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  • Big Brother Can Hear Which Ads You’re Watching


    Man in suit listening with his ear

    In advertising, the web has spending certainty, but TV has scale. Now German consumer research firm GfK is trying to bring something like the net’s trump card to the telly – by using mobile phones to listen to which ads viewers really watch.

    Members of its Web Efficiency Panel – whose internet usage is monitored to help advertisers understand the impact of their online advertising – are being handed “modified mobile phones, which record exposure to TV advertising through sound recognition”, GfK says.

    From the announcement: “Individuals activate the GfK-modified mobile phone when they are watching television, and the phone is able to recognise from the sound which advertisement is being viewed. The recorded data is then transmitted via the phone’s network. Using extremely precise statistical transmission information from Thomson Media Control, GfK is able to determine the television programme during which the panel member was exposed to a specific advertisement.”

    The method is a far cry from monitors like UK radio monitor Rajar, whose panelists must fill in diaries chronicling their listening habits. GfK’s system doesn’t measure viewings of actual programming, but using mobile is interesting, since many people already have their mobiles beside them when watching.

    GfK says the system, because it profiles users TV and online habits, helps advertisers track campaigns effectiveness from one medium to the other, potentially right through to purchase conversion.


  • That’s a Hyundai? Red Bull Racing and Hyundai Reveal PM580 Pikes Peak Race Car – Car News

    Rhys Millen’s Pikes Peak racer looks more like a Daytona prototype.

    Rhys Millen wants to break the Pikes Peak hill-climb record, and he’s partnering with Hyundai to build the unique weapon you see here. The current record holder, Nobuhiro “Monster” Tajima, set his time of 10:01.408 in a purpose-built Suzuki Sport “XL7” that had about as much to do with a real Suzuki as Millen’s does with any Genesis.

    Keep Reading: That’s a Hyundai? Red Bull Racing and Hyundai Reveal PM580 Pikes Peak Race Car – Car News

    Related posts:

    1. Hyundai and Rhys Millen Racing Team Up to Break Pikes Peak Record
    2. RMR Red Bull Hyundai Genesis Coupe – Auto Shows
    3. RMR Red Bull Hyundai Genesis Coupe – Auto Shows
  • Special Offer: 20% off BlackBerry Apps from BBSync Store!

    What’s a better way to say Happy Birthday then by giving you something! To kick off BBSync’s Third Birthday Bash we’re giving you 20% off any regular priced apps from the BBSync Store. To take advantage of this hot offer all you have to do is use coupon code “bbsyncbday3″ at the checkout. You should hurry because this offer expires on April 24th. Here’s a great example of what you could get:

    With the 20% discount you can save $9.99 on the purchase of Tether for BlackBerry. This app normally costs $49.95 and you get it for $39.96. Happy Shopping!

    Start shopping in the BBSync Store and get 20% off today!

    You’re reading a story which originated at BlackBerrySync.com, Where you find BlackBerry News You Can Sync With…

    This story is sponsored by the new BlackBerry Sync Mobile App Store. Grab your free copy today at www.GetAppStore.com from your BlackBerry.

    Special Offer: 20% off BlackBerry Apps from BBSync Store!

    Related posts:

    1. Tether for BlackBerry is 50% off Today Only in the BBSync Store! I say this every time we talked about Tether for…
    2. Happy Holidays from BlackBerrySync.com – Take 15% off Apps from BBSync Store! I just wanted to drop a quick post to wish…
    3. Special Offer: Get MemoryUp Pro (version 3.5) at 50% Off only from BBSync! Ever wonder how you can fine tune your BlackBerry? Give…
  • Dodd: FinReg to Move as Early as Wednesday

    Sen. Chris Dodd (D-Conn.) is calling the Republicans out: The Senate plans to give them the opportunity to vote for or filibuster the financial regulatory reform bill as soon as Wednesday, Brian Beutler at Talking Points Memo reports.

    Democrats need one Republican crossover to break a filibuster and move forward to an up-or-down vote on financial regulation. Right now, it is unclear who that crossover will be, with all 41 Republicans signed on to a letter of opposition written by Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (Ky.). Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine) was the last signer of the letter, and Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, a strong proponent of the bill, is due to meet with her this afternoon.

    Dodd, the chair of the Senate Banking Committee, predicted that Republicans would not stick together to filibuster the bill. “I don’t really believe Republican members want to be with their leaders when they’re talking about filibustering a bill that would allow us to address [regulatory reform],” he said. Still, Republican leadership has repeatedly indicated that it plans to filibuster to force substantive changes to the legislation.

    (As an aside — I doubt that the Senate would move the bill to the floor by Wednesday, given that Obama plans to make his banner speech on the subject at Cooper Union on Thursday.)

  • This Week at the Foundation Center (April 19-23)

    Monday, April 19, 1:00-3:00 pm Meet the Grantmakers: Strengthening the Safety Net 

    Tuesday, April 20, 1:00-2:15 pm Prospect Research Basics: Researching Individual Donors

    Wednesday, April 21, 1:00-3:00 pm Going Sustainable: Developing and Running a Successful Social Enterprise;  5:00-6:30 pm Grantseeking Basics; and 6:30-7:30 pm Introduction to Foundation Directory Online 

    Thursday, April 22, 10:00 am-12:00 pm Healthy, Wealthy, and Wise: Winning Ways for Health and Human Services Organizations; and 1:00-2:30 pm How to Approach a Foundation

    Our library is open Monday through Friday free of charge and no appointment is necessary.

    Library Hours:

    Monday/Tuesday/Thursday/Friday
    10:00 am-5:00 pm
    Wednesday
    10:00 am-8:00 pm

  • Isla Fisher Pregnant?

    Is Aussie actress Isla Fisher expecting? The Confessions of a Shopaholic star — who secretly wed longtime beau Sacha Baron Cohen last February — was been spotted out and about in Los Angeles over the weekend sporting what looks suspiciously like a baby bump.

    It wouldn’t be the first time Isla has remained mum on baby rumors. The star also kept quiet during her pregnancy with daughter Olive Cohen with the Borat star in 2007.

    The child would be the second for the newlyweds.


  • Great news for mothers – but more work to be done

    A bike ambulance in Mozambique. Credit: Steve Simon Oxfam GB

    A bike ambulance in Mozambique. Credit: Steve Simon Oxfam GB

    Last week, I spotted a headline on the BBC website which gave me hope that years of campaigning on maternal health has at last paid off. A recent study has found that in the last 30 years, maternal deaths around the world have reduced by a third, meaning 150,000 more mothers are living to see their newborn babies.

    For years, it seemed the scandal that allows a mother to die every minute – the vast majority of those deaths preventable – was continuing unabated. Despite the promise by world leaders to reduce maternal mortality by three quarters in the Millennium Development Goals – we were seeing virtually no progress.

    So this research is fantastic news and shows what can be achieved when governments invest in their health systems and help mothers’ access health care when they really need it. But the headline missed the more depressing findings – that maternal mortality in many of the poorest countries, particularly in Africa, has in fact increased.

    This makes me reflect back to my recent trip to Malawi, where I visited pregnant women in rural villages in the south of the country. I heard stories of women going into labour and having to walk 20km to the nearest health clinic, often in the middle of the night. The village had a ‘bicycle ambulance’, which could carry women who were suffering complications in labour or could not walk – but this would still be a three-hour journey along a bumpy dirt road. It was tragic to hear how the last women who was carried on the bike trailer had died en route, leaving another widowed father to care for his family alone.

    I also saw how the Malawian government has made huge strides forward in improving their health service. Supported by international donors, they have expanded free health care for mothers and children, and are working through Chiefs to encourage women to travel to health clinics before they go into labour.  But the experience showed me the reality behind the statistics, and the challenges to providing health care for all in a country that is desperately poor.

    This week’s news story has made me optimistic that the fight against maternal mortality is winnable – but only if donors and governments invest in health care in poor countries. It’s made me more determined to continue the campaign on maternal mortality, to see that governments keep their promise to Africa’s mothers.

    Read more about the recent trip to Malawi

  • Second Volcano, Hekla, Erupting*

    Update: It appears the original reports of a plume are not necessarily consistent with an eruption. For now this seems to be no big deal.

    And don’t miss: 10 dormant volcanoes that could blow and cost the economy billions >

    Original post: Uh oh, the Icelandic gods are going nuts!

    Now it appears that a second volcano, Hekla, is erupting, according to Reuters. (via AshAlerts)

    Click the below image to get taken to a live video feed of Hekla.

    MSNBC also reports that Icelandic media reported on an icelandic eruption.

    Remember, this is about more than just air travel. Read here for the implications on food and energy supply in Europe >

    hekla

    Join the conversation about this story »

  • Daimler reportedly cutting ties with Iran over nuclear weapons program

    Filed under: , , , ,

    With pressure mounting on Iran to halt its nuclear weapons program, Daimler is reportedly joining the growing list of businesses – German ones especially – that are reducing their commercial activities with the rogue nation.

    Daimler has strong business ties in Iran, principally centered around the production and sales of commercial vehicles and diesel engines. Among the moves being undertaken by the German industrial giant are the sale of its 30 percent stake in Iranian Diesel Engine Manufacturing and the withdrawal of an application to sell civilian vehicles to Iran. Critics maintain that the moves are insufficient in the global campaign against Iran’s nuclear program, but point towards the initiative as a positive step in the right direction.

    The announcement has hit the wire hot on the heels of the nuclear security summit which President Obama hosted recently in Washington, where measures – largely supported by German Chancellor Angela Merkel (pictured above with Daimler chairman Dr. Dieter Zetsche) – aimed at isolating Iran were discussed.

    [Source: Automotive News – subs. req. | Image: Sascha Schuermann/AFP/Getty]

    Daimler reportedly cutting ties with Iran over nuclear weapons program originally appeared on Autoblog on Mon, 19 Apr 2010 11:39:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • Where’s Condoleezza Rice on New START?

    The former secretary of state and national security adviser can be criticized on many grounds, but if there’s one thing that defined Condoleezza Rice’s history and government service, it’s her expertise on U.S.-Russia relations. So it’s conspicuous that she hasn’t, to the best of my knowledge, taken any position on the merits of the New START accord with the Russians to cut the two nations’ nuclear arsenals and limit the number of deployed systems to deliver a nuclear payload.

    In his New Yorker column this week, Hendrik Hertzberg reminds us how the old Sovietologist guard of the Cold War-era Republican foreign policy establishment have embraced the treaty, even as the current crop of GOP senators express reservations:

    [S]ix right-of-center foreign-policy sages were invited to comment on the Nuclear Posture Review and New Start. George Shultz, President Reagan’s Secretary of State, had praise for both. Paul Wolfowitz, Deputy Defense Secretary under George W. Bush; Fred C. Ikle, a Reagan defense official; and James Schlesinger, President Nixon’s Secretary of Defense, offered criticisms so mild they might have been mistaken for lukewarm support. Richard Burt, who negotiated the first Start treaty for Reagan, wrote, “The Obama Administration’s nuclear posture review, together with the new Start treaty with Russia, will strengthen American security and reinforce the nation’s global leadership.”

    What, no Rice?

    So I contacted Rice’s assistants at Stanford University and learned that the former secretary and national security adviser hasn’t issued any statement so far and isn’t granting interview requests at the moment. Far be it for me to speculate why that is, but it seems odd that she wouldn’t wish to express a perspective on a subject firmly within her wheelhouse.

  • When It Comes to Virtualization, Are We There Yet?

    As much as we hear about virtualization, it can be surprising to get actual numbers on deployments and realize how low they remain — just 18-19 percent of workloads on enterprise x86 servers have actually been virtualized, according to new data released by Lazard Capital Markets. The investment bank expects 48 percent of enterprise workloads to be virtualized by 2012, which means the number of virtual machines will grow to 58 million from 5.8 million in 2008. So the software to manage virtualized machines is going to be hot, but there’s still room for growth.

    The other things adding spice to the commodity hypervisor market are the growth in server virtualization among small- to medium-sized businesses and the next level of virtualization– virtualizing the desktop. Virtualizing the desktop allows IT departments to store a copy of desktops on a server and deliver it to a remote client or PC.  This is a boon for Citrix, which has been pushing desktop virtualization for a while and appears to be the leader over rival VMware when it comes to customer interest in the technology, according to the Lazard report issued on Friday. A Jefferies research report out this morning notes that in a survey of the top 25  software resellers, 44 percent said their customers has expressed an interest in virtualizing the desktop. From the note:

    Some VARs see VDI as the next logical step after app virtualization. Moreover, Windows 7 upgrades are causing IT depts to reassess their entire desktop infrastructure. Ironically, some customers are looking to use VDI as a way to increase life of their existing hardware.

    But beyond the battle between VMware and Citrix for enterprise server and desktop virtualization, SMBs are accelerating their virtualization plans and choosing Microsoft’s Hyper-V in order to do so. Before 2009, some 30 percent of global organizations had started virtualizing — that number which has since doubled, driven predominantly by SMBs, Lazard said. SMB penetration is expected to exceed large enterprise penetration by next year, according to Lazard. So it looks like VMware will have to work hard to stay ahead of where the virtualization market is growing — on the desktop and with SMBs.

  • Movie & Music Trade Groups Suggest Orwellian Measures to Stop Piracy | Discoblog

    computers-networkOnline piracy has plagued the music and movie industry for years, with copyright infringement causing millions of dollars in loss each year. So when the U.S. Intellectual Property Enforcement Coordinator (the copyright czar) asked the entertainment industry to submit proposals to the government for ways to protect intellectual property, the industry came out all guns blazing.

    The Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) and the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) came out with a set of proposals (pdf) that would combat piracy by invading the privacy of consumers and putting the federal government to work for the entertainment industry.

    For example, the trade groups suggest that spyware could be installed on home computers across the land. This special software would identify and block content that violates fair use, block certain keywords that might lead to sites with illegally obtained content, and monitor social networks for the promotion of infringing Web sites.

    The industry also wants border authorities to educate everyone entering the United States about piracy issues, suggesting that customs forms should be amended to require the disclosure of pirate or counterfeit items being brought into the United States. The Electronic Frontier Foundation reports:

    Does that iPod in your hand luggage contain copies of songs extracted from friends’ CDs? Is your computer storing movies ripped from DVD (handy for conserving battery life on long trips)? Was that book you bought overseas “licensed” for use in the United States? These are the kinds of questions the industry would like you to answer on your customs form when you cross borders or return home from abroad.

    In another proposal involving the federal government, the trade groups suggest that the U.S. Department of Justice and the Department of Homeland Security should form an inter-agency task force that would be poised to strike whenever a big blockbuster film is about to be released. The task force should “work with industry to coordinate and make advance plans to try to interdict these most damaging forms of copyright theft, and to react swiftly with enforcement actions where necessary,” the industry suggests.

    Many experts described these proposals as “draconian,” “totally insane,” and a dystopian vision of an “intellectual property police state.” Geekosystem writes:

    The joint proposal from the MPAA and RIAA is, as one might suspect, the sort of thing that wouldn’t seem amiss coming out of the mouth of a black clad man with one cataract-filled eye, who sits in a swivel chair at one end of a glossy conference table and strokes a white Persian cat. Once he finishes speaking, his henchmen drag you away from your computer, screaming.

    Of course, these are just proposals made by the industry and nowhere close to being actual law. But Geekosystem adds that the proposals are an informative look at what the MPAA and RIAA would like to get with, if they could.

    Related Content:
    80beats: Italian Court Convicts Google Execs for Hosting Illegal Video
    Discoblog: Sweet Blogger O’ Mine, You’re Under Arrest
    DISCOVER: The Intellectual Property Fight That Could Kill Millions

    Image: iStockphoto


  • Bob Englehart On UConn President Michael Hogan’s Cardboard Cut-Outs; Placed Around The Storrs Campus

    Hartford Courant columnist Bob Englehart weighs in on the cardboard cutouts of University of Connecticut president Michael Hogan that have been placed around the campus in Storrs.

    http://blogs.courant.com/bob_englehart/2010/04/april-18-2010.html

  • Come to the largest climate rally ever on the D.C. mall on April 25

    by Denis Hayes

    Guest blogger Denis Hayes was national coordinator for the first Earth Day in
    1970, and director of the federal Solar Energy Research Institute from 1979 to
    1981. He is now president of the Bullitt Foundation and international chair of
    Earth Day 2010. Find out about the Earth Day big rally in Washington, D.C., as
    well as other actions you can take, at the Earth Day Network website.

    Earth Day Network is organizing a huge event on the Mall
    in Washington D.C. on April 25. The goal is to demand tough, effective
    climate legislation and a swift transition away from 19th century
    energy sources.

    “So what?” you may be asking yourself. There have been a lot of
    climate rallies over the last 25 years and Congress still hasn’t
    managed to pass a law. Why should I come to this one?

    Let me count the ways …

    Size

    Past climate rallies have generally run from a few dozen people to a
    couple thousand. On Sunday, April 25, energy and climate activists from
    New England to the Carolinas will gather together to find new friends
    and allies at largest climate rally ever. We are coming together to
    move beyond education; to demand change; and to make it clear there
    will be political consequences of Congress doesn’t act.

    Inspiration and direction

    You will hear from:
    Climate scientists like James Hansen, and Stephen Schneider.
    EPA chief (and heroine!) Lisa Jackson and CEQ Chair Nancy Sutley
    Cultural leaders like James Cameron (Avatar; Titanic) and Margaret Atwood (The Handmaid’s Tale; The Blind Assassin)
    Top business executives from Siemens, Phillips, UL, Future Friendly, and SunEdison
    Top labor leaders, including the President of the AFL-CIO and Secretary of the SEIU.
    Progressive activists, including Jesse Jackson, Lydia Camarillo, and Hilary Shelton
    Climate policy gurus like Joe Romm, Phaedra Ellis-Lamkins, and Rafael Fantauzzi
    Spiritual leaders, including Rev. Theresa Thames, Rev. Richard Cizik, and Rabbi Warren Stone
    Athletes like Dhani Jones, Aaron Peirsol, and Billy Demong
    Environmentalists like Bobby Kennedy and Phillipe Cousteau

    Entertainment

    In between the speakers we will hear from some of the most committed
    artists in the nation, including Sting, John Legend, The Roots, Willie
    Colon, Passion Pit, Bob Weir, Jimmy Cliff, Joss Stone, Booker T, The
    Honor Society, Mavis Staples …

    Intensity

    In 1970, I told huge Earth Day crowds in Washington, DC, Chicago,
    and New York: “We won’t appeal anymore to the conscience of
    institutions because institutions have no conscience. If we want them
    to do what is right, we must make them do what is right. We will use
    proxy fights, lawsuits, demonstration, research, boycotts, and-above
    all-ballots … If we let this become just a fad, it will be our last
    fad.”

    Earth Day organizers created a Dirty Dozen campaign that made “the
    environment” a voting issue in the 1970 elections. One of the seven
    Congressmen we defeated that fall was George Fallon, chairman of the
    House Public Works Committee: the “pork” committee. THAT got their
    attention. If Chairman Fallon was vulnerable, everyone in politics was
    vulnerable.

    Over the next three years, despite fierce opposition from the most
    powerful vested interests in the land, Congress passed the Clean Air
    Act, the Clean Water Act, the Endangered Species Act, and a half-dozen
    other far-reaching laws that have utterly transformed the way America
    does business.

    Now we must do it again.

    What is the goal?

    Humanity must swiftly abandon dirty energy sources and switch to
    safe, clean, decentralized, renewable energy sources like solar, wind,
    and geothermal. The world, led by America, must abandon the appallingly
    inefficient way it uses energy and swiftly embrace the most efficient
    new housing, transport, and industrial processes that exist. We
    Americans must slash our politically risky and economically
    catastrophic dependence on the oil wealth of nations that don’t like us
    very much.

    A necessary-though not sufficient-common denominator is to
    establish a price on carbon that reflects the costs of climate
    disruption, blowing the tops off mountains, and acidifying the world’s
    oceans. We must place a firm cap with no loopholes on the amount
    of carbon fuels we consume each year and ratchet that cap down at a
    prescribed rate every year in the future until we hit something very
    close to zero.

    Only a federal law can accomplish this goal.

    If this were easy, we would have begun a quarter century ago. The
    junk science, climate-denying interest groups are rich, powerful, and
    ruthless. But sooner or later they will lose.

    Sooner is better

    They will lose for the same reason that IBM and Control Data lost to
    Microsoft, Apple, and Dell. They will lose for the same reason that Ma
    Bell—the most powerful monopoly in the world—lost to cellular upstarts
    and internet-telephony. They lost because their thinking was anchored
    in the past instead of envisioning the future

    The junk science, climate-disruption-denying interest groups
    will lose because 19th century answers won’t solve 21st century
    problems.

    Come to the Mall

    At some point, this climate-disrupting madness has to start to stop.
    Come to the Mall between the Capitol Building and the White House on
    Sunday, April 25. Bring your spouse, your parents, your kids, your
    neighbors, your friends, your co-workers, your congregation, your
    bowling league. Vote with your bodies on April 25 at the largest
    climate rally ever.

    And put our political leaders on notice that you will vote with your ballot a few months later!

    Related Links:

    Deep thoughts from founder Chip Giller

    The Perils of ‘Green Watching’

    Graham doesn’t want climate bill associated with Earth Day






  • Mozambique: Where apathy is not an option

    Improving access to education in Mozambique is a struggle, but determined parents, together with local and international NGOs, are working to ensure that resources designated for education reach their children. Nicole Johnston finds out how.

    Girls listen attentively in class at Montes Namuli Primary School in Gurue. Photo: Neo Ntsoma/Oxfam

    Girls listen attentively in class at Montes Namuli Primary School in Gurue. Photo: Neo Ntsoma/Oxfam

    The war in Mozambique may have ended 18 years ago, but its legacy lives on in the classrooms of rural schools in Zambézia province.

    This area most often makes headlines when the Zambezi River floods, but it is also the province that suffered most during the 16-year civil war because of the rebel strategy of targeting and destroying hospitals, schools and roads.

    Here it is not unusual to have 100 children in a class, taught by teachers who have not finished high school themselves, with no toilets or running water. Exhausted teachers often run classes in three shifts, the first starting at 6.30am, and many schools do not possess any reading material apart from the children’s work books.

    A battle parents are determined to win

    A girl solves maths problems on the blackboard at Montes Namuli Primary School in Gurue. Photo: Neo Ntsoma/Oxfam

    A girl solves maths problems on the blackboard at Montes Namuli Primary School in Gurue. Photo: Neo Ntsoma/Oxfam

    Mozambique has made huge strides in improving access to basic education since the end of the civil war, but it is an uphill battle. For parents and teachers in rural towns and villages, this is a battle they are determined to win.

    Each school, no matter how impoverished, has a school council elected by members of the community and dedicated to ensuring its children get a decent education. Schools in affluent cities would admire the zeal with which they approach this task: apathy is not an option here.

    “This school was built by the community — they collected stones and made bricks to build the walls and then they lobbied government for the timber and iron sheets for the roof,” explains Pedro Namagila, director of the Errego Primary School in Ile.

    But the lack of basic amenities is not the only challenge that the school council faces: ensuring children stay in school is a major concern, with about 60% of children dropping out before completing Grade 5. For families struggling to grow enough food to survive, every child in school is a pair of hands lost from the fields.

    And as the HIV pandemic spreads, large numbers of children — mostly girls — drop out of school to work or care for sick relatives and younger siblings.

    “If a child drops out, we will go and ask the family why,” says Ferraz Lugeira, chairperson of the school council. “If they say it is because they don’t have books or stationery we use money from a fund for orphaned and vulnerable children.”

    No child turned away

    Children at play in Gurue district, Zambezia province. Photo: Neo Ntsoma/Oxfam

    Children at play in Gurue district, Zambezia province. Photo: Neo Ntsoma/Oxfam

    This determination by parents that their children get a better chance in life than they have had is echoed at Namaripe Primary School near Gurue. The school is nestled against a backdrop of spectacular mountains and tea plantations, and is reached by a road that, even in a 4×4, makes getting there an ordeal. The children walk long distances to school, and often there is not enough space to accommodate them once they get there.

    The province has a ratio of 91 pupils to each teacher, the distances are vast and the roads are bad or non-existent, making it difficult for the Education Department to deliver schoolbooks or do inspections.

    Americo Vaela is the chairperson of the school council and is determined that no child be turned away. “Lots of children don’t come to school because we don’t have enough classrooms. So we build classrooms with thatch walls and roofs until we can make the bricks we need.”

    “Each year we receive more and more students, so the school council will get together and figure out how many bricks each family should make,” explains school council member Padania Henriques. “We ask people with building skills to lend us their expertise and others help us with the physical labour of building.”

    Other members of the council ensure that children who have been orphaned by Aids are still able to come to school. “These children are taken in by relatives, but they have their own children and it puts a lot of strain on them,” says Manuele Mutocorowa. “We try to help by making sure the orphans have books and stationery.” Their dream is to have a hostel at the school to house orphaned children during the school term.

    But even with the best will in the world, the school councils — run by community members who are themselves living in poverty — can only do so much. And ironically, this self-help spirit can serve to maintain the status quo, as it is often easier for communities to take action themselves than to lobby government officials for action.

    Holding the government to account

    The school councils are meant to ensure transparency and accountability around funds allocated from national level through the provinces, then the districts and on to the schools. But often these funds arrive late or not at all, and textbooks and teachers’ salaries are delayed.

    Local and international NGOs have been able to make some impact through initiatives such as the Zambézia Education Project, which provides basic classroom materials, and safe housing for female teachers in rural areas, and builds and equips teacher resource centres and school libraries.

    But this is not a sustainable solution, so Oxfam and its partner organisations Kukumbi and AMME (The Association for Mozambican Women and Education) are working in communities and with school councils to help citizens demand accountability from their government, and ensure resources designated for education actually reach their children.

    It’s a long, slow process, but active citizenship — in which communities demand what is owed them — is the only way that Mozambique’s children will be ensured their right to an education, and a way out of poverty.

    Where we work: Mozambique

    Oxfam in action: education

  • Javelin Pharma Dumps Myriad for Hospira

    Ryan McBride wrote:

    Javelin Pharmaceuticals (AMEX:JAV), a Cambridge, MA-based developer of pain treatments, reports today that it has nixed its merger agreement with Myriad Pharmaceuticals (NASDAQ:MYRX) and accepted a $145 million buyout offer from the specialty drugmaker Hospira. Lake Forest, IL-based Hospira (NYSE:HSP) plans to begin its tender offer to acquire shares of Javelin’s common stock on Wednesday for $2.20 per share. Hospira has also agreed to provide Javelin with three loan facilities of $4.5 million, $8.3 million, and $4.4 million for Javelin to fund operations, to repay loans from Salt Like City-based Myriad, and to cover fees and expenses related to the termination of Javelin’s previous deal with Myriad, respectively.

    UNDERWRITERS AND PARTNERS



























  • 2010 Mazda CX-7 Diesel Test Drive | Popular Mechanics

    A diesel-powered SUV from Japan is just over the horizon.

    This post originally appeared on the Popular Mechanics website, where you can read it in its entirety. Written by Ken Gross.

    Despite widespread acceptance of diesel engines in Europe (approximately 90 percent of the cars in the U.K. use diesels), Americans still shudder at the memory of General Motors’ hapless gas engine-based diesels of the 1980s, and smoky, clattery Mercedes-Benz 300SD oil burners. But there are some signs of progress. Persistent German carmakers continue to introduce new clean-burning diesel cars and SUVs, and next year, even the Japanese will enter the diesel market. We just had a sneak preview of a diesel-powered Mazda CX-7 that’s on sale now in parts of Europe and Japan, and we came away impressed. (more…)

  • X-Box 360 Afterglow Controllers For Gamers Who Play in the Dark

    804173b1 X Box 360 Afterglow Controllers For Gamers Who Play in the Dark Looking to add a glow to your X-Box 360 controllers. Well these latest Afterglow controllers should add a little pizazz to your X-Box 360. We have seen these before for the PS2 but not the X-Box 360. Available in 3 glowing colors – they are currently available for pre-order from EBGames for $29.95 and are expected to ship later this week.

  • Happy Birthday BBSync! Great times ahead…

    Can you believe its that time already? BlackBerry Sync is turning 3 years old! BBSync was started with the goal to connect consumers with the latest BlackBerry news, tips and tricks. Basically I wanted to keep you the readers in sync with everything BlackBerry. Over the past three years I honestly can’t believe how big the site has grown, and honestly I couldn’t do it without you, the readers. So here’s a pretty big celebration for all BBSync readers! We’ve got a whole bunch of great products to giveaway, and even some great special offers. I will be posting the giveaways over the next 7 days and you can find them all here – tinyurl.com/bbsyncbday. Post a comment and you could win! Good luck to all.

    Over the next 7 days we will be posting each item that is up for grabs, and all you have to do is leave a comment. I will be selecting winners at random after the deadline closes for each post, then announcing the winners. I recommend you follow @BlackBerrySync on Twitter to keep in touch.

    You’re reading a story which originated at BlackBerrySync.com, Where you find BlackBerry News You Can Sync With…

    This story is sponsored by the new BlackBerry Sync Mobile App Store. Grab your free copy today at www.GetAppStore.com from your BlackBerry.

    Happy Birthday BBSync! Great times ahead…

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  • The Street chimes in on TD purchase of failed Florida banks

    Analysts got busy after TD Bank's announcement on Friday that it had bought three small Florida banks, generally giving the deal the thumbs up.

    In a note to clients, John Reucassel called it a "solid" transaction consistent with TD's strategy, though he also cautioned that concerns about the loan books of the three banks "are unlikely to disappear" despite the fact that the US regulator has agreed to take a share of any potential losses.

    In a statement after markets closed last week, TD said it purchased the assets and liabilities of Riverside National Bank of Florida, First Federal Bank of North Florida and AmericanFirst Bank with a total of 69 branches.

    The price of the deal, which was conducted through the US regulator, was not disclosed.

    John Aiken, an analyst at Barclays Capital, noted that these sorts of small transactions are exactly what he expects from the major Canadian banks until they have clarity on new capital rules being crafted by global regulators.

    "We do not believe that TD or any of the other Canadian banks, will make a significant acquisition until there is much more clarity surrounding the impact of implementing Basel III," Mr. Aiken said.

    TD's move now puts pressure on Royal Bank of Canada to follow suit, as Canada's biggest bank has said several times that it is looking to take advantage of opportunities south of the border, raising investor expectations that a transaction is coming, he said.

    DBRS said this morning that the Florida transaction has no ratings implications for TD as the price was not material and the impact on capital is minimal.

    The rating agency said the deal "will accelerate TD’s growth strategy in the fast-growing market of Florida by adding 69 branches, predominately in central Florida and along the Treasure Coast, that are geographically complementary to TD’s existing Florida banking franchise."

    John Greenwood