daylight
saving, leaving it an hour behind New South Wales, Victoria and Tasmania.

But Mr HOWARD's told Brisbane radio 4BC the current system, with different time zones
around the country over summer, is ridiculous.

He's suggested replacing state time zones with regional zones.

South-east Queensland would move to daylight saving with Sydney, Melbourne and Hobart,
while Broken Hill in far-west New South Wales would run on Adelaide time.

Mr HOWARD says there's no reason someone living on the Gold Coast should be in a different
time zone from someone in Sydney.

AAP RTV mfh/rat/jn

KEYWORD: DAYLIGHT (CANBERRA)

1999 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

SA: Victoria put on salmonella alert


AAP General News (Australia)
04-13-1999
SA: Victoria put on salmonella alert

Victorian health authorities have been put on alert after a South Australian packing shed
was banned from selling oranges because it tested positive to salmonella.

The South Australian Health Commission issued an order preventing Riverland packing shed
CONSTAS BROS and its supplying orchard from moving or selling oranges after salmonella was
found on the surface oranges.

SA Human Services Department spokesman BRENDON KEARNEY says the packing shed at Cooltong
had supplied oranges to Nippy's juice company.

Nippy's has been linked to a salmonella outbreak which struck down 486 people.

Professor KEARNEY says the packing shed also supplied fresh oranges to one outlet in
Victoria, and the Victorian Health Department has been notified and is investigating.







Further tests will determine if the salmonella found at the shed is the same strain as that
linked to the Nippy's outbreak.

Nippy's products went back on sale yesterday after the health commission lifted a second
ban on Friday on the condition that the company pasteurise all of the products.

AAP RTV vm/am/lm/nd

KEYWORD: SALMONELLA (ADELAIDE)

1999 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

SA: Police arrest girl, 17 over syringe attack = 2


AAP General News (Australia)
12-27-1998
SA: Police arrest girl, 17 over syringe attack = 2

Meanwhile, the shop assistant has been admitted to hospital for testing for HIV.

It will be several months before the woman knows if she has HIV or hepatitis as a result of
the attack.

AAP tj/sco/de

KEYWORD: SYRINGE N/L 2 ADELAIDE (REOPENS)

1998 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

WA:Murderer shouts at judge during sentencing


AAP General News (Australia)
12-12-2011
WA:Murderer shouts at judge during sentencing

A man being sentenced for a strangling murder in the Pilbara has shouted at the judge,
declaring his innocence and calling the justice system a joke.

42-year-old GRAEME LEWIS RAY was given a life sentence with a minimum non-parole period
of 18 years when he appeared in the Supreme Court in Perth.

He was found guilty by a jury in October of murdering 48-year-old DEREK SCHAEFFER after
an argument on July 18 last year in the front yard of Mr SCHAEFFER'S house in the Pilbara
town of South Hedland.

AAP RTV ldj/ar

KEYWORD: RAY (PERTH)

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

Wednesday, February 29, 2012

FED: President of Malta arrives here today


AAP General News (Australia)
02-21-2009
FED: President of Malta arrives here today

Maltese President EDDIE FENECH-ADAMI will arrive in Australia today and attend the
national day of mourning for the Victorian bushfires tomorrow.

Dr FENECH-ADAMI will meet with …

MIM Software Releases Medical Imaging App


Wireless News
06-03-2011
MIM Software Releases Medical Imaging App
Type: News

MIM Software, a provider of medical imaging software, announced that the VueMe App for iPad, iPhone, and iPod touch is now available on the App Store.

According to a release, this new app, designed specifically for patient use, allows patients to view diagnostic images sent to them from their doctors, and to share these images, if needed, with specialists. The launch of VueMe comes on the heels of Mobile MIM, MIM Software's original remote diagnostic imaging app for physicians.
"When we first introduced Mobile MIM, we knew it would be a hit with the medical community," said Mark Cain, MIM Software's Chief Technology Officer.

"But we also recognized that empowered patients would want to view and control their own medical data that is why we created the VueMe App. The iOS platform has continued to thrive with amazing market penetration, and with VueMe, we continue to benefit from the outstanding quality and innovative technology offered on devices such as the iPad, iPhone, and iPod touch."

Along with VueMe, MIM Software has also just released MIMcloud 2.0, an Internet-based service that has been specifically designed to meet the needs of both VueMe and Mobile MIM users.

The VueMe App is available for from the App Store on the iPad, iPhone, or iPod touch, or at itunes.com/appstore/.

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