Wednesday, February 29, 2012
Fed: Fires wreak havoc in Vic, NSW and SA.
AAP General News (Australia)
02-08-2009
Fed: Fires wreak havoc in Vic, NSW and SA.
Victoria's worst fears has been realised with fourteen people killed by yesterday's
horrendous bushfires.
Victorian police confirmed the deaths last night and fear the figure could be more than 40.
At least 100 homes have been destroyed as nine major blazes burnt out of control across
the state.
One man aged in his 40s is in a critical condition after suffering burns to 50 per
cent of his body when he tried to move stock in the Colegaine area …
Blizzard Entertainment and NetEase.com to Release World of Warcraft: Cataclysm in Mainland China
Wireless News
06-24-2011
Blizzard Entertainment and NetEase.com to Release World of Warcraft: Cataclysm in Mainland China
Type: News
Blizzard Entertainment and NetEase.com announced that World of Warcraft: Cataclysm, the third expansion for Blizzard Entertainment's multiplayer online role-playing game, will launch in mainland China on July 12.
"With Cataclysm, we built on everything we learned since launching World of Warcraft to revitalize the game world for existing players and make it even more accessible to new ones," said Mike Morhaime, CEO and cofounder of Blizzard Entertainment, in a release.
"We've always appreciated Chinese gamers' passion and support for World of Warcraft, and we're excited that they'll soon be able to enjoy all of the great new content this expansion has to offer."
"Ever since it first launched in China, World of Warcraft has been one of the most popular online games among players here. With all of the new features and content it introduces, Cataclysm takes the game experience to a whole new level," said William Ding, CEO of NetEase. "We're fully prepared on all fronts to provide great service and support to new and returning players throughout China, and we look forward to welcoming them to the revamped Azeroth."
The Company said players can now begin the process of background downloading data for version 4.1 of the game client, which will be required to play the expansion upon its release.
Blizzard Entertainment, a division of Activision Blizzard, is a developer and publisher of entertainment software.
NetEase.com is a China-based Internet technology company.
((Comments on this story may be sent to newsdesk@closeupmedia.com))
Copyright 2011 Close-Up Media, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
n/a
WA:Man sought over shooting
AAP General News (Australia)
12-05-2011
WA:Man sought over shooting
Police are still appealing for information on a man wanted for a shooting death in
Perth's northern suburbs over the weekend, but have warned the public not to approach
him.
23-year-old HAYDEN SHANE JOSEPH is wanted for questioning over the death of 21-year-old
JEREMIA ISKANDER who was shot in the driveway of his Wanneroo home on Friday evening.
WA Police Commissioner KARL O'CALLAGHAN says Mr JOSEPH could be armed and members of
the public have been warned not to approach him.
Police believe Mr JOSEPH may be trying to leave West Australia and are conducting border
patrols, while staff at the domestic and international airports have been put on alert.
Anyone with information can call Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000.
AAP RTV csb/ar
KEYWORD: SHOOTING (PERTH)
� 2011 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
Commonwealth of Kentucky Selects Sprint to Supply Relay Services for its Deaf and Hard of Hearing Community
Wireless News
03-30-2011
Commonwealth of Kentucky Selects Sprint to Supply Relay Services for its Deaf and Hard of Hearing Community
Type: News
The Commonwealth of Kentucky recently selected Sprint, providers of Telecommunication Relay Services (TRS), to provide its full suite of relay products to the Commonwealth as the newly designated Kentucky Relay Services provider.
According to a release, in October of 2010, the Kentucky Public Service Commission released a Request for Proposal in order to comply with federal laws requiring that telecommunications relay services be provided. A team of experts in the area of telecommunications technology and the needs of deaf, deaf-blind, and hard of hearing relay users evaluated and scored each proposal. A three-year contract was awarded to Sprint with an option for a subsequent two-year extension.
Kentucky Relay allows hearing callers, text-telephone (TTY), CapTel and Speech to Speech (STS) users to communicate with one another through trained Relay Operators, particularly when the hearing party does not have specialized telecommunications equipment. Kentucky Relay is available 24 hours a day and 365 days a year, the Company said. There are no restrictions on the number or length of calls. The service is confidential, and records of conversations are not maintained.
Emma Danielson of Sprint will serve as the Account Manager and the primary point of contact for Kentucky Relay once the transition is complete. Danielson brings to the account 15 years of experience in the Telecommunications Relay Field. As a Relay customer herself, Danielson has insight and firsthand knowledge of the needs of the deaf and hard of hearing population she serves. "I am looking forward to working with all Kentuckians' with their telephone communications needs and keeping them connected with one another," said Emma Danielson, Sprint account manager for Kentucky Relay.
Sprint Relay will employ an outreach program that includes several outreach specialists who will provide awareness to Kentucky residents about new telecommunications relay features, such as Internet-based relay services, including WebCapTel, Internet relay, Video relay, Wireless relay and other technologies under development.
"Sprint Relay is excited to work with the Commonwealth of Kentucky to provide telecommunication needs to the deaf and hard of hearing community. It has been our goal for the past 20 years to continue improving the quality of our services allowing individuals with hearing loss access to the telephone," said Mike Ellis, director of Sprint Relay.
More information:
www.sprintrelay.com
((Comments on this story may be sent to newsdesk@closeupmedia.com))
Copyright 2011 Close-Up Media, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
n/a
Computer hackers strike Stanford U.
University Wire
11-30-1998
(The Stanford Daily) (U-WIRE) STANFORD, Calif. -- For the second time in two months, a computer hacker broke into University computers, this time stealing passwords for almost 300 e-mail accounts.
An outside hacker logged into the Electrical Engineering departmental computer, compromising all accounts on the server, as well as 61 Leland system accounts.
"It looked like the hacker was going for power and wanted to control the system, not necessarily what was on it," said David Brumley, a specialist in the Computer Security Office.
The hacker, using a stolen password, broke into the system at around 7 p.m. on Oct. 31 and stayed in the system for six days, Brumley said. The intruder used a "sniffer," a software program that can intercept user names and passwords, to initially get into the system. Once in, the hacker installed programs on the system to collect user passwords.
Brumley said that although there were no reports of tampering with e-mail accounts, the security office did shut down all the Leland accounts affected, forcing students to go to Sweet Hall to change their passwords.
"That upset a few people, but it's an evil necessity," Brumley said.
The Electrical Engineering Department, which has control over its departmental accounts, has warned everyone with accounts on its server to change their passwords immediately to avoid further complications.
The security office was able to trace the hacker to an Internet service provider but was unable to proceed further without outside assistance.
The University elected not to call the FBI, because minimal damage was done. Brumley said there was no tampering with user accounts, but the department did have to reinstall the system software, as is customary for an incident such as this.
The number of computer security incidents has increased recently, due to more widespread use of automated scanning programs, according to Brumley. These programs allow hackers to look for vulnerabilities in hundreds of machines at a time.
Just last week more than 18,000 scans were performed on Stanford computers. Each scan is counted as coming from one source but could encompass many computers.
The intrusion on the electrical engineering server is far from an isolated incident.
Earlier this month hackers broke into computers on the Leland system to extract more than 5,000 user passwords, in what was considered the first major break-in to the Leland system.
In June, 3,000 researchers at the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center fell victim to hackers and were left without Internet access for a week.
Last April a hacker found his way into the system in the Durand Building and stole 240 e-mail passwords.
Although past incidents have involved hackers deleting doctoral theses from the system, Brumley said the goal of hackers is not always to gain access to Stanford data.
Sometimes they use a computer system as a "jumping spot" to break into other systems, such as banks, so that their actions will be harder for the victims to trace.
Generally, however, hackers can only gain initial access to Stanford computers by logging into a machine on campus.
The PC-Stanford software package, which includes Kerberos security protection, provides users with a secure login.
The Kerberos system encrypts a user's login information so hackers cannot access it.
"It's more or less technically infeasible for someone to crack Kerberos protection," Brumley said.
Dennis Michael, manager of the Leland systems in Sweet Hall, said the problem is that campus computer users are not logging in with the protection of Kerberos.
"We're trying to get rid of clear-text passwords so that sniffers won't work," he said.
(c) The Stanford Daily via U-Wire
FED:Labor opens attack on two fronts
AAP General News (Australia)
08-03-2010
FED:Labor opens attack on two fronts
CANBERRA, Aug 3 AAP - Labor has accused Tony Abbott of running from scrutiny after
the opposition leader rejected the offer of a second election debate.
The government also is on the attack over the coalition's paid parental leave scheme,
predicting it won't see the light of day, as Mr Abbott prepares to announce an 18 month-delay
to its introduction.
"Tony Abbott's running from the scrutiny of a debate," Labor frontbencher Chris Bowen
told ABC Radio on Tuesday.
Prime Minister Julia Gillard has said she'd be willing to have another debate this
Sunday - the same day as the Liberal Party's official campaign launch - so long as it
focused on the economy.
But it was a suggestion rejected almost immediately by Mr Abbott, who accused the prime
minister of "flip-flopping" because her campaign was flagging.
Labor previously rejected "many offers" for three debates, coalition frontbencher Andrew
Robb said.
"We're not now going to jump to their tune," he told ABC Radio on Tuesday.
The coalition already is defending a decision to amend its paid parental leave scheme
ahead of Mr Abbott's re-launch announcement in Brisbane later on Tuesday.
Fairfax newspapers report the scheme now will cost $3.3 billion a year, up from the
$2.7 billion estimated, and that taxpayers would contribute $100 million a year.
As well, the start date is being pushed back to July 2012, prompting Labor to predict
the scheme won't get off the ground.
"I don't think mums and dads believe they'll receive a cent of this money," Labor frontbencher
Tania Plibersek told ABC Radio.
But opposition treasury spokesman Joe Hockey said the coalition's scheme would be always
better than Labor's even with the changes.
Mr Hockey would not confirm the details of the "relaunched format", but said not all
that had been reported was accurate.
"We will have a paid parental leave scheme that is much better than Labor's, it is
real, it is significant," he told ABC Radio.
Ms Gillard is in Sydney on Tuesday, although there are suggestions she may head north
to the NSW central coast where Labor is defending the marginal seats of Robertson and
Dobell.
AAP rl/maur
KEYWORD: POLL10 UPDATE
� 2010 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
NSW: Copenhagen protesters chain themselves to coal train
AAP General News (Australia)
12-20-2009
NSW: Copenhagen protesters chain themselves to coal train
SYDNEY, Dec 20 AAP - Environmentalists chained themselves to a coal train and rail
tracks near NSW's Newcastle Port to protest against the outcome of the Copenhagen climate
talks.
The 25 activists marched onto the tracks about 9am (AEDT) on Sunday, occupying a bridge
and stopping trains from entering the Kooragang coal export terminal for six hours.
The action, organised by Rising Tide environmental group, was aimed at shutting down
coal export operations at Newcastle, the world's largest coal port.
Rising Tide spokesman Steve Phillips said the protest was an act of desperation after
the UN climate summit failed to produce a just, effective and legally binding treaty.
"The US, Australia and other wealthy countries wrecked the talks," Mr Phillips told AAP.
"People are tired of seeing our leaders fail to address to problem of climate change
- we want to undertake bold and long-lasting action."
Mr Phillips said two people chained themselves to a stopped train, and four were tied
to the tracks during Sunday's blockade.
Police began to remove and arrest the protesters about midday, using angle grinders
to cut through the chains, he said.
A sixth person sat atop a large wooden tripod erected on the line, and large banners
reading `Greed wrecked Copenhagen: Now it's up to us all', and `You could have done something
great' were hung at the site.
Police said 14 people had been arrested by the time the action ended about 3pm (AEDT).
Mr Phillips hailed the day a success, and threatened further action if governments "continue
to fail to solve the climate crisis".
"We are now putting world leaders on notice that the longer they fail on this issue,
the more action like this will occur," he said.
The climate change summit was widely criticised after world leaders put forward a deal
aimed at limiting global warming to two degrees celsius.
But it's not clear if the deal can achieve that goal because it contains no targets
to reduce the greenhouse gas emissions blamed for climate change - and the deal is not
binding.
AAP bzs/apm
KEYWORD: CLIMATE COAL UPDATE (PIX AVAILABLE)
2009 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
FED: Govt looking at revamp of national security laws
AAP General News (Australia)
08-11-2009
FED: Govt looking at revamp of national security laws
By Sandra O'Malley
CANBERRA, Aug 11 AAP - The federal government will look at revamping Australia's counter-terrorism
laws to make the nation better able to handle "increasingly complex" security threats.
Prime Minister Kevin Rudd on Tuesday flagged that the government would release a discussion
paper shortly on amendments to national security and counter-terrorism laws.
"The discussion paper will help to establish an effective legal framework which is
fundamental to our ability to manage and respond to the challenges we now confront in
our increasingly complex security environment," he told parliament.
On Saturday, Attorney-General Robert McClelland indicated the discussion paper would
look at whether there needed to be changes to the way the government listed terrorist
organisations.
Mr Rudd said the government needed to be on the front foot when it came to terrorism
- it wasn't enough to prosecute offenders, it was necessary to stop attacks in the first
place.
"The government is committed to ensuring the focus of Australia's national security
and counter-terrorism laws remains on preventing a terrorist attack from occurring in
the first place," he said.
"This is a difficult challenge - we cannot adopt a position which involves us simply
waiting to punish those who commit terrorist attacks and related crimes after they occur."
Last week, authorities allegedly foiled a plot to attack a Sydney military base.
The government has also signalled a strategy to engage individuals and communities
to stop them joining terrorist organisations in the first place.
"These measures are designed to deepen our engagement with at risk communities, to
support them in resisting extremism," Mr Rudd said.
He said it was critical prevention strategy.
Mr Rudd reiterated the government would release a national security White Paper later this year.
AAP so/sb/cdh
KEYWORD: TERROR RUDD
2009 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
NSW: Hells Angel shooting victim improving in hospital
AAP General News (Australia)
04-01-2009
NSW: Hells Angel shooting victim improving in hospital
Hells Angel PETER ZERVAS continues to improve in hospital after being shot four times
in the latest chapter of Sydney's outlaw motorcycle gang wars.
Police say the condition of the 32 year old's been upgraded to stable.
He was shot in the chest .. shoulder .. hip and foot after pulling into the driveway
of his Lakemba unit in southwest Sydney on Sunday night.
Mr ZERVAS was found slumped next to the vehicle .. and rushed to hospital for emergency surgery.
The shooting followed the death of his brother .. ANTHONY ZERVAS .. in a brawl at Sydney
Airport on March 22 .. when Hells Angels members clashed with Comancheros.
AAP RTV vpm/wjf/af
KEYWORD: BIKIES ZERVAS (SYDNEY)
2009 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
NSW: Man charged with murder after elderly woman goes missing
AAP General News (Australia)
08-29-2008
NSW: Man charged with murder after elderly woman goes missing
SYDNEY, Aug 29 AAP - A 53-year-old Jindabyne man has been charged with murder following
the disappearance of an elderly woman.
Police say the 76-year-old woman failed to keep a medical appointment in the southern
NSW town on Wednesday.
"Subsequent investigations ... led to the arrest of a 53-year-old Jindabyne man at
Cooma yesterday afternoon," Police said in a statement today.
"The man was taken to Cooma Police Station for questioning where he was later charged
with murder.
"Investigators will today make further inquiries into the recovery of the woman's body."
The man was refused police bail to appear at Queanbeyan Local Court today.
AAP dr/it
KEYWORD: JINDABYNE
2008 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
Qld: Petrol price rise has its limits, say motorists
AAP General News (Australia)
04-23-2008
Qld: Petrol price rise has its limits, say motorists
One in three Queensland and New South Wales motorists surveyed say they'd give up their
cars and catch public transport to work .. if petrol prices hit one-dollar-75 a litre.
Car insurance company Budget Direct has interviewed two thousand 500 motorists nationwide
.. to ask what price would prove too much for them.
The survey's also found 47 per cent of motorists have already reduced their car use
due to skyrocketing petrol prices.
Half of the respondents say they'd consider trading their current vehicle in for a
more fuel-efficient model .. and seven per cent have already done so.
(EDS: Updating story on amended survey results.)
AAP RTV jmm/pjo/tm/jec/
KEYWORD: PETROL (BRISBANE)
2008 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
Vic: Psychiatric patient jailed as care systems fail
AAP General News (Australia)
12-20-2007
Vic: Psychiatric patient jailed as care systems fail
MELBOURNE, Dec 20 AAP - A 75-year-old dementia sufferer accused of trying to kill herself
and her husband is locked in a high-security jail because health authorities can't find
appropriate care for her.
Police took the Greek-born woman, who speaks little English, to the high-security Dame
Phyllis Frost Centre in Melbourne's west on Monday, The Age reported today.
The woman, who is also clinically depressed, is staying in the jail's psychiatric unit
ahead of a committal hearing charged with her 82-year-old husband's attempted murder.
Her son Nick said his mother was disoriented and agitated when she was discharged from
the St George's Hospital in Kew, where she had been living in a psycho-geriatric ward
for five months.
The hospital discharged her because she no longer needed acute psychiatric care.
Her guardian, the Office of the Public Advocate, has condemned the woman's incarceration
as a breach of her human rights.
Acting Public Advocate Barbara Carter told The Age the woman's situation was "appalling"
and demonstrated big gaps in the medical and community care systems.
"She needs care and supervision. She should not be in jail," Ms Carter said.
"We believe she may be a risk to herself and others If she did not have dementia and
depression, it is likely she would be at home on bail."
The woman's mental fitness to make a plea in court has not been determined.
Victorian Legal Aid told The Age that if the case even reached court, the woman may
have to wait a year.
Federal aged care assessors say she is not suitable for either a hostel or nursing home place.
Ms Carter called on the senior staff at Victoria's Department of Human Services (DHS)
to intervene.
A DHS spokeswoman said the department was trying to find suitable accommodation and
the woman's welfare and safety was being monitored.
AAP jrd/cmc
KEYWORD: PATIENT
2007 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
NSW: Warriors player to be investigated over sexual assault
AAP General News (Australia)
08-08-2007
NSW: Warriors player to be investigated over sexual assault
New Zealand Warriors player MICHAEL CROCKETT is under investigation by NSW Police ..
over claims he sexually assaulted a woman in Sydney.
The club's chief executive WAYNE SCURRAH is holding a news conference in Auckland in
about half an hour (9am AEDT).
He says CROCKETT strenuously denies the allegations.
The woman made the complaint to Redfern police early Monday morning .. saying the incident
happened after the Warriors' draw with the Roosters on Sunday.
CROCKETT's been dropped from this week's match against the Gold Coast Titans at Mt Smart Stadium.
NRL CEO DAVID GALLOP's told The Daily Telegraph .. the league's aware of what he says
are very serious allegations.
AAP RTV xlc/jlw/jmt
KEYWORD: LEAGUE ASSAULT (AUCKLAND)
2007 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
Fed: Aviation on notice about contribution to climate change
AAP General News (Australia)
02-14-2007
Fed: Aviation on notice about contribution to climate change
By Peter Veness
CANBERRA, Feb 14 AAP - Getting airlines to follow more efficient flight paths could
remove 73 million tonnes of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere each year, a leading aviation
expert says.
International Air Transport Association chief executive officer Giovanni Bisignani
says airlines need to see the financial benefits in cutting their carbon emissions.
"You will all be aware that our industry is taking a beating in the environmental debate,"
Mr Bisignani told a conference in Holland.
"Our critics may have lost perspective.
"But they are absolutely correct in demanding more efficiency."
The UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, in its report released a fortnight
ago, estimated there is a 12 per cent inefficiency in air traffic management globally.
Mr Bisignani said the flight path inefficiency translates to financial inefficiency.
"That 12 per cent translates into up to 73 million tonnes of carbon dioxide emissions
and nearly $US13.5 billion ($A17.35 billion) in unnecessary fuel costs.
"Every minute of flying time that we can save reduces fuel consumption by about 62
litres and carbon dioxide emissions by 160 kilograms."
Mr Bisignani's comments come at the same time as Australia's airspace controller moves
to redraw flight paths and introduce new software which will take weather conditions into
account when drawing up daily flight paths.
Airservices Australia is introducing software called Ozops which draws up individual,
optimised flight paths for flights in Australian airspace.
A spokesman for Airservices told AAP the traffic controller was also looking at ways
of reducing emissions from planes.
The introduction of new tracking technology known as ADS-B will allow controllers to
keep better tabs on the exact location of planes and that information will then be used
to cut emissions.
Planes which arrive early at airports are traditionally asked to circle high in the
atmosphere until there is space to land. Planes circling at high altitude burn about 40-50
kilograms of fuel per minute but with ADS-B, the spokesman said, pilots will now be told
to slow down while still en route to an airport, thus avoiding the need to circle.
Airservices chief executive officer Greg Russell addressed the Dutch conference last
night Australian time. Details of his speech, which was expected to address carbon emissions,
will be released later today.
AAP pv/sb/it/sp
KEYWORD: CLIMATE FLIGHT
2007 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
Fed: Former Dems senator says Chipp 'ran his life by love'
AAP General News (Australia)
08-29-2006
Fed: Former Dems senator says Chipp 'ran his life by love'
CANBERRA, Aug 29 AAP - Australian Democrats founder Don Chipp was a humble man who
championed the underdog, former senator Vicki Bourne said today.
Ms Bourne was heavily involved in the founding of the Democrats in the late 1970s with
Mr Chipp, who died yesterday aged 81 after a long battle with Parkinson's disease.
"He used to say that he ran his life by love and I think that's true," Ms Bourne told ABC Radio.
"He was a humble person.
"I remember before every leadership ballot, I'd get a phone call when I was working
for (former deputy leader of the Democrats) Colin Mason and Don would say `do you think
I'll go alright' and of course he would, he was always going to be re-elected leader."
Family and the underdog where the two passions of Mr Chipp's life, Ms Bourne said.
"His family is terribly, terribly important to him and looking after everybody he could,
looking after little people who couldn't look after themselves," she said.
"Don has always been the heart and soul of the party."
Conscience was at the heart of the Democrats and that was the main factor that drew
Ms Bourne to the party.
"People really wanted to find a party where they thought that the members of parliament
could actually work by their consciences all of the time."
AAP pv/jlw/
KEYWORD: CHIPP BOURNE
) 2006 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
Fed: Whales could be saved by 'big brother' tracking device
AAP General News (Australia)
04-21-2006
Fed: Whales could be saved by 'big brother' tracking device
Whales caught in nets and other debris can now be tracked via satellite during rescue operations.
A new high-tech tag to help whale rescue operations .. has been developed in a collaborative
effort by the Australian and New Zealand governments.
The satellite tag .. which is attached to a buoy .. is tied to the net that's trapping
the whale .. and used to follow the mammal if rescuers can't free it.
Environment Minister IAN CAMPBELL says a lot of whales will be saved by the use of the tag.
AAP RTV ae/hn/klf/tm
KEYWORD: WHALES (SYDNEY)
2006 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
Tuesday, February 28, 2012
Qld: Boswell should 'fall on his sword': Katter
AAP General News (Australia)
12-23-2005
Qld: Boswell should 'fall on his sword': Katter
Federal Independent MP BOB KATTER says veteran Nationals Senate leader RON BOSWELL
should fall on his sword .. and not seek preselection at the next federal election.
Mr KATTER .. the federal member for the north Queensland seat of Kennedy .. has told
ABC radio .. that fellow Queenslander Senator BOSWELL should step down because he's sold
out the sugar .. dairy and fishing industries.
He says if Senator BOSWELL had any integrity .. he would've quit years ago.
Senator BOSWELL announced at the weekend he would seek another six-year term at the
next federal election .. due in 2007.
Preselection closes at the end of February.
AAP RTV rm/wf/rt
KEYWORD: NATIONALS BOSWELL (BRISBANE)
2005 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
Monday, February 27, 2012
Fed: Baryulgil people call on Hardie to finalise compensation
AAP General News (Australia)
08-19-2005
Fed: Baryulgil people call on Hardie to finalise compensation
By Samantha Baden, Industrial Reporter
SYDNEY, Aug 19 AAP - Boxing great Tony Mundine has led members of the Baryulgil Aboriginal
community in a protest against James Hardies Industries, saying asbestos mining has killed
many of his relatives.
About 30 members of the community today called on a James Hardie shareholders meeting
in Sydney to finalise its asbestos compensation deal.
The building products company operated an asbestos mine at Baryulgil, in northern NSW,
for three decades until 1979.
Mr Mundine, who grew up in Baryulgil, said many of his relatives had died due to asbestos-related
diseases.
His son Anthony, a well-known boxer and former rugby league footballer, joined today's protest.
"My family's from Baryulgil and a lot of my family members have been victims of asbestos,
a lot of them have passed away and a lot of them have cancer," Mr Mundine snr said.
"I'm here to support them and let James Hardie know that they knew back then what was
going on and what was wrong and now they should simply compensate the families and the
victims.
"The fight's not over."
Hundreds of former mine workers and descendants now suffer from lung-related diseases,
including asbestosis and mesothelioma, as a result of breathing in clouds of potentially
deadly asbestos.
The representatives from Baryulgil were joined by unionists when they protested outside
the meeting, calling on the company to finalise its compensation deal for victims.
The deal, worth as much as $4.5 billion over the next four decades, was agreed in principle
eight months ago, but has recently stalled.
The company has said the one issue holding up the agreement, expected to have been
completed by now, is whether or not its compensation payments will be tax deductible.
Members of the Baryulgil community were originally left out of the compensation deal,
but will also be covered by the agreement once its finalised if they can prove their cases.
Baryulgil community spokesman Ted Mundine said 30 members of the community travelled
eight hours in a bus to protest outside the meeting.
"We just want them to pay up and stop forgetting us," he said.
"It's like they are just waiting for us to die out, but we're not going to."
Asbestosis sufferer Bernie Banton, among those attending the meeting, said he would
ask shareholders not to approve salary increases for the company's directors until the
compensation agreement was finalised.
"How obnoxious is it that they've got their hand out for a money grab, more share options
and an increase in payment to directors when they can't sign off on this?" Mr Banton said.
"It's just typical of this company, this mob just lacks morality."
AAP smb/was/evt/sd C
KEYWORD: JAMES HARDIE PROTEST (PIX AVAILABLE)
2005 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
IPCC Climate Change 2007 Report: Physical Science Basis
IPCC Climate Change 2007 Report: Physical Science Basis
Introduction
The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) is an international committee of scientists working under the auspices of the United Nations. Its job is to report periodically on the state of scientific knowledge on climate change. As of 2007, it had produced four major reports on the subject, the latest titled Climate Change 2007. This report was divided into three sections, each prepared by a different group of scientific experts.
The purpose of the report is to give citizens and government policymakers the most accurate, authoritative, and sweeping possible view of the state of our scientific knowledge about climate change so as to make whatever decisions are made about greenhouse-gas emissions and other climate-affecting activities as informed as possible. The first part to be released was Climate Change 2007: The Physical Science Basis, which provides a comprehensive assessment of the physical science of climate change. The IPCC does not recommend policies, but is restricted to describing scientific knowledge and its limits.
Historical Background and Scientific Foundations
Climate Change 2007: The Physical Science Basis was issued in stages beginning in January 2007 as part of the IPCC's Fourth Assessment Report (the other three were issued in 1990, 1995, and 2001). It describes the state of scientific understanding of how human activity and natural factors drive changes in climate. It also discusses observations of ongoing and prehistoric climate change, our knowledge of how climate works, and how climate is likely to change in the future. Because of increased urgency since 2001 regarding climate change, many new data have become available, new and better ways of analyzing the data have been developed, computer models of past, present, and future climate are more accurate, and there is better understanding of the ranges of uncertainty.
The Physical Science Basis report runs almost 1,000 pages. It offers both summary and in-depth views of the present state of climate science.
Structure of the Report
Since most politicians, citizens, and other interested persons will not have the time to read the bulk of the 2007 Assessment Report, each of its three parts offers a "Summary for Policymakers" that highlights the main conclusions of the report. A "Technical Summary" is also given that goes deeper into the scientific basis for the conclusions described in the "Summary for Policymakers." The meat of the Physical Science Basis report is a series of eleven topic-specific chapters that review specific science areas in detail.
Chapter 1 reviews the history of climate change science. Climate is defined as average weather over some number of years. Many natural factors, including energy from the sun, Earth's orbit, volcanoes, and absorption and release of gases by living things and the oceans, affect climate. Over the last 40 years, scientists have found increasing evidence of a human influence on climate. Humans influence climate primarily by replacing natural landscapes with farmlands, deserts, and cities and by releasing smoke and gases such as carbon dioxide (CO2) and methane (CH4) into the atmosphere. Also, scientists have found convincing evidence that Earth's climate is indeed getting warmer (a fact that was not clear until the 1990s). Today, although many voices on the Internet and a relatively small number of scientists doubt a significant human role in global warming, the great majority of climate scientists worldwide are convinced that global warming is not only real but is caused primarily by human activity.
Chapter 2 describes observed changes over recent decades in the composition of Earth's atmosphere. Chapters 3, 4, and 5 delineate direct scientific observations of Earth's climate, including atmospheric composition, weather, snow and ice, and the oceans. Chapter 6 explores what is known about paleoclimate, the prehistoric climate record. Our detailed knowledge of global temperature and atmospheric composition now go back about 800,000 years, thanks to tubes of ice drilled from ancient snow deposits in Antarctica. Chapter 7 discusses links between climate and biogeochemistry, that is, the mutual effects of ecosystems and the chemistry of soils, seas, and air. Chapter 8 presents information on how computer models are used to simulate climate and compares their predictions to the observations described in Chapters 3, 4, and 5. Chapter 9 reveals how much observed climate change is human-caused and how much is natural. Chapter 10 covers the use of computer climate models to predict future climate change. Finally, Chapter 11 delves into computer-predicted climate change for different regions of the world.
Main Conclusions
The following points are highlighted in the "Summary for Policymakers" section of Climate Change 2007: The Physical Science Basis. Segments in italics are paraphrased from the original report to increase clarity.
Concentrations in the atmosphere of the greenhouse gases carbon dioxide, methane, and nitrous oxide (N2O have increased markedly as a result of human activities since 1750 (about the beginning of the Industrial Revolution) and are now far in excess of any values seen for many thousands of years. Increased carbon dioxide has been caused mostly by fossil-fuel burning and changes in land use, especially deforestation (destruction of forests). The increases in methane and nitrous oxide have been caused mostly by agriculture. Carbon dioxide is the most important greenhouse gas: it is responsible for most anthropogenic (human-caused) global warming. The pre-industrial concentration of CO2 in Earth's atmosphere was about 280 parts per million; as of 2005, it was about 379 parts per million, a 35% increase over pre-industrial values. Today's value far exceeds any value observed over at least the last 650,000 years. Recorded history, by comparison, spans only about 6,000 years.
WORDS TO KNOW
AEROSOLS: Particles of matter, solid or liquid, larger than a molecule but small enough to remain suspended in the atmosphere. Natural sources include salt particles from sea spray and clay particles as a result of the weathering of rocks, both of which are carried upward by the wind. Aerosols can also originate as a result of human activities and in this case are often considered pollutants.
ANTHROPOGENIC: Made by people or resulting from human activities. Usually used in the context of emissions that are produced as a result of human activities.
BIOGEOCHEMISTRY: The study of how substances and energy are exchanged between living things and the nonliving environment.
DEFORESTATION: Those practices or processes that result in the change of forested lands to non-forest uses. This is often cited as one of the major causes of the enhanced greenhouse effect for two reasons: 1) the burning or decomposition of the wood releases carbon dioxide; and 2) trees that once removed carbon dioxide from the atmosphere in the process of photosynthesis are no longer present and contributing to carbon storage.
GREENHOUSE GASES: Gases that cause Earth to retain more thermal energy by absorbing infrared light emitted by Earth's surface. The most important greenhouse gases are water vapor, carbon dioxide, methane, nitrous oxide, and various artificial chemicals such as chlorofluorocarbons. All but the latter are naturally occurring, but human activity over the last several centuries has significantly increased the amounts of carbon dioxide, methane, and nitrous oxide in Earth's atmosphere, causing global warming and global climate change.
INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION: The period, beginning about the middle of the eighteenth century, during which humans began to use steam engines as a major source of power.
MERIDIONAL: Relating to the meridians, imaginary north-south lines that define longitudes. Meridional circulations of air or water are those that are predominantly north-south in character with one direction of flow located above the other.
PALEOCLIMATE: The climate of a given period of time in the geologic past.
PERMAFROST: Perennially frozen ground that occurs wherever the temperature remains below 32°F (0°C) for several years.
RADIATIVE FORCING: A change in the balance between incoming solar radiation and outgoing infrared radiation. Without any radiative forcing, solar radiation coming to Earth would continue to be approximately equal to the infrared radiation emitted from Earth. The addition of greenhouse gases traps an increased fraction of the infrared radiation, reradiating it back toward the surface and creating a warming influence (i.e., positive radiative forcing because incoming solar radiation will exceed outgoing infrared radiation).
Scientific understanding of anthropogenic influences on climate has improved since 2001. There is now very high
confidence that the global, average, net effect of human activity since 1750 has been to warm the Earth. "Very high confidence" is defined in the report as meaning that a statement is over 90% likely to be true. Scientists measure warming or cooling effects in terms of how much Earth's radiation of energy is increased or decreased. Decreased radiation causes warming, just as adding a blanket keeps a person warmer by preventing heat loss. Any change in average global energy radiation is described in units of watts per square meter. Such a change is called a radiative forcing term. The net radiative forcing from human-added carbon dioxide, methane, and nitrous oxide is now at รพ2.30 watts per square meter, which is very likely (at least 80% likely) to be greater than any change in radiative forcing seen for at least 10,000 years.
Warming of the global climate system is unequivocal— that is, definitely real. This is shown by observed increases in global average air and ocean temperatures, widespread melting of snow and ice, and rising sea levels. In other words, the world is getting warmer, and this is not a theory but an observed fact. Eleven of the 12 years from 1995 to 2006 were among the 12 warmest years since instrumental records of weather began to be kept in the 1800s. From the late nineteenth century to 2001–2005, the global temperature increased about 1.37°F (.76°C). Furthermore, the world is getting warmer faster: warming has happened about twice as fast over the last 50 years as it has over the last 100 years. The oceans are also getting warmer. Observations made since 1961 show that the oceans have warmed down to a depth of at least 1.9 mi (3 km). This ocean warming has absorbed at least 80% of the heat added to the climate system by global warming. Since water expands when it heats, the oceans have swelled; this, along with water added to the seas by melting ice, has caused sea levels to rise. The Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets, which contain enough water to raise sea levels by hundreds of feet (though they are unlikely to melt completely), are melting more rapidly and are at least 90% likely to have contributed to observed sea level rise. Sea level rose at about .07 in (1.8 mm) per year from 1961 to 2003, faster than during the preceding century. Sea level rose 6.7 in (17 cm) in the twentieth century.
Besides the global changes described earlier, many climate changes have been observed at the scale of continents, regions, and ocean basins. Climate changes at smaller-than-global scales include a rise in Arctic (North Polar and nearby) temperatures that is twice the global average, with 2.7% per-year loss of Arctic sea ice since 1978; about 10% loss of permafrost area in the Arctic since the nineteenth century; reduced precipitation in parts of the Americas, northern Europe, northern and central Asia, and parts of Africa; more intense and longer droughts since the 1970s, especially in the tropics and subtropics; more frequent heavy precipitation events; fewer cold spells and more hot spells; and increased tropical cyclone activity in the North Atlantic.
Not all aspects of climate have changed. Daily average global temperature range has not changed at least from 1950 to 2003. Antarctic sea ice coverage has not changed in any steady trend. There is not enough evidence to say whether there have been changes in the meridional overturning circulation of the ocean or small-scale weather events such as tornadoes and dust storms.
Paleoclimate (prehistoric climate) data show that the last 50 years have been unusually warm compared to the last 1,300 years. About 125,000 years ago, the last time the poles were significantly warmer than they are now for an extended period, polar ice melting caused sea level rises of 13 to 20 ft (4 to 6 m). Average temperatures in the northern hemisphere over the last 50 years were very likely higher than during any other 50-year period in the last 500 years, and were likely the highest in 1,300 years.
Most of the global warming since the middle of the twentieth century is at least 90% likely to have been caused by anthropogenic increases in greenhouse gases (mostly CO2, methane, and nitrous oxide). In 2001, the IPCC thought it only 80% or more likely that global warming was mostly human-caused; this uncertainty had decreased by 2007. Climate changes traced to human activity include ocean warming, continental-scale warming, more frequent temperature extremes, and changed wind patterns. Moreover, human greenhouse-gas emissions would probably have caused even more global warming than has been observed were it not for the cooling effects of aerosols—tiny solid particles floating in the air—released by volcanic eruptions and human activity. It is at least 95% certain that human beings have at least contributed to global warming. Without human activity, climate calculations show that the world would have probably cooled slightly, rather than warming significantly, from 1950 to the present. Every continent but Antarctica has been warmed by human activity. In Antarctica, significant warming is seen over the western peninsula, while little warming (or slight cooling) is seen over the rest of the continent.
In 2007, for the first time, computer climate models allow the statement of a likely (more than 80% probable) range of climate sensitivity to radiative forcing. Climate sensitivity is the degree to which global climate responds to a given amount of radiative forcing. In other words, climatologists are now able to predict, with reasonable confidence, the results of changes in radiative forcing produced by various human and natural factors, especially atmospheric CO2 concentration. Doubling atmospheric CO2 would, with 80% probability, produce global warming of 3.6-8.1°F (2-4.5°C). Clouds remain the largest source of uncertainty in climate modeling. They are an uncertain term because they tend to warm Earth by reflecting infrared radiation back down to the surface, like a reflective blanket, but tend to cool Earth by reflecting sunlight back into space.
Over the next 20 years, given actual and projected increases in greenhouse-gas emissions, warming will probably continue at about .36°F (.2°C) per decade. Even if greenhouse gas and aerosol concentrations were held steady at 2000 levels, about half that much warming would occur anyway. The IPCC predicted in 1990 that global warming of .27-.54°F (.15-.3°C) per decade would occur from 1990 to 2005. The actual value was about .36°F (.2°C), which tends to support the methods used to make the predictions.
Continuing greenhouse-gas emissions at today's rates or higher will cause warming and other regional and global climate changes in the twenty-first century that are very likely to be greater than the changes that occurred in the 20th century.
Scientific confidence in predictions of regional-scale changes in temperature, wind patterns, precipitation, ice, and extreme weather is higher than in 2001. Increased confidence comes from the agreement between independently developed mathematical models that have a proven ability to predict past climate changes based on earlier data. Snow cover in the Northern Hemisphere will decrease; sea ice will shrink in the Arctic and Antarctic seas; heat waves and heavy precipitation events will become more common; typhoons and hurricanes will become more intense; increased precipitation is very likely at high latitudes (far from the equator) and decreased precipitation is likely in subtropical zones; and the meridional overturning circulation of the oceans is very likely to slow down during the twenty-first century. It is, however, very unlikely that the overturning circulation of the global ocean will stop or undergo other rapid, large changes during the twenty-first century.
Even if greenhouse gas concentrations were to be stabilized, instead of increasing steadily as they are today, anthropogenic warming of the climate and rise of sea level would continue for centuries because of greenhouse gases already added to the atmosphere. The amount of warming and sea-level rise will be affected, however, by how much greenhouse gas humans continue to add to the atmosphere.
Impacts and Issues
No other paper, book, or document reflects the combined knowledge of so many of the world's climate and weather scientists as the IPCC's Fourth Assessment Report. This document is therefore of unique importance in the global dialogue on climate change. It is consulted by hundreds of governments in considering possible responses to the problem of climate change; cited in thousands of essays, editorials, news reports, and scientific papers; read closely by activists and environmentalists seeking to change government policies and patterns of human behavior; and attacked by doubters of human-caused (anthropogenic) climate change.
The 2007 assessment is founded on significantly more and better data than the 2001 assessment, but has been subject to criticism from several quarters. For example, critics employed by or sympathetic to large fossil-fuel corporations have produced many Web sites and editorials calling the report panicky and biased. As of late 2007, however, few papers tending to show that climate change is less severe or human-caused than the report says had appeared in the peer-reviewed scientific literature.
Some scientists have accused the assessment of being too optimistic; for example, even before the Physical Science Basis report's release in early 2007, top U.S. climate scientists were saying that its predictions of sea-level rise were too low because, in the words of polar ice specialist Lonnie Thompson of Ohio State University, they "don't take into account the gorillas—Greenland and Antarctica." Thompson added, "I think there are unpleasant surprises as we move into the twenty-first century."
IN CONTEXT: RELIABILITY OF SCIENTIFIC DATA
At the 10th Session of Working Group I of the Intergovern-mental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) in Paris, France, during February 2007, the Working Group assigned levels of confidence to data and analysis. In their Summary for Policymakers, the following levels of confidence were used "to express expert judgments on the correctness of the underlying science: very high confidence at least a 9 out of 10 chance of being correct; high confidence about an 8 out of 10 chance of being correct."
SOURCE: Solomon, S., et al, eds. Climate Change 2007: The Physical Science Basis: Contribution of Working Group I to the Fourth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. New York: Cambridge University Press, 2007.
The IPCC has also been accused of reflecting a conservative or anti-global-warming bias, as opposed to exaggerating the prospects of global warming. According to some news sources, the roundabout process for releasing IPCC reports, which requires repeated approval by most of the world's governments before release, was supported in the 1980s by doubters of global warming who hoped to impede the release of reports favorable to the reality of global warming. In 2002, news outlets reported that the oil company ExxonMobil urged the administration of President George W. Bush, in a confidential memo that was eventually leaked to the press, to have U.S. climate scientist Robert Watson replaced as chair of the IPCC because he was too vocal about the reality of global warming. However, Watson's replacement, Indian engineer and environmentalist R. K. Pachauri, who was IPCC chair during the preparation of the 2007 Assessment Report, has also proved to be a supporter of the scientific consensus view of global climate change.
See Also Great Conveyor Belt; IPCC Climate Change 2007 Report; IPCC Climate Change 2007 Report: Criticism; IPCC Climate Change 2007 Report: Impacts, Adaptation and Vulnerability; IPCC Climate Change 2007 Report: Mitigation of Climate Change.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Books
Solomon, S., et al, eds. Climate Change 2007: The Physical Science Basis: Contribution of Working Group I to the Fourth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. New York: Cambridge University Press, 2007.
Periodicals
Borenstein, Seth. "New Climate Report Too Rosy, Experts Say." The Washington Post (January 8, 2007).
Borger, Julian. "U.S. and Oil Lobby Oust Climate Change Scientist." The Guardian (April 20, 2002).
Rosenthal, Elisabeth. "Science Panel Says Global Warming Is 'Unequivocal.'" The New York Times (February 3, 2007).
Larry Gilman
OASIS Members Form Technical Committee to Develop Web Services Component Model for Interactive Web Applications.
Business Editors, High Tech Writers
BOSTON--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Oct. 22, 2001
Cyclone Commerce, DataChannel, Documentum, Epicentric, HP, IBM,
Logistics Management Institute, Macromedia, Sterling Commerce, U.S. Defense Information Systems Agency, and Others Collaborate to Advance
International Standard for Delivering Applications as Web Services
OASIS, the XML interoperability consortium, today announced its members have formed the OASIS Web Services Component Model (WSCM) Technical Committee to create a Web services standard for interactive application access. WSCM will provide a coordinated set of XML vocabularies and Web services interfaces that allow companies to deliver Web applications to end users through a variety of channels--directly to a browser, indirectly through a portal or embedded into a third party Web application.
"Right now, there is no industry standard mechanism for packaging the display component of a Web service," explained Charles Wiecha of IBM, chair of the new OASIS WSCM Technical Committee. "WSCM will enable any Web application--a package tracker, a calendar application, a stock quote, anything--to be delivered and displayed to an end user as a Web service, regardless of the underlying Web platform, vendor-specific application format or display device."
With WSCM, companies will be free to syndicate their applications across different portals and Web site platforms without being limited by proprietary products. They will be able to dynamically share Web services without the time and labor of creating multiple vendor-specific connectors written to different Web languages such as Java, COM/.Net and Perl.
Wiecha emphasized that WSCM will be developed in light of standards and specifications issued by OASIS, UN/CEFACT, ISO, W3C and other relevant standards bodies. "We aren't trying to reinvent the Web presentation layer. Our goal is to harmonize WSCM as far as practical with existing Web application programming models (e.g., Portals), the work of the W3C (e.g., XForms, DOM, XML Events, XPath, XLink, XML Component API task force), emerging Web services standards (e.g., SOAP, WSDL, WSFL) and with the work of other appropriate business information bodies."
In the interest of convergence, the OASIS WSCM Technical Committee will consider contributions of related work from other groups and companies. The Web Services User Interface (WSUI), an initiative proposed by a working group of software providers earlier this year, plans to submit their specification to the new OASIS technical committee.
"From WSUI's inception, the goal was to submit our work to a major standards body," said Ed Anuff, chief strategy officer of Epicentric, one of the major WUSI contributors. "We chose OASIS because its members include some of the largest, most influential developers in the industry. That level of support is critical for widespread adoption."
"The nascent stage of Web services requires nurturing not just in terms of commercial credibility but also in terms of usable standards," said Tyler McDaniel, Director of Application Strategies at Hurwitz Group. "This concerted effort by OASIS, leveraging the work of WSUI.Org, will help the market address a key issue of presenting Web services throughout the Internet ecosystem. With strong vendor leadership, focused through OASIS, enterprises should get the benefit of a thorough specification."
IBM intends to contribute Web Services Experience Language (WSXL), a Web services-centric component model for interactive Web applications, as work to be considered in the OASIS WSCM Technical Committee. The WSXL reference document can be found on IBM's developerWorks site at http://www-106.ibm.com/developerworks/library/ws-wsxl/index.html.
"IBM is pleased to contribute WSXL to be considered as part of WSCM," said Bob Sutor, director of e-business standards strategy at IBM. "As an XML and Web services-centric component model for interactive Web applications, WSCM will enable businesses to more easily distribute those interactive Web applications through multiple channels. It will also help create new ones by leveraging existing resources across the Web. IBM is a longtime supporter of OASIS, and we're very happy to have the opportunity to chair the OASIS WSCM Technical Committee."
"Much of the work around Web services is focused on giving developers tools to access remote application functions over the Internet," noted Karl Best, OASIS director of technical operations. "The OASIS WSCM Technical Committee aims to make those services accessible to the end user. We invite all who would be affected by this standard to participate in our work."
Initial members of the OASIS WSCM Technical Committee include Cyclone Commerce, DataChannel, Documentum, Epicentric, Hewlett-Packard Company, IBM, Logistics Management Institute, Macromedia, Sterling Commerce, U.S. Defense Information Systems Agency (DISA), and other OASIS Contributors and Individual members. Participation is open to all OASIS members; interested parties will find information on joining OASIS at http://www.oasis-open.org/join.
OASIS will host an open mail list, wscm-comment@lists.oasis-open.org, for public comment on WSCM. Completed work will be freely available to the public without licensing or other fees.
Industry Support for WSCM
"DataChannel has been a leader in advancing XML-based technologies since our company's inception in 1996," said Norbert Mikula, Chief Technology Strategist of DataChannel and Vice Chairman of the Oasis Board of Directors. "In 1998 we submitted WebBroker to the W3C, followed by a co-submission of the WSDL specification. DataChannel also co-authored the technical architecture for ebXML and UDDI, just to name a few. Today's announcement underscores our commitment to providing our customers with the best technology innovations to enable wide-scale collaboration across the Interactive Enterprise(TM). We look forward to working with IBM and other members of the OASIS WSCM to advance this important technology specification that will have a significant impact on the Internet and the enterprise portal market."
"Web services are integral to Documentum's vision of the next generation of content management," said Una Kearns, XML architect for Documentum and member of the board of directors for OASIS. "They will enable Documentum to incorporate content management capabilities across applications and deliver them through a variety of channels -- reducing the total cost and time necessary to integrate and deploy web and portal infrastructures. Standardizing the packaging and delivery of Web services is essential, and we are delighted to work with our partners and other industry leaders, under OASIS, to complete this important area of work."
"The interoperability and portability of XML-enabled software solutions is critical in customer environments," said Jack Walicki, general manager, Web services operations for HP. "HP is pleased to join with other OASIS members in creating a component model for interactive web applications that can be used by the ever-growing XML community. HP's Netaction software suite, including the HP Netaction Internet Operating Environment, will be able to provide an even more flexible interface through the WSCM specifications."
"Sabre sees XML and Web services as critical components in the future of online travel services and is committed to open interoperability standards and a services-based application architecture," said Eric Garcia, a vice president for Strategic Architecture at Sabre. "We look forward to the results of this technical committee and anticipate that their enabling and harmonization efforts will promote the rapid implementation of value added Web services."
"OASIS is well-positioned to make substantive contributions to this significant area of Web and electronic business technology. This should facilitate the development and use of standards, based on XML, that enhance interoperability," said Jerry Smith, U.S. Defense Information Systems Agency (DISA).
About OASIS
OASIS is the XML interoperability consortium, advancing collaboration, convergence and adoption of open specifications for structured information exchange. Members themselves set the OASIS technical agenda, using a lightweight, open process expressly designed to promote industry consensus and unite disparate efforts. OASIS is the home for XML conformance, web services, security, business transactions, electronic publishing, topic maps and other interoperability specifications development.
OASIS and the United Nations jointly sponsor ebXML, a global framework for electronic business data exchange. OASIS operates XML.org, a community clearinghouse for XML application schemas, vocabularies and related documents. OASIS hosts The XML Cover Pages, an online reference collection for interoperable markup language standards.
OASIS has more than 400 corporate and individual members in 100 countries around the world. OASIS sponsors include Accenture, Access360, Adobe Systems, Agital, Altova, Arbortext, Auto-trol, Aventail, Baltimore Technologies, BEA Systems, Bentley Systems, The Boeing Company, Bowstreet, Business Logic Corporation, Chrystal Software, Cincom Systems, Citrix Systems, Cohesia, Commerce One, Critical Path, CrossLogix, Cyclone Commerce, DataChannel, Divine, Documentum, EADS Airbus SA, EDS, election.com, empolis, Engage, Enigma, Epicentric, Excelergy, eXcelon, Extricity, Fujitsu, Hewlett-Packard, IBM, Identrus, Infoteria, Innodata, Intel, Interwoven, IONA, IPNet Solutions, ITEDO, Ivis Group, Jamcracker, Logistics Management Institute, Macromedia, Mercator, Microsoft, Neocore, Netegrity, Netscape/AOL, NextPage, NII Enterprise Promotion Association, Nimble Technology, NIST, Novell, Oblix, OpenNetwork Technologies, Oracle, Pearson Education, Popkin Software, Republica, Reuters Limited, SAA Consultants, Sabre, SAP, Securant, SeeBeyond, Silverstream, SoftQuad Software, Software AG, Sterling Commerce, StreamServe, Sun Microsystems, Sybase, Tata Consultancy Services, The Tamalpais Group, Thomas Technology Solutions, Tibco, Unisys, US Defense Information Systems Agency, Verticalnet, Virtual Access Networks, Vitria, webMethods, Whitehill Technologies, Xerox, XML Global and Xyvision Enterprise Solutions.
RARE Hospitality International to Broadcast Third Quarter Conference Call Live On the Internet.
Business Editors
ATLANTA--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Oct. 23, 2000
RARE Hospitality International, Inc. (Nasdaq: RARE) today announced it will provide an online Web simulcast and rebroadcast of its 2000 third quarter earnings release conference call.
The live broadcast of RARE Hospitality International's quarterly conference call will be available online by going to www.rarehospitality.com and clicking on the link to Investor Relations. In addition, the broadcast can be accessed through www.streetevents.com and www.vcall.com. Please go to the selected site at least 15 minutes prior to the call to register, download and install any necessary audio software. The call is scheduled to begin at 9:00 a.m. Eastern time on October 31, 2000. The online replay will follow shortly after the call and continue through November 7, 2000.
RARE Hospitality International, Inc. currently owns, operates and franchises 169 restaurants, including 138 LongHorn Steakhouses located primarily in the southeastern and midwestern United States, 18 Bugaboo Creek restaurants located primarily in the northeastern United States and 11 The Capital Grille restaurants located across the country.



















