Wednesday, November 29, 2006

China's Great Wall? "Just a pile of earth"

Reuters News

Tue Nov 28, 2006. BEIJING (Reuters) - Three people have been detained for digging up part of the Great Wall just days before strict new penalties are introduced to protect China's most famous tourist attraction, Xinhua news agency said.

The men used excavators to take earth from the remains of part of the Great Wall in Inner Mongolia, built at least 2,200 years ago, to use as landfill for a village factory.

"It's just a pile of earth," Erhaihao village head Hao Zengjun was quoted as telling officials from the Municipal Office on Cultural Relics Protection.

The Great Wall, which snakes its way across more than 4,000 miles, receives an estimated 10 million visitors a year, mostly to the tiny portion open to tourists at Badaling, the nearest stretch to Beijing.

The wall, which the United Nations listed as a World Heritage Site in 1987, has been rebuilt many times through the centuries, and many sections of it have suffered serious damage from weather erosion and human destruction.

Visitors climb wilder, crumblier sections that are not officially open to the public and stretches have become popular sites for summer raves.

Under the current law, those who damage key cultural relics deliberately can be sentenced to up to 10 years in prison.

From December 1, people taking earth or bricks from the Great Wall will be fined up to 500,000 yuan ($62,500).

© Reuters 2006. All Rights Reserved.

Friday, November 24, 2006

Centrelink-Australia-ID card takes shape...

By Steven Deare, ZDNet Australia

23 November 2006. Centrelink staff will be the first Australian government employees to be issued with a smartcard following a request for tender, which it published yesterday.

The social services agency will combine three cards employees currently use to access Centrelink properties, into a single integrated chip, or smartcard, which will be issued in August 2007. Centrelink has 26,000 staff.

The Centrelink Staff Identification Card would standardise employee access and comply with government best practice, Centrelink said in tender documents.

The card will be the first developed in accordance with the government's fledgling Identity Management for Australian Government Employees Framework (IMAGE). Smartcards are one component of IMAGE, to be implemented across government by 2008.

For security, the card will contain a tamper-resistant, optically variable device in the form of the Australian coat of arms.

Currently, Centrelink staff carry: a photographic identity card, a Vasco token for building access, and a Vasco password-generating token for each computer logon.

"These three physical devices are carried in a single clear plastic envelope in such a fashion that the package allows all three devices to operate, but physically masks the surname of the employee from view," said the tender documents.

The new card will combine logical, physical and identity data. There will be no major changes to how staff use the card.

Centrelink said it would select its tenderer in March before the first production cards are issued in August.

German police get their phoney US Highway Patrolman...

Reuters News

Thu Nov 23, 2006. BERLIN (Reuters) - German traffic police were shocked to see a California Highway Patrol car cruising along the motorway, driven by a man dressed as an authentic American cop, authorities said on Thursday.

But they recovered sufficiently to book the 35-year-old Goettingen resident, whose uniform badge read "T.J. Lazer", for possessing a replica Smith & Wesson revolver without a license and having out-of-date registration plates.

"He was sitting at the wheel with his elbow on the window like in the best TV crime series," said Osthessen police spokesman Martin Schaefer.

"Because wearing such a uniform in public is also prohibited, he had to exchange it for civilian dress after a shopping trip with 'real' colleagues," he added.

The man told police he had been taking the 30-year-old vehicle to Bavaria to sell it and wanted to impress the buyer.

© Reuters 2006. All Rights Reserved.

Microsoft says "Gears" game sells 1 million copies...

Reuters Technology News

Wed Nov 22, 2006. SEATTLE (Reuters) - Microsoft Corp. (MSFT.O: Quote, Profile, Research) said on Wednesday it had sold 1 million copies of its game "Gears of War" in two weeks, making it the fastest-selling title for its Xbox 360 video game console.

Microsoft has been counting on "Gears of War", which went on sale on November 7, to steal some thunder from the recent launches of rival gaming machines from Sony Corp. (6758.T: Quote, NEWS, Research) (SNE.N: Quote, Profile, Research) and Nintendo Co. Ltd. (7974.OS: Quote, NEWS, Research).

Game sales also are important because Microsoft loses money on each Xbox 360 machine it sells, so it relies on game sales to make the business profitable.

Microsoft said earlier this month that "Gears of War", which puts players in the role of a futuristic soldier battling invading aliens, had booked the biggest number of pre-orders of any of its games since 2004's "Halo 2", the second installment of the flagship franchise for the original Xbox.

Pre-ordering is the retail practice in which consumers pay money in advance to ensure a copy of a game on launch date.

Still, "Gears of War " did not come close to matching the draw of "Halo 2", which sold $125 million -- roughly 2.5 million copies -- in its first 24 hours of availability.

"Halo 2", however, had the benefit of building on the successful formula of its predecessor, and it also came three years into the life of the original Xbox, meaning there was a bigger pool of potential buyers.

By contrast, "Gears of War" is an all-new game and arrived just a year after the Xbox 360 hit the market. Its price tag is 20 percent higher than that of "Halo 2" when it was launched.

Microsoft also said subscriptions to its Xbox Live online gaming service have increased because of "Gears of War". Paid registrations per day for the online gaming service have climbed 50 percent since the game's debut.

© Reuters 2006. All Rights Reserved.

Thursday, November 23, 2006

Drunken bus driver asks to continue school run...

Reuters News

Wed Nov 22, 2006. CANBERRA (Reuters) - A bus driver who was 13 times over the legal alcohol limit while driving a bus load of schoolchildren had a simple request for police who arrested him for drunken driving, an Australian court heard Wednesday.

"Can I finish my run, at least to drop these kids off?"

A country court in New South Wales state was told 50-year old David Stack had a blood alcohol level of 0.26, which is 13 times the legal limit for a bus driver, when he was stopped on November 7.

The court was told two adult passengers had alerted police after Stack's bus was speeding and swerving across the road.

Stack, who pleaded guilty to the drunk driving charge, said he regretted his actions and had apologized to the children on the bus at the time.

Now unemployed, Stack will be sentenced in February.

© Reuters 2006. All Rights Reserved.

Wednesday, November 22, 2006

Free Viagra spices up small town life...

Reuters News

<--- A bottle of Viagra pills is seen in an undated file photo. The mayor of a small Brazilian town has begun handing out free Viagra, spicing up the sex lives of dozens of elderly men and their partners. REUTERS

Mon Nov 20, 2006 BRASILIA, Brazil (Reuters) - The mayor of a small Brazilian town has begun handing out free Viagra, spicing up the sex lives of dozens of elderly men and their partners.

"Since we started the free distribution of sexual stimulants, our elderly population changed. They're much happier," said Joao de Souza Luz, the mayor of Novo Santo Antonio, a small town in the central state of Mato Grosso.

Souza Luz said 68 men over the age of 60 had already signed up for the program, which was approved by the town's legislature and has been dubbed "Happy Penis," or "Pinto Alegre" in Portuguese.

But the program has also had the unforeseen consequence of encouraging some extra-marital affairs, Souza Luz said.

"Some of the old men aren't seeking out their wives. They've got romances on the side," he said.
To discourage such illicit canoodling, Souza Luz said the city had decided to begin distributing the Viagra pills to the wives of the men who signed up for the program.

"That way, when the women are in the mood, they can give the pills to their husbands," he said.

© Reuters 2006. All Rights Reserved.

Tuesday, November 21, 2006

Yahoo in ad partnership with newspapers...

Reuters Technology News By Robert MacMillan

The Yahoo corporate building is seen in an undated file photo. Yahoo Inc. said on Monday it has agreed to have at least seven newspaper groups use its technology to sell advertising on their Internet sites. REUTERS/Handout

Mon Nov 20, 2006. NEW YORK (Reuters) - Yahoo Inc. said on Monday that it struck a deal with the publishers of 176 U.S. newspapers to let them use its technology to sell help-wanted advertising and offer a variety of local information services.

The move is an attempt by Yahoo to expand its reach into local markets, viewed as a key growth prospect as it battles rivals such as Google Inc. for advertising dollars.

For publishers, it is a bid to expand their audience and advertising revenue as more readers drop the print editions of their papers in favor of getting their news and classified ads from the Internet.

The publishers include Belo Corp., Cox Newspapers Inc., Hearst Newspapers, Journal Register Co., Lee Enterprises Inc., MediaNews Group and E.W. Scripps Co..

Their newspapers circulate in 38 U.S. states, and include major metropolitan dailies such as the San Francisco Chronicle, the Dallas Morning News and the Los Angeles Daily News.

"We believe the local segment is largely untapped and provides significant opportunities to expand audience engagement and subsequently grow local advertising," Yahoo Chief Executive Terry Semel said in a statement. Financial terms of the deal were not disclosed.

In a key element, advertisers who list jobs in the papers will also be able to post them on Yahoo's HotJobs Web site, potentially widening the appeal of print help-wanted ads, which have lost ground in recent years to online recruiting sites. Continued...

© Reuters 2006. All Rights Reserved.

Thursday, November 16, 2006

Warm weather wrecks bears' winter slumber...

Reuters News

A four-month-old bear cub looks around as it is released for the first time outside a family farm some 400 km west of Moscow, April 12, 2005. Insomniac bears are roaming the forests of southwestern Siberia scaring local people as the weather stays too warm for the animals to fall into their usual winter slumber. By Sergei Karpukhin

Wed Nov 15, 2006. MOSCOW, Nov 15 (Reuters Life!) - Insomniac bears are roaming the forests of southwestern Siberia scaring local people as the weather stays too warm for the animals to fall into their usual winter slumber.

The furry mammals escape harsh winters by going to sleep in October-November for around six months, but in the snowless Kemerovo region where the weather is unseasonably warm, bears have no desire yet to hibernate.

"Due to weather conditions, bears didn't go into the winter sleep in time," said Tatiana Maslova, chief expert at a regional environmental agency in the city of Kemerovo, about 3,500 km (2,190 miles) southeast of Moscow.

"Our teams are making sure there is no damage to farming and to local residents," she told Reuters on Wednesday, adding that every patch of land is watched by a specially assigned inspector.

To survive the prolonged winter rest, bears have to put on extra body fat -- up to 180 kg (396 pounds) -- and so spend the preceding months devouring as much food as they can find.

"At the moment there is enough fodder, so they are not wreaking any havoc," Maslova said.
Hunters, out in the woods stalking birds and hares now that the hunting season is open, need protection from restless bears the most, she added.

"We have observers who ensure there are no attacks on hunters."

Bears den in dry places usually covered by snow, and wet weather makes finding a suitable "bedroom" for the winter difficult.

Russian media reported that in the Kemerovo region and other areas, normally cold and snowy by now, there are fresh buds on trees and some flowers have blossomed for the second time this year.

© Reuters 2006. All Rights Reserved.

Tuesday, November 14, 2006

In sin city Vegas, erotic dancers must keep distance...

Reuters News

Sat Nov 11, 2006 7:55pm ET SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - A court has upheld a Las Vegas city regulation barring erotic dancers from raunchy physical contact with their customers, in a ruling that runs counter to the gambling city's sinful reputation.

Nevada's Supreme Court on Thursday reversed two lower court rulings that found the regulation improperly curtailed "expressive conduct" protected by the U.S. Constitution's First Amendment.

The high court judges said that even if the constitutional amendment did apply, its protection was not absolute, and added the city measure helps curtail prostitution, sexually transmitted disease, drug offenses and criminal activity.

The city rule bars dancers from physical contact of a sexual nature with customers.

The decision echoes a ruling by the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals last year that backed a California city's regulation requiring at least two feet (0.7 meter) distance between erotic dancers and the audience.

Voters in Seattle took a different view this week, rejecting a measure on Tuesday that would require erotic dancers to stay at least four feet from patrons.

© Reuters 2006. All Rights Reserved.

"Sexist" urinals sell out...

Reuters News

Mon Nov 13, 2006. VIENNA (Reuters) - Four urinals shaped like a woman's lips were sold on eBay Sunday for a total of 5,343 euros ($6,877) after their owner removed them from a public toilet in Vienna following protests that they were sexist.

Designed by Austrian artist Rudolf Scheffel for the "toilet-bar Vienna" next to the National Opera, the urinals featured lips covered in red, orange or blue lipstick, a bright red tongue and gleaming white teeth.

The urinals were in the toilets for three years but raised an outcry in the run-up to Austria's October 1 parliamentary election when they were used by political party supporters attending rallies nearby.

Women's rights campaigners said the urinals were sexist and misogynist. The toilet's operator Gerhard Neuhold said on eBay they would be restored to their original condition before being delivered to their new owners.

One of the two red-lipped urinals proved most seductive in the auction, raising 1,510 euros from Austria-based eBay user "abv06." The other three went to another bidder in Austria, according to the eBay online auction web site.

Neuhold told Austrian tabloid newspaper Kronen-Zeitung that the amount was at the lower end of the range of his expectations. He will donate a quarter to a charity.

© Reuters 2006. All Rights Reserved.

Sunday, November 12, 2006

Microsoft goes for Google's jugular...

C-NET REVIEWS Rafe Needleman

Microsoft brings 3D mapping to Internet Explorer.

November 06, 2006. Enlarge photo Microsoft is about to upgrade its mapping product, Live Local, to Microsoft Virtual Earth, a competitor to Google Earth. [See news story.] We got a live preview of the product a few days ago and will have a hands-on review shortly. These impressions are based on the demo.

In a word: Wow. Microsoft is doing with its Earth program what I've wanted from Google for a while: creating one integrated mapping and globe-exploring service, not two products with different interfaces. With Virtual Earth, you get all of Microsoft's Live Local features (traffic data, e-mail integration, bookmarks) with the additional capability to zoom around the 3D planet and see your locations from any angle.

Microsoft, like Google, has 3D buildings in its virtual world, but Microsoft's are photo-realistic, not just gray boxes. There is expected to be 15 cities with 3D buildings at launch, with 100 by next summer. In the San Francisco city demo, the buildings looked great.

The service will have an API, so people can use the Virtual Earth globe in their own apps and mash-ups. However, don't expect too many people to create Virtual Earth mash-ups, since the service works only in Internet Explorer.

But Virtual Earth is great eye candy, and if you're an Internet Explorer user, the integration between it and Microsoft's online mapping product is very powerful.

Friday, November 10, 2006

Telstra's ADSL2+ finally arrives, access limited....and about time!

PC World

Sydney 10/11/2006.On the tenth anniversary of BigPond's launch, Telstra has finally flicked the switch for uncapped high speed ADSL and ADSL2+ broadband services. However, its new 24Mbps capable ADSL2+ will only be sold in locations where competitors already offer the same service.

The availability comes some 18 months after its competitors, including iiNet and Internode, have been offering ADSL2+ speeds. Until now, Telstra's fastest DSL offering has been capped at 1.5Mbps.

Telstra's new uncapped ADSL plans can reach speeds of 8Mbps and will cover 2,400 exchanges and 91 per cent of the population. Its limited ADSL2+ offering will allow download speeds of up to 20Mbps, just shy of this technology's 24Mbps capacity.

In an ASX statement, BigPond group managing director, Justin Milne, said the decision to limit exchanges to locations where competitors also offer ADSL2+ was due to "regulatory constraints".

"Cleary, this is a very defensive move by Telstra and not at all an offensive one," said Ovum research director, David Kennedy. "It's consistent with that fact that they are not looking for a fight from their ADSL2+ competitors because they are not undercutting their prices."

Kennedy said Telstra's avoidance of a price war was a wise move on its part and believed the telco would instead look to achieve growth by consolidating services through BigPond's range of deliverable content and its marketing clout.

Telstra's high speed 20,000/1000kbps 60GB plan is priced at $149.95 per month. In comparison, Internode offers its high speed 24000/1000kbps 80 GB shaped plan for $119.95 per month.

"Today it does look like Telstra has finally, (six years late) and lurchingly, blinked," said Internode's Simon Hackett in a posting on the Whirpool forums. "I am sure that (one way or another) our customers will gain access to higher speeds nationally as a result of this, and I'm very much looking forward to being able to offer the entire Australian ADSL population the ability to see just how fast the Internode national and international backbone is, by removing that ridiculous 1500/256 bottleneck from their lives at last."

Ovum's Kennedy said that despite having the technical capability since last year to offer ADSL2+ services, Telstra had delayed availability while it sought clarification from the ACCC that it would not have to provide competitors with access to its ADSL2+ infrastructure.

Microsoft struggles with patch...

ZDNet News By Ina Fried, and Dawn Kawamoto, CNET News.com

October 10, 2006. Microsoft on Tuesday released a slew of patches for Windows and Office, but a glitch prevented the company from pushing the updates out automatically.

The patches, which include critical fixes for both Office and Windows, can be manually downloaded from Microsoft's Web site. Early on Tuesday, the fixes were not available via Microsoft's more automated tools, and Microsoft said its technical teams were "working around the clock" to solve the updating problems.

"Due to technical difficulties experienced on the Microsoft Update platform, security updates released today are not currently available via Microsoft Update, Automatic Updates, Windows Server Update Services or Windows Update v6," the software maker said.

The issue was resolved by late afternoon Tuesday and the patches were sent out via the automatic updating service, Microsoft said.

The company had said last week to expect 11 patches. However, a representative for the software maker said on Tuesday that a planned critical Windows patch "did not meet the quality bar" and so was not issued.

Tuesday's 10 security bulletins, which include six critical fixes for both Office and Windows, are designed to fix more than two dozen flaws in Microsoft's software--the largest bunch so far this year, said one security company.

"Although there are only 10 patches, they address 26 vulnerabilities, and it's the largest release for Microsoft this year," said Jonathan Bitle, manager of technical accounts at Qualys. "This could be overwhelming for IT managers because they'll have to navigate what to patch and which to patch first."

The second-largest release was in August, when Microsoft's 12 patches put right 23 flaws. A CNET Reviews rundown of the October bulletins can be found here.

Antivirus company Symantec said the updates include patches for Office flaws for which exploit code already exists, including an Excel vulnerability that surfaced in July and a Word exploit that emerged last month.

"The quantity of Microsoft Office vulnerabilities this month illustrates this emerging attacker focus, and users should consider the installation of these patches to be a critical component of a smart security strategy," Symantec Security Response director Oliver Friedrichs said in a statement.

IT administrators may want to work particularly quickly in deploying three of the patches--MS06-057, MS06-058 and MS06-060-Qualys' Bitle said.

Microsoft also noted that it expects to release Windows Internet Explorer 7 later this month, with the browser update scheduled to be delivered shortly thereafter via Windows Update and Automatic Update. The company said it is providing a blocker tool that will allow businesses to prevent their computers from receiving the new browser. Businesses that don't want IE7 should have the blocking tool in place by November 1, Microsoft said.

Thursday, November 09, 2006

Skype tests new features...

Reuters Technology News By Eric Auchard

Wed Nov 8, 2006. SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Web telephone-calling company Skype on Wednesday unveiled new software with automatic click-to-call features designed to make shopping easier and that also encourages users to join group conversations.

<---A man uses a Skype internet phone in a 2005 photo.
Skype on Wednesday unveiled new software with automatic click-to-call features designed to make shopping easier and that also encourages users to join group conversations. REUTERS/Richard Chung

Skype Chief Executive Niklas Zennstrom said in an interview that features in the new Skype 3.0 -- available in a public test version starting on Wednesday -- can help the company move beyond its dependence on communications revenue."You are also going to see new services which are more targeted to e-commerce," Zennstrom said.

The company has said it expects $195 million in revenue, up 225 percent from $60 million it took in 2005.

Skype-calling software allows users to place free phone calls to other Skype users on computers. It also offers cut-rate prices for calls to conventional landline or mobile phone users from either computers or a new generation of Skype-ready phones now available worldwide.

Click-to-call allows calls to be to be placed the moment a Skype user clicks on a phone number listed on any Web page.

The promise of such features for use in Web-based customer service or closing sales was a big selling point that online auctioneer eBay Inc. had highlighted when it acquired Skype a year ago in a deal worth more than $4 billion.

Skype 3.0 automates this process by allowing users with only one click to make ordinary phone calls from Web pages. Continued...

© Reuters 2006. All Rights Reserved.

Wednesday, November 08, 2006

Skype sets eyes on enterprise customers...

Computer World John Blau (IDG News Service)

8 Nov 2006. After winning over millions of consumers to its largely free Internet telephone services, Skype is preparing to go after businesses eager to reduce their telecommunication costs.

Skype, a provider of VOIP (voice of Internet Protocol) services acquired by Ebay for US$2.6 billion last year, is developing a range of offerings targeted at the enterprise market, said Skype Senior Director Jonathan Christensen, at the Von conference in Berlin on Monday.

"We're currently working on a call-center service," Christensen said. "And there are more enterprise services on the way. So stay tuned."

Security is a huge concern of all businesses, Christensen acknowledged. "Companies have told us that we don't share enough information with their IT managers," he said. "Information sharing is definitely an issue. We're going to be putting together more white papers and other information to improve this."

Interoperability with public service telephone networks remains difficult and, depending on the network, can degrade call quality, according to Christensen. This is also an issue Skype will need to address to attract corporate users.

Asked if Skype, with annual sales of around US$200 million, could ever justify its acquisition price, Christensen said the company will be rolling out many new products over its platform aimed at creating new revenue streams.

But revenue was not the main reason for purchasing Skype, according to Christensen. It was a one-time opportunity.

"On the Internet, there are some successful businesses that are only created once, like Flickr, YouTube and Skype," Christensen said. "For every YouTube, you'll find hundreds of other sites offering nearly the same service. It's what we call major network effect; once it happens, it happens."

Tuesday, November 07, 2006

Lice face lousy future from dryer device...

Reuters Health News By Michael Conlon

Mon Nov 6, 2006. CHICAGO (Reuters) - A single 30-minute treatment with a hair dryer-like device kills head lice more effectively than chemical preparations, apparently by drying the bugs and their eggs to death, researchers reported on Monday.

<--- (A nurse checks a homeless man for lice during disinfection at a medical centre in Moscow, January 14, 2004. A single 30-minute treatment with a hair dryer-like device kills head lice more effectively than chemical preparations, apparently by drying the bugs and their eggs to death, researchers reported on Monday).


If the device, called the Louse Buster, wins U.S. regulatory approval, it could be on the market for schools, clinics and other institutional settings within two years, the report from the University of Utah said.

"It is particularly effective because it kills louse eggs, which chemical treatments have never done very well," said Dale Clayton, a biology professor at the school who led the research and helped invent the machine. "It also kills hatched lice well enough to eliminate entire infestations. It works in one 30-minute treatment."

The study, published in the November issue of "Pediatrics," the journal of the American Academy of Pediatrics, said the device blows air at a slightly cooler temperature than a hair dryer. The parasites may be dried to death, the study said.

Previous research had found that lice eggs, called nits, lose their amniotic fluid in hot conditions making it difficult for them to hatch. An earlier study involving a hair rinse using the pesticide permethrin killed 60 percent of eggs, compared to 98 percent mortality with the dryer.

The hot air dryer is also likely to avoid the problem of lice developing drug-resistant strains, the authors said. "In summary, hot air is a significant improvement over other therapies used to treat head lice," the report concluded.

It said the device is in early stages of commercial development by a University of Utah spin-off company, Larada Sciences, for which Clayton is chief scientific officer, with patents pending on the technology.

Randall Block, president and chief operating officer of the company, said the device will have to pass "fairly rigorous clinical trials" before it can be approved as a medical device by the Food and Drug Administration.

Block said it will be intended primarily for use in schools, clinics and other institutional settings, and will likely cost from $1,000 to $2,000 for the basic machine.

Clayton warned parents not to use home hair dryers to try to kill head lice.

© Reuters 2006. All Rights Reserved.

Sunday, November 05, 2006

Please cancel my AOL account...

"YouTube"

Sunday, 5 Nov. 2006. Gold Coast QLD Australia. Microsoft isn't the only company that's doing it to us.

Thinking of cancelling (or gasp... signing up for) AOL internet service? Watch this video of how AOL treats its customers, and then think again. Or perhaps you're considering signing up for Comcast high-speed internet?

This is what's in stake for you.

Saturday, November 04, 2006

Flavored condom ad in bad taste?

Reuters News

Fri Nov 3, 2006 NEW DELHI (Reuters) - Indian authorities want to stop the daytime airing of a television advertisement promoting flavoured condoms saying it is obscene and in bad taste, a newspaper reported Friday.

<--- A truck driver blows up a condom during an AIDS awareness campaign event called a "condom party," organized by a non-government organisation (NGO) in Guragon, in the northern Indian state of Haryana June 9, 2006. Indian authorities want to stop the daytime airing of a television advertisement promoting flavoured condoms saying it is obscene and in bad taste, a newspaper reported Friday.

The advert promotes DKT's "XXX" strawberry, chocolate and banana flavoured condoms with the catchline "What is your flavor of the night?."

But the Advertising Standards Council of India and the Censor Board have asked the government to bar the ad from being broadcast during the day, especially during the popular Champions Trophy international cricket tournament.

"This campaign is obscene," Sharmila Tagore, chairwoman of the Censor Board was quoted as saying in the Times of India. "Maybe DKT is targeting raunchy teenagers. But the ads are definitely not meant for children."

Tagore, who is also an anti-AIDS activist, said she did not want to ban the advert totally, but recommended it be aired after 11 p.m. or in cinemas with an "A certification" instead of during the day when children were watching television.

An A certification on a film or advert indicates that it is meant for adult viewing only.

A senior DKT official told the newspaper the flavored condoms were not meant to promote oral sex, but to encourage couples who do not like the smell of latex.

Conservative attitudes to sex and contraception and a lack of awareness is common, especially in rural India.

Experts say this has not only left children and women vulnerable to abuse but has also exacerbated the spread of HIV/AIDS in the country, which now has the highest number of cases in the world.

According to the United Nations, 5.7 million Indians are living with the virus. But activists say the true figure may be far higher as social stigma forces many of those infected to keep their status a secret.

© Reuters 2006. All Rights Reserved.

Friday, November 03, 2006

Police on lookout for model behavior...

Reuters News

Thu Nov 2, 2006 7:29am ET. MUMBAI, Nov 2 (Reuters Life!) - Indian police have an unusual undercover surveillance job this week, scanning the ramps and observing models at a top fashion show to check that no one intentionally displays too much flesh.

Police in plain clothes mingled with India's cigar-chomping, crystal-clinking class at the Lakme Fashion Week, after busting zippers and slipping bustiers at the show's last edition sparked a morality debate in the conservative country.

"We are keeping an eye on each show. We don't want any bad example to be set," said Sanjay Mohite, deputy commissioner of police in Mumbai, India's financial and entertainment capital.

In March, a series of "wardrobe malfunctions" at the show saw models exposing their breasts and buttocks, sending newspapers and television channels into a frenzy of excitement.

Indian police even launched an investigation into the incidents, but later concluded that the clothes had come undone by accident.

This time, police have issued a 28-point guide for the organizers and designers, including a directive that models wear nipple tape so that they don't show through flimsy dresses, and that lights be switched off if clothes come off.

Police said they reserved the right to cancel a show if their guidelines were violated.

"We have a set of guidelines to follow. I think everyone is happy about it," said Anil Chopra, vice-president of organizers Lakme. Continued...

© Reuters 2006. All Rights Reserved.

New weapon in battle of the bulge...

Reuters News

SYDNEY, Nov 2 (Reuters Life!) - Size really does count, just ask Australian underwear maker AussieBum which has just launched the "Wonderjock" for men who want to look bigger.

Since the launch seven days ago, AussieBum says it has sold 50,000 pairs of "Wonderjock," mostly on its Web site www.aussiebum.com and a handful of stores around the world.

"The design of the underwear, separates and lifts. The fabric cup protrudes everything out in front instead of down toward the ground," said "Wonderjock" designer Sean Ashby.

"There is no padding, rings or strings," said Ashby, a co-founder of the Internet-based AussieBum firm.

Ashby said the idea for the "Wonderjock" was the result of online feedback from customers who expressed an interest in looking bigger, just like women using the "Wonderbra."

"When you go to a department store to buy underwear you usually get a grandmother serving, which is not the ideal way to get feedback," said Ashby. "Our customers give us feedback. We didn't realize that big is better."

© Reuters 2006. All Rights Reserved.

Thursday, November 02, 2006

Five hundred calls per month to piracy hotline: Microsoft

ZDNet Australia

By Munir Kotadia, ZDNet Australia

01 November 2006 05:48 PM. Microsoft revealed that it received around 500 calls per month to its Australian anti-piracy hotline from consumers that feel they have been ripped off and from resellers that are being pushed out of the market by dealers in pirate software.

The claim comes as the software giant launched a massive crackdown against piracy by announcing it has filed 50 criminal and civil actions globally, including three in Australia.

Vanessa Hutley, senior lawyer at Microsoft Australia, said the company received information from a variety of sources and a lot of the information had come from the anti-piracy hotline.

Despite the large number of calls, Microsoft only took action once it had evidence of wrongdoing, Hutley said.

"We don't take action unless we have investigated ourselves. We find that the majority of people ringing the hotline are people that have genuinely been ripped off -- or system builders that find their business is being undermined by people that are actually shoddy dealers," she told ZDNet Australia.

According to Hutley, Microsoft does not set targets for the number of software pirates it hopes to catch each month.

"We don't just file cases for the sake of it nor do we benchmark -- doing X number for the sake of it -- each case is analysed on its own value and based on the evidence we have," she said.

In order to gather evidence, Microsoft employs secret shoppers, who are paid to purchase software from suspected pirates.

"We have a variety of mechanisms to track purchases -- people will go in as consumers and purchase products in a very legitimate way. We don't take rumours, we need to have evidence and that evidence is collected through a very judicious purchasing process," added Hutley.

In Australia today, Microsoft lodged proceedings in either the Federal Magistrates Court or the Federal Court of Australia against: Safar Safar of Ashfield, NSW-based Compubits; Zhiyang Xu, who trades in NSW as TopTeq Computer and Reuben Mark Vella, the sole director and shareholder of RP Distribution Pty Ltd, which trades as LGA Logistics.

Wednesday, November 01, 2006

The new mating call...

Reuters News

Mon Oct 30, 2006. TOKYO (Reuters) - Is it a phone call, a text message or simply time to make love?

A new mobile phone available through Japan's NTT DoCoMo can ring to let would-be mothers know when they reach the most fertile part of their monthly reproductive cycles.

By tapping in data on menstruation dates, the user can program the phone to alert her three days before ovulation and again on the day. The company warns that the calculations are based on average cycles.

The new phone comes after Japan's fertility rate -- the average number of children a woman bears in her lifetime -- fell to an all-time low of 1.25 in 2005, sparking worries about a shrinking population.

The phone was the idea of female designer Momoko Ikuta, who also provided its pastel paisley look.

The handset provides several other functions designed to appeal to women, such as a recipe database and a button on the side that sets off a "camouflage melody," allowing the user to avoid unwanted attention by pretending to receive a call.

© Reuters 2006. All Rights Reserved.

Active life may help elderly keep their eyesight...

Reuters Health News

Mon Oct 30, 2006. LONDON (Reuters) - Keeping an active lifestyle can reduce the risk of developing an eye disease that is a leading cause of blindness in the elderly, researchers said on Tuesday.

Age-related macular degeneration (AMD) gradually destroys the central vision of the eye. It is linked to aging but scientists in the United States have found that physical activity such as walking and climbing stairs has a protective effect against it.

Exercise helped to reduce the odds of suffering from "wet", or exudative, AMD -- a form of the condition in which new blood vessels grow behind the eye causing bleeding and scarring which leads to distorted vision and impaired sight.

The effects were still noticed after taking of other risk factors such as weight, blood pressure and smoking.

"Engaging in an active lifestyle or walking more ... reduced the risk of developing exudative AMD over 15 years by 70 percent and 30 percent, respectively," Michael Knudtson, of the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health, said in a report in the British Journal of Ophthalmology.

Knudtson and his team studied the impact of exercise on 4,000 men and women in Beaver Dam, Wisconsin over 15 years. The volunteers were aged between 43 and 86 when the study started in 1988-1990.

They were questioned about how much exercise they did and assessed every five years. About 25 percent had an active lifestyle and nearly the same number climbed more than six flights of stairs each day.

The researchers said they could not rule out other factors but added that the report "provides evidence that a modifiable behavior, regular physical activity, such as walking, may have a protective effect for incident AMD."

© Reuters 2006. All Rights Reserved.

Depression can weaken bones, Israeli study shows...

Reuters Health News

Mon Oct 30, 2006. JERUSALEM (Reuters) - Depression can lead to brittle bones, Israeli scientists found in a new study released on Monday that also suggested anti-depressant drugs could be used to treat osteoporosis.

The scientists, at Jerusalem's Hebrew University, said mice that were given drugs to induce behavior similar to human depression suffered from a loss of mass in their bones, mainly their hips and vertebrae.

After being given anti-depressants, the bone density of the mice increased, along with their level of activity and social interaction, the scientists said.

"The new findings ... point for the first time to depression as an important element in causing bone mass loss and osteoporosis," Hebrew University professor Raz Yirmiya, who took part in the study, said in a statement.

Depression activates the "sympathetic nervous system", which responds to impending danger or stress, causing the release of a chemical compound called noradrenaline that harms bone-building cells, the study showed.

Anti-depressant drugs block noradrenaline and reverse its negative effects, according to the findings, which will be published this week in the American journal PNAS (Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences).

A study published earlier this month by the Forsyth Institute in Boston found that fluoxetine, used in the popular anti-depressant drug Prozac, also increased bone mass in mice.

Osteoporosis weakens bones and makes them more likely to fracture. It is treatable but affects millions and is most prevalent among postmenopausal women.

© Reuters 2006. All Rights Reserved.