Monday, August 5, 2013

Israel to free 26 Arab prisoners on August 13 Negotiator

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Source: www.nepalnews.net --- Sunday, August 04, 2013
Israel will free the first batch of a promised 104 long-serving Palestinian and Israeli Arab prisoners on August 13. "The release of veteran prisoners will be in four batches as Israel refused to release them all at once," he said in a statement. Israel says that the men will go free in stages depending on progress in newly-resumed peace talks with the Palestinians. "It agreed on ... ...

Source: http://www.nepalnews.net/index.php/sid/216228919/scat/bf053b50c46383e0

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Cricket-Sri Lanka v South Africa, second T20-scoreboard

Sun Aug 4, 2013 10:56pm IST

Aug 4 (Reuters) - Scoreboard in the second Twenty20 International between Sri Lanka and South Africa at Hambantota on Sunday.     South Africa:  H. Davids b Kulasekara                 7  Q. de Kock st Sangakkara b Senanayake 19  F. du Plessis b Malinga               12  JP Duminy c Mathews b Senanayake      30  AB de Villiers run out                15  D. Miller c Chandimal b Kulasekara    36  D. Wiese not out                       7  W. Parnell not out                    10  Extras (lb-2, w-7)                     9  Total (For 6 wickets in 20 overs)    145     Did not bat: M Morkel, Imran Tahir, L Tsotsobe     Fall of wickets: 1-11 2-44 3-48 4-86 5-105 6-132     Bowling: Kulasekara 4-0-22-2(w-1), Malinga 4-0-32-1(w-1), Senanayake 4-0-18-2(w-1), Mathews 4-0-32-0, Mendis 4-0-39-0.     Sri Lanka:  K. Perera lbw b Tahir                21     M. Jayawardene c de Kock b Tsotsobe   6  D. Chandimal c de Kock b Tsotsobe     2  K. Sangakkara c Wiese b Morkel       39  L. Thirimanne b Parnell              18  A. Mathews c de Villiers b Wiese      1  T. Perera not out                    22  N. Kulasekara c de Kock b Morkel     10  S. Senanayake not out                 1  Extras (lb-1, w-2)                    3  Total (For 7 wickets in 20 overs)   123     Did not bat: L Malinga, A Mendis     Fall of wickets 1-8 2-27 3-48 4-85 5-88 6-90 7-112.     Bowling: Tsotsobe 4-0-17-2(w-1), Morkel 4-0-34-2(w-1), Parnell 4-0-25-1, Wiese 4-0-25-1, Tahir 4-0-21-1.     Result: South Africa won by 22 runs   (Compiled by Amlan Chakraborty, editing by Pritha Sarkar)

Source: http://feeds.reuters.com/~r/reuters/INcricketNews/~3/ov6sV2mUeAY/cricket-safrica-scoreboard-idINL4N0G507A20130804

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More Alike than Different: Why email is Madonna, and Facebook is Lady Gaga [Full video replay from Email Summit 2013]

MarketingSherpa Video Archive

Jay Baer, Convince and Convert


"All of us in email have heard social media is going to kill email, and people don't need emails because they can use messaging. But, do not panic ? email is not going anywhere, ever."

At Email Summit 2013, Jay Baer, President, Convince and Convert, gave his presentation "More Alike than Different: Why email is Madonna, and Facebook is Lady Gaga," in which he discussed why integrating email and social media programs at companies is becoming more essential every day.

"Facebook is a tool we use to help people keep our company at the top of their minds, which is exactly what email does," Baer said.

In this Summit presentation replay, you will also learn:

  • The three areas of integration of email and Facebook

  • How to discover what a Facebook fan is worth to your company using similar metrics as email

  • Why email people and Facebook people in your company should be the same people

  • How to surround your audience with connection options

  • Ideas for message integration testing with email and Facebook

  • And much more

Download the slides to this presentation

Related Resources


Email Summit 2014 in Las Vegas - Call for Entries (Bonus: Enter the MarketingSherpa Email Awards using the same form)

MarketingSherpa Email Summit 2013 Wrap-up: Top 5 takeaways for email marketers

MarketingSherpa Email Summit 2013: Social media is email with fresh paint

B2B Social Media: Video of Jay Baer destroying social media myths

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/MarketingsherpaNewsletter/~3/LvPysanJuQA/article.html

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China, Russia halt some NZ dairy imports

A woman carries a child past powdered milk products including cans of Dumex infant formula already inspected and deemed to be from a safe batch at a supermarket in Beijing, China, Monday, Aug. 5, 2013. The official Xinhua News Agency said Hangzhou Wahaha Health Food Co. Ltd., Hangzhou Wahaha Import & Export Co. Ltd., Shanghai Tangjiu (Group) Co. Ltd. and Shanghai-based Dumex Baby Food Co. Ltd. on Sunday began recalling and sealing products with allegedly contaminated whey protein from New Zealand. (AP Photo/Ng Han Guan)

A woman carries a child past powdered milk products including cans of Dumex infant formula already inspected and deemed to be from a safe batch at a supermarket in Beijing, China, Monday, Aug. 5, 2013. The official Xinhua News Agency said Hangzhou Wahaha Health Food Co. Ltd., Hangzhou Wahaha Import & Export Co. Ltd., Shanghai Tangjiu (Group) Co. Ltd. and Shanghai-based Dumex Baby Food Co. Ltd. on Sunday began recalling and sealing products with allegedly contaminated whey protein from New Zealand. (AP Photo/Ng Han Guan)

New Zealand dairy giant Fonterra Chief Executive Officer Theo Spierings adjusts his glasses upon arrival for a press conference at a hotel in Beijing, China Monday, Aug. 5, 2013. A botulism scare has prompted China and Russia to stop importing some New Zealand dairy products, denting the country's reputation as a supplier of safe, high quality food. Fonterra announced Saturday that up to 1,000 tons of infant formula, sports drinks and other products sold in seven countries could be tainted after tests found bacteria in whey protein concentrate that could cause botulism. (AP Photo/Andy Wong)

Fonterra Chief Executive Officer Theo Spierings, right, speaks to his Managing Director of China/India Kelvin Wickham during a press conference at a hotel in Beijing, China Monday, Aug. 5, 2013. A botulism scare has prompted China and Russia to stop importing some New Zealand dairy products, denting the country's reputation as a supplier of safe, high quality food. Fonterra announced Saturday that up to 1,000 tons of infant formula, sports drinks and other products sold in seven countries could be tainted after tests found bacteria in whey protein concentrate that could cause botulism.(AP Photo/Andy Wong)

FILE - In this March 29, 2007 file photo, Fonterra's Whareroa processing plant is seen near New Plymouth, New Zealand. New Zealand authorities have triggered a global recall of up to 1,000 tons of dairy products across seven countries after Fonterra, the world?s fourth-largest dairy company, announced tests had turned up a type of bacteria that could cause botulism. New Zealand?s Ministry of Primary Industries said Saturday, Aug. 3, 2013 that the tainted products include infant formula, sports drinks, protein drinks and other beverages. It said countries affected beside New Zealand include China, Australia, Thailand, Malaysia, Vietnam and Saudi Arabia. (AP Photo/NZPA, Rob Tucker, File) NEW ZEALAND OUT, NO SALES

New Zealand dairy giant Fonterra Chief Executive Officer Theo Spierings, center, looks at his Managing Director of China/India Kelvin Wickham as they are surrounding by the media after a press conference at a hotel in Beijing, China Monday, Aug. 5, 2013. A botulism scare has prompted China and Russia to stop importing some New Zealand dairy products, denting the country's reputation as a supplier of safe, high quality food. Fonterra announced Saturday that up to 1,000 tons of infant formula, sports drinks and other products sold in seven countries could be tainted after tests found bacteria in whey protein concentrate that could cause botulism.(AP Photo/Andy Wong)

(AP) ? A botulism scare has prompted China and Russia to stop importing some New Zealand dairy products, New Zealand officials said Monday, denting the country's reputation as a supplier of safe, high quality food.

New Zealand dairy giant Fonterra announced Saturday that hundreds of tons of infant formula, sports drinks and other products sold in seven countries could be tainted after tests found bacteria in whey protein concentrate that could cause botulism.

The import bans in Russia and China extend beyond the products now being specifically targeted for recall. How long those trade halts last could indicate the extent of the damage to New Zealand's reputation as a source of top-quality dairy products.

Dairy and other agricultural exports power the country's economy, and China is its single biggest export market. An indication of the seriousness of the threat to New Zealand's trade came over the weekend, when the government assigned 60 officials to work on the botulism scare. Fonterra is the world's fourth-largest dairy company, with annual revenue of about $16 billion.

Consumers in China and elsewhere have been willing to pay a premium for New Zealand infant formula because of high food safety standards and the popular image of the country as a remote, unspoiled environment. Chinese consumers have a special interest after tainted local milk formula killed six babies in 2008.

"As a mother, I am really angry to hear this kind of news," said Wang Qun, 24, who lives near Shanghai and feeds her 7-month-old son milk powder made by Dumex, one of the companies recalling products. "I am surprised to hear that the problem has happened to a New Zealand milk producer. That should be the best place for milk."

She said in the future she may not choose milk powder from New Zealand, but added: "I don't have many choices in China."

At a press conference Monday in Beijing, Fonterra's chief executive Theo Spierings offered an apology to anyone affected by the scare.

"We really regret the distress and anxiety which this issue could have caused," he said.

Spierings said he'd flown to China to provide reassurance in person and because of the importance of the Chinese market to Fonterra.

There have been no reported illnesses as a result of the contamination. The Centers for Disease Control describes botulism as a rare but sometimes fatal paralytic illness caused by a nerve toxin.

News of the tainted dairy triggered a sell-off in the New Zealand dollar. It dropped about two cents against the U.S. dollar, from 79.3 cents Friday before the announcement to 77.2 cents Monday morning. New Zealand Prime Minister John Key said there was "no question" the safety lapse had damaged the reputation of Fonterra and New Zealand.

Fonterra said in a statement that China had suspended imports of the company's whey powder and a type of dairy powder used for making infant formula. It said the ban didn't extend to whole milk powder or other products. The company said China has also increased general border inspections of all New Zealand dairy imports.

China hasn't confirmed any restrictions, and the country's General Administration of Quality Supervision, Inspection and Quarantine didn't immediately respond to a request for comment.

"China has not closed the market to all New Zealand dairy products, it has been quite specific about the range of Fonterra products which it has temporarily suspended," said Scott Gallacher, acting director-general of the Ministry for Primary Industries. "The Chinese authorities still have a number of questions, which we are wanting to work with them on to respond to."

Russia has imposed a wider ban on New Zealand dairy products even though it wasn't among the countries to receive any of the tainted products, Gallacher said.

Russia's state sanitary watchdog agency, Rospotebnadzor, said in a statement that it was suspending imports of Fonterra products and taking steps to remove them from stores. The agency sent directives to its branches in the Russian provinces and to the Federal Customs Agency.

It called on Russians to take "reasonable precautionary measures and not to use formulas by Fonterra or any other of its dairy products."

Fonterra said the contamination occurred as the result of dirty pipes in a Waikato plant in May 2012. It said samples turned up a potential bacteria problem in March this year, but that it took until July 31 for testing to indicate the presence of the type of bacteria that could cause botulism.

Asked at the Beijing press conference why it took so long for the problem to show up, Spierings said although the ingredient was produced in 2012, it was only used in making base powder in March this year. At that point, he said, it was retested.

"The supply chain of infant nutrition powders takes a long time because it has many steps and every step is tested very strictly," he said. "The closer you come to the consumer, the more testing you do."

China's official Xinhua News Agency said Hangzhou Wahaha Health Food Co. Ltd., Hangzhou Wahaha Import & Export Co. Ltd., Shanghai Tangjiu (Group) Co. Ltd. and Shanghai-based Dumex Baby Food Co. Ltd. on Sunday began recalling and sealing products with potentially contaminated whey protein.

New Zealand company Nutricia and Malaysia's Danone Dumex have announced recalls of some types of infant formula. Vietnam has initiated a recall of Similac Gainplus Eye-Q infant formula, while Dumex in Thailand has initiated a recall of five types of infant formula.

Thailand's Food and Drug Administration deputy secretary-general Srinuan Korakotchakorn said the agency is trying to find out how many products might be affected and will issue any further recall notices as needed. She said the agency is doing all it can to prevent any more contaminated products from arriving in the country.

"From now on, any products or ingredients containing whey protein must be tested for safety at customs points," Srinuan said.

Fonterra said some of its potentially contaminated whey protein was purchased by Coca-Cola and Australian health food company Vitaco but the manufacturing process used by those companies, including ultra-high temperature treatment, meant their products posed no risk. It said the same situation applied to Chinese beverage maker Wahaha.

In the first half of this year, China imported 371,000 tons of milk powder from New Zealand. That was up 34 percent from the same period last year and accounted for 83 percent of total imports of such products, according to Chinese customs spokesman Zheng Yuesheng.

___

Watt reported from Beijing. Thanyarat Doksone in Bangkok, Vladimir Isachenkov in Moscow, Minh Tran in Hanoi and Fu Ting in Shanghai contributed.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2013-08-05-New%20Zealand-Botulism/id-8b3670f2a13d464fbcf68a7fed550f99

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How to Root Your Nexus, HTC One, or Samsung Galaxy S4

How to Root Your Nexus, HTC One, or Samsung Galaxy S4

Android offers a wide variety of advanced customization options, but that?s only scratching the surface of everything you can do with Google?s open source operating system. With root access you can get down to the system level and tweak things to your liking, even going so far as completely replacing the OS.

Read more...

Source: http://gizmodo.com/how-to-root-your-nexus-htc-one-or-samsung-galaxy-s4-990847878

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Sunday, August 4, 2013

HiT Software Feeds IBM i Data into Microsoft LightSwitch


HiT Software Feeds IBM i Data into Microsoft LightSwitch

Published: July 30, 2013

by Alex Woodie

Organizations that are using Microsoft's lightweight LightSwitch development environment can feed data from IBM i servers into their LightSwitch applications using the latest version of HiT Software Ritmo/i. Version 6 of the tool also adds support for Microsoft's Entity Framework (EF) object-relational mapper for .NET using native IBM i protocols, the company says.

Microsoft LightSwitch is a template-based, model-driven development environment that was first released by Microsoft in 2011. The software is intended to be used by non-technical Windows users who need to quickly generate database-powered, three-tier applications that feature modern Web interfaces.

Users get started with LightSwitch by using pre-built application shells that provide the look and feel of a particular type of application, such as Microsoft Office. Users then configure their LightSwitch applications in a graphical environment by creating relationships between database tables and entities, and defining queries against the data. Business logic in LightSwitch applications is powered by Windows Communication Foundation RIA Services and Entity Framework, while Silverlight powers the GUI and SQL Server handles the database layer.

The capability to access data stored in the DB2 for i database via Ritmo/i will benefit LightSwitch users, says Giacomo Lorenzin, managing director of HiT Software, which is a subsidiary of BackOffice Associates. "By adding support for LightSwitch and Entity Framework to Ritmo/i, developers can now take full advantage of IBM i data in their application development, regardless of which development approach they use," Lorenzin says in a press release.

Ritmo/i v.6 also supports integration with Visual Studio 2012, SQL Server 2012, and SQL Server Data Tools (SSDT). The new version also introduces support for multi-value parameters in SSIS/SSDT (Reporting Services/Data Tools), including support for access to listed parameter values, the company says.

Ritmo is a Windows-based product that helps Windows developers build high-speed, native data connections between their .NET applications and their data residing in the three DB2 database versions, including DB2/400, DB2 for Linux, Unix, and Windows, and DB2 for the mainframe. The software does this by reading SQL statements from Windows apps and translating it into IBM's Optimized Database Server (ODBS) protocol. No additional software is required on the database server.

Ritmo/i v.6 is available now. For more information, see www.hitsw.com.

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Source: http://www.itjungle.com/fhs/fhs073013-story04.html

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Few Aussies to play in Presidents Cup golf

Australia is in danger of having its smallest-ever contingent in the Internationals team at golf's Presidents Cup team when they take on the Americans for the 10th time.

Adam Scott and Jason Day are the only Australian certainties for the October 3-6 clash at Muirfield Village in Ohio, ranked first and fifth respectively among eligible players for new captain Nick Price's team.

Conversely, South Africa is set to dominate the 12-man team with Louis Oosthuizen, Charl Schwartzel, Ernie Els, Branden Grace, Richard Sterne and Tim Clark all inside the top 10.

Japan's Hedeki Matsuyama and Argentina's Angel Cabrera round out the group currently in line for top 10 automatic selections.

That leaves Australians Marc Leishman (14th), John Senden (15th), Geoff Ogilvy (16th), Brett Rumford (18th) and Marcus Fraser (19th) needing to play their way into the top 10 quickly or give Price a compelling reason to include them in his two captain's picks to be named on September 2.

Last time around, the Australians could hope for some love from former captain and countryman Greg Norman and point to local knowledge of the Presidents Cup venue at Royal Melbourne to get captain's picks.

Zimbabwean Price may have other ideas and currently the tough Thongchai Jaidee of Thailand (11), South African George Coetzee (12) and Canada's Graham DeLaet (13) rank ahead of them.

Should they fail in their bid it would be the lowest Australian representation in the biennial events history, having had five members on five occasions, four on three occasions and a previous low of three players in 2009.

Price says he's yet to decide whether to use his picks on form players or for experience, with Ogilvy in the mix having played the last three times.

"That's the $64,000 question, and that's what I'm going to have to make a decision on," Price said.

"We will weigh up how much experience we have on the team, who the hot players are, and if we're short on experience, we may throw in a guy there who has more experience."

Price said Scott and Els had already taken upon themselves to be leaders, trying to fire up others towards what would be just a second International team triumph.

"Ernie and Adam were great in talking about the previous experiences, and a lot of the young guys had eyes were like saucers and were really soaking it all in," Price said.

"It's an exciting time. I've always enjoyed being an underdog going in. I think the favourites have more pressure on them."

Source: http://wwos.ninemsn.com.au/article.aspx?id=8699263

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