An Indonesian military transport plane carrying troops and their families has crashed on the island of Java, killing at least 97 people, officials say. At least two people died on the ground as the plane hit houses before skidding into a rice field where it caught fire. The plane, en route from Jakarta to eastern Java, came down not far from an air base where it was heading. Visibility appears to have been good and there is no indication yet of what caused the crash. The C-130 Hercules had been carrying about 110 passengers and crew. Ten children were reported to have been on board. Fifteen passengers – some with bad burns – survived, officials said. Smoking debris The plane was due to land at Iswahyudi air force base and struck houses in the village of Geplak, a few kilometres away, at about 0630 local time (2330 GMT). Lucy Williamson The BBC’s Lucy Williamson in Jakarta: Indonesia’s history is pockmarked with air disasters. Official figures for 2006 show there was an aircraft incident here every 10 days. Analysts say the real figures are likely to be even higher. Some of those incidents have been devastating. Two and a half years ago, a passenger plane crashed into the sea with 102 passengers on board. A few months later, a flight operated by the national carrier Garuda Indonesia crashed on landing at Yogyakarta airport in Java, killing 21 people. Those incidents led the European Union to ban all Indonesian airlines from flying to its territories. Indonesia has worked hard since then to improve its safety systems, but incidents still pepper the news. Air disasters timeline In pictures: Indonesian crash The aircraft was almost completely destroyed in the crash; wreckage was strewn across rice fields and only the tail was left intact. Rescue teams have been pulling the dead and injured from the smoking debris. Eyewitnesses spoke of a big explosion before the plane came down near the town of Madiun. A local villager, quoted by Kompas newspaper’s website, said some aircraft parts including nuts and bolts fell from the sky. “One of the wings fell off… Then the plane nose-dived into the houses.” A survivor said it felt like the plane’s engines just stopped and then the aircraft began to break apart in mid-air. The man, who was interviewed on local TV, was thrown clear of the plane as it came down. Poor record Investigators have been sent to find out what caused the crash. Landing conditions were good, the aircraft was believed to be in good repair and there was contact with the crew just moments before the plane went down, a military spokesman said. Indonesia’s air force has long complained of being underfunded and handicapped by a US ban on weapons sales, correspondents say. The ban has recently been lifted. map It has suffered a series of accidents, including one involving a Fokker 27 plane that crashed into an airport hangar in western Java last month, killing all 24 aboard. An Indonesian air force Hercules overshot the runway at Wamena airport in Papua on 10 May. One person was reportedly injured in that incident. In response, the air force said it would check its Hercules fleet, which is being upgraded with airframe and engine capability improvements. There have also been a number of commercial airline crashes in Indonesia in recent years, killing more than 250 people. In 2007, all Indonesian airlines including national carrier Garuda were banned from the European Union for safety reasons.
Indonesia air crash kills scores – BBC
May 20, 2009 by azadexpressionFacebook and the Whopper deal
February 2, 2009 by azadexpressionFacebook is happy, right? What is a good example to agencies of Madison Avenue, how a great brand can be a real benefit for users. This is the future of advertising. Or it could be Facebook, if not halt, the data cited:
We encourage the creativity of developers and brands with help of the Facebook platform, but we must also ensure that applications to users’ expectations of privacy of users. This activity, which facilitates the application is contrary to the privacy of users of the application of people, if a user deletes a friend. We have succeeded in developing solutions. Meanwhile, we have the necessary measures to ensure the confidence of users of Facebook, is maintained.
Someone said before the sale of seal on this item? All that the user will receive a message disse tells which contributes to the spread Virally application. Without the implementation of this feature is less potent. There is no privacy, but only a decision of Facebook, people should not be warned, if you as a friend.
How Intel are slashing prices
February 2, 2009 by azadexpressionSome of the chip maker in Taiwan on the basis of customers, including Micro-Star and Gigabyte Technology, said they were the leaders of Intel, that the price cuts in July were 23.Desperate time of desperate measures. Rival Advanced Micro Devices since last month its market share by more than 20 percent for the first time in four years. Even in the last month, Dell bought AMD chips for its computers for the first time.
Toyota braced for historic loss – BBC
December 22, 2008 by azadexpressionJapan’s biggest carmaker Toyota has forecast its first annual loss in 71 years due to plummeting sales and a surge in the value of the yen.
The firm said it expected a loss of 150bn yen (£1.1bn) in yearly operating profits – from its core operations.
Japan also posted a trade deficit of $2.5bn (£1.7bn) in November as exports fell at a record rate.
The rising yen saw export levels down 26.7% from a year earlier, the ministry of finance said.
The carmaker recorded an operating profit of 2.27 trillion yen last year.
Toyota said it still expected to make a profit on a net level for the year ended March but has cut its forecast sharply to 50bn yen, down from a previous estimate of 550bn yen.
It is the second profit warning by Toyota in less than seven weeks.
The latest estimate is far lower than its net profit of 1.7 trillion yen earned the previous year.
Falling sales
Toyota’s president Katsuaki Watanabe said that the company now expected to sell 8.96 million vehicles around the world this year, down 4% from the previous year.
Unlike previous years, he gave no goal for 2009.
Toyota said in a statement it was cutting its profits forecast because of the soaring yen “as well as a review of sales plans following a faster than expected contraction of the auto market”.
Japanese carmakers have all been hurt by plummeting car sales in their key overseas markets, including the US.
The surging yen has eroded their overseas earnings and also hit their profits – the dollar has fallen to 13-year lows against the Japanese currency.
Honda last week cut its annual profit forecast by 67%, and outlined a list of counter-measures such as putting off non-urgent investments to prop up its profitability.
Deteriorating sector
In the United States, President Bush threw the struggling carmakers General Motors and Chrysler a lifeline of up to $17.4bn to stave off bankruptcy as they reel under slumping demand.
Commenting on Toyota’s latest announcement, analysts said it underlined the problems now facing Japan’s car exporters.
“This is very, very, very bad. There’s a chance that they could fall into the red in the next business year as well,” said Koichi Ogawa of Daiwa SB Investments.
“This is also not just a problem for Toyota. What is good for Toyota is good for the Japanese economy.”
Fujio Ando of Chibagin Asset Management added: “This shows how rapidly and badly the auto sector has deteriorated.”
“Toyota will likely revise down its earnings numbers or sales forecast again in late January or February as I don’t think the business environment will become any better,” he said.
Output slashed
Japan typically runs a trade surplus due to strong demand for its products – but the surging yen has hit demand for its goods.
Japanese exports fell sharply to all areas but those to the US were worst-hit, plunging 33.8% – also a record drop.
Shipments to the European Union were down 30.8% while those to China fell 24.5%, the biggest fall since 1995, said Reuters news agency.
Exports to the rest of Asia declined 26.7%.
Imports were also down – 14.4% overall – due in part to lower oil prices.
Japan’s economy – the world’s second-largest after the US – has slipped into its first recession in seven years after two quarters of negative growth in a row.
The government has forecast zero growth in the year ending March 2010.
Sanctions imposed on Somalia head – BBC
December 22, 2008 by azadexpressionThe East African regional grouping Igad has decided to impose sanctions on Somali President Abdullahi Yusuf Ahmed and his associates.
In a communique after a meeting of foreign ministers in Ethiopia it backed Prime Minister Nur Hassan Hussein, whom the president tried to dismiss.
The grouping also discussed ways to replace Ethiopian troops when they pull out of Somalia in the next few weeks.
African Union commission head Jean Ping said Nigeria was ready to send troops.
Torn by internal conflict, Somalia has been without an effective central government for more than 15 years.
Infighting
The BBC’s Elizabeth Blunt in Addis Ababa says there was no doubt whose side this meeting of the Inter-governmental Authority on Development (Igad) was on.
In a place of honour on the platform was Ahmed Mohammed Goala, the Somali prime minister’s newly appointed foreign minister, not his predecessor, who had been associated with President Abdullahi, our correspondent says.
At the end of the meeting, the foreign ministers of the six member states expressed their support for Mr Nur and his newly appointed cabinet, and said they regretted the attempt by the president to replace him last Sunday.
Mr Abdullahi said the government had been “paralysed by corruption, inefficiency and treason” and failed to bring peace.
However, Somalia’s parliament declared the sacking illegal and passed a vote of confidence in Mr Nur by a huge majority on Monday.
In the communique issued at the end of the meeting, Igad gave its strong backing to Mr Nur and his government.
“[Igad] regrets the attempts by President Abdullahi Yusuf to unconstitutionally appoint a new prime minister that Igad does not recognise, and decides to impose sanctions on him and his associates immediately,” it said.
It also called on other countries to take similar measures.
Our correspondent says that in addition to the infighting in the Somali government, the imminent departure of Ethiopian troops from the country overshadowed the meeting.
Ethiopian Foreign Minister Seyoum Mesfin said his country’s decision to pull out over the coming weeks was “irrevocable”.
Igad formally thanked the Ethiopians for the sacrifices they had made to advance the cause of peace in Somalia, but made no appeal to them to change their mind and stay.
The issue of peacekeeping will be considered further at a meeting of the African Union’s Peace and Security Council on Monday.
Ministers now have the task of trying to beef up the AU’s mission in Somalia, which will no longer have the comfort of knowing it can call for Ethiopian back-up when needed, our correspondent adds.
At the Igad meeting, the president of the African Union Commission said Nigeria had promised to send a battalion of about 850 soldiers to Somalia next month, and that Burundi and Uganda would each send an additional battalion.
IMF urges spending to spur growth – BBC
December 22, 2008 by azadexpressionMore spending by governments will be needed to stimulate worldwide economic growth, the head of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) has told the BBC.
Dominique Strauss-Kahn said he feared measures announced by the Group of 20 nations last month would not be enough.
The IMF has already cut its forecast for global growth next year, and he said the next projection, due in January, would be even worse.
Mr Strauss-Kahn spoke of “2009 as really being a bad year”.
“I’m specially concerned by the fact that our forecast, already very dark… will be even darker if not enough fiscal stimulus is implemented,” he said in an interview with BBC Radio 4.
‘Less bad solution’
He said it would take a spending stimulus equivalent to about 2% of global Gross Domestic Product, or about $1.2 trillion (£800bn), to make a real difference.
He added that given the choice between increasing the deficit and not fighting the recession, he favoured the “less bad solution”.
He described European Central Bank chief Jean-Claude Trichet’s warning that eurozone governments must keep a lid on borrowing as “noble”.
“He’s the head of the central bank – it’s his job to say things like that,” Mr Strauss Kahn said.
“We are in the biggest crisis we have experienced for 60 or 70 years and we have to take that into account,” he added.
In November, the IMF lowered its global economic growth forecast to 2.2% from 3%.
In the BBC interview, Mr Strauss-Kahn was asked about the level of debt in the UK – 44.2% of GDP.
Shaun Ley, of BBC Radio 4’s The World This Weekend, asked Mr Strauss-Kahn: “Markets seem to have made their own judgements about this: it is cheaper to get insurance against big multinationals like BP and McDonald’s defaulting than it is to get insurance against UK government bonds going under. That is quite disturbing, isn’t it, when a country is viewed in that way?”
“Yes, it is,” Mr Strauss-Kahn said. “That is a good example of the fact that we are facing something which is almost unknown.”
Last week, Mr Strauss-Kahn said the IMF could cut its 2009 forecast for China to around 5% amid an “unprecedented” global slowdown.
IVF weight limit ‘not justified’
December 22, 2008 by azadexpressionOverweight and obese women have as much chance of having a baby through fertility treatment as normal weight women, a Scottish study suggests.
IVF treatment is no more expensive for most obese women, the report in the journal Human Reproduction added.
But women should be advised to lose weight because of the high risk of complications, the researchers said.
Most primary care trusts limit IVF to women with a body mass index under 30, which excludes women classed as obese.
The research, on 1,700 women who underwent their first cycle of IVF between 1997 and 2006 in Aberdeen, found 28% were overweight, 8% were obese and 5% had a BMI over 35 – classed as heavily obese.
No significant difference was found between groups in the proportion of women having a positive pregnancy test, ongoing pregnancy, and live birth.
And there was no difference in the cost of a live birth between normal weight women and women with a BMI up to 35.
But a higher proportion of women in the overweight or obese groups had a miscarriage.
And they needed higher doses of drugs used to stimulate the ovaries.
Age ‘more important’
Study leader Dr Abha Maheshwari, clinical lecturer in reproductive medicine at the University of Aberdeen, said they had expected costs to be higher in overweight and obese women.
But the study showed patients should not be discriminated against because of their size, she said.
“It shows that age is a more important factor than weight.
“Everybody should be encouraged to lose weight, but treatment shouldn’t be declined on weight alone.”
She said women with a BMI over 35 should not be offered IVF until they had lost weight because of the particularly high risk of complications.
The British Fertility Society agrees that no one with a BMI over 35 should get IVF, but says that for those with a BMI over 30, fertility treatment should be delayed until they have lost weight unless their age is against them.
Professor Adam Balen, an expert in reproductive medicine at Leeds Teaching Hospitals and author of the British Fertility Society guidelines, said these were put together on clinical grounds, not cost grounds.
“If you look at all the data, there is no doubt that obesity has a powerful effect on fertility but you can overcome it with fertility drugs.
“However, you still have a high risk of miscarriage and it is associated with maternal and foetal deaths.”
Dr Virginia Beckett, a spokeswoman for the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists, said the study would get people talking but she would want to see bigger trials done before practice was changed.
“There is well-established data that over a BMI of 30 you have a much higher risk of complications.”
BBC iPlayer now available on Mac – BBC
December 22, 2008 by azadexpressionThe BBC has created a version of the iPlayer that works with both Mac and Linux computers.
The two systems, which have been able to stream BBC programmes via the iPlayer for a year, will now be able to handle downloads.
The BBC, working with Adobe, has developed the new version, known as BBC iPlayer Desktop.
The Corporation also ran tests of a system to help ISPs cope with increase in traffic generated by the iPlayer.
Lab edition
The iPlayer is the BBC’s online media player that lets viewers stream programmes for up to seven days after broadcast or download and watch them for up to 30 days.
When the iPlayer first launched the BBC was criticised for producing versions that only worked with Microsoft’s Windows XP and which used Microsoft’s digital rights management (DRM) system to enforce viewing restrictions.
The BBC’s head of digital media technology, Anthony Rose, who is responsible for delivering the next generation of BBC iPlayer, said the structures put in place by the BBC Trust on how the iPlayer can operate meant DRM was a necessity.
“The BBC Trust said we could make content available for seven or 30 days after broadcast,” he said. “The ability to take things away after some time requires DRM.”
The new version of the iPlayer has been written with Adobe’s AIR technology which aims to make it possible to create applications that can be downloaded to your computer, rather than just embedded in browser web pages as is possible with the widely used Flash software.
Those who want to try the new player must first install Adobe AIR and then get the trial version by signing up to be an iPlayer Labs tester via the iPlayer site.
A beta version of the BBC iPlayer Desktop that uses the Adobe AIR technology was made available on 18 December with a finished version likely to be released in February 2009.
The cross-platform nature of Adobe AIR means the iPlayer will work with Open Source and Apple Mac computers “out of the box” on 18 December, said Mr Rose. It fulfilled the Trust’s demand that the iPlayer be “platform neutral”, he said.
Mr Rose said the iPlayer now supported three separate DRM technologies: Microsoft, Adobe, and the OMA standards for mobiles.
“We may embrace other DRMs as needed,” said Mr Rose, adding that putting the iPlayer on phones, game consoles and many more computers was helping to drive the success of the application.
Traffic congestion
At the same time, said Mr Rose, the BBC has carried out tests to help ISPs mitigate the bandwidth demands of iPlayer users.
In early 2008 ISPs complained that the popularity of the iPlayer was putting a strain on their networks and forcing up their costs.
Net provider Plusnet published figures which suggested the cost of carrying streaming traffic increased from £17,233 to £51,700 per month largely because of the iPlayer.
The BBC has worked with British company Velocix to test a system which puts servers in ISPs that store, or cache, the most popular iPlayer programmes.
Mr Rose said smart software in the iPlayer would check these caches to see if the programme a user wants is loaded locally on a caching device near the user. Streaming from within an ISP’s network cuts the cost of transporting that traffic for both the BBC and the net supplier.
It was up to ISPs now to get hold of the caching boxes and install them, said Mr Rose.
“The BBC is not building its own content delivery network,” he said. “But we can help move the market in this area.”
Mr Rose said it would establish commercial relationships with ISPs that use the caching technology in the same way it did with other firms that carry or broadcast BBC content.
Small firms ‘take long Christmas’ – BBC
December 22, 2008 by azadexpressionMore small firms are planning to take an extended Christmas break than at any time in 16 years, the Federation of Small Businesses (FSB) has said.
From a survey of its members, the FSB estimates that 10% or 500,000 are planning to close for two weeks over the festive period.
The FSB says the main motivation for the move is to save money.
FSB official Stephen Alambritis said the firms were following the decisions of carmakers such as Land Rover.
‘Reduced bills’
“By closing down for the full two weeks, small firms are looking to save a bit of cash though reduced electricity and fuel bills,” he said.
“Obviously small retailers won’t be closing, but small manufacturers and self-employed workers such as electricians and plumbers, will be downing tools.”
The banking industry recently revised its guidelines for dealing with small firms to try to help them through the economic downturn.
Under the changes, banks will have to be more proactive in contacting firms they think might be in trouble.
The government also announced new measures to help small firms in the pre-Budget report, including the ability to spread tax bills, and increased access to loans.
