Sunday, February 26, 2012

A year of destruction.

Natural disasters left more than 220,000 people dead in 2008 and cost hundreds of millions of dollars Natural disasters killed over 220,000 people this year, making it one of the most devastating years on record and underlining the need for a global climate deal, the world's number two reinsurer said. Although the number of natural disasters was lower than in 2007, the catastrophes that occurred proved to be more destructive in terms of the number of victims and the financial cost of the damage caused, Germany-based Munich Re said in its annual assessment. "This continues the long-term trend we have been observing. Climate change has already started and is very probably contributing to increasingly frequent weather extremes and ensuing natural catastrophes," Munich Re board member Torsten Jeworrek said. Most devastating in terms of human fatalities was Cyclone Nargis, which lashed Myanmar on May 2-3 to kill more than 135,000 people and leave more than one million homeless. Just days later an earthquake shook China's Sichuan province, leaving 70,000 dead, 18,000 missing and almost five million homeless, according to official figures, Munich Re said. Around 1,000 people died in a severe cold snap in January in Afghanistan, Kyrgystan and Tajikistan, while 635 perished in August and September in floods in India, Nepal and Bangladesh. Typhoon Fengshen killed 557 people in China and the Philippines in June, while earthquakes in Pakistan in October left 300 dead. Six tropical cyclones also slammed into the southern United States, including Ike which, with insured losses of $10 billion, was the industry's costliest catastrophe of the year. In Europe, an intense low-pressure system called Emma caused $2 billion worth of damage in March, while a storm dubbed Hilal in late May and early June left $1.1 billion worth. The earthquake in Sichuan province was the most expensive overall single catastrophe of 2008, causing around $85 billion worth of damage, helping to make the year the third most expensive on record, Munich Re said. With $200 billion worth of damage, only 2005, when a large number of hurricanes slammed into the southern United States, and 1995, year of the Kobe earthquake in Japan, wreaked more destruction since records began in 1900. According to provisional estimates from the World Meteorological Organisation, 2008 was the tenth warmest year since the beginning of routine temperature recording and the eighth warmest in the northern hemisphere. This means that the ten warmest years ever recorded have all occurred in the last 12 years, Munich Re said. "It is now very probable that the progressive warming of the atmosphere is due to the greenhouse gases emitted by human activity. The weather machine is running in top gear, bringing more intense severe weather events," it said. The number of tropical cyclones in the North Atlantic in 2008 was much higher than the long-term average, and in terms of both the total number of storms and the number of major hurricanes, 2008 was the fourth most severe hurricane season since reliable data have been available, it said. The world needed "effective and binding rules on CO2 emissions, so that climate change is curbed and future generations do not have to live with weather scenarios that are difficult to control," board member Jeworrek said. Last December, the international community agreed in Bali on a two-year roadmap culminating in a new global climate deal to be signed in Copenhagen in December 2009. Unprecedented in scale and complexity, this accord, due to take effect from 2012, is meant to rein in the greenhouse gases that stoke global warming and throw a lifeline to poor countries exposed to mutated weather patterns.

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PGMI entrance test on 26th.

ENTRY test would be held for specialization in various areas of medical science on June 26 being offered by Postgraduate Medical Institute/Lahore General Hospital (PGMI/LGH).

In a press release on Sunday, Principal PGMI Prof Dr Tariq Salahuddin said the test result would be announced on July 2, 2011. He added that as many as 1,350 applications from all over the country had so far been received for admission to PGMI in this regard. He said that the entry tests for admission to PGMI would be held in transparent manner and its result would reflect that pure merit had prevailed.

He further said that PGMI has provided state of the art facilities for the students to make them aware of all development and modern knowledge about the diseases. A digital library at the institute helps the students to remain in contact with the medical universities all over the world through internet, he added. In fact, PGMI has become an organization of international standard for specialization in various fields of medical science, he said.

Dr Tariq Salahuddin while hailing the announcement of four new medical colleges and increased amount for health sector in Punjab budget 2011-12 said that, Chief Minister Punjab has a progressive vision about health sector and his prioritization about health and education has started yielding fruitful results.ECe

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Julie Lindsay Appointed Programming Director at Global Health Frontline News.

Atlanta, GA (PRWEB) May 26, 2011

Global Health Frontline News (GHFN) today announced that veteran broadcast and web journalist Julie Lindsay has joined its production staff as Programming Director.

Ms. Lindsay had been Senior Managing Editor for WebMD's website in the United Kingdom. She was a key architect of the site, managing a team of journalists and doctors, with responsibility for all its editorial content.

Ms. Lindsay has over 25 years experience as a journalist for the most respected news organizations in the world including the BBC, ITN, Reuters and CNN. After beginning her career as a reporter for BBC Bristol where she covered numerous national stories including the Lockerbie bombing and the Northern Ireland conflict, she joined IRN/ITN in London as a reporter, presenter and senior bulletin editor, covering stories including IRA bombings and the Romanian revolution. In 1993 she became the senior producer and presenter for BBC Radio 5, launching the station's award-winning National Morning Show. After working at Reuters Radio and Television in London as a senior editor, she moved to the United States in 1996 to join CNN International as a senior writer, editor, producer and anchor. She started developing WebMD's operations in the U.K. in 2009.

"Julie will be the principal manager of our strategy to build our programming outreach to Internet platforms worldwide," said GHFN's Executive Editor Gary Strieker. "Her deep experience in international broadcasting and basic journalism will be a major asset for us as we develop our coverage of global health stories in the months ahead," he said. "We are proud to have her on our team."

Launched in January, GHFN assigns video newsgathering crews worldwide to cover major global health stories in partnership with selected broadcasters and Internet platforms. As a nonprofit project with a mission to produce video news stories on global health issues that are largely under-reported by mainstream media, GHFN focuses its coverage on diseases that mainly affect impoverished populations in developing nations -- malaria, HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, and neglected tropical diseases such as river blindness and trachoma -- and on maternal/child health and food security.

Funded by nonpartisan donors and operating independently, GHFN follows strict journalistic standards and produces high-quality video news material for broadcast globally by television networks and wide distribution on the Internet.

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Read the full story at http://www.prweb.com/releases/2011/5/prweb8490540.htm

Cox Communications Names Kelly Williams Vice President, Wireless Product and Operations.

-Cox Communications announced that Kelly Williams has been promoted to vice present of wireless product and operations. In this role, Williams is responsible for the development, management and support of wireless products and services.

"Kelly was instrumental in creating and executing the overall project plans for the initial deployment of Cox Wireless," said Len Barlik, executive vice president, product development and management, Cox Communications. "Kelly's experience and proven leadership will benefit Cox greatly as we further the availability of Cox Wireless and continue to enhance the Cox customer experience."

Cox was the first U.S. cable company to launch fully-integrated wireless phone and mobile high speed Internet services. Previously, Williams was responsible for the enterprise Project Management Organization, which developed and executed the overall project plans for deploying Cox Wireless. He also ran the Wireless Network Operations team, which included operating and maintaining the core wireless network elements as well as the back-office systems that supported the wireless line of business.

Prior to joining Cox, Kelly spent 23 years with BellSouth/Cingular/AT&T. During that time, he held a variety of roles and responsibilities, including VP/GM of Bellsouth's Nicaragua wireless company, VP/GM of BellSouth International Wireless Services, head of core technology strategy for Cingular Wireless and various other marketing, operations, project management, strategy, product development, product management and planning roles.

Williams holds a Bachelor's degree in Electrical Engineering as well as an MBA in Finance.

Keywords: Advertising, Electrical Engineering, Electronics, Marketing, Networks, Wireless Network, Wireless Phone, Wireless Technology.

This article was prepared by Marketing Weekly News editors from staff and other reports. Copyright 2011, Marketing Weekly News via VerticalNews.com.

Saturday, February 25, 2012

Game over for online poker? Prosecutions turn multibillion-dollar business into a shaky bet, and players wonder whether they'll ever see their chips.(News)

Byline: Oskar Garcia Associated Press

LAS VEGAS America's multibillion-dollar run at the online poker tables has been interrupted by what could be a killer hand: federal prosecutions of the three biggest websites.

The government has blocked U.S. gamblers from logging on to the offshore sites, which are accused of tricking and bribing banks into processing billions of dollars in illegal profits. Now gamblers who dreamed of enormous prizes in Las Vegas, or even used online poker to make a living, can't access online bankrolls that in some cases reach six figures.

Some predict the American online poker industry, estimated to be worth up to $6 billion, may fold under the weight of the investigations as it threatens amateur and professional players, televised tournaments and the marketing machine that helped Texas Hold 'em emerge from smoky casinos to become a dominant form of gambling on the Internet.

"It just cut the head off of everything," said Robert Fellner, a 27-year-old Las Vegas poker pro whose roughly $250,000 bankroll on PokerStars was frozen after the indictments. "It's scary. It's much more scary."

Pay-to-play poker sites have been on shaky legal ground for years in the U.S., but the government hadn't prevented gamblers from playing on the three biggest sites PokerStars, Full Tilt Poker and Absolute Poker before last week's indictments of 11 executives and bank officials.

More than 75 company bank accounts in 14 countries have been frozen, and authorities are seeking $3 billion in fines and restitution.

Poker players, meanwhile, now see an FBI notice where the websites once were. Some of them had treated their poker accounts like savings accounts, leaving significant portions of their net worth online and ready to wager anytime.

It appears that they will get that money back, though it's not clear when. The government said Wednesday it had reached agreements with PokerStars and Full Tilt Poker to restore the companies' domain names so they can return money to U.S. players. PokerStars said on its website that said it expected cashouts to be available to U.S. residents within several weeks

Full Tilt said in a statement that the agreement was a good first step, but that it won't be able to give players refunds until the government

gives up control of those funds. U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara of the Southern District of New York, however, said in a statement that "no individual player accounts were ever frozen or restrained."

Fellner, who won over $57,000 at a small World Series of Poker tournament in 2007, is more concerned about how he would make a living without online poker. He said cards have been his only income since he was 19, when he matched his annual salary working at a dry cleaner by playing online poker three months.

Since then, he said he's made more money each year and plays for stakes that require $5,000 to $15,000 just to comfortably buy in and compete. He wouldn't specify how much he has earned so far this year.

Fellner relies on online poker because the Omaha game he prefers isn't normally offered at his stakes in the vast majority of Sin City casinos. He said he could support himself with savings while he waits for things to play out, but doesn't know what he'll do if he can't replace his income.

"I have friends on Wall Street they could always get me an interview," he said.

Federal authorities consider the poker sites illegal and follow a 2006 law that made it a crime to process financial transactions related to illegal online gambling. But last week's indictments are feds' first attempt to hold poker site operators to that law.

Players and companies have long argued that the 2006 law didn't properly define illegal gambling or outlaw online poker, which many consider a game that involves more skill than luck.

Unlike games such as blackjack, players gamble against each other, not the casino. Casinos and Internet sites that host poker collect a small percentage of each pot for running the game.

PokerStars and Full Tilt have stopped offering real-money play in the United States, while Absolute has not, according to PokerScout.com, a site that tracks traffic and real-money play on online poker sites. All three sites have free sites using ".net" domain names, and have switched to European domains to keep the gambling flowing outside the United States.

PokerStars and Full Tilt have been telling players through Twitter and other means that their balances are safe.

A customer service representative for Absolute who did not provide a last name said in an email to the AP that the company has suspended deposits, withdrawals and transfers for customers based in the U.S.

After the indictments, dubbed "Black Friday" in poker circles, worldwide online poker traffic dropped 22 percent from the prior week, said Dan Stewart, owner of PokerScout.com.

Before Friday, an average of more than 77,000 players were playing poker for real money in cash games online at any given moment over four days last week. That number dropped to just over 60,000 between Saturday and Tuesday, Stewart said.

PokerStars traffic fell 24 percent, Full Tilt traffic fell 49 percent and traffic on the network that includes Absolute fell 45 percent.

Other sites like Bodog.com and CarbonPoker.com have remained open to American players and saw spikes in traffic in the past week, but their increases are meager compared with the number of players that have stayed offline, Stewart said.

Alexander Ripps, a legal analyst in Washington for independent gambling market analysis firm Gambling Compliance, said it's not yet clear who might step in to take over the U.S. market. The firm estimates the market to be worth $4 billion to $6 billion, but the government's pursuit of the top companies suggests the entire industry is in danger.

Brian Balsbaugh, an agent for famous poker professionals including Daniel Negreanu, Tom Dwan and Phil Hellmuth, said the effects go far beyond players. Full Tilt and PokerStars have spent some $200 million per year on marketing, he said, directly or indirectly funding almost all poker-related television shows, news websites, magazines and several live tournaments.

"These companies, Full Tilt and PokerStars, were wholly responsible for the poker economy and its growth over the last five years," Balsbaugh said.

Cable network ESPN, which counted Full Tilt and PokerStars among its sponsors for poker programming, said in a statement it has moved quickly to remove TV shows and Web content related to the companies, though it still plans to air the World Series of Poker, by far the most popular tournament for fans and players. An airing of part of the North American Poker Tour a live tournament organized by PokerStars was pulled on Monday.

Ibibo Enables Voice Based Status Updates Via Mobile; Group SMS-1.

India, June 24 -- Ibibo, the Naspers and TenCent owned social network has recently launched "My Voice", a mobile based service which allows Ibibo members to post audio status updates from their mobile phones. The way it works is quite simple - users who have registered their mobile phones with the service merely click a link on their profile page, or SMS 'RECORD BEEP' to 58247. They receive an incoming call from ibibo (in my case, from +91-22-61168700), asking them to record their message after the been, much like voice mail. The audio of my recorded message was uploaded as a new 'beep' on ibibo within minutes, and an update automatically posted "I have recorded a new voice beep on ibibo. To listen, sms PLAYBEEP NIXXIN to 5676746 or go to http://t.ibibo.com/s0LPE"

While I'm not likely to put up other audio messages, I quite like the fact that ibibo is trying to integrate its services across Internet and mobile - most of their Zynga inspired games (the latest is Mumbai Underworld, much like Mafia Wars) are also available on mobile.

Copyright Issues, Voice Updates And Version Recordings

The issue that Ibibo might face with voice updates, is that users like Raju Singh will sing songs as updates; click here to listen to his version of 'kuchh toh log kaenge', a Hindi film song. That instance of singing is similar to an unlicensed cover version of a song. Ibibo will have no control of that; one can't possibly expect them to manually verify each update, so they would need some tool using which they can prevent copyright violation; take something like an online karaoke license from music labels. Ibibo was taken to court last year by music label T-Series over an online singing competition - iSinger.

Remember that the current Copyright (Amendment) Bill 2010 seeks to create licenses for version recordings, and in its current form treats copyright violation at an individual level as a criminal offence. In our comments on the Copyright (Amendment) Bill 2010, we've requested that individual instances of copyright violation not be deemed criminal offences.

Group SMS

Additionally, Ibibo has also launched Group SMS over the past couple of months. This is similar to SMS GupShup, which allows its users to create and subscribe to groups, enabling one-to-many and many-to-many SMS'.

Both these services create an incentive for Ibibo users to share their mobile numbers with the service.

Published by HT Syndication with permission from Medianama. For more information on news feed please contact Sarabjit Jagirdar at htsyndication@hindustantimes.com

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Trip to Africa changes his life.

Byline: Andrew Brophy

Aug. 26--FAIRFIELD -- Last August, Randi Oster was flipping through Family Circle magazine when she noticed a small ad that advertised an essay-writing contest by National Geographic.

It was summertime, and Oster's 13-year-old son, Gary, wasn't especially busy, so Randi asked him if he'd like to enter.

"I had said to him, 'Do you want to watch TV or write an essay?' He chose to write an essay," Randi recalled. "If he said he didn't want to enter and write the essay, I wouldn't have made a big deal out of it."

But Gary got to work and wrote an essay on the balance of nature that was so good, National Geographic selected him as one of only 15 children nationwide to go exploring in South Africa. Nearly 5,000 kids entered the contest.

Gary and his mother stayed in South Africa for 10 days earlier this month, and both said they were struck by the happiness of children who had so little, the sacrifices made by their parents, the majesty of wild animals and how different South African culture was from American culture.

"I learned the world is a much bigger place than I thought it was," Gary said a few days after he returned to Fairfield. "The world really is a bigger place and a better place."

The American kids, ages 10 to 13, were part of National Geographic's Kids Hands-On Explorer Expedition Team. They were accompanied by their parents and five people from National Geographic, including Boyd Matson, host of public television's "Wild Chronicles."

The South African trip for American kids was the second annual trip hosted by National Geographic. Last year, kids went to the Galapagos Islands; next year, they're going to Australia, said Caryn Davidson, National Geographic's director of communications.

"We're looking for the next generation of explorers," Davidson said.

NBC's "Today Show" sent a film crew on the trip and plans to broadcast footage Sept. 8. National Geographic also sent a film crew, but the date of that broadcast isn't set, Davidson said.

Gary recalled with excitement his underwater observation of great white sharks from a metal cage off the Western Cape, which Randi had tried to discourage by renting "Jaws" before they left.

But "Jaws," which kept so many people out of the ocean in the summer of 1975, didn't deter Gary. He said the shark that terrorized Long Island, N.Y., in the movie looked mechanical.

Randi allowed the shark dive, but only after "three weeks' worth of convincing," Gary said.

Gary said he also liked seeing elephants, rhinos, lions and buffalo at the Sabi Sabi Private Game Reserve and whales, dolphins, penguins and other sea animals in the Western Cape.

Gary said he saw a fight between two elephants, but it wasn't a major dispute and appeared to stem from which elephant would stand his ground.

Gary and other American kids on the trip also traveled to Dyer Island to build nests for penguins, many of whom were sick or oiled. Davidson said she thinks the trip gave kids and their parents a new appreciation for wild animals and how they fit into the world.

Gary said he also was really struck by the poverty in South African townships visited by the group.

In the Masakhane Township, Gary said 100 people lived on an acre in homes no bigger than a small garden shed. "The walls were made out of cardboard and the roof was made out of aluminum. For every 1,000 houses, there is one outhouse," Gary said.

Getting water isn't as easy as turning on a tap. Mothers of children in the Sam Nzima Primary School, just outside Sabi Sabi, have to walk 1 miles to a pump and haul 30 gallons back to their families every day, Gary said.

Men who work in the Masakhane Township have to spend 11 months every year away from their families in order to provide for them, Randi said.

Gary saw a sign in Masakhane that read, "There's an important difference between giving up and letting go" and said it reflected how the men dealt with being away from their families 11 months a year. "These people will see their children once a year, but they don't give up on their families," Randi said. "They let them go so that they can then provide for them."

Before he left for South Africa on Aug. 6, Gary and his local friends did a six-mile walk-a-thon to raise money toward the purchase of a computer for the Sam Nzima school.

Gary and his friends raised $733, a good percentage of its overall $4,200 cost. "These kids had never seen a computer before, especially one with Internet access," he said.

Children at the Sam Nzima school also hadn't seen a digital camera before and jumped with excitement when Gary showed them pictures immediately after he took them.

Gary said about 70 kids were in a class in the Sam Nzima school and that its soccer field was not at all like soccer fields in Fairfield. "It looked like they were playing soccer on Death Valley," he said of the unmarked dirt field.

The two South African schools visited by the American kids, which included a school in the Masakhane Township, didn't have books, libraries, gymnasiums or cafeterias, Randi said.

"There was the classroom, maybe two classrooms, but no amenities. It was a room with chairs. You didn't even see bookshelves filled with books," Randi said, adding the most prominent feature in the schools was a chalkboard.

But the schoolchildren all seemed happy and grateful for what they had, Gary said.

"I asked the teacher who had 70 kids in a class, 'How do you control that?' and she said, 'They're just grateful to be here,' " Randi said.

Gary said he'd like to do another walk-a-thon to raise money for South African kids and that American kids who went on the National Geographic trip, whom he keeps in touch with by e-mail, also were interested in the idea. "I'm confident, if we all do something together, we can help these people," Gary said.

Gary's face lights up when he recalls his trip and says it changed his life. "From now on, I'm always going to enter a contest. The worst thing that can happen is I lose," he said.

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