Wednesday, February 29, 2012

FED:Australia still in the firing line


AAP General News (Australia)
08-24-2011
FED:Australia still in the firing line

By Doug Conway, AAP Senior Correspondent

SYDNEY, AAP - Since September 11, 2001, more Australian civilians have been killed
in terrorist acts than Americans.

It's a chilling reminder that Australians are still key targets in the decade-long
war on terrorism despite all the flak directed towards the US and other allies.

The main reason for this remains the Bali bombings of 2002, described in Britain at
the time as "Australia's own 9/11".

Of the 202 people murdered in the holiday island bombings, 88 were Australian, making
it Australia's worst peacetime calamity abroad.

Four Australians were also among 20 people killed in repeat bombings on the tourist
island three years later, though Australians were not among the nine victims of a car
bomb attack on Australia's embassy in Jakarta in 2004.

Though the Bali atrocities will forever scar the Australian psyche, the fact remains
that all of these attacks occurred in Indonesia.

No such strike has occurred on Australian soil, and many believe that has shaped a
different perspective on terrorism during the past decade than that held by Americans.

"If the Bali bombings had happened in Australia they would have had a much deeper impact
on Australian society," said Australia's top foreign affairs bureaucrat Dennis Richardson,
who was head of ASIO at the time of 9/11.

Similarly, the deaths of 29 Australian soldiers fighting the Taliban have occurred
in Afghanistan.

Australia's toll there, shocking though it has been, is far below that of the US (1648
as at August 6) and Britain (378) as well as Canada (156), France (74), Germany (56),
Denmark (41), Italy (41) and Spain (33).

Though 11 Australians died in the September 11 attacks in New York and Washington that
kick-started the decade of terrorism, geographical distance again seemed to have some
effect on perceptions.

"Our airspace was not closed, as it was in the US and Europe," said Richardson, now
the Foreign Affairs Department secretary.

"It impacted on the American psyche in a way not experienced in Australia.

"Six weeks after 9/11 I was reading the Washington Post and got to page 22 before there
was a single article not related to 9/11."

Richardson experienced another difference when he visited CIA number three Joan Dempsey
in Washington, and asked her about a bag he noticed in the corner of her office.

She told him it was packed with clothes following a standing instruction from CIA Director
George Tenet that if he was out of contact for over 15 minutes she should assume "something
bad" had happened to him.

"We (Australia) never had that experience," Richardson told a Sydney University US
Studies Centre seminar.

Australians have glibly adopted the American shorthand term of "9/11" even though for
them it's back to front; it should be "11/9".

Yet they have no such numerical term for the atrocity that occurred over their own
back fence in Bali on October 12, 2002 - no "12/10" to refer to a slaughter so much closer
to home.

The cold, hard numbers of death show that, per head of population, Bali was fully half
as devastating for Australia as 9/11 was for America.

The wheels of justice in Bali at times seemed to grind slowly, but the resolve of Australian
and Indonesian authorities did produce significant results.

Alleged Bali mastermind Hambali was captured and is in US custody at an undisclosed location.

Three of the perpetrators - Imam Samudra, Amrozi Nurhasyim and Huda bin Abdul Haq -
were executed by firing squad in 2008 on the island prison of Nusakambangan.

Dulmatin, believed responsible for setting off one of the bombs with a mobile phone,
was killed in a shoot-out with Indonesian police in Jakarta in 2010.

Abu Bakar Bashir, alleged spiritual leader of the violent Islamist group Jemaah Islamiah,
was found guilty and sentenced to two and a half years imprisonment, though served only
18 months because of his indirect involvement.

Umar Patek, the last of the key operatives captured, has been transferred from Pakistan
to Indonesia to face trial.

And terrorism's master puppeteer, Osama bin Laden, has been killed by US forces in Pakistan.

Attorney-General Robert McClelland says that during the past decade Australia has foiled
four terrorist plots with the potential to cause mass casualties.

Of the 38 people charged with terrorism-related offences, 37 have been Australian citizens
and 21 were born here, adding fuel to concerns about home-grown terrorism.

Twenty-three of the 38 have been convicted.

Dennis Richardson believes it's too easy to overlook those successes when assessing
the past decade.

"It's important not to lose sight of the bullets we have dodged," he said.

If a terrorist plot had succeeded, if 100 or 200 people had been killed in Sydney or
Melbourne, he argues, "what would be the nature of our discussions today?"

John Howard, prime minister at the time of the Bali bombings, described them as a reminder
that the war against terrorism had to continue in an uncompromising and unconditional
fashion.

"Any other course of action would be folly," he wrote in his 2010 book Lazarus Rising.

"It is impossible to escape the reach of terrorism by imagining that if you roll yourself
into a little ball you will not be noticed.

"Terrorism is not dispensed according to some hierarchy of disdain; it is dispensed
in an indiscriminate, evil, hateful fashion."

The fight continues around the clock to this day, unseen by most civilians.

Australian Customs and Border Protection Service boss Michael Pezzullo calls it a "daily
arms wrestle".

"Not a day goes by when I don't see a fragment (of information) that has to be pieced
together with other fragments," he said.

"Some are directed at us."

Such painstaking work, in cooperation with authorities in other countries, is part
of the unrelenting effort to prevent another Bali.

Or worse, a Bali on Australian soil.

AAP dc/hn/jlw

KEYWORD: SEPT11 BALI (AAP BACKGROUNDER)

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

Main stories in today's AM program


AAP General News (Australia)
02-22-2008
Main stories in today's AM program

SYDNEY, Feb 22 AAP - Main stories in today's AM program:

* The Greens are worried that the federal government won't heed the warnings to cut
greenhouse emissions.

* Environment Minister Penny Wong says the government understands climate change is
a challenge that needs tackling.

* US Republican frontrunner John McCain has been implicated in a sex scandal.

* Protesters in the Serbian capital Belgrade have set fire to the US embassy as part
of a rally against Kosovo's declaration of independence.

* Telstra CEO Sol Trujillo is now …

'Blame the Zionists, and don't kill more than 20 people at a time.' Syrian opposition releases what it claims is regime's crackdown strategy. Assad says he has ordered cabinet reshuffle, detainees fr


OREN KESSLER; ReutersOREN KESSLER and Reuters
Jerusalem Post
04-15-2011
'Blame the Zionists, and don't kill more than 20 people at a time.' Syrian opposition releases what it claims is regime's crackdown strategy. Assad says he has ordered cabinet reshuffle, detainees freed
Byline: OREN KESSLER; ReutersOREN KESSLER and Reuters
Edition: Daily
Section: News
Type: News

Syrian President Bashar Assad on Thursday ordered the release of all detainees arrested in a wave of protests, except those who committed crimes "against the nation and the citizens," state media said.

The move came following the exposure of a document opposition groups said detailed the regime's intelligence strategy for clamping down on the monthlong uprising.
Syria's state news agency SANA said the prisoner release followed a meeting between Assad and "religious and popular" figures.

Assad also announced a cabinet reshuffle, but critics said the move means little in Syria, where the executive and judiciary have been sidelined under 48 years of Ba'athist rule and power is held firmly by the Assad family and the security apparatus.

The new government is headed by Adel Safar, who was agriculture minister in the government of Naji al-Otari that resigned on March 29, more than a week after protests broke out in the southern city of Deraa and spread to other parts of the country. The Syrian president retained veteran diplomat Walid Muallem as foreign minister, appointed intelligence operative Ibrahim al-Shaar as interior minister and Muhammad al-Jililati, head of the Damascus Stock Exchange, as finance minister.

Syrian opposition figures revealed a document on Wednesday purportedly drafted by senior intelligence officials detailing a plan to infiltrate anti-government protesters and detain and assassinate their leaders. The document, which a US official said was likely authentic, also includes plans to blame the country's unrest on "Zionists" and other foreign agitators.

The text could not be immediately verified, but the US official said there was a "strong likelihood" it is real. "It would not be surprising if the Syrians are plotting the use of dirty methods to discredit opponents," he said. The document was posted on Wednesday to Facebook, and a translation provided by NBC News.

"No leniency shall be observed with regards to smearing the image of our highest symbol" - a reference to Assad - "regardless of the costs," according to an English translation.

The plan, dated March 23, also calls for banning news media coverage of the protests and punishing those "who convey any news that does not serve the country," adding that the security services should "show no leniency in this matter."

The document outlines a three-pronged media, security and political plan to suppress the protests. "Link the anti-regime demonstrations and protests to figures hated by the Syrian populace such as the usual Saudi and Lebanese figures, and connecting the lot of them to Zionism and to America," it says.

The plan also calls on security agents to work via Facebook to "jam up" dissent using "pseudonyms" to pose as political dissidents and then gather intelligence about the opposition. Opposition figures should also become the target of lawsuits designed to "smear their moral and religious reputations."

The text calls for blocking off the locations of political protests, and inserting civilian-clothed security agents "in an attempt to cause a state of chaos."

To further "deceive the enemy," snipers should be concealed among protesters and be given the leeway to shoot some security agents or army officers, "which will further help the situation by provoking the animosity of the army against the protesters."

Any areas where the protests get out of control should be isolated, with the electricity and Internet links cut off. The plan calls for the "arrest of key influential figures in that area, and if the situation is critical, to kill them."

But the document also cautions that when security forces and snipers enter protest areas, "the number of people killed must not exceed twenty each time, because it would let them be more easily noticed and exposed, which may lead to situations of foreign intervention."

The state news agency said snipers killed a soldier on Thursday in the coastal city of Banias, where authorities had been trying to ease tensions after large protests against Assad.

Rights campaigners said authorities had agreed to replace secret police in Banias with army patrols as part of a deal to reduce tension in the restive city.

The agency quoted a source saying "a group of armed snipers shot today a number of army members while they patrolled the city of Banias... One was martyred and another wounded."

In the capital, several hundred students marched in a pro- democracy protest at Damascus University for a second day.

Also on Thursday, Lebanese border police detained two people trying to drive cars filled with weapons into Syria, security sources said. "The cars had AK-47s, semi-automatic weapons, and some bombs," one security source said. The men, a Lebanese and a Syrian, were detained late on Wednesday in the border area of the eastern Bekaa Valley.

David Schenker and Andrew Tabler, Syria experts at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, wrote on Thursday that the moment of truth has arrived for the Assad regime, and that protests following Friday prayers this week could prove fateful in determining whether it survives. If the government's approach so far is any indication, it will undoubtedly be a bloody day," they wrote.

"Washington should issue a strong public warning before Friday that the regime will be held accountable should it respond violently to peaceful demonstrations."(c) Copyright Jerusalem Post. All rights reserved.

Illustrations/Photos:
Caption: Bashar Assad

(Copyright 2011 The Jerusalem Post)

FED:Floods kick off COAG agenda


AAP General News (Australia)
02-13-2011
FED:Floods kick off COAG agenda

CANBERRA, Feb 13 AAP - A new strategy to tackle natural disasters has kicked off the
agenda at the Council of Australian Governments (COAG) meeting in Canberra.

State and territory leaders are locked in talks with Prime Minister Julia Gillard at
Parliament House, with the key discussions focusing on a new health deal.

But sources close to the talks say the first hour was devoted to receiving an update
on the floods recovery and the damage to north Queensland from Cyclone Yasi.

The leaders are also understood to have discussed a national resilience strategy to
better handle disasters.

The strategy - which came out of a meeting of emergency service ministers in Canberra
on Friday - is expected to include an overhaul of building codes and housing development
principles, as well as making better use of new technology for early-warning systems.

A lunch in Ms Gillard's office which was expected to go for an hour went more than
half an hour overtime, as some of the state and territory leaders met for the first time.

A media conference is expected no earlier than 5.30pm (AEDT).

AAP pjo/sb/mp

KEYWORD: COAG FLOODS

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

VIC:Millionaire's killer had assault history


AAP General News (Australia)
08-30-2010
VIC:Millionaire's killer had assault history

By Daniel Fogarty

MELBOURNE, Aug 30 AAP - Cutting up and burning the remains of Melbourne millionaire
Herman Rockefeller showed a callous indifference to his family and added to their trauma,
a judge has said.

Mr Rockefeller, a multimillionaire businessman, was bashed, dismembered and then burned
by two swingers after he went to their house for sex in January this year, the Victorian
Supreme Court was told on Monday.

The couple had become angry when Mr Rockefeller did not bring a partner and he was
killed in an argument after he tried to leave the house in suburban Hadfield.

Mario Schembri, 58, and Bernadette Denny, 42, have pleaded guilty to Mr Rockefeller's
manslaughter and are facing a pre-sentence hearing.

Mr Rockefeller's widow Victoria sat in court on Monday listening to details of the crime.

Justice Terry Forrest said the dismemberment clearly added to the Rockefeller family's trauma.

"What has occurred after he has died not only was designed to conceal (detection) of
the crime, but it also showed a callous indifference to the loved ones of the deceased
and it must necessarily add to their trauma," he said.

Prosecutor Chris Beale, SC, told the court Schembri and Denny bought a chainsaw from
a hardware store after Mr Rockefeller's death and Schembri had dismembered his body.

The victim's remains were taken to a house in Glenroy and burnt in a drum, Mr Beale said.

Mr Beale said Schembri had a prior conviction for intentionally causing serious injury.

Schembri's barrister Geoffrey Steward said his client was frank with police and told
them all the details of what had happened.

He said the dispute between Schembri and Mr Rockefeller had escalated because his client
"felt he was being taken for a fool, taken for a ride".

"It is a circumstance clearly where he became very angry and very upset by what was
taking place and he struck Mr Rockefeller a number of times and he died," Mr Steward said.

Denny's barrister Philip Dunn QC said the death was unplanned, unexpected and no-one
gained from it.

He said his client was a short, unsophisticated woman who had fallen "head over heals"

for a much older man.

The hearing before Justice Forrest is continuing.

AAP df/it/was

KEYWORD: ROCKEFELLER UPDATE

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

NT: Territory bids farewell to founding father


AAP General News (Australia)
04-22-2010
NT: Territory bids farewell to founding father

One of the Northern Territory's most inspirational men has been farewelled at a state
funeral in Alice Springs.

BERNARD KILGARIFF .. a pastoralist who founded the Country Liberal Party .. died last
week aged 86.

He became one of the first NT senators in 1975 .. and was also the first Speaker elected
to the Legislative Assembly in 1974.

AAP RTV lcs/ajw/

KEYWORD: KILGARIFF (DARWIN)

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

Vic: Main stories on today's 1800 Nine News


AAP General News (Australia)
12-08-2009
Vic: Main stories on today's 1800 Nine News

MELBOURNE, Dec 8 AAP - Main stories on Nine's news tonight:

- tyres slashed on metropolitan fire chief Tony Murphy's car days after giving evidence
to bushfires royal commission about absenteeism on Black Saturday

- residents in bushfire hotspots protest against lack of action over neighbourhood safer places

- notorious child killer Derek Percy named in inquest as person responsible for the
death of seven-year-old Linda Stilwell 41 years ago.

- Gambler Harry Kakavas, who lost nearly $35 million at Crown Casino, loses Supreme
Court case against the casino

- St Kilda triangle development rejected

- Tiger Woods' wife reportedly moves out of home amid claims a porn star was among
10 women with whom the golfer allegedly had affairs

- Tony Abbott resurrects former Howard ministers in reshuffled opposition front bench

- climate summit opens in Copenhagen

- ACCC to conduct tests on popular Christmas toy



AAP pmu/cdh

KEYWORD: MONITOR 1800 NINE

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

Fed: Contractors may not be included in unemployment data: Hockey


AAP General News (Australia)
04-30-2009
Fed: Contractors may not be included in unemployment data: Hockey

SYDNEY, April 30 AAP - As many as two million Australian contractors may not be included
in unemployment figures during the economic downturn, the opposition says.

An International Monetary Fund (IMF) report predicts unemployment in Australia will
rise from 5.7 per cent to 7.8 per cent next year.

However, shadow treasurer Joe Hockey fears the figure will not include a high number
of self-employed people.

"In this recession, quite clearly, there are going to be far more independent contractors
in small businesses than in the last recession," he said.

"It's roughly half a million to two million."

Some could be forgotten by the government because of the nature of their work, he said.

"I think there will be independent contractors and small business people, particularly
in the service sector, particularly in home-based businesses, that might not be properly
accounted for in the official data," he said.

"When you are rung up by the ABS (Australian Bureau of Statistics) and asked whether
you have got a job, you will say `I'm employed by my own company. We are probably getting
a proposal together ... I just haven't got any contracts at the moment'.

"I just hope those people are not forgotten by the government during the course of the downturn."

Mr Hockey said job sharing would play a greater role in Australian working life in
the near future.

"Job sharing is going to be a very real part of life and I hope the flexibility is
still in the industrial relations system that allows for that job sharing activity," he
said.

AAP bc/evt/apm

KEYWORD: JOBS HOCKEY

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

WA: Four people killed on WA roads during holiday period.


AAP General News (Australia)
12-25-2008
WA: Four people killed on WA roads during holiday period.

A 69-year-old male cyclist's died after colliding with a car north of Perth.

Police say it happened when the man was cycling through Wannamal .. about eight (AEDT)
yesterday morning.

He was taken to Royal Perth Hospital where he died overnight.

The WA holiday road toll now stands at four.

AAP RTV bc/af

KEYWORD: TOLL WA (PERTH)

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

NSW: Corrective Services moving to block proposed prison strike=2


AAP General News (Australia)
08-19-2008
NSW: Corrective Services moving to block proposed prison strike=2

Mr Woodham said important aspects of the reforms were the introduction of casual staff,
centralised rosters, changing correctional centre routines and a new sick leave policy.

He said the government would "not negotiate" with the union on those issues.

Casual prison officers would cost about $28 per hour in comparison with hourly rates
of more $100 per hour for high-ranking officers, he said.

The Corrective Services Department had docked the pay of Long Bay prison officers who
held industrial action last week and contingency plans were in place in case all officers
walked off the job across NSW.

"Our managers will stay online and police will come to the outer perimeter of the jails
and deal with anything that it has to protect the community, like escorts," Mr Woodham
said.

He denied there would be a complete lockdown if the state's officers went out on strike.

"We've come up with a process of letting them (prisoners) out, and exercising every
day, showers, and they will get all their medical care and be fed, of course."

AAP krc/evt/it/mn

KEYWORD: PRISONS WOODHAM 2 SYDNEY

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

NSW: Main stories in today's Sydney newspapers = 3


AAP General News (Australia)
04-12-2008
NSW: Main stories in today's Sydney newspapers = 3

THE AUSTRALIAN:

Page 1: The Liberal Party powerbrokers who backed Brendan Nelson over Malcolm Turnbull
in last year's federal leadership tussle are switching their allegiances. The collapse
of stockbroker Lift Capital, the second such company to go under this month, has led to
calls for a review of Australia's financial regulatory system.

Page 2: Prime Minister John Howard has called for coal giants Australia and China to
do more to address climate change.

Page 3: A hair transplant company is being investigated over claims it was abusing
the Medicare safety net, with allegations it told patients accommodation and domestic
flights would be covered by the scheme.

World: Satellite photographs have discovered a secret Iranian ballistic missiles site
capable of launching an attack on Europe (London).

Finance: Slowing demand and higher fuel prices are starting to affect the Australian
airline industry, with Virgin Blue predicting a halving of its profits this year.

Sport: Tiger Wood's even par 72 has kept him in the running for a fifth win at the
US Open in Augusta.

MORE ab/rs

KEYWORD: MONITOR FRONTERS NSW 3 SYDNEY

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

Fed: Govt says no decision made on extending Afghan stay


AAP General News (Australia)
12-09-2007
Fed: Govt says no decision made on extending Afghan stay

The federal government says no decision has been made to keep Australian troops in
Afghanistan beyond next year.

Fairfax reported today that the Dutch government's said Australia's agreed to continue
its deployment to 2010.

The report says the Netherlands .. which plays a lead role in Afghanistan's Oruzgan
province where Australian troops are stationed .. has decided to stay there until August
2010 .. before withdrawing three months later.

Australian Defence Minister JOEL FITZGIBBON says there's been no change to the term
of the deployment in Afghanistan beyond August next year.

AAP RTV pw/af

KEYWORD: AFGHAN AUST (CANBERRA)

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

NSW:Campbell says 'treachery,disloyalty' used to oust him:report


AAP General News (Australia)
04-26-2007
NSW:Campbell says 'treachery,disloyalty' used to oust him:report

SYDNEY, April 26 AAP - NSW Labor senator George Campbell has cited the "gross treachery
and disloyalty" of the union boss Doug Cameron as a reason for his decision to retire
from politics, it was reported today.

Senator Campbell will announce today he will not seek pre-selection next month for
the federal election and will leave the senate when his term expires in 2008, Fairfax
newspapers report.

His spot on the NSW Labor senate ticket will be filled by Mr Cameron, the national
secretary of the Australian Manufacturing Workers Union (AMWU), who long ago stitched
up the numbers in the NSW Left to depose Senator Campbell.

Senator Campbell preceded Mr Cameron as the national secretary of the AMWU.

He was elected to the senate in 1998 and will be 65 when his term expires.

He said his decision had also been influenced by his age.

"With Labor on the cusp of winning government, I believe now is the time for the party
to encourage generational change," Senator Campbell told Fairfax.

"The second factor influencing my decision is the way in which some colleagues in my
old union, the AMWU, behaved in the lead-up to the current preselection."

He said of Mr Cameron: "I do think the way he went about doing this was a gross act
of treachery and disloyalty."

Senator Campbell said Mr Cameron's actions were more hurtful given he had mentored
Mr Cameron in the AMWU.

Mr Cameron declined to comment on Senator Campbell's assessment of his character.

"George Campbell has had a very good career as a union official and as a parliamentarian,"

he said.

"I have got no criticism of him."

AAP vpm/srp

KEYWORD: SENATOR

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

Fed: Bushfire-affected states awake to white Xmas


AAP General News (Australia)
12-25-2006
Fed: Bushfire-affected states awake to white Xmas

HOBART, Dec 25 AAP - Residents in two bushfire-affected states have awoken to a white Christmas.

Snow has been recorded in alpine areas in Victoria and Tasmania, which are still battling
fires that have blackened thousands of hectares this month.

In Tasmania, the weather bureau received reports about five centimetres of snow had
fallen at the summit of Mount Wellington in Hobart.

Snow was settling on the mountain, 800 to 900 metres above sea level, Bureau of Meteorology
duty senior forecaster Shane Wells said.

Cradle Mountain and Mount Read were also likely to have received a dusting, he said.

Mr Wells said it was not the first white Christmas for Tasmania, with snow falling
either side of Christmas during the past couple of years.

"It's unusual but not without precedent - it's happened a few times," he said.

"This event's probably heavier and more significant - certainly it's snowed down to
a lower level.

"Often it's just a very light dusting on the top of Mt Wellington at a level of 1,250 metres."

Today Hobart is forecast to reach a top of 14, which is 1.4 degrees warmer than the
coldest Christmas day ever recorded there in 1984.

Snow also capped Victoria's Mt Buller, Lake Mountain and possibly Mt Baw Baw, where
the temperature plunged to minus two degrees this morning.

Bureau spokesman Ward Rooney said snow had or would fall to higher than about 900 metres
above sea level today.

"With these areas where there's going to be some sort of precipitation and it's high
enough and cold enough, it will fall as snow," he said.

But it was not the first time it had snowed in Victoria on Christmas day.

"It's not particularly unusual," he said.

AAP mi/dk/imc/

KEYWORD: SNOW

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

SA: Len Evans irreplaceable in wine industry says AWBC


AAP General News (Australia)
08-17-2006
SA: Len Evans irreplaceable in wine industry says AWBC

The Australian Wine and Brandy Corporation has paid tribute to LEN EVANS .. who's died aged 75.

Mr EVANS .. one of the wine industry's best known identities .. died today in Newcastle.

Corporation chief SAM TOLLEY says the wine writer .. show judge .. winemaker and advocate
.. leaves an extraordinary legacy and can't be replaced.

AAP RTV sl/es/wf

KEYWORD: EVANS AWBC (ADELAIDE)

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

SA: Main stories in today's 1200 ABC news


AAP General News (Australia)
04-11-2006
SA: Main stories in today's 1200 ABC news

ADELAIDE, April 10 AAP - Main stories in today's 1200 ABC news:

- AWB former managing director disputes evidence of foreign minister's chief of staff;
Alexander Downer starts giving evidence to Cole inquiry.

- Italian opposition leader defeats prime minister: reports

- Supreme Court judge finds man used excessive force to defend himself from attack.

- Adelaide businessman loses court challenge against validity of 50kph zones.

- Some Villawood detainees fearful they could face permanent relocation.

- Qantas says Cairns-based subsidiary will close from July.

- Thousands of bottles of fake perfume found by customs officers.

- Australian cricketers in trouble against Bangladesh.

- Sydney Swans deny they've got big heads after last year's AFL premiership.

AAP sl/

KEYWORD: MONITOR 1200 ABC NEWS (ADELAIDE)

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

Monday, February 27, 2012

Vic: Snow in low-lying Victoria


AAP General News (Australia)
08-10-2005
Vic: Snow in low-lying Victoria

MELBOURNE, Aug 10 AAP - Freezing Antarctic winds have dumped snow on at least two
low-lying south-west Victorian towns.

Heywood, just 27 metres above sea level, and Winchelsea, which is also close to sea
level, today acquired white blankets.

Both towns are less than 40 kilometres from the ocean.

"It's very unusual," said Bureau of Meteorology senior forecaster Scott Williams.

"If you look at it on a Victoria-wide scale, it looks set to be the coldest day this winter."

Mr Williams said the snow was caused by a mass of cold air that originated close to
the Antarctic.

"We've had a strong south to south-west airstream, which has brought that air rapidly
northwards in the wake of last night's cold front," he said.

Melbourne's coldest day so far this winter has been July 9, when the temperature peaked
at 10.3 degrees Celsius.

Today, Melbourne's temperature has already topped five degrees Celsius, so the record
for the coldest day with a maximum of 4.4 degrees - set on July 4, 1901 - won't be broken.

AAP jb/gfr/it

KEYWORD: SNOWFALLS

2005 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

AAP National News Wire Round-Up for Evening, April 4


AAP General News (Australia)
04-04-2005
AAP National News Wire Round-Up for Evening, April 4
Evening Round-Up: HIGHLIGHTS OF THE AAP RTV FILE AT 1630


Chopper Grounded (SYDNEY)

The Australian Navy's Sea King helicopters have been grounded after nine Australians
died when one of them crashed in Indonesia.

The navy says it's erring on the side of caution and won't allow the helicopters to
fly until after an investigation into the cause of the crash on Nias island on Saturday.

The bodies of the six navy and three air force personnel who died in the crash are
due to be flown home to Australia tomorrow.

The Australian Defence Association has questioned the government's decision to continue
using the choppers when other nations are retiring them.

But Prime Minister JOHN HOWARD says other countries are still using Sea Kings just
as old -- and in some cases older.



Chopper Survivors (ON BOARD HMAS KANIMBLA)

The two survivors of the Australian military helicopter crash are being hailed by shipmates
as miracle men.

SHANE WARBURTON and SCOTT NICHOLLS are believed to have survived the crash because
they were at the rear of the Sea King as it plunged into a field near the remote village
of Aman Draya on Saturday.

They were dragged from the flames by an Indonesian villager who was later thanked personally
for his heroism by HMAS Kanimbla's captain Commander GEORGE MCGUIRE.

NICHOLLS, an RAAF paramedic, and WARBURTON, a communications operator, were both on
board the helicopter as part of a medical team sent to help earthquake survivors.



Indon Aust PM (CANBERRA)

Two days after the chopper crash tragedy, Indonesian President SUSILO BAMBANG YUDHOYONO
has held talks with Prime Minister JOHN HOWARD in Canberra.

Mr HOWARD has told reporters the tragedy has brought Australia and Indonesia closer together.

He says both he and the Indonesian leader have a strong personal commitment to strengthening
the relationship between their two countries.

Mr HOWARD says Australia will finance 600 scholarships for Indonesian students to study
here, to build that relationship further.

And he says it's important for Australian companies to invest in Indonesia as a means
of defeating terrorism.



Pope Pell (SYDNEY)

Australia's highest ranking Catholic, Sydney Archbishop GEORGE PELL, has arrived in
Rome after the death of Pope JOHN PAUL II.

He's there with 116 other cardinals to decide who the next leader of the church will be.

Cardinal PELL says the 84-year-old pontiff will be remembered for his great following
of young people and his contribution to the collapse of communism.

Thousands of Australian Catholics will gather at Sydney's St Mary's Cathedral tomorrow
night for a special mass to commemorate the life and death of JOHN PAUL.



MP (ADELAIDE)

South Australia's parliamentary speaker PETER LEWIS has announced his resignation after
a month-long controversy in which he claimed there was a paedophile MP in state parliament.

Mr LEWIS has told parliament he'll go to the governor's office this afternoon and tender
his resignation.

His decision came only moments before the Labor government was to introduce a motion
of no confidence in him.

The government has threatened to sue for criminal defamation after a volunteer worker
in the speaker's office named the MP at the centre of the allegations last week.



Basketball (PERTH)

A 10-year-old Perth boy whose hands and foot were surgically reattached after an horrific
basketball accident has been forced to have his foot amputated.

Nine days after he repaired TERRY VO's limbs, plastic surgeon ROBERT LOVE has performed
a 90-minute procedure to remove the schoolboy's leg 14cm below the knee.

A brick wall and guttering collapsed on top of TERRY as he performed a slam dunk at
a friend's birthday party on March the 26th.

The eight-hour operation to reattach his hands and foot -- crushed off seven centimetres
above the wrists and ankle -- was originally hailed a success, but Dr LOVE says the muscles
in TERRY's foot have since decayed.



Detainee (ADELAIDE)

A suicidal Iranian asylum seeker, who has taken court action against the federal government,
says he was treated like an animal at the Baxter detention centre.

He and another Iranian detainee have launched an action in the Federal Court, claiming
the federal government has failed in its duty of care towards them.

One of the men -- identified only as S -- says he wasn't able to see a psychiatrist
until January this year despite several self-harm and protest incidents during his four
and a half year detention.

Both men, whose names have been suppressed, are being held at the Baxter facility in
South Australia's north.



Thai Bombs (BANGKOK)

Airports in southern Thailand are on full alert after bomb blasts at the region's main
airport and two other sites killed at least two people and wounded several dozen others.

Foreigners, including British, French and Malaysian nationals, are among those wounded
in the blasts at the Hat Yai regional airport, a French-owned department store and a hotel
in Songkhla province yesterday.

Deputy Transport and Communications Minister PHUMTHAM WECHAYACHAI says authorities
will check security at all airports and railway stations in southern Thailand.



Mallah (SYDNEY)

The jury in the trial of a Sydney man accused of planning a suicide attack on government
offices has retired to consider its verdict.

Twenty-one-year-old ZAKY MALLAH has pleaded not guilty in the New South Wales Supreme
Court to charges under federal counter-terrorism laws.

The Crown alleges MALLAH planned to kill himself and government staff at the Sydney
offices of the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade, or the Australian Security and
Intelligence Organisation, in late 2003.



Bushfires Vic Esplin (MELBOURNE)

Victoria's emergency services commissioner says mother nature -- not the Department
of Sustainability and Environment -- is to blame for a routine burn that grew out of control.

The blaze ripped through 7,000 hectares of Wilsons Promontory National Park in the
state's south-east when weather conditions changed at the weekend.

More than 200 firefighters, 17 tankers and two bulldozers are battling the flames and
the department is hoping for substantial rain to help bring it back under control.

Commissioner BRUCE ESPLIN says the burning was started 11 days ago when weather conditions
were benign, but a sudden change in the weather caused it to fan out.



Whales (PERTH)

A pod of pilot whales has been herded back into deep water after spending more than
a day stranded on a West Australian beach.

19 long-finned pilot whales were found between Peppermint Beach and Siesta Park at
Busselton, 230 kilometres south of Perth, early yesterday.

Four were already dead, and despite the efforts of more than 120 people, another two
died before nightfall.

The Department of Conservation and Land Management says the rescue team worked throughout
the night to ensure the survival of the remaining 13.

The whales are still being tracked and are reportedly making good progress.



BRIEFLY:



A semi-trailer filled with explosive chemicals has crashed near an explosives factory
in central Queensland, forcing the closure of the Bruce Highway.




Indonesian police say they've had to deal with more than 100 bomb threats since the deadly
attack on the Australian embassy in Jakarta last September.




A Sydney mother who has fostered more than 40 children has been named Barnardos New South
Wales Mother of the Year.




And in Tokyo, a women-only subway car has begun operating during the morning rush hour
in a bid to crack down on groping, which is common on crowded trains.



IN SPORT:


LEAGUE WEBCKE (BRISBANE)

Test prop SHANE WEBCKE has announced his retirement from representative rugby league
due to a chronic knee injury.

A veteran of 18 Tests for Australia and 21 State of Origin appearances for Queensland,
30-year-old WEBCKE says he's bitterly disappointed not to be able to play for those teams
again.

The Brisbane Bronco says he has a degenerating knee problem that has required surgery
twice in the past six months and does not believe it would cope with the extra workload
of representative football.



LEAGUE JUDICIARY (SYDNEY)

Parramatta lock DANIEL WAGON will miss Sunday's clash with Brisbane at Suncorp Stadium
unless he successfully fights a dangerous throw charge at the NRL judiciary.

WAGON has been charged with a grade one dangerous throw for a tackle on Penrith prop
JOEL CLINTON during the Eels' 26-16 victory at Parramatta Stadium on Friday night.

Bulldogs hooker COREY HUGHES will escape suspension with an early guilty plea on a
grade one careless high tackle charge for his hit on Cronulla lock PAUL GALLEN at Toyota
Park yesterday.


AAP RTV ea/wjf

KEYWORD: EVENING ROUND-UP

2005 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

time to market

time to market (TTM) The time taken to bring a new product or service from the initial concept stage to its introduction to the market. Shortening TTM can often deliver a substantial competitive advantage. See concurrent engineering.

P-Com Reports Third Quarter Results.

Business Editors/High-Tech Writers

CAMPBELL, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Oct. 31, 2002

P-Com, Inc. (Nasdaq:PCOM)

 -- New orders received for P-Com Network Services  -- Increased interest in products from Middle East  -- Operating expenses reduced by $2.4 million 

P-Com, Inc. (Nasdaq:PCOM), a worldwide provider of wireless telecom products and services, today reported net sales of $7.5 million for the third quarter ended September 30, 2002, compared to $8.7 million for the second quarter of 2002 and $10.3 million for the corresponding quarter a year ago.

As previously announced, the decline in P-Com's net sales was primarily related to the timing of orders placed under existing supply contracts for equipment sales to Asia-Pacific customers.

Gross profit margins were 11% in the quarter, compared to 17% in the previous quarter and minus 191% in the corresponding quarter a year ago due primarily to inventory write-downs. Operating expenses for the quarter were $7.5 million, compared to $9.9 million in the second quarter of 2002, and $10.7 million (excluding goodwill amortization) for the same period in 2001. Operating expenses included approximately $450,000 related to debt restructuring and non-recurring legal expenses. Included in other expense in the third quarter 2002 was approximately $791,000 related to the write-off of notes receivable and $754,000 for a vendor settlement.

Net loss for the quarter before extraordinary items was $9 million, or $.29 per share, compared to a net loss of $37.3 million, or $2.20 per share, for the same period in 2001, and a net loss of $8 million, or $.37 per share, in the second quarter of 2002.

"The state of the telecom industry remains uncertain and any attempt to project revenues for future quarters remains difficult," said P-Com Chairman George Roberts. "As a result, we continue to believe it is necessary to reduce costs and manage cash prudently. When the telecom turnaround occurs, P-Com will be well-positioned to supply global demand because of the recently completed development of our next generation products. This will give us a competitive advantage over other providers, who have either reduced or discontinued new product development. We are also encouraged by the recent increase in orders for P-Com Network Services and increased interest for our products from the Middle East."

Conference Call

Management will discuss both the results and the Company's outlook, and hold a question and answer session for investors today, October 31, 2002, at 2:00 p.m. Pacific / 5:00 p.m. Eastern time. To listen to the call by phone, dial 1-877-777-1971 for U.S. calls or 1-612-332-0725 for international calls. To listen to a live broadcast over the Internet, go to www.p-com.com and click on the Investor Relations page, or go to StreetEvents at www.streetevents.com. A replay of the call will be available at both sites for 90 days.

About P-Com, Inc.

P-Com, Inc. develops, manufactures, and markets point-to-multipoint, point-to-point, and spread spectrum wireless access systems to the worldwide telecommunications market, and through its wholly owned subsidiary, P-Com Network Services, Inc., provides related installation support, engineering, program management and maintenance support services to the telecommunications industry in the United States. P-Com broadband wireless access systems are designed to satisfy the high-speed, integrated network requirements of Internet access associated with Business to Business and E-Commerce business processes. Cellular and personal communications service (PCS) providers utilize P-Com point-to-point systems to provide backhaul between base stations and mobile switching centers. Government, utility, and business entities use P-Com systems in public and private network applications. For more information visit www.p-com.com or call (408) 866-3666.

Safe Harbor Statement

Statements in this release that are forward-looking involve known and unknown risks and uncertainties, which may cause P-Com's actual results in future periods to be materially different from any future performance that may be suggested in this release. Such factors may include, but are not limited to, the need to raise equity, a severe worldwide slowdown in the telecommunications equipment and services sector, working capital constraints, fluctuations in customer demand and commitments, introduction of new products, commercial acceptance and viability of new products, cancellations of orders without penalties, pricing and competition, reliance upon subcontractors, the ability of P-Com's customers to finance their purchases of P-Com's products and/or services, the timing of new technology and product introductions, and the risk of early obsolescence. Further, P-Com operates in an industry sector where securities values are highly volatile and may be influenced by economic and other factors beyond P-Com's control, such as announcements by competitors and service providers. Reference is made to the discussion of risk factors detailed in P-Com's filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, including its reports on Form 10-K and 10-Q.

                                P-COM, INC.                  CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS                        (In thousands, unaudited)                                              September 30, December 31,                                                  2002         2001                                               ---------    --------- ASSETS Current assets:  Cash and cash equivalents                    $   1,646    $   7,103  Restricted cash                                   --          2,911  Accounts receivable, net                         7,376        7,926  Inventory                                       21,195       31,946  Prepaid expenses and other assets                4,119        7,138                                               ---------    ---------    Total current assets                          34,336       57,024  Property and equipment, net                      12,659       17,627 Goodwill and other assets                        11,875       17,583                                               ---------    ---------                                               $  58,870    $  92,234                                               =========    =========  LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY Current liabilities:  Accounts payable                             $   9,162    $   8,143  Other accrued liabilities                        8,158       21,767  Loan payable to bank                             1,612         --  Deferred contract obligations                    8,000        8,000  Convertible subordinated notes                   1,742       29,299                                               ---------    ---------    Total current liabilities                     28,674       67,209                                               ---------    ---------  Long-Term Liabilities:  Convertible subordinated notes                  22,375         --  Other long-term liabilities                      2,227          769                                               ---------    ---------    Total long term liabilities                   24,602          769                                               ---------    ---------    Total liabilities                             53,276       67,978                                               ---------    ---------  Stockholders' equity:  Common Stock                                        16            8  Additional paid-in capital                     333,204      319,994  Accumulated deficit                           (326,682)    (294,460)  Accumulated other comprehensive loss              (944)      (1,286)                                               ---------    ---------    Total stockholders' equity                     5,594       24,256                                               ---------    --------- Total liabilities and stockholders' equity    $  58,870    $  92,234                                               =========    =========                                 P-COM, INC.             CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS            (In thousands, except per share data, unaudited)                           Three months ended      Nine months ended                                Sep 30,                 Sep 30,                            2002       2001         2002        2001                         ---------   ---------   ---------   --------- Sales: Product                 $   6,350   $   7,554   $  22,292   $  66,395 Service                     1,100       2,696       2,234      30,274                         ---------   ---------   ---------   --------- Total sales                 7,450      10,250      24,526      96,669                         ---------   ---------   ---------   ---------  Cost of sales: Product                     5,545      27,486      19,263      82,867 Service                     1,108       2,293       2,210      22,686                         ---------   ---------   ---------   --------- Total cost of sales         6,653      29,779      21,473     105,553                         ---------   ---------   ---------   ---------  Gross profit                  797     (19,529)      3,053      (8,884) Gross margin                   11%       -191%         12%         -9%  Operating expenses: Research and  development/engineering    2,439       4,952      10,266      15,626 Selling and marketing       1,709       1,589       5,268       6,197 General and  administrative             3,357       4,191      12,476      15,778 Receivable  valuation charge            --          --          --        11,600 Goodwill amortization        --         6,333        --         7,756                         ---------   ---------   ---------   --------- Total operating expenses    7,505      17,065      28,010      56,957                         ---------   ---------   ---------   ---------  Operating expense as a  percentage of sales          101%        166%        114%         59%  Loss from continuing  operations                (6,708)    (36,594)    (24,957)    (65,841) Interest expense             (964)       (474)     (1,972)     (1,524) Gain on sale  of subsidiary               --          --          --         9,814 Other expense, net         (1,331)     (1,127)     (1,186)       (377)                         ---------   ---------   ---------   ---------  Loss from continuing  operations before income  taxes, extraordinary  item and cumulative  effect of change in  accounting principle      (9,003)    (38,195)    (28,115)    (57,928)  Provision for  income taxes                --          (923)       --          (316)                         ---------   ---------   ---------   --------- Loss from continuing  operations before  extraordinary item and  cumulative effect of  accounting change         (9,003)    (37,272)    (28,115)    (57,612)  Extraordinary gain on  retirement of Notes         --          --         1,393        --  Cumulative effect  of change in  accounting principle        --          --        (5,500)       --                         ---------   ---------   ---------   --------- Net loss                $  (9,003)  $ (37,272)  $ (32,222)  $ (57,612)                         =========   =========   =========   =========  Basic and diluted  loss per share:  Loss from continuing  operations             $   (0.29)  $   (2.20)  $   (1.21)  $   (3.51) Extraordinary gain on  retirement of Notes         --          --          0.06        -- Cumulative effect of  change in accounting  principle                   --          --         (0.24)       --                         ---------   ---------   ---------   --------- Basic and diluted net  loss per share  applicable to Common  Stockholders           $   (0.29)  $   (2.20)  $   (1.39)  $   (3.51)                         =========   =========   =========   =========  Shares used in Basic  and Diluted per share  computation               31,104      16,950      23,323      16,413                         =========   =========   =========   ========= 

Working tirelessly to stop solvent abuse; Barrie Liss was talking to Peter Rasmussen.

'To stop it before it ever happens, that's the ideal,' says Barrie Liss. An impossible task? Not to the man who was recently made an OBE for services to the prevention of solvent and volatile substance abuse. Sixteen years ago he founded the charity Re-Solv, of which he has been chairman ever since.

The ducks are quacking away in the back garden pond of Marion and Barrie Liss's house, idyllically situated in Stafford. Inside, the former joint managing director of Evode, manufacturers of adhesives, talks with commitment about the long fight against the abuse that has cost more than 1,500 people - mostly teenagers - their lives in the UK since 1980.

Barrie was born in London in 1933, but at the beginning of the Second World War, as a young boy, he was evacuated along with the rest of his family. That marked the beginning of a ten year stay in Hertfordshire. Though he did return to the capital on one rather poorly timed occasion.

'I went back to London for a short period, when they didn't think there would be any bombings. But actually I was there for all of the bombing, and then we were evacuated again,' he remembers with a smile.

After two years as a National Service officer, he started working in wholesale in London, but was soon offered a job with a Stafford based company producing adhesives.

In London he had met his future wife, Marion, who was studying medicine. She later followed him to Stafford, where she has now been working as a GP for more than 30 years.

The firm in Stafford which Barrie joined in 1957 was to be company and line of business he stay in.

'In the early 1980s, glue sniffing had become such a big problem that the adhesives industry was concerned that the image of the whole industry would be tarnished by it,' he explains.

Through the years, Barrie Liss had worked his way to the top of the company. As joint managing director, he was chosen as a representative for the trade association to find out what could be done to reduce the damage of the abuse - both to the industry and the abusers.

'At that point I knew nothing about the problem, but when I was asked, I looked into it. I found out that there were a lot of problems all across the country. A lot of people were sniffing glues, harming themselves, and quite a number of them dying,' he says.

His advice to the industry was clear: Stop hiding from the media, be honest and explain that this is not just an industrial problem, but rather a social one.

But his initial approach to the abuse of solvents had already changed. Seeing how widespread the problem was, he decided to do more than advise the industry on how to approach the problems, and so in 1984, still working with Evode, he founded Re-Solv. He saw that there was an urgent need for a national organisation that knew what it was doing.

'Some local authorities and selfhelp groups were trying to do something about the problem. But there were a lot of unco-ordinated things going on; leaflets being prepared by people with very little knowledge, leading to really poor information,' he remembers.

Today the organisation is involved in preventative work across the UK, including distributing educational material, sponsoring research and holding conferences.

Being chairman of Re-Solv has not taken all of Barrie Liss's time though. His CV indicates that he is a man who firmly believes that idleness is the root to all evil. Among other things, he has been chairman of the Mid Staffordshire Health Authority and is still a member of Mid Staffordshire magistrates. In his opinion, being made an OBE will change nothing, for him nor the organisation, but he was still delighted when he heard the news.

'It's definitely an endorsement of the work we are doing and an encouragement to go on,' he says.

Barrie Liss often talks to parents who have lost their children because of solvent abuse. It can be a psychological strain, he says, but it also keeps him going.

'A lot of the parents we talk to say to me: 'If we had only known what you have told us, we would have known which danger signals to look for.' That makes me feel that our organisation and further information is needed.'

nIf you have questions about solvent abuse, you can call the Re-Solv Helpline : 0808 800 2345, or find them on the Internet at www.re-solv.org

Sunday, February 26, 2012

Retention marketing and profit optimization: three strategies of success.(Conference notes)

Resident satisfaction and renewals may play a larger role than many apartment professionals know in building a successful revenue management program.

While the financial benefits of revenue management strategies have been widely discussed, the relationship between resident satisfaction, data collection and pricing strategies is less understood.

At this year's Apartment Internet Marketing Conference, three industry experts shared perspectives on the important role renewals play in maximizing income.

Retain What You Have

The economic downturn elevated the importance of revenue management, but it doesn't always come in the form of automated pricing software. Doug Miller, President of SatisFacts Research, views satisfaction levels as an important component of revenue management. "The goal is to have apartments leased at maximum rent levels, which is achievable through superior satisfaction," he says. "The concept of retention has moved up the food chain."

Combined data from SatisFacts and Axiometrics, a leading apartment-research firm, estimates turnover costs at $4,166 per unit. From Miller's perspective, by boosting satisfaction, communities avoid this NOI loss while achieving desired renewal increases because satisfied residents are less likely to resist pricing changes. Based on these estimated turnover costs, a 5,000-unit portfolio that reduces turnover rate by 9 percent can improve NOI by nearly $2 million and asset value by roughly $33 million.

Waterton Residential is one company where the ultimate goal is to deliver customer service that creates value for the residents, according to Greg Lozinak, the company's Chief Operating Officer. But, he says, there needs to be a balance between retention rates and driving rents.

"When you look at customer service and revenue management, they're not intertwined per se; they move in parallel," he says. "If I take really good care of my customer, I'll be able to get greater value for it, whether it is on the retention side in a down market or if we're driving rents in an up market."

Let the Data Speak

Richard Hughes, Vice President of Revenue Management for AMLI Residential, believes apartment companies can use resident data analysis to create models that predict a resident's likelihood of renewal and incorporate those models into their revenue management systems.

Hughes acknowledges data collection in the apartment industry has historically been difficult and often inaccurate, limiting a community's ability to establish best pricing strategies. However, thanks to the improved collection, aggregation and analysis of resident data, the age of empirical marketing is upon the apartment industry.

The easiest way revenue managers can begin to predict renewal intent is to consolidate renewal and profile data (such as a resident's demographic information and transaction history), conduct cohort (group) analyses and correlate the findings. Digging even deeper, a regression model combines all this information to determine how much impact and relevance each variable (such as length of stay, number of adults in unit and demographics) has on a resident's intention to renew.

Hughes shared a "logit" or logistical regression model, "where marketing and pricing come together."

"With a logit model, for any price point for any consumer with mapped ancillary data--demographic, psychographic or transactional--we can tell you the percentage propensity for renewal," Hughes explains. "That's fantastic from a revenue management standpoint because it allows us to create bespoke pricing, where each individual can get their own price."

Using this exceptionally optimization-friendly data, pricing software can determine individual rents for each resident based on unique environmental factors. By combining data in new ways, apartment companies can make their revenue management systems better and more robust.

Turn over a new leaf.

Can being well-read really help you wash away the stresses and strains of a busy Dubai life? If you've been on overdrive trying to meet your festive deadlines, you probably need a simple pick-me-up. This could take the form of a nice meal with the family, a boat ride across the Creek or a shopping spree to one of Dubai's malls. But if we stopped for a minute, we'd realise there's a lesser-known kind of help on offer and it's one even the busiest person can easily fit into their daily routine. 'Bibliotherapy', or health-boosting reading, has proven benefits, including stress relief and mood-lifting. As reported in British newspaper, The Metro, the technique is being employed by health professionals across the UK in treating conditions such as anxiety, depression, diabetes and obesity. The idea works by targeting mental wellbeing and trials have proved so successful over there that there are now more than 80 'books on prescription' schemes in prisons, libraries, psychiatric wards and health centres. But we don't have to book an appointment with our doctors to reap the benefits of reading. It's something we were all brought up to do but in the hustle bustle of Dubai city life, many of us will only find time for a book if we're on the beach or catching a flight. Whether it be a gritty true horror, one of your son's fiction books or a romance, transporting yourself into a different world for an hour, or even just a few minutes, can have untold benefits. Mike McGinley, owner of House of Prose secondhand book shops at Jumeirah Plaza and Ibn Battuta mall knows only too well about the benefits of reading. "It really takes you out of yourself," he says. "They always say meditation is a good thing and reading a book and being totally involved in it is, you could say, a form of meditation which is very relaxing. "It uses all of your concentration. I always say juggling balls is good for stress because it takes all your concentration to do that and I think I would agree books do the same thing, it really takes all of your ego away and gets you back to your subconscious." But with the busy lifestyle of most of us here in Dubai, surely it's easier to just switch on the television? Especially at this time of the year when we have work targets and festive socialising to squeeze into our already bursting routines. "TV is emotionally numbing," says author Susan Elderkin. "It shuts families down. The danger in being a couch potato at Christmas is that we become passive, regressing into our childhood roles and don't consider what we can bring to the day as an adult." As well as relieving stress, reading is also a great 'brain tool', helping people of all ages to learn and develop important life skills. Children and adults can read to develop their language, vocabulary, and all-round comprehension skills and spelling and writing skills are also improved by regular reading. It seems us 'grown ups', who often find ourselves telling our offspring they should read more, need to set aside at least a few minutes a day for reading. Whether that means keeping a book in our bags in case we happen to find ourselves in a typically long Dubai queue or use reading to help lull us to sleep, the activity really helps alleviate stress. "I always have a book with me. When I go to the bank I have a book in my hand, if I go to the car wash I have a book in my hand. If I ever have to wait, it helps to take away boredom and you don't get so impatient," adds Mike. "It's therapy I guess you could say, a time to dedicate to yourself. "It stimulates your imagination, you tend to make a movie of a book. "I think it gets you away from your problems for the immediate time because you're not into yourself you're into a story."

2007 Al Sidra Media LLC

Provided by Syndigate.info an Albawaba.com company

LightSquared Submits Nationwide Wireless Broadband Plan to FCC.

RESTON, Va., June 30, 2011 /PRNewswire/ -- LightSquared(TM), the nation's first wholesale-only integrated wireless broadband and satellite network, formally presented the company's modified spectrum plan to the FCC and proposed a comprehensive solution to the GPS interference issue. This plan will serve as a foundation for the construction of a new wireless broadband network that will bring world-class Internet service to the United States, including rural areas and other underserved communities and inject new competition in an increasingly consolidating wireless market.

LightSquared's proposal outlines a three-part solution for resolving GPS interference issues involving GPS devices, which was detailed in recommendations filed at the FCC today. GPS device test results, which were also filed at the FCC today, show unequivocally that the interference is caused by the GPS device manufacturer's decision over the last eight years to design products that depend on using spectrum assigned to other FCC licensees.

Now LightSquared is stepping forward to help resolve the problem. In contrast, the GPS device manufacturers, unlike relevant government agencies, have been largely uninterested in finding a win-win solution. Rather, their only answer to a problem of their own making is to demand that the government simply block LightSquared from using the company's own spectrum to roll out the first wholesale-only wireless broadband network for the entire nation - an economic benefit worth as much as $120 billion to consumers. This is a problem that the GPS industry could have avoided by equipping their devices over the last several years with filters that cost as little as five cents each.

"This issue will be resolved by good data, smart engineers and good faith problem solving dialog. The end-result will be continuity for the reliable and safe GPS system we have come to depend on along with a new high speed wireless network that will provide huge benefits to consumers,'' said Sanjiv Ahuja, LightSquared Chairman and CEO.

Despite the GPS industry's claims, the FCC does not face a stark choice between reliable GPS service and a new competitor in the broadband market. In fact, the testing results released today show LightSquared's proposed solution resolves interference for approximately 99.5 percent of all commercial GPS devices- including 100 percent of the 300 million GPS-enabled cell phones.

While issues remain with precision GPS devices, LightSquared is fully committed to finding a solution. It is unthinkable that a nation which recently completed a complex digital-television transition involving nearly every household in the U.S. will be stymied by a problem posed by approximately 200,000 GPS devices.

But LightSquared cannot solve this problem on its own. It needs the cooperation of the GPS industry. LightSquared believes cooperation is the least to expect from an industry that built a business by piggy-backing on the federal government's GPS network without any investment in infrastructure or spectrum. A recent Brattle Group study showed that the commercial GPS industry's ability to use the U.S. government's GPS network amounts to an $18 billion federal subsidy.

LightSquared is fully committed to a safe and robust GPS service. In fact, LightSquared will not launch unless the FCC, in consultation with the NTIA, is satisfied that all reasonable interference concerns have been addressed.

In the meantime, LightSquared looks forward to working with the FCC, NTIA, and other federal agencies in its effort to find solutions so that it can move forward with its plan to bring world-class wireless broadband services and needed competition to 260 million Americans in 2015.

About LightSquared

LightSquared's mission is to revolutionize the U.S. wireless industry. With the creation of the first-ever, wholesale-only nationwide 4G-LTE network integrated with satellite coverage, LightSquared offers people the speed, value and reliability of universal broadband connectivity, wherever they are in the United States. As a wholesale-only operator, LightSquared will deploy an open 4G network to be used by existing and new service providers to sell their own devices, applications and services - at a competitive cost and without retail competition from LightSquared. The deployment and operation of LightSquared's network represent more than $14 billion of private investment over the next eight years.

CONTACT:

Chris Stern

Burson-Marsteller

Tel: +1 (202) 530-4737

chris.stern@bm.com

Forward Looking Statement

This release contains forward-looking statements and information regarding LightSquared and its business. Such statements are based on the current expectations and certain assumptions of LightSquared's management and are, therefore, subject to certain risks and uncertainties. The forward-looking statements expressed herein relate only to information as of the date of this release. LightSquared has no obligation to update these forward-looking statements to reflect events or circumstances after the date of this release, nor is there any assurance that the plans or strategies discussed in this release will not change.

SOURCE LightSquared

Louisiana Tech computer scientist pens first cyber data mining reference book.

RUSTON, La. - Dr. Sumeet Dua, the Upchurch Endowed Professor of Computer Science and coordinator of information technology research at Louisiana Tech University, has co-authored the first reference book focusing on cyber data mining and machine learning.

"Data Mining and Machine Learning in Cybersecurity," which Dua authored with Dr. Xian Du, a senior research associate and postdoctoral fellow at Louisiana Tech, surveys cybersecurity problems and state-of-the-art machine-learning and data-mining solutions that address the overarching research problems. The book is designed for students and researchers studying or working on machine learning and data mining applications.

"'Data Mining and Machine Learning in Cybersecurity' is intended as a preliminary reference point for emerging researchers in this heavily interdisciplinary area," said Dua. "This book will provide them with an integrated, bottom-up view of the data-centered computational learning challenges in cybersecurity domains and help apportion this large problem into smaller underpinning data-mining and machine-learning research questions and their potential solutions."

Dua says numerous illustrative figures will help readers visualize the workflow of complex techniques, and more than forty case studies provide a clear proof-of-principle understanding of the design and application of data-mining and machine-learning techniques in cybersecurity.

According to the book's preface, in the emerging era of Web 3.0, securing cyberspace has gradually evolved into a critical organizational and national research agenda, inviting interest from a multidisciplinary scientific workforce. Machine learning and data mining play significant roles in cybersecurity, especially as more challenges appear with the rapid development of information discovery techniques.

Several conferences, workshops, and journals have focused on this research topic, however until the publication of Dua's book, there had not been a single interdisciplinary resource on past and current works and possible paths for future research in this area.

Dua says the inclusion of cybersecurity design principles in machine-learning research is important for academic research. "Such an inclusion inspires fundamental research in machine learning and data mining, such as research in the subfields of imbalanced learning, feature extraction for data with evolving characteristics, and privacy-preserving data mining."

In addition to this first-of-its-kind reference publication, Dua has also co-authored or edited books on data mining in biomedical imaging and bioinformatics, and computational analysis.

Dua earned his Ph.D. from Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge and has received numerous research awards from the State and Louisiana Tech including the 2007 Research Recognition Award and the 2009 Inventor Recognition Award. He is frequently invited to serve as a scientific review panelist for a variety of federal agencies and is a senior member of IEEE and the Association for Computing Machinery (ACM).

Dua's areas of expertise include data mining, image processing and computational decision support, pattern recognition, data warehousing, biomedical informatics, and heterogeneous distributed data integration.

Keywords: Cyberspace, Cyborgs, Emerging Technologies, Image Processing, Information Technology, Information and Data Mining, Internet, Louisiana Tech University, Machine Learning, Software, World Wide Web.

This article was prepared by Information Technology Newsweekly editors from staff and other reports. Copyright 2011, Information Technology Newsweekly via VerticalNews.com.

Government planning to include information on mobile location to VAS providers.(POLICY & REGULATION)

The Indian government is exploring the possibility of providing VAS (value-added services) providers with access to key information pertaining to mobile-phone location as part of its National Telecom Policy 2011. This service could go a long way in tracking lost phones and even people across India by entering the number in an Internet-based application. According to R Chandrashekhar, secretary, Department of Telecommunications, LBS (location-based services) is expected to be an important component of content in the time to come. The NTP 2011 content-enabled provision specifies the kind of content that can be provided by VAS operators on cellphones. Meanwhile the government is also keen not to share too much information in the public domain owing to possible security hazards. Currently, a cellphone's location in India can be traced only if it is GPS-enabled.

Saturday, February 25, 2012

Cut the hysteria: Less legwork is a perfect remedy; A little outfield time, not surgery or killer antibiotics, can ease long-team worries about Joe Mauer's health.(SPORTS)

Byline: PATRICK REUSSE; STAFF WRITER

Twins General Manager Bill Smith is in St. Petersburg, Fla., for his team's four-game series with Tampa Bay. He was being interviewed by phone early Friday afternoon and trying to calm the Joe Mauer hysteria that was taking place back home.

Smith felt as if the media and the public could be attaching way too much seriousness to Mauer's condition. The GM said that if it was a position other than catcher, the Twins probably would have waited a few days before placing Mauer on the disabled list.

"You can't go three or four days with one catcher, so that's why we had to make a move," Smith said.

Civilians listening to the interview communicated electronically their outrage, insisting that Smith and the Twins were being naive and/or duplicitous by not admitting that Mauer's weak legs were a result of the grind of catching, and it was past time to find another position for the four-time All-Star.

The Twins had provided fuel for this over-the-top reaction by authorizing manager Ron Gardenhire to tell reporters on Thursday night that Mauer was afflicted with "bilateral leg weakness."

People going to the Internet to diagnose ailments have become such a pain for doctors that they have a word for it: cyberchondria.

In a spinoff of this, reporters, Twins fans and Twins critics rushed to the Internet to look up "bilateral leg weakness'' and soon were suggesting Mauer was facing everything from a spine problem to Lou Gehrig's disease.

Mauer had spent Thursday's game in the clubhouse, feeling as if he was fighting the flu. Eventually, he was taken to a hospital to receive fluids and to have a couple of tests.

The results came back Friday afternoon: Mauer has a viral infection, which has been known to cause weak legs even among strapping 28-year-old athletes.

Respected national baseball analysts were assuring their audiences that this was it for Mauer as a catcher. Tom Verducci of SI.com was quick to post a piece that Mauer was breaking down physically and the Twins erred by giving him an eight-year, $184 million contract extension that carries through 2018.

Either that, or Mauer was sick, and in need of a Z-pack of antibiotics to get back on his feet.

Listen. Media, fans ... we didn't have any idea of Mauer's outlook when leaping into the hysterical fray late Thursday and through the day on Friday.

There's a possibility that what Smith was saying at noontime Friday -- that he anticipated Mauer being ready to resume catching when his DL stint ends -- will be correct.

It also is possible that Mauer's legs will remain bilaterally weak and the Twins will have to consider their options.

We do know this: The Twins will be better off between now and the end of the 2018 season with Mauer as part of the ballclub than if he had departed by trade or free agency last year.

The idea that has intrigued me for a couple of years would be to apply the Yogi Berra plan to Mauer: Later in his career, the Yankees started playing Yogi regularly in left field, to make room for Elston Howard behind the plate.

The Twins aren't going to have a second catcher the likes of Ellie (an American League MVP) -- not even if they had kept Wilson Ramos, folks.

The odds do seem long that the Twins will sign either Delmon Young or Francisco Liriano to high-buck, multiyear contracts. That means next winter they would be looking at their free-agent seasons.

Presuming Young and Liriano get it going to some degree, there will be talent to be had in exchange -- including a catcher with enough of a bat to be a semiregular in the big leagues.

The departure of Young would help create space in the outfield for Joe Benson and/or Ben Revere. It also would give the Twins a chance to use Mauer in left field a few times a month.

You want to get 145 starts and the most out of Mauer? Here's a formula: 100 behind the plate, 25 in left, 20 as a DH.

That's based on bilateral leg weakness turning out to actually have been a fellow being sicker than a dog, of course.

Patrick Reusse can be heard noon-4 weekdays on 1500ESPN. preusse@startribune.com