среда, 29 февраля 2012 г.

Vic: Gippsland, Bendigo houses under threat from fires


AAP General News (Australia)
02-08-2009
Vic: Gippsland, Bendigo houses under threat from fires

MELBOURNE, Feb 8 AAP - More communities and towns were coming under threat of fire
in the early hours of Sunday as Victoria's killer bushfires continued to rage across the
state.

Police said on Saturday that 14 people had died in infernos, but authorities fear they
may find more bodies on Sunday with the toll possibly reaching into the 40s.

"This is an absolute tragedy for the state and we believe the figure may even get worse,"

Victoria Police Assistant Commissioner Kieran Walshe told reporters late on Saturday night.

"We base …

Ericom Releases Chromebook Ready


Wireless News
06-18-2011
Ericom Releases Chromebook Ready
Type: News

Ericom Software, a provider of application access and desktop virtualization solutions, announced general availability of Ericom AccessNow for VMware View, bringing an almost three-month beta to a successful end.

According to a release, Ericom AccessNow for VMware View is a patent-pending HTML5 client that provides seamless, web-based access to VMware View virtual desktops. It's the first VDI solution to run wholly within any HTML5-compatible Web browser, and works on Chromebooks and natively with Chrome, Safari, Internet Explorer (with Chrome Frame plug-in), Firefox, Opera and other browsers with HTML5 and WebSocket support. The solution does not require Java, Flash, Silverlight or any other underlying technology.
Marvin Smith, System Administrator for the City of Orlando, said, "We have been evaluating Chromebooks for a variety of applications throughout various City agencies. Our objective was to be able to provide users with flexibility in accessing VMware View virtual desktops from any location. In fact, employees plan to take Chromebooks to meetings, use them while they work from home and on lunch breaks. Ericom's AccessNow for VMware View provides a key connectivity component in empowering users to access vital resources from the Chromebooks. We have successfully installed and tested AccessNow for VMware View and plan to roll it out within our VMware View and Google Chromebook environments."

Brian Berns, Ericom Software's President and COO said: "We are very pleased to have completed our beta program so quickly, and with so much positive feedback. We are seeing a lot of interest from VMware customers and partners who find AccessNow for VMware View of great value in facilitating quick and easy rollout of installations. In addition, many sites which have been evaluating Chromebooks have contacted us with a fundamental need to access Windows applications and desktops from the Chromebooks."

Ericom AccessNow for VMware View provides multiple benefits to organizations of all sizes, including:

-Supports Windows, Linux, Mac and Chrome OS (HTML5 client is the only way to support Google's Chrome OS)

-Runs on Chromebooks, netbooks, desktops, laptops and thin clients, and supports Intel x86, ARM or any other CPU architecture

-Looks and works the same way on all supported device types, thus reducing training and help desk costs

-Enables IT staff to publish desktops to end-points for which native VMware View clients either do not exist or cannot be created (e.g., Google Chrome OS)

-Can be deployed to locked-down end-points, kiosks and computers for which the user does not have administrative privileges

-Includes Ericom's image compression and acceleration technology

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

Copyright 2011 Close-Up Media, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
n/a

SA:SA teen denies murdering gardener


AAP General News (Australia)
12-05-2011
SA:SA teen denies murdering gardener

ADELAIDE, Dec 5 AAP - An Adelaide teenager has denied murdering a Vietnamese market gardener.

An 18-year-old male, of no fixed abode, appeared in the South Australian Supreme Court
on Monday charged with the murder of Tuyet Van Do, 65, whose body was found at a market
garden at Waterloo Corner in November last year.

The teenager, whose name has been suppressed for legal reasons, pleaded not guilty to the murder.

Do had only been in Adelaide a short time, having travelled from Melbourne to work
at the market garden to pay for his son's education.

The accused teenager is next due in court on January 23.

AAP sbm/lk/mjs/de

KEYWORD: LEGAL: DO

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

LocaLoop Partners with Runcom to Deliver Affordable Broadband Internet To Rural Users


Wireless News
03-30-2011
LocaLoop Partners with Runcom to Deliver Affordable Broadband Internet To Rural Users
Type: News

Twin Cities-based LocaLoop, Inc. a company focused on low-cost wireless Broadband Internet service for underserved and rural markets, and Israeli-based Runcom Technologies, a developer of 4G Broadband communications products and services for cellular phone networks, announced a global Strategic Marketing and Technology Agreement.

Under terms of the agreement, the Company said Runcom is adapting its 4G network hardware to improve economics in serving low density markets and will become LocaLoop's supplier for 4G network equipment. LocaLoop is combining its patented cloud technology business management Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) platform with Runcom's 4G equipment. LocaLoop is now marketing this turnkey solution to its Broadband Internet service provider customers. This combined solution enables deployment in underserved rural markets for both fixed and mobile applications, starting in the nine-state region of the upper Midwestern U.S.
"Today's announcement is much more than a marketing and technology agreement," said Carl-Johan Torarp, LocaLoop founder and CEO. "LocaLoop's 'pay as you grow' network and business management software for wireless Broadband Internet operators and Runcom's leadership in 4G network hardware complement one another perfectly. Together we are able to deliver a powerful turnkey 4G wireless network solution with capabilities that we could not achieve individually. This combination creates a uniquely competitive advantage, not available before."

"This strategic alliance with LocaLoop accelerates our U.S. market penetration and strengthens our technology and price performance capabilities as we participate in the largest and most competitive market in the world," said Moshe Levinson, Runcom Technologies CEO.

LocaLoop was founded by Carl-Johan Torarp with the vision of creating a mobile broadband wireless solution for mainstream users both in their homes and on the go.

Runcom Technologies Ltd. was founded by Dr. Zion Hadad, a telecommunications industry technology company with experience in the development of military and commercial communication systems.

More information:

www.localoop.com

www.runcom.com

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

Copyright 2011 Close-Up Media, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
n/a

QLD:Missing clues in Gold Coast shootings


AAP General News (Australia)
12-10-2010
QLD:Missing clues in Gold Coast shootings

A man accused of firing a shot into a car at Surfers paradise .. showering a woman
with glass .. is expected to apply for bail today.

Police allege MAHAN GHEISARI was driving a BMW on Saturday night when he fired the
shot into a blue Holden Commodore .. showering a woman with glass.

GHEISARI turned himself into police on Wednesday .. but has refused to disclose the
location of the BMW .. and police are appealing for help to find it .. with number plate
657-KKE.

AAP RTV ka/tnf/tm/wz/af

KEYWORD: DRIVEBY (BRISBANE)

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

QLD:Latest tests clear bore water


AAP General News (Australia)
08-03-2010
QLD:Latest tests clear bore water

New tests have cleared bore water near a Queensland underground gas project of dangerous
levels of cancer-causing chemicals.

But more tests will be needed before residents around the Cougar Energy plant near
Kingaroy .. northwest of Brisbane .. are allowed to resume using it.

Cougar was forced to shut down its pilot project last month after the Queensland government
learnt traces of benzene and toluene had been found in ground water at the site and a
neighbouring property.

The Department of Environment and Resource Management says the latest underground water
quality tests found levels of the two substances remain within Australian drinking water
guidelines.

AAP RTV tnf/crh

KEYWORD: COUGAR (BRISBANE)

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

QLD: Teen survives shark bite


AAP General News (Australia)
12-20-2009
QLD: Teen survives shark bite

BRISBANE, Dec 20 AAP - A teenage boy has been bitten by a shark while diving in waters
off central Queensland.

The Department of Community Safety told AAP the 19-year-old was diving on Lamont Reef
off Heron Island when he was bitten on the forearm about 7.45am (AEDT) on Sunday.

He was taken to Heron Island in a dinghy and flown to the Royal Brisbane Hospital.

He is in a stable condition.

AAP ka/jfm

KEYWORD: SHARK

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

NSW: Even more murder charges likely over airport brawl


AAP General News (Australia)
08-11-2009
NSW: Even more murder charges likely over airport brawl

Police say more members of the Comancheros bikie gang are expected to be charged with
murder over the fatal brawl at Sydney airport.

NSW Police arrested three members of the gang this morning .. charging one man .. 22-year-old
POMARE PIRINI .. with the murder of 29 year old ANTHONY ZERVAS.

PIRINI was already facing riot and affray charges over the airport brawl.

Gang Squad Commander Detective Superintendent MAL LANYON says the other two men ..

aged 23 and 32 .. are also expected to be charged with murder today.

Fourteen men have now been charged over the brawl .. including 11 alleged Comanchero bikies.

AAP RTV nr/hn/crh

KEYWORD: BIKIES (SYDNEY)

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

NT: Man charged with brutal assaults on his partner in Alice


AAP General News (Australia)
04-01-2009
NT: Man charged with brutal assaults on his partner in Alice

DARWIN, April 1 AAP - A woman with a broken arm left an Alice Springs hospital to go
drinking with the man accused of injuring her, only to be badly hurt again, police say.

She returned for more treatment the following day after the man allegedly broke the
same arm again and bashed her face, they said.

The 41-year-old man was arrested outside Alice Springs Hospital on Tuesday and police
have charged him with attacking the woman on several occasions.

The woman was admitted to hospital last week and treated for a broken arm, allegedly
caused by the offender on March 17.

Less than a week later, he attacked her by smashing a bottle over her head and repeatedly
striking her with a rock, police said.

The woman left hospital to go drinking with her partner on Monday.

But she returned the next morning having sustained another break to the injured arm,
along with severe lacerations and bruising to the head.

Police said the same man attacked the woman on November 24 last year, when he assaulted
her with a stick and broke both her arms.

After being arrested outside the hospital he was charged with numerous offences, including
three counts of serious harm, four counts of aggravated assault, three counts of being
armed with an offence weapon, and one count of making threats to cause injury.

The man has been remanded in custody to appear in the Alice Springs Magistrates Court
on Wednesday.

Police said an emergency Domestic Violence Order was also taken out on the woman's behalf.

AAP tr/ldj/apm

KEYWORD: DOMESTIC

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

Vic: Conditions on Victoria's snowfields today


AAP General News (Australia)
08-29-2008
Vic: Conditions on Victoria's snowfields today

MELBOURNE, Aug 29 AAP - Conditions on Victoria's snowfields today:

MT HOTHAM - Lifts: 13/13. Temperature -3.2C. Road Open, icy patches. Snow depth: 141cm.

Light southerly winds. Skiing and boarding on an excellent cover of softening groomed
snow.

FALLS CREEK - Lifts: 14/14. Temperature -1.7C Road Open and clear. Snow depth: 141cm.

Light north westerly. Skiing and boarding on an excellent cover of packed and groomed
snow.

MT BULLER - Lifts: 24/24. Temperature -1C. Road open and clear. Snow depth 115cm. Moderate
north westerly. Skiing and boarding on a very good cover of firm packed snow.

MT BAW BAW - Lifts: 5/7. Temperature 0.7C. Road open and clear. Snow depth: 116cm.Skiing
and boarding on an excellent firm packed, packed and groomed snow.

DINNER PLAIN - Lifts: 1/1. Roads open, icy patches. Snow depth 51cm. Skiing and boarding
on an excellent softening groomed snow cover in all areas open.

LAKE MOUNTAIN - Temperature 2.1C. Road Open and clear. Snow depth 60cm. Calm north
westerly. Excellent sightseeing, snow play and tobogganing.

MT STIRLING - Road open and clear. Snow depth 85cm. Excellent sightseeing tobogganing
and snow play.

MT BUFFALO - Road open and clear. Snow depth 70cm.

MT ST GWINEAR - Road open and clear. Snow depth 94cm. Excellent softening snow over
a firm base for excellent skiing.

MT DONNA BUANG - Road open and clear. Snow depth 13cm. Good sight seeing and snow play.

AAP mok/

KEYWORD: SNOW VIC

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

NSW: Four people questioned over Tibet protest in Kings Cross


AAP General News (Australia)
04-23-2008
NSW: Four people questioned over Tibet protest in Kings Cross

SYDNEY, April 23 AAP - Police were tonight questioning four people after a banner protesting
human rights abuses in Tibet was unfurled over the iconic Coke sign in Sydney's Kings
Cross.

The protesters allegedly unveiled a banner saying: "Enjoy compassion, always Tibet"

written in the same style of script as the Coca-Cola brand.

Printed in black at the bottom of the banner was the message: "China - talk to the Dalai Lama."

It is the third protest over Tibet to be staged in Sydney today, after two earlier
incidents centred on the Harbour Bridge.

Five police rescue officers removed the banner from the sign just after 5pm (AEST) today.

A NSW police spokesman said three men and a woman were taken to Kings Cross police
station for questioning.

Police inquiries are continuing.

AAP krc/hn/sp

KEYWORD: OLY08 FLAME COKE (PIX AVAILABLE)

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

Fed: Rudd's first meeting with state and territory leaders


AAP General News (Australia)
12-20-2007
Fed: Rudd's first meeting with state and territory leaders

States and territories will battle it out today for their share of a 100 million dollar
injection of Commonwealth funds designed to slash hospital waiting lists.

The Council of Australian Governments is meeting in Melbourne .. in Prime Minister
KEVIN RUDD'S first chance to meet his state and territory counterparts.

COAG is a key instrument for guiding federal-state relations and reform initiatives
.. and this meeting is expected to be dominated by health and indigenous affairs.

The leaders will also consider proposals to improve business deregulation .. housing
.. water and climate change.

Queensland Premier ANNA BLIGH says the meeting is an opportunity to improve the health
system and reduce duplication of services.

Victorian Premier JOHN BRUMBY says he wants COAG to spur reform on hospitals .. education
and climate change.

Mr RUDD says he wants COAG to meet every three months in 2008.

AAP RTV kc/wz/crh

KEYWORD: COAG (CANBERRA)

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

Fed: Skills and infrastructure would keep rates low: Rudd


AAP General News (Australia)
08-08-2007
Fed: Skills and infrastructure would keep rates low: Rudd

CANBERRA, Aug 8 AAP - A Labor government would have invested more into the skills shortage
and infrastructure to ensure interest rates would not rise again today, Opposition Leader
Kevin Rudd says.

The Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) is widely tipped to raise its cash rate to 6.5
per cent today, its highest level since November 1996.

Mr Rudd said if Labor was in power it would have acted differently to ensure rates
would not rise.

"It goes to what has been a consistent criticism of this government's performance over
a long period of time on the capacity constraints within the economy - that is, infrastructure
bottlenecks and the skills shortage," the Labor leader told ABC Radio today.

"If you handle those two things better, let me tell you, you make the overall economic
equation easier."

Mr Rudd said the coalition had neglected issues surrounding the skills shortage for too long.

"The government has ignored what Labor has been saying for years now about the need
for a greater investment in education, skills and training and now all the chickens have
come home to roost as far as that impact on the overall economy is concerned."

And when it comes to infrastructure, the government has been playing an ongoing blame
game with the states, he said.

"Why don't they just roll up their sleeves and become part of the solution?" Mr Rudd said.

"We have an answer to that, it's called Infrastructure Australia and we want to partner
with the private sector and with state governments to unplug infrastructure bottlenecks."

But Mr Rudd could not guarantee that housing, petrol or food prices would be lower under Labor.

"I'm not in the business of making irrational promises that you can't deliver on," Mr Rudd said.

"What we can only guarantee is that we will have on the beat an effective competition
policy watchdog."

AAP kc/jm/bwl

KEYWORD: RATES RUDD

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

Vic: Paramedics vote for work bans over colleague's sacking=2


AAP General News (Australia)
02-14-2007
Vic: Paramedics vote for work bans over colleague's sacking=2

MAS chief executive officer Greg Sassella said the organisation would take the issue
to the Australia Industrial Relations Commission tomorrow in a bid to have the bans lifted.

"It's about protecting the community, it's about using the lawful processes. The union
has mechanisms available to them to deal with their concerns. The bans, of whatever nature,
are unnecessary ... and they are unlawful and really the organisation, the Ambulance Service,
has no choice but to have the bans lifted."

Mr Sassella denied the paramedic's sacking had anything to do with the rape allegations,
saying it related to breaches of employment conditions.

"We haven't convicted anybody and we're not making any connection between our decision
and the courts.

"The criminal process must take its course. Our decision is not in any way reflecting
what may or may not happen in the court process.

"Our investigation has been very thorough, the union has been involved in the process
and the employment conditions of this paramedic are the reason that we have terminated
the employee and indeed have no, little, connection in fact with what the criminal process
may discover."

Mr Sassella said that while the work bans were planned for a non-peak time for paramedics,
patients would be potentially at risk.

AAP cbm/dj/dk/imc/cdh

KEYWORD: AMBULANCE 2 MELBOURNE (REOPENS)

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

Main stories in today's 0745 ABC News


AAP General News (Australia)
08-29-2006
Main stories in today's 0745 ABC News

SYDNEY, Aug 29 AAP - Main stories in today's 0745 ABC News:

- The founder and former leader of the Australian Democrats, Don Chipp, dies in Melbourne
after a long battle with Parkinson's disease.

- The Deputy Leader of the Democrats Andrew Bartlett says Don Chipp has left a huge legacy.

- The former Democrats Senator Vicky Bourne pays tribute to the man she calls the heart
and soul of the party.

- After having his terror-related conviction overturned earlier this month, Victorian
man Jack Thomas spends the night under a curfew.

- Jack Thomas' brother Les tells the ABC's Lateline program that the control order
is a political stunt.

- The UN Secretary General Kofi Annan says all parties to the Israeli-Lebanon war will
have to make painful compromises to avoid a return to hostilities.

- The Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert announces a low-level inquiry into the Lebanon
war, but he rejects demands for an inquiry by an independent state commission with the
power to dismiss people.

- Today's return to parliament by MPs after a nearly three-month break will be cut
short by strike action from parliamentary staff.

- With parliamentary staff planning to strike this afternoon the head of the Public
Service Association says the parliament has been cut to the bone and can't take any more
job reductions.

- A new survey says small business owners in NSW have lower levels of confidence in
the economy than business owners in other states.

- In rugby league, the Sydney Roosters says there is no truth to suggestion former
Warriors coach Daniel Anderson is set to replace Ricky Stuart.

AAP kaj

KEYWORD: MONITOR ABC 0745 SYDNEY

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

Fed: Oddities of the Week


AAP General News (Australia)
04-21-2006
Fed: Oddities of the Week

SYDNEY, April 21 AAP - Oddities of the Week:



+ Parkes Elvis Festival organisers are "all shook up" by recent changes to copyright
laws that aim to stop unauthorised impersonators. An American billionaire, who owns the
rights to Elvis's name and likeness, plans to open his own festival to celebrate the King
and his music. The plan may threaten the western NSW event that attracts more than 5,000
visitors each year. Organisers are seeking legal advice to ensure the event goes ahead.



+ Easter saw New Zealand overrun with bunnies, but not the good kind. Rabbits have
reached plague proportions in New Zealand's South Island, hence the annual Great Easter
Bunny Hunt, which this year managed to dispose of 12,000 bunnies. Locals forewent the
usual chocolate at the event, guzzling down such treats as bunny burgers and sausages.



+ Like selling ice to Eskimos, Tasmania has achieved the impossible and is exporting
vodka to Russia. The company, located north-west of Launceston, opened recently and notched
up some impressive clients straight off the bat, with the Russians considering a long-term
contract. "The main attraction is the quality of the wheat grain alcohol we're using and
also the quality of the Tasmanian natural spring water," The Tamar Distillery's Phillip
Ridyard said.



AAP cj/cdh/tnf

KEYWORD: ODDITIES

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

понедельник, 27 февраля 2012 г.

Fed: Telco prepares for job cuts to purge the "frozen middle"


AAP General News (Australia)
12-17-2004
Fed: Telco prepares for job cuts to purge the "frozen middle"

SYDNEY, Dec 17 AAP - Telecommunications giant Telstra will shed 10 per cent of its
staff in preparation for full privatisation, it was reported today.

Senior management was informed about the purge in emails sent out on Monday, The Australian
newspaper said.

The changes, the result of an 18-month review, would begin early next year.

Telstra human resources director Bill Scales refused to tell the newspaper how many
jobs would be lost but said the "frozen middle" management would be affected.

"For us the main driver is not numbers; it's about efficiency; it's about capability;
it's about getting accountability right; it's about getting the authority to meet the
customers needs," Mr Scales said.

"You will see the number of managers decline but they might be turned into technical
specialists, because that's what they actually are."

Telstra's heavily unionised field workforce of 16,000 people and call centre staff
will be largely unaffected by the cuts.

The newspaper said the axings might match the 10 per cent staff cuts by rival Optus,
which carried out a middle management purge three years ago.

This would amount to up to 4,300 job losses at Telstra.

AAP tam/was

KEYWORD: TELSTRA

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

statutory company

statutory company A company incorporated by the promotion of a private Act of Parliament. Compare registered company.

Internet–based Problem–based Learning: International Collaborative Learning Experiences

Internet–based Problem–based Learning: International Collaborative Learning Experiences

Introduction
Pilot Study: Mailing List-based PBL System
Mailing List-based International PBL Study
Web-based PBL System
Web-based International PBL Study
Advantages and Constraints of Internet-based PBL
Acknowledgments
References

Yasuyuki Suzuki ,
Masayuki Niwa ,
Toshiyuki Shibata ,
Yuzo Takahashi ,
Khamboonruang Chirasak ,
Anura Ariyawardana ,
Jutti C. Ramesh ,
Phillip Evans

Introduction

Problem-based learning (PBL) nurtures the ability of learners to solve real-life problems and fosters communication and cooperation among students across a wide variety of disciplines. By adopting PBL in medicine, students—through peer discussion and individual learning—not only actively acquire medical knowledge but also develop logical thinking and experience authentic medical problems through case studies. PBL also promotes the development of communication and leadership skills, which are essential for medical professionals, and motivates students to learn medical skills and develop professional attitudes. While regular meetings in the traditional classroom setting is fundamental to PBL programs, they are constrained by, for example, the requirement for several small rooms and the presence of tutors at designated times. Every medical school has a limited number of facilities and tutors. Moreover, it is difficult for each medical school to prepare and provide a PBL-based curriculum that covers all medical fields.

Such limitations may be overcome by the new communication technologies. Internet technology, for instance, enables students and teachers to communicate with each other regardless of time or place, domestically or internationally. An Internet-based PBL program operated jointly by several medical schools would enable us to provide a unique PBL curriculum that would be difficult to implement in the traditional classroom setting. And students with diverse backgrounds—be they geographical, professional, ethnic, or cultural—would be able to participate in such programs. Similarly, we would have tutors with different backgrounds and experience acting as facilitators and coaches. It is anticipated that Internet-based PBL programs will become a part of the globalization of education.

An electronic mailing list would be a convenient and economical tool for launching an Internet-based PBL program. However, it is difficult to optimize the system, administrate its usage, or analyze the learning outcomes. A web-based PBL system, on the other hand, can be equipped with functions that an e-mailing list cannot provide, including security features, participant profiling, uploading of case scenarios, discussion boards, web-site or journal listing boards, and email notification of new postings.

Here we describe our Internet PBL project, which was launched in 2001 using an e-mailing list system but has since progressed to a web-based system.

Pilot Study: Mailing List-based PBL System

In 2001, we began a pilot study of an Internet-based PBL program in Japan using an e-mailing list (Suzuki et al., 2002a), with the Medical Education Development Center of the Gifu University School of Medicine serving as the center of the program. Students and tutors were recruited nationwide. Mailing lists were prepared for discussion groups each consisting of 10 to 20 students and several tutors. Unlike the regular and mandatory PBL sessions, the groups had a larger number of students and tutors, as it was felt that some of the students would find it difficult to participate fully in the activities but would only read the content on the course web site. From 2001 to 2004, 20 courses were conducted (Table 7.1), all but one domestically and in Japanese. Cases were sent to the participants once a week by email or uploaded onto the web site. The tutor's guide was supplied to the tutors separately. Discussion took place between students and tutors through a mailing list. After reading each case scenario, students discussed what they found interesting, what they could not understand, and so on from their school or their home. The tutors advised students on how to go about solving the problem, gave comments or suggestions, and shared their own experiences. The course directors and resource persons also offered guidance on learning, provided relevant information and suggestions, and summarized the discussions. Responses could be made anytime.

Mailing List-based International PBL Study

An international PBL program conducted in English through an e-mailing list was launched in February 2002 (Suzuki et al., 2002b). The theme chosen for this first international trial was HIV (human immunodeficiency virus) infection and AIDS (acquired immunodeficiency syndrome), a widespread and serious problem faced by countries worldwide. Course directors and resource persons from Japan and Thailand defined the general objective of the course, designed case scenarios, and prepared the tutor's guide including suggestions. The general objective of the course was "to encourage and stimulate medical students to continue self-directed learning about basic scientific knowledge on HIV/AIDS, and to communicate with Asian students in English." Faculty members and student participants came from several Asian countries.

Three different cases on HIV/AIDS were prepared (Figure 7.1). One case scenario was uploaded each month to allow students, some of whom were not proficient in English, sufficient time to work on it. The first scenario depicted a girl in a rural village whose family members were infected with HIV. Her father died of AIDS, while her brother appeared to have suffered a congenital infection. Participants

Table 7.1 Internet PBL courses
<Mailing List>
YearCourseStudentsTutors/Directors
2001Cell Biology307
Genetic Disease185
World Health158
Gene Therapy 198
Imported Infection50 7
Neonatal Medicine*1184
2002Clinical Ethics—11138
Sports Medicine—1283
Risk Management387
HIV/AIDS**4911
Clinical Ethics—2121 10
What is Human?*24611
Palliative Care2810
Oncogene 2610
Hormone17 7
2003Clinical Ethics—3238
Sports Medicine—221 15
Carbon and Life*214 21
Child Diseases53 18
2004Clinical Ethics—42610
 Subtotal1253188
<WEb-based "Rakuichi">
YearCoursestudentsTutors/Directors
2004Disinfection* 36334
Clinical Ethics—54016
Habit and Disease** 36 12
Oxygen and Life#1710
Food Science#2310
Reproductive Biology#1812
POMR—1***155
POMR—2***205
2005Basic Life Support—1*43 7
Basic Life Support—2*1046
Milestones of Life*324 34
POMR—3***223
POMR?4***254
Soil and Bacteria##158
 Subtotal1065 166
* Compulsory
** International
*** Problem-oriented medical record
# Master program for life science
## Doctor program for agriculture

discussed the case and posed questions. Their interest in the case lay not only in the scientific and medical aspects of the disease but also in the social, economic, and cultural impacts. The resource persons shared their valuable experience, while the course directors provided pertinent information, such as tuberculosis as the major opportunistic infection and the high incidence of HIV infection among intravenous drug users.

The second scenario described a director-general of a health and welfare department who is a policymaker in the HIV/AIDS prevention and control committee. The prevalence of HIV in their countries, the role of the government, the prevention strategies, and the ethics of isolating people infected with HIV were discussed by the participants.

The third scenario portrayed a research physician involved in an HIV vaccine trial. Vaccines, clinical trials, double-blinded studies, informed consent, the economics of prevention, and ethical issues faced by physicians and vaccine developers were considered by the participants.

Web-based PBL System

Although an e-mailing list is a convenient tool for communicating within a group and can be applied in an Internet-based PBL program, as described above, it does not allow one to present the entire structure and content of the course, to include essential utilities for conducting learning activities, to manage a large number of participants with efficiency, or to assess the outcome of the learning activities. To overcome these constraints, we developed a web-based PBL system that we named Rakuichi the Tutorial. Rakuichi refers to the "free market" that was established in Gifu town in 15th century Japan to promote economic and cultural exchange. Every merchant could trade in this market system without requiring authorization or being subject to tax. Our web-based system Rakuichi is built with many functions and utilities (Figure 7.2):

  1. The use of user identities and passwords to secure the learning environment.
  2. The capacity for any number of groups of any size or kind, which the administrator can set depending on the number and attributes of participants.
  3. A space for participants to enter their personal profiles introducing themselves to the group.
  4. A case scenario field that serves as the starting point of discussion.
  5. A discussion board for participants to post comments and questions and which displays a list and the content of postings made by participants. Discussion can be conducted synchronously, as in chat, or asynchronously at the participants' convenience.
  6. A space for participants to list learning resources, such as web sites, textbooks, and journals.
  7. An email notification function that informs all participants of new entries posted on the discussion board.
  8. A function to download postings from the discussion board, which only teachers are permitted to use.

The schema of a course is shown in Figure 7.3. After registration, participants enter this system using their user identity and password. Before starting on the course, they receive guidance from the course directors and introduce themselves to other group members. After reading a scenario, they begin to discuss what the problems are and what issues to learn. The tutors give advice to the students and share their own experiences. Learning outcomes or resources are posted on the discussion board or the listing board as shown in Figure 7.2. The course directors sometimes conduct lectures on certain topics. In compulsory courses, assessment is made based on students' reports and/or the content of their postings. The number of students in a group is usually between 10 and 20, with several tutors and/or course directors facilitating each group. In elective courses, some of the students did not participate fully in the activities of the course and were considered as "read-only members."

Web-based International PBL Study

During the web-based PBL trial, we conducted an international course "Habit and Disease." The main theme of this course was oral cancer, the most common form of cancer found in South Asia. In collaboration with our counterparts in Sri Lanka, Malaysia, Thailand, and Britain, we prepared the case scenarios and tutor's guide and recruited students worldwide. A total of 36 medical and dental students and 12 teachers from these countries and from Japan participated in this program.

Two different cases on oral cancer and the betel quid chewing habit, respectively, were prepared and uploaded onto the web site. A case scenario is shown in Figure 7.4. Students were expected to discuss these learning issues: the etiology and epidemiology of oral cancer; habitual betel quid chewing and the mechanisms of carcinogenesis; oral lesions caused by betel quid chewing; genetic alterations and genes linked to cancer; and prevention of oral cancer through education, chemoprevention, change in cultural practices, and other means. As some of the participants were unfamiliar with betel quid chewing, they not only acquired medical knowledge in the process but also learned about the cultural differences between Asian countries, as shown in Figure 7.5. In the midst of this course, on Christmas Eve of 2004, a huge tsunami devastated countries around the Indian Ocean, and some of the participants could not continue with the program. The emotional bond and the compassion felt for their peers was so strong during this unusual period that it was an unforgettable experience for the other participants.

Advantages and Constraints of Internet-based PBL

We have launched and investigated a series of interactive Internet-based PBL courses since 2001 to overcome constraints encountered in conducting PBL in the traditional classroom setting and to explore the potentials of online PBL for distance learning programs. We began with an e-mailing list because it was easy and relatively inexpensive to set up. However, it was difficult to add to the system other web-based functions. Hence, we developed a web-based system.

Various studies on the adoption of ePBL have been reported. The University of Sydney uses Internet-based PBL in the first two years of its medical education program (Carlile et al., 1998). Internet-based otolaryngology case discussion was found to lead to better acquisition of medical knowledge than the traditional seminar teaching approach (Carr et al., 2002). The learning outcome of students engaging in computer-mediated PBL was reported to be similar to that of traditional PBL (Dennis, 2003). An Internet-based virtual classroom and educational management software were shown to enhance students' didactic and clinical experiences (Riley et al., 2004). Another study suggested that the interaction between facilitators and students in a web-based PBL environment was more caring and approachable than in the traditional classroom (Schoenfeld-Tacher et al., 2005).

Internet-based PBL offers many advantages:

  1. It enables communication between students anywhere.
  2. It facilitates learning on a global scale, which promotes not only the acquisition of knowledge and communication in English but also an understanding of the different social and cultural traditions in other countries.
  3. It facilitates multidisciplinary learning, which helps nurture the spirit of teamwork and an understanding of the roles of other professionals.
  4. It allows students in different academic years to participate in the same activities in a group, which gives them the opportunity to help each other out.
  5. It allows faculty members from different institutions to jointly design and conduct unique learning courses, which is difficult to do in the formal curriculum.
  6. It allows institutions in remote locations or with limited resources, in collaboration with allied institutions, to adopt this system to complement their formal curriculum.

However, Internet-based PBL has its limitations too, which we must take into consideration when designing such programs. The Internet infrastructure in some countries is still underdeveloped, and the facilities available to different participants may not be consistent. While an Internet-based PBL system would greatly benefit institutions and participants in remote areas, the cost of establishing the infrastructure might represent a heavy financial burden. Further, the different educational backgrounds and life experiences of participants might cause misunderstanding during online interaction. Fortunately, we have not experienced any significant emotional or cultural conflict between participants so far. However, course directors and tutors must take care to adopt an appropriate theme for the program and pay attention to the mood of the discussions. Another problem is that not all members will be active. Some may hesitate to make comments or ask questions on the discussion board and would resign to being mere observers. These participants might be uncomfortable with using the new communication tools. Although participants introduce themselves by posting their personal profiles on the web site, this may not be sufficient to break the ice. Asians generally tend to be more reserved and to not question authority. For some students, a limited command of the English language might be an obstacle. Ice-breaking activities to promote communication would be necessary.

E-learning is set to become a major component of medical and science education, not only while in school but also in continuing education after graduation. The University of Edinburgh, for instance, has already made considerable investment in the Edinburgh Electronic Medical Curriculum (Eemec), for which it received recognition from Queen Elizabeth II in 2005 for excellence in e-learning. IVEMEDS is a further example of such a project (Harden, 2005). The key steps in developing an effective web-based education system are as follows: conducting a needs analysis, securing technical resources, obtaining commitment from participants, designing the content of courseware, conducting a pilot study before full implementation, encouraging and facilitating usage of the system, and monitoring online interactions (Cook & Dupras, 2004). Our web-based interactive PBL system, Rakuichi the Tutorial, has been shown to be a promising tool for conducting international, multidisciplinary, collaborative, and active shared learning.

Acknowledgments

The authors thank the participants of the Internet PBL courses for their active participation. This study was supported in part by Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research (16390298) from the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology of Japan.

References

Carlile, S., Barnet, S., Sefton, A., & Uther, J. (1998). Medical problem based learning supported by intranet technology: A natural student centered approach. International Journal of Medical Informatics, 50 (1-3), 225-33.

Carr, M. M., Hewitt, J., Scardamalia, M., & Reznick, R. K. (2002). Internet-based otolaryngology case discussions for medical students. Journal of Otolaryngology, 31 (4), 197-201.

Cook, D. A., & Dupras, D. M. (2004). A practical guide to developing effective web-based learning. Journal of General Internal Medicine, 19 (6), 698-707.

Dennis, J. K. (2003). Problem-based learning in online vs. face-to-face environments. Education for Health (Abingdon), 16 (2), 198-209.

Harden, R. M. (2005). A new vision for distance learning and continuing medical education. Journal of Continuing Education in the Health Professions, 25 (1), 43-51.

Riley, J. B., Austin, J. W., Holt, D. W., Searles, B. E., & Darling, E. M. (2004). Internet-based virtual classroom and educational management software enhance students' didactic and clinical experiences in perfusion education programs. Journal of ExtraCorporeal Technology, 36 (3), 235-39.

Schoenfeld-Tacher, R., Bright, J. M., McConnell, S. L., Marley, W. S., & Kogan, L. R. (2005). Web-based technology: Its effects on small group "problem-based learning" interactions in a professional veterinary medical program. Journal of Veterinary Medical Education, 32 (1), 86-92.

Suzuki, Y., Niwa, M., Fujisaki, K., Nakamura, H., Washino, K., & Takahashi, Y. (2002a). A preliminary trial of an Internet PBL-tutorial using mailing list. Journal of Medical Education (Taiwan), 6 (1), 87-90.

Suzuki, Y., Niwa, M., Chirasak, K., & Takahashi, Y. (2002b). A trial of an international Internet PBL on HIV/AIDS. Journal of Medical Education (Taiwan), 7 (4), 432-37.

Globecomm Systems Signs Agreements With Distance Learning, Inc. and ChildU, Inc.

Distance-Learning Curriculum is the First On-line Content to be Offered By

Globecomm Systems and NetSat to Its Customers

HAUPPAUGE, N.Y., Oct. 22 /PRNewswire/ --

Globecomm Systems Inc., (Nasdaq: GCOM), a leading global supplier of end-to-end solutions for satellite earth stations and networks, announced today that it has signed agreements with both Distance Learning, Inc. and ChildU, Inc., enabling Globecomm to offer high quality Internet-based educational content for resale by its customers.

Commenting on the agreements, David Hershberg, Chairman and CEO of Globecomm Systems, stated, "These are landmark partnerships for Globecomm Systems. As an end-to-end solutions provider, we saw both the opportunity and the need to make Internet-based content available to our ISP (Internet Service Providers) customers around the globe. Distance learning has become a fixed and highly successful part of the educational system and we are well positioned, with Internet access and satellite services we already provide, to facilitate the distribution of on-line content worldwide. This is just the beginning for us in providing on-line content to our customers as part of our total solutions package."

The agreements allow Globecomm Systems to immediately begin offering Internet-based educational courses for resale by its customers, which include large-enterprise ISPs, utilizing the Internet-via-satellite services of NetSat Express. The agreement with Distance Learning, Inc. will provide English language courses and the agreement with ChildU will offer curriculum for children. Globecomm expects the courses to be used by educational institutions, multi-national business and government agency end-users. Both agreements name Globecomm Systems as an exclusive distributor of the educational courses in certain countries.

"We view Globecomm Systems as a natural partner for our business," said John Cervieri, Chairman and CEO of Distance Learning. "They have the experience, infrastructure, and customer base to successfully bring DLI online schools and courses into emerging markets."

Distance Learning, Inc. is an Internet-Based Learning company that authors, hosts, and delivers English language training solutions for academic institutions, corporations, and governmental agencies around the world. DLI's broad range of products and services include highly acclaimed online English courses; customized online English schools; content, information and marketing services; and a sophisticated e-learning platform.

ChildU, Inc., is a leading provider of Internet-based curriculum and is focused on improving education through the use of innovative technology and the Internet. ChildU presently offers curriculum for grades K through 8. ChildU's "The Learning Odyssey" is a Web-based learning program designed for use in the classroom and as an "anytime, anywhere" tutor. ChildU, Inc. is a wholly own subsidiary of WRC Media, Inc., the world's largest supplemental education provider.

Globecomm Systems Inc. is an end-to-end satellite-based communications solutions provider. The Company's core business provides end-to-end value- added satellite-based communications solutions. This business supplies ground segment systems and networks for satellite-based communications including hardware and software to support a wide range of satellite systems. Its wholly owned subsidiary, NetSat Express provides end-to-end satellite-based Internet solutions including network connectivity, broadband connectivity to end users, Internet connectivity, Intranet extension, media distribution and other network services on a global basis. Both Globecomm Systems' and NetSat Express' customers include communication service providers, multinational corporations, Internet Service Providers, content providers and government entities.

Based in Hauppauge, New York, Globecomm Systems also maintains offices in Hong Kong and the United Kingdom.

For more information contact Globecomm Systems Inc., 45 Oser Avenue, Hauppauge, NY 11788-3816, USA. TEL: +1 631 231-9800, FAX: +1 631 231-1557; Email: info@globecommsystems.com ; Web: www.globecommsystems.com .

Company Contact: David E. Hershberg, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Globecomm Systems Inc., (631) 231-9800. Investor Relations: Marilynn Meek, +1-212-445-8451, or Peter Seltzberg, +1-212-445-8457, both of FRB/Weber Shandwick. Public Relations: Robert Schaefer, Robert Schaefer Inc., (631) 643-5466.

Certain of the statements contained in this press release may be deemed forward-looking statements. Such statements, and other matters addressed in this press release, involve a number of risks and uncertainties. Among the factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from these statements and matters include, but not are not limited to, whether or not the Company will provide additional on-line content to its customers, and the risks and other factors detailed, from time to time, in the Company's reports with the Securities and Exchange Commission, including, but not limited to, the Company's Annual Reports on form 10-K and its Quarterly Reports on Form 10-Q.

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Internet Culture Spawns Breed of `E-Cruiter in Raleigh, N.C., Area.(Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News)

Oct. 23--It's not news that the Internet has changed how people look for work and how companies find employees. But the changes go much deeper than you might think.

The World Wide Web is truly tangled. It links the personal and the professional, connects folks with shared interests and serves as a giant holding tank of data for and about the people who built it.

To think about mining that data to find a particular person with a particular skill is to understand the potential it holds for someone with technical jobs to fill. A recruiter skilled at using advanced Internet searching techniques to find that needle-in-a-haystack person has an edge in this talent-starved tech environment.

Meet the e-cruiters.

Listening as Jeanie Mabie and Tracey Claybrooke talk about their trade is sometimes like eavesdropping on a conversation in a foreign language.

Mabie and Claybrooke, both executives with Raleigh-based PeopleClick.com, were working with Claybrooke & Associates, a boutique Internet recruiting consultancy acquired by PeopleClick earlier this month.

They throw around terms like "harvesting," "peer search," "peeling" and "sourcing" in rapid-fire exchanges that seem to reflect the frenzied hiring pace still pervading much of the technology industry.

First of all, they say, understand one thing. The importance of hiring the right person for the job has never been greater. The new economy has also been called the knowledge economy. Brainy software developers are responsible for a technology company's entire product line. Hire the best, churn out quality. Hire a dud and essentially take a chunk out of the company's valuation.

Thus the evolution of what used to a be a paper-pushing "personnel" department. It evolved into a more sophisticated "human resources" function. Now, say Mabie and Claybrooke, it's "human capital."

As part of PeopleClick's push to become the first comprehensive online software package to help companies with all aspects of the hiring, managing, training and retaining process, the Raleigh-based applications service provider has taken to buying companies with specialized expertise.

With Claybrooke, they got experts in the Internet recruiting game.

Once they get past the "human capital" distinction, Mabie and Claybrooke make something else clear: Forget Monster.com.

The giant job sites just aren't effective ways to find top-quality talent. Why? Because top-quality talent usually isn't looking.

"It just doesn't work in this market," says Mabie. She tells a joke about a recruiter posting a job on one of those sites and then just waiting for the resumes to come in as if it's the latest zinger about Gore or Bush. "For one thing, every other company can see it."

That's where sourcing comes in. "Sourcing" is a term for finding so-called passive candidates who might be willing to jump ship if the opportunity was right.

To find the passive candidate, Mabie and Claybrooke turn to the Internet where, using advanced search technology to move from Web site to Web site, they are able to locate individuals with particular skills.

Here's one example: CyberAtlas, a Web marketing site, predicts that there will be more than 32 million personal home pages by 2002. Who will be the first to build them? The techies, Mabie says. And they often link to their employers' Web pages. By searching backward from the corporate site, recruiters are often able to contact individuals directly.

Once found, the passive candidates are courted for the long term.

"You're treating it like a marketing program. You send them e-mail newsletters and just keep them informed of things going on," Mabie says. "You treat them differently. If you come knocking on their door, you're selling to that individual."

Other Triangle recruiters rely on the Internet to find employees, but often don't have time to use the sourcing tricks embraced by PeopleClick's Internet consulting division.

David Tucker, who is handling recruiting for Redback Systems' new Triangle office, admits he's no Internet guru. But he says he counts on colleagues who are e-cruiter specialists.

"They're a very integral part of recruiting today," Tucker says. "They're helping me build the pipeline."

But on the other end, there's still plenty of work to be done to put a passive candidate into a vacant job. "You're basically pursuing them."

And, as Jackie Larson and Cheri Comstock of Durham-based FocusTech points out, there's no time to waste -- the Internet has stepped up the pace of recruiting.

FocusTech, which recruits for tech company clients nationwide, also has employees combing the Internet full time for candidate leads. They also use job board Web sites and have noticed some other Web effects.

"We're finding very strong trends that when we're placing people from the Internet -- they are constantly shopping their resume," says Larson. "All of a sudden, they're unlikely to stay longer than a year. We're having to go back and replace a lot of people -- they're not sticking."

Victoria Richardson has helped Network Appliance increase its RTP presence in an office that has gone from zero to 90 people in less than a year.

"The fundamental tool is the job board. It's pedestrian and very routine. But it's the underpinning. It saves a lot of phone work," she says.

Richardson took a seminar to learn advanced Internet recruiting techniques and was thrilled with what she learned. She was dazzled to find a searching technique that could extract a staff list from a company Web site.

But the pace of her job has been such that Richardson hasn't had time to apply her new searching skills.

She got a kick out of a recent Wall Street Journal article that depicted recruiters who stay up all night online to find job candidates. "Anyone who has a job just looks at that and laughs."

Richardson adds: "In the end, it's all hard work. You have to organize yourself to follow through on it."

Jennifer Richardson (no relation to Victoria), a senior technical recruiter at Raleigh-based Edgesource, does her share of getting creative with the Internet but feels strongly that it's the nonvirtual people network that is most important to her job.

"Everybody knows somebody," Richardson says. "Nothing is more effective than picking up the phone and talking to somebody I know."

To see more of The News & Observer, or to subscribe to the newspaper, go to http://www.news-observer.com.

(c) 2000, The News & Observer, Raleigh, N.C. Distributed by Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News.

1999 Grolier Multimedia Encyclopedia.(Software Review)(Brief Article)(Buyers Guide)

1999 Grolier Multimedia Encyclopedia by Grolier Interactive, Inc. $59.95 U.S. Compatible with Macintosh or Windows 3.1 or later (See dealer for system requirements)

How could an encyclopedia that has everything possibly get any better? Grolier found a way. New to the 1999 Grolier Multimedia Encyclopedia are 360 [degrees] panoramic views of famous places, easier navigation inside the program, and access to the New York Times Science Questions and Answers, new and updated articles every month, and 250,000 dictionary definitions. The two CD-ROMs also include Internet access to online versions of The New Book of Knowledge and Encyclopedia Americana. Welcome to a virtual library in a box!

воскресенье, 26 февраля 2012 г.

Duke Energy Anticipates Ohio Coal Plant Retirement.

M2 PRESSWIRE-July 18, 2011-: Duke Energy Anticipates Ohio Coal Plant Retirement(C)1994-2011 M2 COMMUNICATIONS

RDATE:15072011

NEW RICHMOND, OHIO -- Duke Energy Ohio anticipates it will retire all six coal-fired generation units at its W.C. Beckjord Station, southwest of Cincinnati, by Jan. 1, 2015, as a result of a proposed U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) rule.

Duke Energy Ohio announced its intent to retire Beckjord Station's coal-fired units 1 through 6 - totaling 862 megawatts (MW) of generating capacity - in its 2011 Resource Plan filing with the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio (PUCO) on July 15.

The company plans to retire the coal-fired units at the nearly 60-year-old plant in 2015 due to EPA's recently proposed Utility Maximum Achievable Control Technology (MACT) rule. EPA intends to finalize the rule in Nov. 2011, with required emission control technologies to be installed by Jan. 1, 2015.

The Beckjord Station decision is largely based on the age of the coal-fired units and the prohibitive cost - to which our customers would be exposed - of implementing the new MACT technology requirements. The anticipated retirement date is contingent on potential changes to the implementation for EPA's MACT rule and other environmental regulations.

Barring a change to plant economics - including variables like fuel costs, power prices, and capital and maintenance expenses - Duke Energy intends to continue operating the coal-fired units through the anticipated 2015 retirement date to help meet regional demand for electricity.

As outlined in its 2011 Resource Plan, Duke Energy Ohio plans to meet demand following the retirement of Beckjord's coal-fired units through the purchase of electricity on the competitive wholesale market or the construction/acquisition of natural gas-fired combined-cycle generating assets.

No determination has been made as to which path Duke Energy Ohio will pursue.

The construction of the W.C. Beckjord Station was announced on Nov. 10, 1948, at a location 18 miles upstream of Cincinnati on the Ohio River. The site was dedicated on June 12, 1952, with the first 100-MW unit in commercial operation. Five additional coal-fired units were added by 1969. Four oil-fired combustion turbines (CTs) were added in the early 1970s.

Duke Energy Ohio owns 100 percent of the first five generating units at the station, and jointly owns unit 6 (37.5 percent ownership) with American Electric Power Co. (12.5 percent) and Dayton Power and Light Co. (50 percent).

Duke Energy Ohio owns all four CT units, which are capable of producing 244 MW of electricity and are primarily used for generating power during periods of high demand. The company has no plans to retire the CT units.

Today, Beckjord Station employs approximately 120 Duke Energy personnel.

Some employees might be offered the opportunity to work at other Duke Energy plants. The company will work closely with employees and unions to determine potential options for impacted workers. The anticipated retirement date of Beckjord's coal-fired units is contingent on potential changes to the implementation timeline for EPA's MACT rule.

Duke Energy launched a website - www.duke-energy.com/beckjord - to provide additional information and updates.

About Duke Energy Ohio

Duke Energy Ohio's operations provide electric service to approximately 685,000 customers and natural gas service to approximately 400,000 customers.

Duke Energy is one of the largest electric power holding companies in the United States. Its regulated utility operations serve approximately 4 million customers located in five states in the Southeast and Midwest, representing a population of approximately 12 million people. Its commercial power and international business segments own and operate diverse power generation assets in North America and Latin America, including a growing portfolio of renewable energy assets in the United States.

Headquartered in Charlotte, N.C., Duke Energy is a Fortune 500 company traded on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol DUK. More information about the company is available on the Internet at: www.duke-energy.com .

CONTACT:

Media - 800-559-3853

((M2 Communications disclaims all liability for information provided within M2 PressWIRE. Data supplied by named party/parties. Further information on M2 PressWIRE can be obtained at http://www.presswire.net on the world wide web. Inquiries to info@m2.com)).

Leeds closes top deal after just one week.(Business)

LEEDS Building Society has closed its Online Access 4 account, which pays 2.44 pc after tax (3.05 pc before tax).

The account -- one of the top deals on offer for those looking to run their account over the internet -- was on sale for just one week.

The top rate on these accounts now comes from Santander eSaver 3 at 2.4 pc (3 pc), including a variable rate bonus of 2 (2.5) percentage points payable for a year.

Chelsea BS has launched a toppaying, two-year cash Isa at 3.7pc taxfree fixed until July 31, 2013. Santander and Leeds BS also match this rate for two years, while Halifax pays 3.65pc.

The top one-year rate is 3.2pc taxfree from Cheshire, Derbyshire and Dunfermline building societies, all part of Nationwide. Northern Rock pays 3.1 pc over the internet fixed for one year or 3 pc through its branchbased and postal version.

With Norwich & Peterborough's new deal you earn 3.05 pc, but you need a minimum [pounds sterling]5,340 to open an account.

These one-year, fixed-rate cash Isa rates are well below the top deals on taxable fixed-rate bonds, where you can earn 3.5pc before tax with Yorkshire, Barnsley and FirstSave and 3.4 pc with Tesco Bank.

Savers looking for cash Isas will be better off in the top easy-access accounts where they do not have to tie their money up for a year.

AA Savings, part of Halifax, pays 3.35 pc on its Internet Access Isa and Santander 3.3pc on its Flexible Isa 3 -- although you can't transfer your existing cash Isas into these accounts.

Perrigo Announces FDA Final Approval for Minoxidil Foam - Generic Equivalent to Men's Rogaine[R] Foam.

Perrigo Company (Nasdaq: PRGO; TASE) announced that it has received final approval from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for its abbreviated new drug application for over-the-counter (OTC) Minoxidil Foam, a generic version of Men's Rogaine[R] Foam (see also U.S. Food and Drug Administration).

Perrigo had been sued for patent infringement by Stiefel Research Australia Pty. Ltd., a GSK Company, when it submitted its Paragraph IV ANDA. Under the terms of the settlement reached between the parties in February 2011, Perrigo can launch the generic version of Men's Rogaine[R] Foam in the U.S. on March 1, 2012, or earlier, under certain circumstances. The product will be entitled to 180 days of generic exclusivity upon launch.

Rogaine[R] (Minoxidil) Foam is used to regrow hair on the top of the scalp, and has annual sales of approximately $60 million, as measured by Information Resources, Inc.

Perrigo's Chairman and CEO Joseph C. Papa concluded, "This is another example of Perrigo's commitment to bring new products to market. Perrigo continues to deliver on its mission to provide quality, affordable healthcare to consumers."

Perrigo Company is a leading global healthcare supplier that develops, manufactures and distributes OTC and generic prescription (Rx) pharmaceuticals, infant formulas, nutritional products, active pharmaceutical ingredients (API) and pharmaceutical and medical diagnostic products. The Company is the world's largest store brand manufacturer of OTC pharmaceutical products and infant formulas. The Company's primary markets and locations of manufacturing and logistics operations are the United States, Israel, Mexico, the United Kingdom and Australia. Visit Perrigo on the Internet (http://www.perrigo.com).

Keywords: FDA, Generics, Legal Issues, Perrigo, Perrigo Company, Pharmaceutical Company, Regulatory Actions, U.S. Food and Drug Administration.

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

суббота, 25 февраля 2012 г.

KIDS WHO ARE SICK HAVE FEWER FRIENDS, STUDY FINDS.

WASHINGTON, DC -- The following information was released by the American Sociological Association:

By Randy Dotinga, Contributing Writer

Health Behavior News Service

A new study reveals that sick teens are more isolated than other kids, but they do not necessarily realize it and often think their friendships are stronger than they actually are.

The findings rely on surveys conducted before the Internet era made it easier for outsider kids to reach out to teens like themselves. Still, the study offers insight into the role that health plays in the relationships between people, said lead author and sociologist Steven Haas.

"Health is both a cause and a consequence of how many friends you have and how many people you have to support you," said Haas, an assistant professor at Arizona State University.

"For about 30 years, we've seen that people who have more friends -- and can get things from their friends like money or social support, all kinds of things that friends give each other -- are healthier and live longer. Few people have looked at the opposite side of the coin: Can the health of people affect the size of people's social networks and their place in them?"

In the new study, published in the December issue of the Journal of Health and Social Behavior, Haas and colleagues examined the results of a 1994-1996 survey of teenagers that asked them to name their friends. The study authors focused on 2,060 teens and explored the connections between them and their classmates.

Roughly, two-thirds of teens rated their health as "excellent "or "very good." The researchers looked most closely at the other kids - about a third of the total - who said their health was "good," "fair" or "poor." They might have suffered from conditions like asthma, obesity, deafness or blindness, Haas said.

"The less healthy kids are in smaller networks over time compared to their healthier peers," Haas said. "The kids don't perceive themselves as having fewer friends. If you ask them to list them, they list the same number of friends as the healthy kids do.

But if you ask the other kids who they're friends with, they're much less likely to nominate the sick kids as their friends." In essence, the sicker kids "tend to overstate how strong some of their friendships are," he said.

It gets worse. The sicker kids are 20 percent more likely to have no friends, Haas said. That means that no one in the school lists them as one of their friends, Haas said.

The study does not say which came first for the sicker kids -- isolation or poorer health. However, it is clear that "being sick doesn't make you fun to be around. It can be taxing on your friends and they have to do a lot of emotional support and try to make you feel better," Haas said. "At the same time, individuals who are depressed can't do the things we have to do to help our friends like support them and spend time with them."

Robert Crosnoe, a sociologist and professor at the University of Texas at Austin, said he is a fan of the study. While it might seem obvious that good health boosts friendships and vice versa, he said, "it is not something scientists have done a good job of studying," largely because there are not good data.

He also pointed to a potential bonus to helping kids become healthier. "The findings," he said, "suggest that school health services, to the extent that they work, could have effects on high-school peer dynamics that adults find so complex and mysterious, not just health itself."

TERMS OF USE: This story is protected by copyright. When reproducing any material, including interview excerpts, attribution to the Health Behavior News Service, of the Center for Advancing Health is required.

E-LOAN Selected as Key Service Provider by Bank Rate Monitor.

PALO ALTO, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Sept. 9, 1998--E-LOAN (http://www.eloan.com), the leading online mortgage broker, has been selected by Bank Rate Monitor (http://www.bankrate.com), the leading source of retail financial product information in the country, to provide consumers with the ability to implement product selections on its web site.

Bank Rate Monitor, which provides readers with access to the latest rates on savings, credit cards, auto loans, and mortgages, has partnered with E-LOAN to provide additional online mortgage qualification services to its already popular mortgage data. Through access to the co-branded mortgage center, consumers will have additional access to nationally and regionally recognized lenders.

"Bank Rate Monitor attracts consumers who are smart about managing their finances," said Doug Galen, vice president of sales and business development for E-LOAN. "Since a mortgage is one of the largest components of a household balance sheet, proactively taking advantage of the best rates and products can have a significant positive impact on peoples' net worth. By leveraging our technology and the Internet, E-LOAN and Bank Rate Monitor are helping consumers manage their mortgage debt in an easy and cost-effective way."

"Our goal is to help consumers make more informed decisions," said Sara Campbell, senior vice president of Bank Rate Monitor. "Expanding our offering to incorporate services that let them act on their decisions is a natural next step. E-LOAN gives people the power to lock-in rates and obtain a loan online, and we give them the power of information. This complementary combination serves a united purpose -- to get consumers the best deal."

Bank Rate Monitor provides unbiased data that helps consumers clarify their savings and loan choices in a marketplace flooded with financial products and services. Bank Rate Monitor combines over 20 years of data research and editorials about the banking industry that are licensed to national print and online publications. This data is generated for 21 products in 127 major markets through daily access to 3,000 banks, thrifts and credit unions across the country. These rates are scrutinized and updated weekly.

By linking to the Mortgage Center from Bank Rate Monitor's home page, consumers can access E-LOAN's personalized features to help determine which mortgage financing options best fit their needs. Interactive questionnaires provide custom mortgage quotes and recommendations based on an individual's financial situation. Customers can then use E-LOAN to get pre-qualified or pre-approved, and complete the entire loan transaction online.

E-LOAN's innovative use of technology drives inefficiencies out of the usual paper-based transaction and E-LOAN customers enjoy significant savings over the traditional mortgage process. At the same time, E-LOAN provides a personal customer service representative to each loan applicant, ensuring quick responses to questions and concerns. After a loan closes, customers can choose to use E-LOAN's monitoring services to track the volatile mortgage marketplace and be prepared to take advantage of future savings opportunities.

About E-LOAN

E-LOAN, Inc. (http://www.eloan.com) is the leading online mortgage broker where borrowers can compare, apply for and obtain home loans from the nation's leading lenders. E-LOAN saves borrowers as much as 75 percent on brokerage fees through the elimination of unnecessary transaction costs, while providing personalized customer service.

After closing a loan, E-LOAN can, at the customer's request, continue to send customized information about new products that become available, helping consumers turn a mortgage into a working financial asset. E-LOAN offers customers 24 hour a day online access to updated information on their loan status through its exclusive E-TrackSM service.

E-LOAN is the exclusive mortgage services provider to loan centers on many leading web sites, including E-Trade and Yahoo!. The company is headquartered in Palo Alto, Calif., with loan processing offices in Dublin, Calif. E-LOAN's investment partners include Benchmark Capital and Technology Partners.

About Bank Rate Monitor

Bank Rate Monitor is the nation's leading source for retail financial product information. They offer more than 1,700 pages on the World Wide Web including timely rates and fees for: mortgages, home equity loans, auto loans, savings accounts, credit cards and online checking accounts, as well as ATM and online banking fees.

Relied upon by the Federal Reserve, national news media and financial institutions, Bank Rate Monitor has been tracking bank rates and the banking industry for more than 20 years. The editorial staff is comprised of dedicated and experienced professional journalists whose focus is spotting the latest trends in consumer rates, fees and new products.

CONTACT: E-LOAN, Inc.

Doug Galen, 650/847-3707

Doug@eloan.com

or

Niehaus Ryan Wong, Inc. (for E-LOAN)

Tiffany Kelley, 650/827-7079

Tiffany@nrwpr.com

or

Bank Rate Monitor's BANK ADVERTISING NEWS

Kelly Slimak, 561/630-1213

Kelly@xmail.bankrate.com

Samsung: content deals are complex.(HOME NETWORKS)

- Working on Its Own Wi-Fi Variant forWireless HD

Wireless Watch reports that Samsung says its biggest problem in getting Internet-delivered entertainment to its TV sets is the complicated business deals that content owners require, not the technology that's required.

Hyun-Suk Kim, VP of R&D for Samsung's television products, told a press conference this week, "Hardware-wise, everything is ready, but the problem is there are so many parties that want to have their own share, so it's complicated."

Samsung is working with Intel and Yahoo to use widgets as a way to bring Web content to PCs and TVs. Intel and Yahoo recently released a software developers "kit for the Widget Channel."

Wireless HD

On the matter of getting HD video wirelessly to TV sets, Kim said the company was working on several projects.

In July Samsung said it would support Amimon's WHDI technology, which uses a derivative of the 802.11n fast Wi-Fi approach. It has also reiterated its backing for SiBeam and the WirelessHD would-be standard, which uses the 60GHz band.

With approaches based on Wi-Fi extensions and 60GHz fighting it out, and possibly even converging--and with Ultra Wideband-based systems also likely to make a rejuvenated effort in a year or two--there would seem to be plenty of choices.

Notwithstanding, Samsung said this week that it is also defining its own variation on Wi-Fi for its digital TVs and could release the technology early next year.

He said Samsung is working mainly on 60GHz and its own Wi-Fi platform for short-term digital TV network releases, but remains interested in UWB and other options for the longer term.

H.J. HEINZ COMPANY ENTERS JOINT VENTURE IN SOUTH AFRICA

PITTSBURGH, Sept. 25 /PRNewswire/ -- H.J. Heinz Company (NYSE: HNZ) today confirmed the formation of a joint venture between Heinz and Sentraalwes Co-operative, a farmers' co-operative based in Klerksdorp, South Africa. The joint venture, in which Heinz holds the majority share, will be known as Heinz Frozen Foods (Pty) Ltd. It is expected to be the first in a series of transactions.

Heinz also announced the formation of Heinz South Africa (Pty) Ltd, which will be the holding company for Heinz investments in Southern Africa. Rory W. Beattie, area director for South Africa, will serve as chairman of Heinz South Africa.

Heinz Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer Anthony J.F. O'Reilly said: "The formation of Heinz South Africa will provide us with growth opportunities as we make further investments in a variety of food categories where Heinz has world-class leadership. Heinz's operations are highlighted in Africa by our successful Zimbabwean business. South Africa, with a population of 42 million and where our brand name has remained popular among consumers, is a promising market for Heinz."

The joint venture will make Heinz a leading processor of frozen chips in South Africa for grocery and foodservice customers. The affiliate's product lines are expected to expand with the addition of new units and businesses. Heinz is the biggest producer of these products in New Zealand and the United States.

Heinz is the largest food company in neighboring Zimbabwe, with Olivine Industries with more than 1,500 employees. A joint venture with the Zimbabwean government, Olivine produces vegetable oils, margarines, soaps and Heinz-branded products, such as canned beans, vegetables and soup.

Heinz also has an edible oils and soap business in neighboring Botswana. In Ghana, its StarKist affiliate operates a tuna cannery.

/delval/

     -0-                           9/25/95 

/EDITORS' ADVISORY: H.J. Heinz Company press releases are available at no charge through PR Newswire's Company News On-Call fax service and on PRN's Web site. For a menu of available H.J. Heinz Company press releases or to retrieve a specific release, call 800-758-5804, ext. 402575, or http://www.prnewswire.com on the Internet./

/CONTACT: D. Edward I. Smyth, VP - Corp. Affairs, 412-456-5780, or Debora S. Foster, Gen. Mgr. - Corp. Communications, 412-456-5778, both of H.J. Heinz; or John E. Kennedy, or L. Michael Kelly, Jr., 412-456-3586, or 412-456-3840, both of Ketchum Public Relations, for H.J. Heinz/

(HNZ)

CO: H.J. Heinz Company; Sentraalwes Co-operative; Heinz Frozen Foods

(Pty) Ltd.; Heinz South Africa ST: Pennsylvania IN: FOD SU: JVN

CD -- PG003 -- 2022 09/25/95 08:33 EDT