среда, 29 февраля 2012 г.

Fed:Rudd package forgets 100,000 who will lose jobs:Fielding


AAP General News (Australia)
02-06-2009
Fed:Rudd package forgets 100,000 who will lose jobs:Fielding

Family First senator STEVE FIELDING says the federal government's 42 billion stimulus
package will do nothing for the forgotten 100 thousand Aussies who will lose their jobs.

SENATOR FIELDING will carry a key vote when the package is debated in the Senate next week.

He says the plan is focussed on keeping people in …

Airspan Networks and Buggs Island Telephone Cooperative Sign $19 Million Contract for Broadband Deployment in Virginia


Wireless News
06-17-2011
Airspan Networks and Buggs Island Telephone Cooperative Sign $19 Million Contract for Broadband Deployment in Virginia
Type: News

Airspan Networks, a provider of broadband wireless access networks, and Buggs Island Telephone Cooperative (BIT) announced the selection of Airspan 4G equipment for deployment in southern Virginia, USA.

BIT received two grants which will be used for infrastructure to deliver wireless broadband Internet access to residents and businesses in fifteen counties in south central Virginia. The grants include a government Broadband Stimulus award of $18.9 million dollars by the United States Department of Commerce's National Telecommunications & Information Administration (NTIA) as part of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) and a $3.9 million dollars grant from Virginia Tobacco Indemnification and Community Revitalization Commission.
The project will provide 100 per cent coverage of residents and businesses in the Federal Communications Commission licensed serving area, offering a minimum of 1.5 Mbps (megabits per second) of service and up to 10 Mbps. The primary deployment phase will be completed within 12 months and has a projected subscriber base of upward of 30,000 customers within five years. Availability of access to broadband connectivity is one of the key elements for economic growth in the region. In addition, by creating this new business division, BIT will create 64 direct new jobs - mostly in Mecklenburg and Brunswick Counties.

This next-generation dual-band network operates in both 700 megahertz (MHz) and 3.65 gigahertz (GHz) frequency bands. Due to its natural propagation characteristics, the 700 MHz product allows for optimum coverage and range, requiring fewer base stations and minimizing deployment costs. Built with Airspan's reputable product offering, the network consists of Airspan's Air4G base station, a compact, all-outdoor, Macro unit. The network is also supplemented for in-fill coverage with AirSynergy, a Pico base station with integrated backhaul.

BIT Communications is a nationwide provider of technology and communication services.

Airspan is a 4G wireless solution provider. With over 500 customers in over 100 countries and as a top vendor for carrier- class broadband wireless solutions, Airspan is a developer of 4G and broadband wireless technologies all over the world.

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

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

FED:Website makes 'Pansy Wong' error


AAP General News (Australia)
12-04-2011
FED:Website makes 'Pansy Wong' error

SYDNEY, Dec 4 AAP - A news website has been forced onto the back foot after running
a headline referring to Senator Penny Wong as "Pansy Wong" in a story about gay marriage.

"PM Julia Gillard and Senator Pansy Wong - a reluctant embrace of an emotive issue;
gay marriage," was the headline posted on the Sunday Telegraph website early on Sunday.

The story was about the ALP voting at its national conference on Saturday in favour
of a motion by Prime Minister Julia Gillard to allow state and federal MPs a conscience
vote on gay marriage.

Reporter Claire Harvey later tweeted that a mistake had been made in which the openly
gay Senator Wong had inadvertantly been given a misnomer.

"A Kiwi-born online ed at the Sunday Tele mistakenly wrote Senator "Pansy Wong" today.

Pansy Wong is a real NZ pollie," she tweeted.

In another post on the microblogging site she wrote: "Genuine mistake. Careful readers
will see we editorialised in favour of gay marriage today. Everyone else stop being sensationalist."

Later the subeditor responsible added in his own tweet "Sorry conspiracy theorists
but the Pansy Wong headline was an honest mistake."

AAP jjs/tab

KEYWORD: LABOR PANSY

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

FileMaker Supplies 3 Free FileMaker Go Starter Solutions


Wireless News
03-27-2011
FileMaker Supplies 3 Free FileMaker Go Starter Solutions
Type: News

FileMaker, Inc. released three Starter Solutions for FileMaker Go for iPhone and iPad, available with a free 30-day trial version of FileMaker Pro 11.

The Company said the business database app for iPhone and iPad, FileMaker Go allows you to search, view and edit FileMaker Pro databases remotely or locally on an iOS device.
Designed from the ground up for the iOS platform, the FileMaker Go Starter Solutions are optimized for iPhone and iPad displays and Multi-Touch gestures.

The three new Starter Solutions, as described by the Company, include:

-Contacts: Lets users manage all of their business and personal contacts on their iPhone or iPad. With Contacts, users can add and find multiple contacts within the same company, city and more.

-Documents: Take along business documents and automatically synchronize any changes to a master database.

-Assets: A way to track all types of assets. Users can also create asset categories and track serial numbers, value lists and purchase dates and even calculate depreciation.

According to a release, the three starter solutions will run on the iPhone, iPad, iPod touch, Mac OSX or Windows. Users can copy databases from their desktop or laptop to their iOS device using iTunes. Users can use wireless or Internet networking to directly open a FileMaker Pro database on your desktop or laptop.

The Company noted that these solutions are designed to be customized using FileMaker Pro on a desktop. Changes to your solutions can then be copied to your iOS device.

FileMaker is a company focused on database software.

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

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

QLD:Teen swimmer missing at water fall


AAP General News (Australia)
12-09-2010
QLD:Teen swimmer missing at water fall

A search for teenage boy missing at a waterfall swimming spot in central Queensland
will resume this morning.

The boy disappeared after entering the water at Wappa Falls .. Yandina .. at 11.20
yesterday morning.

AAP RTV lpm/jen/

KEYWORD: SWIMMER (BRISBANE)

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

QLD:Rothschild gives Gillard, Abbott an F


TOVAH LAZAROFF TOVAH LAZAROFF
Jerusalem Post
08-02-2010
Normal life resumes quickly in Sha'ar Hanegev, Ashkelon
Byline: TOVAH LAZAROFF TOVAH LAZAROFF
Edition: Daily
Section: News

From his perch next to the gaping rocket hole in the roof of the Hydrotherapy Center next to Sapir Academic College on Sunday, Oded Koren had a perfect view of spots where rockets fired from neighboring Gaza have struck over the past eight years.

Pointing to the white plastic chairs set up under a green plastic awning just outside the center's indoor pool, Koren said that rockets hit twice before, in 2007 and 2008.
Each time, they shattered windows in the building, but there were no injuries, said Koren, who is in charge of security for the center.

A security guard was once wounded by a rocket on a road leading to the center, and a student was killed on the campus, Koren said.

Miraculously, he said, the center, located between the college and Sderot in the Sha'ar Hanegev region, was closed on Saturday night, when the rocket tore into a fitness room for disabled children. It also destroyed a room used for yoga and birthing classes as well as an office.

Late on Sunday afternoon, wires and tiles hung from the ceiling and furniture was overturned in the rooms, which were filled with dust and debris.

The direct hit followed a Grad rocket in nearby Ashkelon on Friday morning, which narrowly missed a large apartment building.

But the damage to the three rooms on the second floor of the Hydrotherapy Center in Sha'ar Hanegev, which serves as a fitness center for locals and offers rehabilitative services for the disabled, was limited.

The rest of the building was unharmed. Outside of the red taping material that blocked entry to the second floor, it was not possible to see any damage to the structure from the first floor or even outside.

"We opened as usual in the morning," Koren said.

Leading The Jerusalem Post through the building, he showed how swimmers were busy doing laps in the pool and the fitness room, with its treadmills and weight lifting equipment, was crowded.

"Normal life was restored very quickly," he said as he stood in the lobby as calming music played and members of the center entered the air-conditioned building with sports bags thrown over their shoulders; just like any other summer day.

The receptionist said that on one hand it did make her nervous to work there when she thought about the attack, but on the other hand, she lived nearby and a rocket could just as easily strike her home, and almost had in the past.

The center's fund-raiser, Varda Goldstein, said, "No one will get the better of us. We will continue to fight for our right to have a normal life here."

She returned from Europe on Sunday morning and went straight to her office from the airport.

Luckily, Goldstein said, it was unharmed. She added that the center was the only one in Israel that integrated the disabled into a regular fitness center.

In Ashkelon, Friday's attack left more visible damage.

The shattered windows of the apartment building's ground floor, where office space was under renovation, had yet to be replaced.

A car whose rear window was also destroyed when the rocket hit nearby was still parked in the small lot.

Glass shards littered the sidewalk all around the building.

But half a block away, it was a normal day for French immigrant David Baruch-El. He manned the counter in a hardware store that also sells toys and cutlery.

Outside his store, not far from the beach, he had hung rubber boats. Leaning against the window were rubber rafts and inner tubes. Balls tied up in a net hung from the cement awning.

Customers flowed in and out. Baruch-El said that it was in all ways a normal day.

On Friday morning, he was in the parking lot on his way to open the store, when the siren rang.

He understood immediately what was happening and sought refuge behind the wall of a building.

Within moments there was an explosion. The ground and the building shook. "It felt like an earthquake," Baruch-El said.

He held his ground for a bit, fearful that a second rocket was on its way, before going to find out what had happened.

He filmed what he saw on his iPhone and showed the Post shots of that morning.

The tall, slim, dark-haired man came to Ashkelon six months ago, in spite of the rockets, because he thought it would be a good place to live.

He is not deterred. "I came to strengthen the country. I am a very strong Zionist."

Similarly, he had no problem continuing to work in a store that lacked an area protected against rockets.

"You can't change your fate. If you are supposed to die, you will die," Baruch-El said.

Illustrations/Photos:
Photo;
Caption: FRENCH OLEH David Baruch-El outside his Ashkelon store
yesterday. 'You can't change your fate.' ..CR:Tovah Lazaroff

(Copyright 2010 The Jerusalem Post)

FED: Wong unsure of success at Copenhagen


AAP General News (Australia)
12-18-2009
FED: Wong unsure of success at Copenhagen

SYDNEY, Dec 18 AAP - Climate Change Minister Penny Wong has cast doubt that frantic
last minute negotiations will achieve agreement at the UN Climate Change Summit in Copenhagen.

She said world leaders met till 2am on Friday (Danish time) before handing negotiations
on to their representatives who met from 3am until 8am. World leaders have since resumed
meeting.

"You'd have to say that things are pretty tough," she told ABC Television on Friday
night, just ahead of the final day of the summit.

"There's a lot of work still going on but you'd have to say there's a very real possibility
that we will not reach agreement.

"We are short of time and there still remains many disagreements between nations."

Senator Wong said the negotiations were stuck on the same issues - the nature of the
agreement, the transparency that's associated with developing country actions and the
need to ensure that developing country actions are put into an international agreement.

"Unfortunately we're still having difficulty getting movement from either side on those issues."

The US threw its weight behind a plan for rich countries to find $US100 billion ($A112.78
billion) a year by 2020 to help poor countries tackle climate change. Money has been a
major stumbling block at the talks.

Senator Wong said that announcement had not led to the hoped for breakthrough.

"That has not - to date - been enough to shift some of the issues in the negotiations," she said.

But she said negotiators had not given up.

"There are a lot of people working very hard to try in these last few hours to broker agreement."

Leaders from more than 130 countries are in Copenhagen.

Leaders are expected to decide on a "Copenhagen Agreement" on Friday afternoon but
talks could go through the night.

AAP jlw/mn

KEYWORD: SUMMIT WONG

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

WA: Pomersbach faces uncertain future after alleged assault


AAP General News (Australia)
08-10-2009
WA: Pomersbach faces uncertain future after alleged assault

By Justin Chadwick

PERTH, Aug 10 AAP - Luke Pomersbach's international career could be over before it
ever really began after the troubled cricketer was charged with assaulting a police officer
while attempting to escape custody.

Pomersbach has been suspended indefinitely by the Western Australian Cricket Association
(WACA) and faces an uncertain future after police alleged the talented 24-year-old, who
made his Twenty20 debut for Australia against New Zealand in 2007, was involved in two
alcohol-fuelled hit-and-run incidents in Perth on Sunday night before resisting arrest.

During an alleged struggle to restrain Pomersbach, a police officer was pushed into
a window of the cricketer's City Beach house.

The officer required hospital treatment for minor cuts and grazes to his elbow.

Pomersbach has been charged with failing to stop, failing to accompany police, driving
with an alcohol level in excess of 0.08, assaulting a public officer, obstructing police
and escaping legal custody.

He will appear in the Perth Magistrates Court on Friday.

Pomersbach, a hard-hitting middle-order batsman who has also made his mark in the lucrative
Indian Premier League for Kings XI Punjab, has been plagued by off-field dramas throughout
his promising career.

In 2007, Pomersbach and Warriors teammate Shaun Marsh were suspended by the WACA for
engaging in a marathon drinking session just days before a match against South Australia
in Adelaide.

Earlier this year, Pomersbach was stood down from a WA Twenty20 fixture after failing
to turn up for a club game.

The WACA said neither Marsh nor any other Warriors players had any involvement in Pomersbach's
latest misadventure.

WACA chief executive Graeme Wood and WA coach Tom Moody spoke to Pomersbach via telephone
on Monday before deciding to suspend the star batsman from all pre-season training commitments
until the matter was dealt with by the courts.

Pomersbach, who has plundered 1,570 runs at an average of 43.61 in 22 first-class matches,
has previously spoken about his hopes of one day representing Australia in Test cricket.

But after being suspended for the third time in less than two years, those dreams are
in grave danger of becoming just that - dreams.

WA Premier Colin Barnett said he hoped the incident did not ruin Pomersbach's cricketing career.

"He is a very talented sportsman who could go on to greater things in cricket and perhaps
go on and play for Australia," Mr Barnett told reporters.

"It is a tragedy that he has found himself in the situation, that he has behaved this
way. I hope there is support for him.

" ... I hope it does not finish his cricket career - but right now he is in a lot of trouble."

Police allege that at about 9.30pm (WST) on Sunday, shortly after Australia wrapped
up the fourth Ashes Test in England, Pomersbach was driving while intoxicated when his
car crashed into the back of another car in the western Perth suburb of City Beach.

Pomersbach allegedly fled the scene in the Toyota Prado and 15 minutes later hit a
skip, slamming the loaded bin four metres into the pergola of a house.

Police claim he reversed the car and drove away, leaving an oil trail that led to his
nearby home.

"He was spoken to by police and as he was being placed in the rear of a police sedan
he informed police that he did not want to accompany them and tried to leave," police
spokesman Sergeant Greg Lambert said.

"A struggle developed when police tried to restrain the man, during which a police
officer was pushed backward into a window of the house, causing it to break.

"The man eventually managed to break free and ran away from the scene.

"A police dog and his handler were called in and tracked the man through sand dunes
before finding him and taking him into custody."

AAP jsc/jl/mn

KEYWORD: POMERSBACH WRAP

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

Fed: Clinton thanks Aust for friendship and leadership


AAP General News (Australia)
02-16-2009
Fed: Clinton thanks Aust for friendship and leadership

HILLARY CLINTON's thanked Australia for its friendship and leadership in Asia .. as
she heads to the region on her first overseas visit as America's top diplomat.

Ms CLINTON's breaking with tradition to head to Asia .. rather than Europe or the Middle
East .. for her maiden voyage as US secretary of state.

She'll visit Japan .. Indonesia .. South Korea and China.

In a major foreign policy speech before her departure .. Ms CLINTON's signalled Asia
Pacific relations will be just as important as trans-Atlantic partnerships for the Obama
administration.

She's made special mention of Australia .. which missed out a place on the itinerary
.. sympathising over the devastating Victorian bushfires.

AAP RTV so/kms/tm/af

KEYWORD: US AUST (CANBERRA)

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

Qld: Calls for elective surgery bans


AAP General News (Australia)
08-28-2008
Qld: Calls for elective surgery bans

BRISBANE, Aug 28 AAP - A Queensland medical emergency specialist is calling for statewide
bans on elective surgery to free up beds.

Australasian College for Emergency Medicine Queensland chairwoman Sylvia Andrew-Starkey
said banning elective surgery, including surgery for cancer patients, would reduce the
waiting list at hospitals.

This follows Townsville's public hospital using ambulances as makeshift beds and cancelling
elective surgery to cope with the demand.

Ms Andrew-Starkey said patients were sitting in waiting rooms and corridors for 24
hours at hospitals.

"Patients don't generally sit in waiting rooms for 24 hours - they sit in corridors,"

she told ABC Radio today.

"This is a regular occurrence. It's been the worst I have seen it in a good number of years.

"Elective surgery is the only thing we have any control over.

"We need something radical, like putting (elective) cancer surgery on hold."

She said the Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospitals, Princess Alexandra and Logan hospitals
are forced to go on bypass, meaning ambulances are redirected to other hospitals because
they could not cope with the number of patients needing beds.

Australian Medical Association Queensland president Dr Chris Davis said banning elective
surgery may become a necessity but he did not agree with it.

"We need to get away from 100 per cent occupancy (at hospitals) and get it down to
80 per cent to cope during the peak demand," Dr Davis said.

"We need about 20 per cent more beds in hospitals across Queensland."

Queensland Health Minister Stephen Robertson said an elective surgery freeze was unnecessary.

"We are building more hospitals. We have open 778 new hospital beds over the last couple
of years, we have opened new emergency departments at Prince Charles Hospital, expanded
the emergency departments at Redcliffe, Caboolture and I could go on," Mr Robertson told
ABC Radio today.

"We have population growth of about two per cent a year yet our emergency department
presentations are increasing by 10 per cent a year and in some parts of the state like
the Gold Coast and Townsville over 30 per cent a year."

Despite this Mr Robertson said the state had the infrastructure to support the population growth.

AAP peb/pjo/jfm/mn

KEYWORD: HEALTH QLD

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

Qld: Electricity workers walk off the job


AAP General News (Australia)
04-23-2008
Qld: Electricity workers walk off the job

More industrial action is expected this week at power distributor Ergon Energy .. after
800 staff from the Queensland government-owned electricity distributor temporarily walked
off the job yesterday.

And there could be some disruption to supplies from rolling stoppages by linesmen ..

mechanics and electrical fitters starting today.

The Electrical Trades Union says more action is on the way tomorrow (Thursday).

Meanwhile .. a four-hour stoppage by the Australian Services Union yesterday affected
administrative .. clerical and technical staff.

The Australian Services Union says talks on an enterprise bargaining agreement have broken down.

The union says workers are seeking better pay and conditions .. including an allowance
to attract and retain staff in some areas.

AAP RTV rad/pjo/wz/af

KEYWORD: ERGON (BRISBANE)

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

Qld: Bulk carrier successfully refloated


AAP General News (Australia)
12-19-2007
Qld: Bulk carrier successfully refloated

BRISBANE, Dec 19 AAP - A bulk carrier which ran aground in Gladstone Harbour, becoming
the second vessel to get stuck in the same central Queensland port area this month, has
been refloated.

The Grain Harvester was on its way from Hay Point to Brazil when it stopped to refuel
at Gladstone Harbour.

The 220-metre carrier, fully loaded with coal, was leaving the port at about 5.30pm
(AEST) yesterday when it ran aground near Gatcombe Channel, about 3.7 kilometres downstream
from where the bulk carrier MV Endeavour River ran aground on December 2.

A spokesman for Maritime Safety Queensland said five tugs successfully refloated the
Grain Harvester about 3am (AEST) today on the rising tide.

"It's been towed out to an outside mooring clear of the harbour," he said.

"There's been no pollution and it will now undergo a full survey and inspection."

It took salvage crews five days to refloat the Endeavour River.

The 75,000-tonne bauxite carrier had sailed with a full load from Weipa on Cape York
bound for the Queensland Alumina Ltd (QAL) wharf at Gladstone when it became stuck in
mud.

AAP rm/jt/jlw

KEYWORD: CARRIER REFLOATED

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

Vic: Police charge second man over Campbellfield shooting


AAP General News (Australia)
08-07-2007
Vic: Police charge second man over Campbellfield shooting

MELBOURNE, Aug 7 AAP - Victorian detectives have charged a second man over a shooting
outside a pizza shop in Melbourne's north that left three teenagers injured.

The 19-year-old man from suburban Roxburgh Park has been charged with attempted murder,
Victoria Police said.

The man had been under police guard in St Vincents hospital overnight while he recovered
from injuries from a separate incident involving a car accident on Saturday night.

He was arrested late yesterday along with a 19-year-old man from Meadow Heights, following
the shooting outside the shop in Barry Road, Campbellfield, about 9pm (AEST) on Saturday.

The incident followed an argument between two groups of youths in the shop which spilled
into the car park, where one of the men allegedly pulled out a shotgun.

An 18-year-old Coolaroo man was taken to the Royal Melbourne Hospital with serious
shotgun wounds to his stomach and upper leg.

The two others, brothers aged 16 and 19, were taken to the Northern Hospital with minor wounds.

The 19-year-old Meadow Heights man was charged with attempted murder, affray and intentionally
causing serious injury.

Both men, who have been remanded in custody, were expected to appear before Melbourne
Magistrates' Court today.

AAP sam/gfr/maur/de

KEYWORD: GUNMAN CHARGE

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

NSW: Controversial change to organ transplant policy


AAP General News (Australia)
02-14-2007
NSW: Controversial change to organ transplant policy

Transplant doctors will be able to remove organs from people whose heart and circulation
have stopped .. but who aren't brain dead.

Fairfax newspapers report the change .. drafted as a NSW government policy .. can increase
the availability of kidneys and other vital organs by 15 per cent.

Medical experts say organs deteriorate rapidly after blood circulation stops .. and
so they must be removed quickly.

Once cardiac death is confirmed .. waiting for brain activity to ultimately cease after
.. can apparently hinder the process.

But doctors won't be allowed to make any physical preparation to a person's body ..

while the would-be donor is still on artificial ventilation.







Only 204 Australians became donors after death in 2005 .. which resulted in the removal
of 736 transplantable organs.

The transplant waiting list stands at 1700 .. and is expected to blow out further ..

because of an epidemic of Type 2 diabetes .. a major cause of kidney failure.

AAP RTV vpm/nc

KEYWORD: TRANSPLANT (SYDNEY)

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

Vic: Armed robber escapes on bike


AAP General News (Australia)
08-28-2006
Vic: Armed robber escapes on bike

A bandit's escaped on a bicycle after holding up a Melbourne bank.

He walked into the Commonwealth Bank in Wattletree Road .. East Malvern .. just after
the doors opened .. pulled out a gun and demanded money.

Police says he escaped with the cash on a turquoise bicycle.

AAP RTV jrd/gfr/bart

KEYWORD: BANDIT (MELBOURNE)

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

Diary for Friday, April 21, 2006


AAP General News (Australia)
04-21-2006
Diary for Friday, April 21, 2006
EVENTS LISTED IN CHRONOLOGICAL ORDER AND LOCAL TIME UNLESS OTHERWISE STATED:

ADELAIDE
No items listed.

BRISBANE
1100 - Griffith University Pro Vice Chancellor Health Professor Allan Cripps, Dean of
Dentistry and Oral Health, Professor Newell Johnson, Dr Sandie McCarthy and Barambah Regional
Medical Service officials will sign a Memorandum of Understanding to facilitate future
joint initiatives in health research & health education. Barambah Regional Medical Service,
cnr Broadway and Bligh sts, Cherbourg. Contact: Shona Upson 3735 6458 or 0418 799 544.

1230 - Special Rural Press Club lunch with speakers including Tully banana grower Patrick
Leahy, Babinda canegrower Guido Ghidella, and Tableland avocado grower Jim Kochi talking
about cyclone experiences. United Services Club, 143 Wickham Terrace, Brisbane. Contact:
Jane Milburn 0408 787 964.

CANBERRA
1100 - Media preview of exhibition Exiles and Emigrants with curator Patricia Tryon Macdonald.

Temporary Exhibition Gallery, National Museum of Australia, Acton Peninsula, Acton, ACT.

Contact: Leanda Kitchen 6208 5338 or 0438 620 710.

DARWIN
No items listed.

HOBART
No items listed.

MELBOURNE
1000 - Melbourne Holden Dealers Group president Dale Smith to hand over Special Edition
Holden Monaro to top auction bidder John Virgona for the Good Friday Day appeal. Royal
Children's Hospital front entrance. Contact: Julie Webber 9345 5130 or 0407 327 418.

1000 - Federal Minister for Transport and Regional Services Warren Truss and Transport
Minister Peter Batchelor to launch $120 million Dynon Port Rail AusLink project. Enterprize
Road Rail level crossing, Port of Melbourne (Melway 42 K7). Contact: Kylie Butler 02 6277
7680 or 0417 652 488.

1215 - Students from West Footscray Primary School to join Western Bulldogs CEO Campbell
Rose and players to plant tubs of vegetables as part of the Multicultural School Gardens
program. Whitten Oval, Barkley Street, Footscray (Melway 41 K4). Contact: Rebecca O'Riley
9680 6132 or 0411 407 776 or Ron Smith 9818 5700 or 0417 329 201.

PERTH
1230 - Former NSW premier Bob Carr talks to the Australian Institute of International
Affairs (AIIA) and Australian American Leadership Dialogue about the state of the alliance
after Iraq and Afghanistan. University Club at University of Western Australia. Contact:
08 9367 8102.

SYDNEY
1000 - Demonstration of Australian cancer robot in preparation of a national screening
campaign. Enterix Ltd, 15/2 Eden Park Drive, North Ryde. Contact: Aaron Parnell 4722 2252
or Bill Pickering 0404 074 299.

1100 - News conference for Falun Gong torture case appeal. Outside NSW Supreme Court,
Macquarie St, Sydney. Contact: Kay Rubacek 0404 894 750 or John Deller 0410 979 384.

1230 - Cyanide Watch, the campaign to stop the transport of bulk cyanide by road and rail,
will conduct a Speak Out. Near the Rotunda in Macquarie St, Dubbo. Contact: Graeme Dunstan
0407 951 688.

1400 - University of Western Sydney hosts lecture by cultural expert Professor Toby Miller.

The Gallery, Female Orphan School, Bldg EZ, Parramatta Campus. Contact: Amanda Whibley
9678 7084 or 0418 438 399.

1400 - ANZAC international military tattoo. Sydney SuperDome. Contact: Emma Collison Publicity
9699 5199 or 0418 584 795.

1600 - Presentation of Honorary Doctorate of Literature to Neil Armfield. The Great Hall,
University of Sydney. Contact: Christine Fogg 9351 2261 or 0423 782 603.

1730 - Vanunu freedom candlelight vigil. Wynyard Park, opposite Israel Trade Commission,
York St, Sydney. Contact: Jennifer Killen 0422 520 935 or Peter Murphy 0418 312 301.

SPORT
RUGBY LEAGUE -
Round 7 - to April 25
1930 - Parramatta v Wests Tigers, Parramatta Stadium
AFL -
Round 4 - to April 25 -
1940 - Carlton v Hawthorn, Telstra Dome
RUGBY - Super 14 - Round 11
1735 (AEST) - Chiefs v Cheetahs, Hamilton, NZ
1940 (AEST) - Reds v Stormers, Brisbane
2145 (AEST) - Force v Crusaders, Perth
SURFING - 2006 Foster's Mens World Tour -
Rip Curl Pro, Bells Beach Vic - to April 21
MOTORSPORT - V8 Supercars C'ship series -
Round 2 - to April 23
PlaceMakers V8 Supercars, Pukekohe Park Raceway, NZ
TENNIS - Fed Cup -
Asia/Oceania Zone Group I playoffs - to April 22
Olympic Park Centre Court, Seoul, South Korea
competing nations: Australia, Chinese Taipei, India, Korea, New Zealand, Philippines, Uzbekistan
TENNIS - Masters Series - to April 23
Monte Carlo
GALLOPS -
Wodonga
Ipswich
Grafton
Canberra
TROTS -
Harold Park
Mildura
Gold Coast
Gawler
Bendigo
Wagga
Gloucester Park
New Zealand
GREYHOUNDS -
Richmond
Geelong
Albion Park
Casino
The Gardens
Mandurah
Traralgon

AAP RTV kaj/smb/cjh/nf/jv/psm/

KEYWORD: DIARY FRIDAY APRIL 21, 2006

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

понедельник, 27 февраля 2012 г.

AVC

AVC See additional voluntary contribution.

We jumped on the live reference bandwagon, and we love the ride!

Our reference numbers were declining, and we wanted to offer live help online. But as a medium-sized library with limited resources, we knew we couldn't go it alone. That's when the 24/7 Reference bandwagon rolled into town.

Patrons were arriving in droves to use our Internet stations. Web page statistics were skyrocketing. Remote accesses to databases were escalating. We were busier than ever. But our reference questions were steadily decreasing. We began to wonder how we, a medium-sized public library with a limited staff, could provide a librarian's expertise to our online community members when ever they needed information? We discovered that a real-time reference collaborative would require small commitments of staff time and money, and decided to become players on the live reference bandwagon.

All About Our Home Territory

Memorial Hall Library is the public library of Andover, Mass., a small, affluent New England town of 30,000 that has always provided strong financial support to its library. It was built in 1873 with funds that had been raised to create a memorial to Andover Civil War veterans. The building serves as a meeting place for town boards and community organizations, making it a central gathering place on Main Street. With the reorganization of the Massachusetts library system in 1993, Memorial Hall was awarded the contract for the Northeast Massachusetts Regional Library System Research and Reference Center.

We have a history of offering innovative services, including a netLibrary collection, Gemstar e-books, audiobooks on MP3 players, and an e-mail newsletter. Memorial Hall is open 68.5 hours a week, has a reference staff of 10 and answers an average of 60,000 reference questions a year. However, like other libraries, we saw our reference statistics slowly decreasing as the number of people using our public Internet computers increased. We eventually asked ourselves, "How can we reach these patrons who feel they can find anything they need online without our help?"

We did see our patrons using our online services. We provided new services over the home page and upgraded the public computers, and our patrons continually asked for more: "When can we request books online?" "When can we renew titles online?" "Can we access the magazine databases from home?" As we waited for our network to choose a new automated library system that could provide more remote access, we were always on the lookout for additional services that would make our library more essential to the life of the community.

Starting to Play with Live Reference

In May 2000, our director, James Sutton, read "The Librarian and Mr. Jeeves" by Steve Coffman and Susan McGlamery. (1) The article described a real-time live reference service available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. The authors envisioned a collaborative effort from libraries in all the time zones of the world. Would a real-time, live reference service appeal to our patrons and fulfill our mission, as the Northeast Massachusetts Regional Library System Research and Reference Center, to explore new technologies? Glenda Schaake, coordinator of reference services, and Eleanor Sathan, reference librarian, were assigned the task of investigating what live reference "wagons" were available.

We looked at LivePerson and Human-Click. Both required the individual library to load and maintain the software on its own server, as well as to monitor all hours of service. This is a complicated, time-consuming, and very expensive undertaking for a library of our size. We thought about the LSSI program, but the software was too costly for us. And we certainly didn't have the staff to man a live reference service 168 hours a week--essentially to be available whenever a question popped into an Andover resident's head. The collaborative effort proposed by Coffman and McGlamery seemed to solve the problems that we saw with other vendors. The 2417 Reference collaborative service maintained the software and the server, the members shared monitoring the hours of service, and the monthly fee fell within the library system's budget. In July of 2000, Eleanor met Susan McGlamery at the ALA conference. Susan had become the director of 24/7 Reference, a project of the Metropolitan Cooperative Library System, supported b y federal LSTA funding and administered by the California State Library. Eleanor was impressed with Susan's enthusiasm and vision for this new area of library technology and reference services. Susan agreed to send us a test version of the Cisco/Webline software that the 24/7 Reference project was using. We were eager to test the software. Unfortunately, it proved to be difficult to use.

In September 2000, the project software changed to eGain. With it, we began to experiment using computers that were side-by-side within the library, alternating the roles of the librarian and the patron, making up questions as we went along. It was essential to evaluate the software from both the patron's and the librarian's point of view. Initially, we had Internet problems that caused broken connections between the two. The experiment became very frustrating and we put the project aside for a while. Eventually, our IT department suggested that the software might work better if the patron was at a remote location. Eleanor used her home computer and chatted with Glenda at the library, which gave a more realistic feel to the live reference. Indeed, there were fewer broken connections. The software met our needs of pushing Web pages and co-browsing with the patron. The collaborative required our librarians to monitor only 10 hours per week in return form 24/7 live reference coverage. Sof we decided to jump on t he 24/7 bandwagon. The next step was to train our librarians.

Drumming Up Local Support

Susan McGlamery e-mailed us a series of exercises that demonstrated the elements of the eGain software. Also, the exercises addressed the adaptations necessary to modify the traditional reference interview for the live reference format. The software included canned scripts that could be sent to the patron, allowing the chat interaction to flow smoothly and quickly. This gives the librarian time to search for answers, while keeping the patron engaged. After working through and adapting the exercises, we trained five other librarians, one to cover each weekday morning shift and two alternates. Those whom we asked to do "live" reference were eager, but not without trepidation. Susan came to Andover in August 2001 to meet our staff and to offer additional training. This gave our staff a great boost. With her encouragement and training we pulled our librarians up onto the wagon with us.

Susan asked us to cover 8 a.m. to 10 a.m. EST, Monday through Friday. We were not able to hire additional staff but asked staff to come in a half-hour early, at 8 a.m., on their assigned days. All were glad to do this, as they were enthusiastic about the service and loved leaving at 4:30 p.m. instead of 5 p.m. We are fortunate that the staff has been flexible in trading days to cover meetings and vacations. In all this time, we have never missed a day, even for snow.

On Sept. 17, 2001, we began to offer 24/7 reference service. In typical librarian fashion, we were afraid that we weren't ready to handle a deluge of questions from the public. After all, Ask Jeeves receives millions of questions a day. But when the deluge did not materialize, we decided that we needed a marketing campaign. We didn't have funds to hire a professional marketing consultant, so we devised our own plan to reach our patrons.

* The local paper ran the headline story "Library to Answer Questions 24/7."

* We gave the 24/7 logo a prominent place on our home page.

* Staff added the logo to pages throughout our Web site.

* The town of Andover added links to 24/7 Reference on its Web page.

* We demonstrated the service to school librarians.

* We announced the new service through MHL-Mail, our e-mail alert newsletter.

* We added a signature file on our e-mail responses: "Try asking your reference question live on 24/7 chat at www.mhl.org."

* Editors added articles to the Friends' newsletter and regional newsletters.

* Employees distributed brochures and signs throughout the library.

* Periodically, reminders of 24/7 are included in the library column of the local newspaper.

* A PowerPoint slide show advertises 24/7 on our local cable station.

With these steps, we saw our statistics climb from fewer than 40 to over 100 questions a month.

The community loved the service. Feedback included comments like "This is ABSOLUTELY AMAZING!! This is what the Internet should be all about! Rock on Memorial Hall!" "I loved the program, it was just like Instant Message except it got me an answer I really needed. Without it I would have a check minus in English." Students are avid users, logging on between classes for answers, and disappearing as quickly as they came, hurrying back to class.

The Wagon Crosses into Eastern Standard Time

When we joined 24/7 Reference, we were the only member library outside of California. This represented the first step in Susan's vision for a worldwide collaboration. 24/7 requested that we cover the early morning hours, 5 a.m. to 7 a.m. PST, when their staff was answering questions from their homes. This allowed the California staff to work on archived questions, while our staff handled the live questions. This also fit nicely into our schedule, as it took only 1 hour a day from our reference desk schedule. As the West Coast slowly awoke, the East Coast was already awake and ready to have questions answered.

A sentiment often heard from librarians is, "How can a librarian from miles away answer questions for my patrons?" With our coming on board, the collaborative now had a test case to see if librarians could handle local questions. The 24/7 software includes an online page of manuals for each library, which include circulation rules, hours, links to their online catalog, electronic databases, and the home page. This is a tremendous help in answering local library questions. In addition, we use instant messaging to give the Memorial Hall librarian a contact in California for local information and 24/7 procedures. We are able to work as online teams to discuss our search strategies and to troubleshoot technical problems. We all have faceless friends on the West Coast who keep us informed of the balmy California conditions in January.

The Internet Public Library developed an e-mail management software program named QRC, which the 24/7 Reference collaborative has adapted to transfer questions to different categories or follow-up folders. Each day we check the local folder for questions that have come in through our home page. If we can add further information from our local materials, we e-mail the patron. Examples of local questions that we have answered are: "Does the winter parking ban extend to all streets in Andover?" "Who owned the Andover Spa in the 1960s?" and "Do you have a list of local nursery schools?" Many patrons are amazed at the additional information that we provide, and they take the time to e-mail their thanks.

When other libraries outside of California are considering joining the collaborative, Susan refers them to Memorial Hall. We are happy to share our experience and assure them that their patrons will be well served.

Collaborative Reference: A Service to Beat the Band

We are able to add 24-hour, 7-day-a-week "live reference" to our menu of reference services. As Joe Janes says,"... the synchronous/asynchronous thing isn't an either/or proposition. It's a when/how/for whom proposition." (2) In addition to walkin, telephone, and e-mail, we have added yet another way for our patrons to reach a librarian. We can answer their questions by pushing them Web pages. We can also use co-browsing to show patrons how to use our catalog, electronic databases, and the Web. The community is impressed with the cutting-edge technology that our library offers.

After the patron clicks on the "Talk to a Librarian" icon, he or she has the choice of contacting a librarian by telephone, email, or live.

Because many patrons now choose to e-mail us, the number of e-mail questions has more than doubled. Before 24/7 we averaged 20 a month; now we receive 59 to 60 a month. Our patrons love the e-mail exchanges, and the staff gets great positive feedback for its efforts.

Our 24/7 reference staff members continue to develop their skills in searching the Internet, a variety of online catalogs, and electronic databases. They are able to juggle multiple windows and multiple patrons. Staffers who do not monitor the service have also benefited from being part of the reference desk team. This is most evident in the negotiation of e-mail questions. They have adapted the skills from the virtual reference interviews and now might use several e-mail exchanges to clarify a question. Staff is more confident in making referrals when necessary.

Best of all, live reference has made being a librarian more exciting! We are reaching out to our patrons in a new way. We are receiving national attention and joining with colleagues to share ideas and to improve our skills. Glenda and Eleanor have relished the opportunity to speak at the Massachusetts Library Association Convention, American Library Association's RUSA/MARS Pre-conference in Atlanta, and the Virtual Reference Desk Conference in Chicago. We truly feel part of a global library community.

The Journey Continues

News of our successful journey on the 24/7 Reference circuit has reached other librarians in Massachusetts--two more, Boston Public Library and Reading Public Library, have joined the collaborative. Libraries across the state became interested in providing live reference service for their patrons. In response to this interest, the Massachusetts Board of Library Commissioners funded a project called MassAnswers, which has put a 24/7 Reference seat in each of the Regional Reference Centers in the state. Live reference assistance is available to every state resident any time of the day or night, any day of the week. Our experience influenced the decision of the MassAnswers committee to join this collaborative ride.

We hope that our experience encourages you to investigate live reference service for your patrons. More than 2 years have passed since our journey began, and our librarians are as enthusiastic now as when we started. We are proud to be involved in this new, cutting-edge technology.

So jump on the bandwagon with us--we guarantee you'll enjoy the ride!

To Contact the Companies

24/7 Reference

24/7 Reference

3675 Huntington Dr.

Pasadena, CA 91107

310/391-7444

(Fax) 213/228-7579

http://www.247ref.org

LivePerson, Inc.

Human Click

462 Seventh Ave.

New York, NY 10018

212/609-4200

http://liveperson.com

LSSI

Library Systems & Services, LLC

Virtual Reference Toolkit

20250 Century Blvd.

Germantown, MD 20874

301/540-5100

800/638-8725

(Fax) 301/540-5522

http://www.lssi.com

[GRAPH OMITTED]

References

(1.) Coffman, Steve and Susan McGlamery, "The Librarian and Mr. Jeeves." American Libraries, May 2000, pp. 66-69.

(2.) Janes, Joe. "Live Rererence: Too Much, Too Fast?" netconnect, Fall 2002, pp. 12-14.

Glenda Schaake is the coordinator of reference services at Memorial Hall Library in Andover, Mass. She holds an M.L.S. from Simmons College in Boston. Her e-mail address is gschaake@mhl.org. Eleanor Sathan is the regional reference librarian at Memorial Hall Library. She holds an M.L.S. from Simmons College in Boston. Her e-mail address is esathan@mhl.org. Together they co-manage Memorial Hall's virtual reference project and train for MassAnswers.

Terremark Worldwide to Participate in the Kaufman Bros. 4th Annual Emerging Communications Conference.

Business Editors/Technology Writers

MIAMI--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Oct. 11, 2001

Terremark Worldwide will participate in the Kaufman Bros. 4th Annual Emerging Communications Conference on October 16, 2001 at the W Hotel in New York City. There will be a formal presentation on Terremark Worldwide by Manuel D. Medina, Chairman and CEO; Jose Segrera, Chief Financial Officer, will also be in attendance.

Interested investors can access a live audio webcast of the presentation and slide materials, scheduled for 3:15 pm, at http://www.twst.com/econf/mm/kbro/tww.html. A replay of the presentation will be available by the end of the day and will be archived for 60 days.

For more information on Terremark, please visit our website at http://www.terremark.com. For more information on the Kaufman Bros. Conference, please visit http://www.kbro.com/conferences/.

About Terremark Worldwide, Inc./NAP of the Americas

Terremark Worldwide Inc. (AMEX:TWW) is a global leader in facilitating Internet connectivity and providing Internet infrastructure and managed services. Terremark is the owner and operator of the NAP of the Americas, the 5th Tier-1 Network Access Point in the world and the model for TerreNAP(sm) Data Centers the company intends to deploy in emerging markets. The carrier-neutral NAP of the Americas is a state-of-the-art facility providing interconnection between global carriers, ISPs and others as well as connecting fiber networks in Latin America, Europe and Africa to those in the U.S. Terremark is headquartered at 2601 S. Bayshore Drive, 9th Floor, Miami, Florida USA, (305) 856-3200.

Statements contained in this press release may constitute "forward-looking statements" within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Terremark's actual results may differ materially from those set forth in the forward-looking statements due to a number of risks, uncertainties and other factors, as discussed in Terremark's filings with the SEC. These factors include, without limitation, Terremark's ability to obtain funding for its business plans, uncertainty in the demand for Terremark's services or products and Terremark's ability to manage its growth. Terremark does not assume any obligation to update these forward-looking statements.

воскресенье, 26 февраля 2012 г.

Simon's happy to be early bird.

Crowd favourite Fabrice Santoro may have bowed out of the Dubai Tennis Championships for good, but conqueror and compatriot Gilles Simon is still going strong - and relishing an early semi-final on Friday. Santoro, known as the magician for his ability to conjure up a vast array of shots on court, saw his hopes of a dream finale at the Aviation Club ended by the impressive young Frenchman on Thursday afternoon. The 23-year-old Simon struggled to read the variations of spin from the wily 36-year-old early as he lost his serve to be 3-1 down in the first set. But he finally got to grips with his unusual opponent to record a 7-6 (7/3), 6-1 victory. It was the third match the No.3 seed has had to play in the baking afternoon sun on Centre Court, leading many to suggest he was being given a hard ride compared to other top seeds like Novak Djokovic, who have played all their games in the cooler evening conditions. But ahead of his semi-final with top seed Djokovic, which is scheduled for 2pm on Friday, Simon says he is more than happy to be the early riser. "Really I don't care (that the other players have played at night) because it has meant all of my opponents are more tired than me. It is hot but I am used to it," Simon said. "I'm happy to play in the afternoon because, you may use more energy, but then you get more rest. "Some of the matches have not been finishing until after 11pm (Djokovic's match against Jan Hernych didn't finish until after midnight on Wednesday). By that time I am having lots of rest in my room. "I'm looking forward to the semi-final, I will give my all." Simon could have been saying different after Santoro had him bamboozled with his shot variety, ranging from sliced two-handed backhands to volleyed lobs. But despite seeing his serve broken twice in the first set, Simon stuck to his task to take a first-set tie-break. From then there was only going to be one winner and Simon raced through the second set. It may have been a losing ending for 36-year-old Santoro, but the 2002 Dubai champion had noregrets. Dubai fans will no longer see him, while he will be gone from the tennis radar when he hangs up his racquet for good in October. But there is only one thing on his mind come eight months time. "Dubai is a special place to me and I have been very lucky to be able to travel and see new places. [But] I will go home to my country, to my home and to my bed," said Santoro. Simon will now take on Djokovic in the first semi-final today (2pm) after the Serbian world No.3 got the better of rising star Marian Cilic 6-3, 6-4. And Djokovic is hoping the vociferous support from his Serbian fans on Centre Court can help him into the final. "Thanks for the support. When I play in Dubai it always feels like I am at home. Please come back tomorrow." In the other semi-final (7pm), Spanish No,4 seed David Ferrer, who beat Igor Andreeev 7-5, 6-1, will face Richard Gasquet.

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