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Saturday, December 6, 2014

While You Were Offline: Sony Gets Hacked, the Internet Freaks Over Star Wars


Internet in Cuba only for the rich — or enterprising HAVANA: With their smartphones and tablet computers, they look much like young people anywhere in the world. But these Cubans have to go to extremes just to get an internet connection and somehow get around the strict control of the Communist authorities. In the capital Havana, clusters of young Cubans can be spotted at weekends in groups near hotels, embassies and business centers in a desperate attempt to get online — somehow. "Some people capture wireless signals after getting the codes from friends who work here, but I know there are others who manage to crack passwords with special software," one computer enthusiast said, speaking on condition of anonymity at the foot of an office block. Lurking down a small street abutting a hotel, another strategy is at work. Several youngsters tap away furiously on their devices — they are online thanks to a shared connection courtesy of a classmate posted at hotel reception. Suffice it to say that in Cuba, wireless signals — or failing that, any internet connection — are highly coveted. They are under strict control, reserved for companies, universities and institutions. A privileged few — journalists, artists and doctors, in particular — are entitled to a particular connection. And that's it. In 2013, only 3.4% of Cuban households were connected to the internet, according to the International Telecommunication Union (ITU), which rates the connectivity of countries. Since June last year, the Cuban authorities have gone a small way to affording the island's 11.3 million population a rare chance to access the Internet, opening about 100 centers for the public to get online. But at $4.5 per hour, rates are prohibitively expensive in a country where the average monthly wage is around $20. Previously, only hotels could offer the Internet to the public, but again with a prohibitive rate of up to $10 an hour that only foreign visitors could afford. The state telecommunications service provider, ETECSA, does not offer mobile Internet to its customers, while the 3G network is only for foreign visitors using roaming and offers often patchy performance. ETECSA has now allowed subscribers to access their mail from their smartphones, but it only applies to the domain @nauta.cu. The company has also opened a service to send pictures from phones to any email address. They are minor concessions in a country where foreign-branded smartphones are increasingly visible. "Cuba remains one of the most restrictive countries in the world in terms of Internet freedom," Sanja Tatic Kelly, project director for Freedom on the Net, at the American NGO Freedom House, told AFP. "Rather than relying on the technically sophisticated filtering and blocking used by other repressive regimes, the Cuban government limits users' access to information primarily via lack of technology and prohibitive costs," she said. The Cuban authorities do censor certain websites — press and blogs that are against the Castro leadership, pornography and Skype -- but Tatic Kelly noted: "The total number of blocked websites is relatively small when compared to many other authoritarian states like China, Iran or Saudi Arabia." The more tech-savvy Cubans have found a way around that too, downloading software that can hide their IP addresses to avoid detection and mislead snooping eyes into thinking they are surfing the net in another country. For those who are less tech-smart, they can always rely on the "paquete" — USB sticks packed with pirated films, TV shows, pop music and games and sold on the black market for a few US dollars. Cuba's rulers say they need to keep a tight rein on the internet to protect the island from cyberattacks. Over 18 months, Havana has been the victim of cyberattacks from thousands of addresses registered in over 150 countries, according to deputy minister of communications Wilfredo Gonzalez. That brooks no argument with Tatic Kelly. "Cuba does not register as one of the leading countries experiencing cyberattacks," she said, citing data from online security experts Kaspersky Lab, which ranks Cuba 199th in terms of countries hit with counterattacks. At number one, the most targeted, is Russia, it says, with the United States third. http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/followceleb.cms?alias=internet in Cuba,Cuba internet,Cuban Government,Cuba Stay updated on the go with The Times of India’s mobile apps. Click here to download it for your device.

PM believes in marketing, concentrating powers in his hands: Rahul


Rahul Gandhi today targetted Prime Minister Narendra Modi saying he believes only in "marketing" and "symbolism" and concentrating all power in his hands in the belief that he can run the country alone. Accusing the NDA government of treating democratic processes as "useless", the Congress Vice President said "Today (Leader of Congress in Lok Sabha) Mallikarjun Khargeji was speaking but the microphone was switched off." "We never did this kind of thing. Their thinking is that the democratic process is useless and not required. They cannot say it outside but this is their thinking," Gandhi said. Adressing an alumni meet of Youth Congress, Rahul charged BJP does not believe in democracy and on the contrary when there was UPA government at the Centre, leaders of opposition parties always got a chance to speak in parliament. He also referred to the protest led by him in Parliament over the controversial remarks of union minister Niranjan Jyoti amid a stalemate between the government and the opposition on the issue. He said while the programmes of UPA were eaimed at giving power to the people at large, those of NDA government "snatch power from people". "This is the difference. The Prime Minister feels that he alone can run the country. He deeply believes in this. And this can never work. Only people of this country will run it...His thinking is of symbolism. Say anything, market it and then start saying the next thing. People will react to it," Gandhi said as he also sought to pick holes in the Prime Minister's Sansad Gram Yojana scheme. In the backdrop of Congress' defeat in a series of electoral battles, Rahul Gandhi admitted the party has "gone a bit away from people (Congress party janta se thodi door hui hai)." "We have to change this in coming one of two year and connect the party with people and open its door for them," he said as he made a strong pitch for a bigger political role of youths in Congress saying his job is to get Youth Congress leaders into the parent party. The party launches special pages for the event on Facebok and Twitter. One of the tweets on its page quoted Gandhi as saying that the Prime Minister wants "all power in his hands". Calling the Youth Congress leaders as "testimony of the party youth wing's struggle, Gandhi said "my job is to get Youth Congress leaders into the parent Congress...People say that once they are out of Youth Congress, they do not get a place in the party organization. "...It is my job to rectify it. There has to be a coordination between Youth Congress and Congress". He said there is a need to bring people from Youth Congress across the time span together. "My effort will be to ensure that even those who were once in Youth Congress should feel that they are going to have a place in the parent organization...our party is the party of Hindustan. It is not the party of any religion or region or any community," Gandhi said. He urged the Youth Congress leaders to hit the streets and give a voice to the reaction by people to various steps being taken by the government including change in the wage component of MNREGA. "Those whose jobs are being taken away will react. You will have to take this reaction forward and this will not happen with speeches. You will have to hit the streets," he said. Party seniors Anand Sharma, Mukul Wasnik, Ramesh Chennithala, Manish Tewari, Randeep Surjewala and Ashok Tanwar attended the event along with other seniors like Oscar Fernandes and Ashok Gehlot who had been the in-charge of Youth Congress at some point. Besides, some former and serving chief ministers, who had served as Youth Congress chiefs in their states, were also there. Go to Top

Friday, December 5, 2014

Technology struggles to beat thieves


This image courtesy of Omnicell shows a nurse accessing an automated medication dispensary using her fingerprint to gain access to the system. A touch screen shows the nurse the medications that have been ordered for each patient. The cabinet lights up to show where the medications are located in the cabinet, and the system keeps track of the inventory levels so they can be restocked before they run too low.(Photo: Omnicell) Narcotics are as old as the Sumerians who cultivated opium from poppies in 3400 BC, and so is the use of narcotics by healers. Today, nurses have the most contact with drugs in the health care workplace — and the most opportunities to steal them, an infraction the industry calls "diversion." "Nurses are the No. 1 care provider with regular access to controlled substances," said Kimberly New, a medication security consultant and executive board member of the National Association of Drug Diversion Investigators. "We detect a lot more nurses than pharmacy staff diverting medications in inpatient settings." Storing, charting, counting and administering drugs are part of almost every nurse's duties. Patients need medication, and they need it often. Care you receive in a modern professional medical facility usually includes them. But even though the core duties of a nurse are similar from facility to facility, no two workplaces seem to handle drug tracking, reporting and security the same way. DIFFERENT SECURITY SYSTEMS If the nurse works somewhere other than a hospital, such as a long-term care facility, chances are the medications are stored in an old-style cabinet that uses metal keys, two of them, to unlock the doors. The cabinet usually is in a room that itself is locked, and has a locked refrigerator to hold perishable drugs. It's the easiest setup to game. and also the most time-consuming and mistake-prone, because of the way the medications are tracked. The nurse has to manually record a host of details each time a drug is removed from the cabinet — date, time, name of patient and much more. At the end of the shift, the incoming nurse hand-counts the narcotics in the presence of the outgoing nurse, who verifies the count, almost like when convenience store clerks change shifts and count register drawers. As Xerox is to copiers, so Pyxis is to medicine carts, another common way medications are dispensed. While Pyxis offers newer models with updates, their older carts — which many facilities still use — have drawers for each patient's medications and don't feature higher-end technology. With a manual entry each time a drug is dispensed and a manual count at the end of the nurse's shift, they are also easy to trick. AUTOMATION BRINGS POWER The state-of-the-art technology used by roughly 80 percent of acute-care hospitals involves an automated dispensing machine, similar to a vending machine, that requires a barcode or a username and password to gain access to the medication drawers. Hospitals can set up the system so nurses are able to access only the medication for their assigned patients. From a patient safety perspective, the real breakthrough comes with the software. In Fishersville, Augusta Health upgraded this year to an automated dispensing solution from Omnicell that creates a transaction record each time medication is dispensed. Originally developed to save hospitals time by eliminating hand counts, the electronic records have become a valuable security tool, allowing a nursing or pharmacy director to isolate suspicious dispensing patterns to a particular caregiver. "The technology allows us to run reports at the end of each shift to reconcile all the medications," Augusta Health spokeswoman Lisa Schwenk said. If there's a discrepancy, the software can analyze the transaction data and generate red flags — for example, a nurse with a high number of morphine transactions compared with others on the unit, signals possible theft or error. USING THE TOOLS New previously oversaw a diversion program at University of Tennessee Medical Center that used Pandora analytics software. At one of the hospitals where New worked, she saw one nurse climb to the top of the chart. "She was a new employee and had just been through orientation," New recalled. "She immediately started diverting Percocet by taking doses that were never documented." Using her analytic tools, New typically found nurses stealing medicine once or twice a month. "Diversion is universal, so if you don't catch it in a year, it's a reason to look at your process," she said. In addition to causing pain, worsening health and even death, drug "diversion" costs consumers money every time they're charged for medications they didn't receive. Hospitals can, if they choose, use their transaction reports to correct the patient's bill if diversion occurs. All the required data is already there — patient name, data, time, medication, dose — and can be exported to the billing department to reverse the charge. HIGHEST RISK DRUGS The Drug Enforcement Administration "schedules" drugs partly according to their potential for abuse and addiction. Most health care facilities take security measures for drugs in Schedules II through V. Schedule I drugs aren't used in a medical setting in Virginia. •Schedule I: Heroin, marijuana and other non-prescribed opiates •Schedule II: Prescription opiates and amphetamines such as morphine and fentanyl, as well as methadone, Ritalin, oxycodone and high doses of codeine •Schedule III: Steroids and barbiturates such as buprenorphine and paregoric tend to lead to psychological dependence when abused. Physical dependency is less intense. •Schedule IV: Some barbiturates and partial opioids are rated less potentially addicting than Schedule III drugs, including Xanax, Librium, and Valium and Ambien •Schedule V: The least risky substances such as certain cough suppressants that include opiates in low doses to treat common ailments Read or Share this story: http://www.newsleader.com/story/news/special-reports/2014/12/05/addicted-nurses-technology-struggles-beat-thieves/19907913/

2015 Technology Showcase at NAIAS Offers Street-Level View of the Future


DETROIT, Dec. 5, 2014 /PRNewswire/ -- Innovation will be front and center at the North American International Auto Show (NAIAS) when the inaugural NAIAS Technology Showcase looks at the integration of technology and the automotive industry during Press Preview and Industry Preview. The effort, which will take place Jan. 12-15, in Hall E at Cobo Center in Detroit, will focus on many of the flash-forward technologies that will impact connectivity, automation and efficiency in the next generations of vehicles. The 2015 Technology Showcase will offer companies from around the world a forum for exhibiting breakthrough technologies, providing product demonstrations, revealing fresh designs and participating in panel discussions. Scheduled activities include: Hyper-connected automotive technology that will explore autonomous vehicles, the Intelligent Transportation System and new heights of fuel efficiency Some of the companies on display include: Alpine Electronics, ASC, Covisint, Modern Car Safety Technologies, NextEnergy, Ricardo, Square One, Mojio, the Oak Ridge National Laboratory and others A spotlight on Michigan-based companies that are leading the way in developing and producing advanced vehicle technologies with assistance from the Michigan Economic Development Corporation Opportunities for media and enthusiasts to meet leaders in manufacturing and technology along with futurist thinkers during panel discussions and seminars planned for Wednesday, Jan. 14, 2015 Two key symposia already on the docket are: "Ignition," a joint NAIAS/Crain's Detroit Business event that will offer Detroit entrepreneurs a chance to present their technology ideas to a panel of judges before an audience of investors, financiers, attorneys and academics in the mode of television's reality show, "Shark-Tank" AutoBeat Group's "Meeting the Mobility Challenge," a free symposium about the challenges of making the connected car a reality In addition, attendees will be able to ride along in the world's first full-size, working 3-D-printed car. Called the Strati, the game-changing vehicle is the brainchild of Phoenix-based Local Motors, a technology company that designs, builds, and sells vehicles. Local Motors will premiere a mid-model refresh of the car after a live demonstration of the three-phased, micro-manufacturing process on the main show floor. Phase 1 includes 3D-printing the vehicle structure, which takes approximately 40 hours of continuous printing on a Big Area Additive Manufacturing machine. During Phase 2, the vehicle is milled. During Phase 3, the final phase of the process, the car is then rapidly assembled. Attendees will be able to ride in the made-from-scratch automobile on the Shell Innovation Track located in the Technology Showcase in Hall E starting on Monday, January 12, 2015. The Shell Innovation Track, sponsored by Shell Oil Company (shell.com), will be the launch pad for vehicle demonstrations, student competitions and other industry exhibits. Part of a global group of energy and petrochemical companies in more than 70 countries, Shell is a key player in the future of the auto industry. (Note: The track will test Tec Pro racing barriers that will be used when Shell returns to the Motor City in April to host the Shell Eco-marathon. This event on the streets of Detroit will challenge students to build cars that can reach 2,800 mpg.) Students from the University of Michigan, University of Michigan-Dearborn, Michigan State University, Lawrence Technological University, Wayne State University and the College for Creative Studies will participate in a variety of displays and demonstrations including solar technology, racing performance, fuel mileage efficiency and automotive design. Credentialed media will have access to both Press Preview and Industry Preview. Others will need to purchase tickets for Industry Preview. Tickets are $95 per day and are available online now at naias.com. About the North American International Auto Show Now in its 27th year as an international event, the NAIAS is among the most prestigious auto shows in the world, providing unparalleled access to the automotive products, people and ideas that matter most - up close and in one place. Administered by Executive Director Rod Alberts, the NAIAS is one of the largest media events in North America, and the only auto show in the United States to earn an annual distinguished sanction of the Organisation Internationale des Constructeurs d'Automobiles, the Paris-based alliance of automotive trade associations and manufacturers from around the world. Follow us for highlights and updates!Facebook: likeautoshow.com Twitter: @NAIASDetroit Hashtag: #NAIASSubscribe for the latest news on naias.com Press Preview - Mon-Tue, Jan. 12-13, 2015Industry Preview - Wed-Thu, Jan. 14-15, 2015Charity Preview - Fri, Jan. 16, 2015Public Show - Sat-Sun, Jan. 17-25, 2015 Logo - http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20090903/DE70318LOGO To view the original version on PR Newswire, visit:http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/2015-technology-showcase-at-naias-offers-street-level-view-of-the-future-300005540.html SOURCE North American International Auto Show

On Smaller Farms, Including Organic Farms, Technology and Tradition Meet


Photo On the Farmhack.net website, enterprising farmers share tools and innovations. On the Farmhack.net website, enterprising farmers share tools and innovations.Credit I spent yesterday morning at a remarkable meeting of young farmers meshing tradition and technology to sustain healthy soils and produce bountiful crops in a changing economy and climate. They had gathered for a “pre conference” ahead of the seventh Young Farmers Conference hosted by the Stone Barns Center for Food and Agriculture in the lower Hudson Valley the rest of this week. A recurring theme was that the best way to sustain America’s smaller farms, both organic and conventional, is through an intensified focus on technology. You can follow the meeting over the next couple of days through the hashtag #YFC14. But I also recommend tracking #FarmHack. This is the Twitter tag for an idea-sharing network of farmer-tinkerers devising everything from a remotely-monitored compost thermometer to an electric-powered rolling platform that one lies on while weeding (organic farms, eschewing herbicides, need other methods). Farmhack is also a website through which farmers are sharing tools and methods with their peers — very much akin to Digital Green‘s use of YouTube in India to connect farmers. Both of these portals, along with the Stone Barns “Virtual Grange,” are not doing anything new. For centuries, farmers have shared ideas and lessons learned at the market or grange hall or seed store. These portals are simply greatly expanding the reach of such knowledge networks. The “knowosphere” has arrived on the farm. Given the aging of America’s farmers, it’s inspiring to see a new generation seeking ways to sustain productive landscapes. I was at the conference to run a panel on “no-till” strategies for limiting plowing and the resulting erosion, water problems and compaction of soils. This is an approach to agriculture that I first wrote about in 1983 in the context of an effective but dangerous herbicide, Paraquat. At the industrial scale, the simplest path to limiting plowing has long been to spray this or another non-persistent weed killer on a field and plant directly into the stubble. Our discussion centered on strategies focused on mechanical means of suppressing weeds or the use of secondary (or “cover”) crops. The panelists were Anu Rangarajan, the director of the new Hudson Valley Farm Hub in Kingston, N.Y., Dorn Cox, a New Hampshire farmer focused on sustaining farming through social and technological innovation, Timothy LaSalle, an expert in soil restoration and health. Rangarajan and Cox, both of whom work with both conventional and organic farmers, stressed that an engineering approach to solving challenges like weed control is increasingly important. Rangarajan mentioned new satellite-navigating robots, for example, that boost efficiency and cut soil loss by dispersing seed for a cover crop between rows of corn plants well before the corn is harvested. This is what one such device, made by Rowbot, looks like: Here’s more on robots down on the farm. But, again, such technology is mainly limited to big operations for now. She and Cox were echoed by Jack Algiere, who manages Stone Barns extensive farm operation. This Saturday, he’s hosting a technology and tools workshop for some of the farmer attendees. There’s plenty of technology being deployed on the country’s big heartland farms, as Quentin Hardy recently reported for The Times. But in a brief hallway chat Algiere told me there is a big gap that needs filling. There’s a substantial market for small-scale versions of sophisticated gear that is already made for industrial-scale farms, but few companies or entrepreneurs are focused there (which is one reason Farm Hack exists). Here’s more on the role of new technology in service of sustainable harvests, from a piece written recently for the Stone Barns website by Jane Black, a Brooklyn-based food writer: Americans love technology. And yet, when it comes to farming, we expect the new generation of farmers to go back in time, shunning the power of satellite GPS, Web-based apps, and robotics. On popular food news sites, there’s a lot more talk about tractor-free no-till farming than there is about how to harness big data to fight climate change or the enormous potential of anaerobic digestion. In the minds of many, technology is inextricably linked with industrial farming; they cannot imagine how it can be used for good. But for farmers–especially small farmers–technology is essential for environmental and financial sustainability. “We’re at the beginning of the greatest transformation of our food system since the Green Revolution: the information revolution,” says Danielle Gould, the founder of Food + Tech Connect, which helps food and agriculture startups create a better future for food. “There is a misconception that technology equals agribusiness. But technology also has the potential to level the playing field for small and mid-sized farms, by making it easier for them to manage operations, better utilize resources and sell their products.” There are some technologies specifically geared for small farmers. Most are Web-based: AgSquared, for example, helps vegetable farmers plan and keep track of plantings, harvests, and yields. Farmeron offers similar services for small livestock farms. What there isn’t is much high-tech equipment for small farms: No small, lightweight tractors or inexpensive cooling systems that could make small farms more competitive. Companies that make wheelchairs and fancy zero-turn lawn mowers have the capabilities, says Stone Barns Four-season Farm Director Jack Algiere. The problem is that small-scale agriculture just isn’t a big enough market for companies to bother with. The result is that farmers are forced to retrofit old lawnmowers and 1950s refrigerators to approximate what they need. Efforts to develop small-scale, affordable technology are growing. In partnership with design engineer Barry Griffin, Stone Barns has identified 34 appropriate-scale tools for small, sustainable farms. The first project is a small electric tractor—the TC-30—that will serve as the “motherboard” frame to which other tools can be attached. Up next: a solar-powered Horse Tractor and compressed-air grain harvester and processor. Farm Hack has a similar aim. Founded in 2010, the online and real-world community of farmers, designers, and engineers has worked to develop and build open-source tools that are affordable, adaptable, and easy to fix. Its successes include ideas as varied as a pedal-powered root washer and an electronic fence that can be controlled by text message. But there is still much work to be done. Small farmers need the attention of university researchers, who for half a century have worked all but exclusively to find ways for big farms to increase yields. Today, those researchers are looking at sustainability—it’s called “precision agriculture” in the trade–but their focus remains laser-focused on industrial farms. [Read the rest here.] In discussion this issue with Rangarajan, I couldn’t help bringing up the remarkable Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute engineering program not far from her Farm Hub operation. As I wrote in 2012, Rensselaer has extensive programs focused on aiding regional business with technological challenges. Imagine if student teams in the school’s Design, Innovation, and Society program spent some time with local farmers. I’m a matchmaker at heart and could see a fruitful exchange developing.

WHUK introduces advance Professional Grade WordPress hosting service over CloudLinux


This article was originally distributed via PRWeb. PRWeb, WorldNow and this Site make no warranties or representations in connection therewith. SOURCE: The new Wordpress hosting plans will combine Wordpress, with Webhosting UKs superior performance and customer service to deliver a range of plans that guarantee a premium experience. Leeds, UK (PRWEB UK) 5 December 2014 Webhosting UK is pleased to announce the launch of its first service designed specifically for bloggers and online content professionals with a new range of Wordpress plans. The new Wordpress hosting plans will combine Wordpress, the worlds most popular blogging platform, with Webhosting UKs superior performance and customer service to deliver a range of plans that guarantee a premium experience. With Wordpress pre-installed with a carefully chosen bundle of plugins and a free domain name included, customers are able to get started with adding content in just minutes. We are excited to be introducing this new range of services that are targeted specifically at bloggers regardless of their technical background James Anderson, marketing head of Webhosting UK explains. He adds, Whether customers are looking to start their own blog for personal or professional reasons, our new Wordpress platform is designed to give you a head start so all you need to think about is the content. An emphasis has also been placed on security with the new Wordpress platform. Security isolation and bad neighbour isolation are packaged with every plan to provide complete protection for all users from rogue websites. Customers also have the option to have their website scanned on a regular basis by Webhosting UKs new MTVScan security tool so that their blogs can remain clear of malware. WHUKs new Wordpress hosting platform will be available in three tiers; the Starter plan, priced at £3.99/month, offers 2GB SAS storage, with the facility to host up to 5 domains; the Professional plan, priced at £5.99/month, provides 5GB SAS storage and the facility to host up to 20 domains; the line up is completed with the Platinum plan, priced at £8.99/month, which comes with 10GB SAS storage and can host an unlimited number of domains. All plans come complete with cPanel access for clients to manage their accounts and an unlimited amount of bandwidth. One of the typical problem faced by most shared hosting clients is the occasional loss of performance, usually caused by unpredictable processes from the neighboring accounts, traffic peaks, ill scripts etc. WHUK therefore offers the solution over CloudLinux, which ensures that a resource intensive Website doesn't affect the other users over a shared server. Its one of the key advantages with this offering where resources of individual accounts are isolated, well managed resources, better security and performance, hence no overload and performance enhancement over the same shared environment, said a spokesperson from the company. For the original version on PRWeb visit: http://www.prweb.com/releases/2014/12/prweb12371999.htm Information contained on this page is provided by an independent third-party content provider. WorldNow and this Station make no warranties or representations in connection therewith. If you have any questions or comments about this page please contact pressreleases@worldnow.com. Web Hosting Main menu Hottest Hosts Cloud and Hosting News WHIR Events Austin, Texas Phoenix, Arizona Los Angeles, California Denver, Colorado Chicago, Illinois San Diego, California Amsterdam, Netherlands London, United Kingdom Washington, D.C. Dallas, Texas Other Industry Events Webinars Video White Papers

Wednesday, December 3, 2014

Amazon Web Services tweaks cloud pricing structure


Amazon Web Services is providing more payment options for its cloud-based virtual machines, allowing users to lock in a price and pay either entirely upfront, or throughout the life of a one- or three-year contract. AWS has a variety of ways customers can pay for using its cloud-based virtual machines. The most common is an on-demand pricing model where customers enter credit card information and pay for virtual machines by the hour. For customers who plan to use the resources for a longer period of time, AWS offers Reserved Instances (RI) that carry a contract of either one or three years. Previously customers had to pay for those RIs up front, but today AWS announced that customers can pay for the RIs throughout the life of the contract. + MORE AT NETWORK WORLD: Recap of AWS re:Invent: 10 cool new features in Amazon’s cloud | How to get more out of virtualized and cloud-based environments + In a blog post on the company’s website, AWS says that customers have three ways of paying for RIs now: Customers can pay for the reserved instance entirely upfront in a one or three year contract; instances can be paid for partially upfront, meaning that a portion of the RI is paid for upfront and the remaining is paid for throughout the life of the contract. Or, customers can choose to pay for the RIs as they are consumed with no up-front payment. In the last scenario, even though customers do not pay for the RIs up front, they are still committing to paying for them throughout the life of the contract. RIs offer advantages to both the user and AWS. For users, it guarantees a discounted price of a virtual machine throughout the life of the contract, and it secures the capacity in Amazon’s cloud. In return, customers can save more than 60% compared to using on-demand, by-the-hour pricing when paying for the RIs entirely upfront. When customers defer RI payments the savings is about 30% compared to on-demand pricing. For AWS, RIs create a steady revenue stream and usage of its cloud by customers. AWS also offers some volume discounts, including up to a 5% discount for between $500,000 and $4 million of usage, and a 10% discount for between $4 million and $10 million of usage. AWS also allows customers to resell their unwanted RIs on a marketplace that it runs. The new system replaces an old model that used light, medium and heavy RIs and offered customers different levels of discounts. That model caused confusion for some customers, says Toban Zolman, vice president of product development at AWS cost tracking company Cloudability. For enterprises, the all upfront-payments are similar to enterprise agreements they make to buy servers for a data center. For startup companies, they can now get the advantage of RI pricing without paying for it upfront. Cloudability Chief Customer Officer J.R. Storment says not nearly enough customers the company works with take advantage of RI pricing though. Still too many users are leaving savings on the table by using on-demand instances. If a company plans to use AWS for more than six months, and it plans to grow that usage over time, then Storment says it’s worth it to look at RI pricing. This story, "Amazon Web Services tweaks cloud pricing structure " was originally published by Network World.

Arizona lags in homes with high-speed Internet


Posted Nov 30, 2014, 5:01 pm Miranda Rivers Cronkite News Arizona homes trailed the nation in both their access to high-speed Internet and their computer ownership, according to a recent report from the Census Bureau. The report, released this month, said 86.8 percent of Arizona homes had a computer and 76.2 percent had high-speed Internet connections in 2013, both about 2 percentage points below the national averages for the same categories. Experts in the state were not surprised by the numbers, pointing to the state’s largely rural make-up which they said leads to fewer providers, harder access and higher Internet costs. “Our problem over quite a while, is just the fact that bandwidth just hasn’t been available locally,” said Shirley Pulsipher, a technician for Apache County Schools Business Consortium. “We don’t have the option of multiple providers like you do in the Valley,” said Pulsipher, noting that for the past year the local phone company has been the only provider available to Apache County schools. The Census Bureau report said Arizona was one of 20 states that fell below the national average for computer ownership and high-speed Internet. Utah topped the list for computer ownership, at 94.9 percent of households, and New Hampshire had the most households with high-speed access, at 85.7 percent. Mississippi was last in both categories, with 80 percent of homes having a computer and 62.3 having broadband. Patrick Sherrill, president and CEO of Zona Communications, said the biggest difference between Internet access in Arizona’s rural and urban areas is price. His Phoenix-based company provides telephone and broadband service to rural areas of the state. “Rural areas are much less populated, which means the cost of building the networks there are more expensive,” Sherrill said. That’s true in Apache County, where Pulsipher said schools pay $40 to $50 per megabit, compared to the $5 to $10 they might pay in the city for the same level of service. Pulsipher, who works in Sanders – population 630, according to the latest Census numbers – said the cost for putting in infrastructure is “just too high.” Mike Murphy, superintendent of Sanders Unified School District in Apache County, said his district was able to increase its bandwidth because of E-rate, a federally funded program that provides discounted telecommunications services for eligible schools. “We have boosted our bandwidth prior to the start of the school year, and the connection seems to be pretty solid,” Murphy said. But for the general rural population, Pulsipher said, getting access to high-speed internet and computers can be tough. That’s particularly true in areas like Apache County, where a sizeable number of homes might not have power or running water, he said. “The provider can’t really sell something to people that don’t have the infrastructure for that type of thing,” Pulsipher said. Sherrill said his company is seeing population growth in some rural areas of the state, where he said demand for broadband is “pretty solid.” “We are constantly trying to figure out how to get them a faster speed,” Sherrill said. But that takes money to construct the needed network facilities. Sherrill said the demand for Internet in rural areas is just as strong as those in more populated areas. And just as important: Having a computer gives people the ability to get access to healthcare and education, and to prosper economically, he said. “A network is more valuable for everybody when everybody’s connected to it,” Sherrill said. - 30 -

New York Public Library will rent Wi-Fi hotspots to people who need it most


No need to wait your turn on a limited number of computers. (vincent desjardins) The New York Public Library, as well as the Queens Library and the Brooklyn Public Library, will begin renting out 10,000 Wi-Fi hotspots to residents later this month, The Wall Street Journal reported on Tuesday. A press release provided to Ars by the New York Public library noted that the New York and Brooklyn Public Libraries will rent out the hotspots for six months to a year to residents who don't have broadband and who are enrolled in library programs and adult learning programs. The Queens Library will lend the mobile hotspots from five of its libraries to anyone with a library card. Further Reading NYC to blanket the city in free public Wi-Fi with 10,000 stations The kiosks have charging stations, claim they can reach "up to Gigabit speeds." The hotspots will be provided by Sprint. A New York Public Library spokesperson told Ars via e-mail that people who borrow the hotspots will need "to sign an 'acceptable use agreement'" as required by Sprint. "It essentially states that the user will not do anything illegal with the Wi-Fi (such as illegally download movies)," the spokesperson said. In addition, renters of the hotspots will be afforded the same privacy protections they would have if they had purchased the hotspot themselves. The announcement is yet another front in New York City's efforts to bring Internet access to all of its residents. Earlier this month, the city announced that it will roll out a new communications network called LinkNYC, which will turn old payphones into kiosks that offer "up to gigabit speeds." Those 10,000 kiosks will be funded by advertisements surrounding them and will offer free domestic calls as well. Still, the LinkNYC plan has been criticized for falling short in serving all of the residents of New York City equitably, especially given that the kiosks will be placed far enough apart in many poorer neighborhoods that residents will see gaps in being able to connect. The hotspot rental plan through the public library system will be a step forward in filling those gaps and closing the digital divide that exists between poor and wealthier families. (That is to say, wealthier residents will not be able to just check out a hotspot and go work in the park.) Currently, computers at the city's public libraries are packed. “At every branch you walk into, every computer is being used all the time,” Anthony Marx, president of the New York Public Library, told The Wall Street Journal. “As more and more of what the library offers moves online, it became obvious that there was a problem.” In a press release e-mailed to Ars, the New York Public Library said the funding for the program came from a $500,000 donation from a coalition of nonprofits, as well as a $1 million donation from Google. The New York Public Library ran a six-month pilot of the hotspot rental program this summer. During the pilot program, the library conducted a survey that found that 55 percent of its patrons using the Internet and computers in its branches did not have broadband access at home. Of those patrons using the free Internet in the library who reported making $25,000 or less each year, 65 percent said that they did not have Internet access at home. As part of the launch, Google is also providing 500 free Chromebooks to be distributed to children and teens enrolled in library programs.

39th Annual International Computers, Software & Applications Conference (COMPSAC) to Address Mobile and Cloud Computing Challenges and Applications


Related: Press Release, News 39th Annual International Computers, Software & Applications Conference (COMPSAC) to Address Mobile and Cloud Computing Challenges and Applications LOS ALAMITOS, Calif., Dec. 3, 2014 /PRNewswire-iReach/ The 39th Annual International Computers, Software & Applications Conference (COMPSAC), scheduled for July 1-5, 2015 in Taichung, Taiwan, will address the challenges and applications of mobile and cloud systems. Papers are being accepted until 17 January, 2015. Photo - http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20141203/162044 Mobile and cloud computing are increasingly being used for computations and data analytics, however, there are challenges when applying them to different domains or across domains. The hardware and software design in mobile systems with cloud-based delegation of data and computation has created issues with high power consumption, delays, security, and integration. "As computer systems and software applications continue to become more complex and evolve into the fast emerging mobile and cloud platform, COMPSAC has been evolving too, to offer the richest possible technical contents that feed participants a well-balanced coverage of interrelated technical issues," said Carl Chang, the COMPSAC Standing Committee Chair since 2006. "Each COMPSAC symposium will be community-based, and cross-cutting issues linking symposia domains will also be addressed. Within IEEE Computer Society, COMPSAC is known for providing conference goers this kind of enriched experience." COMPSAC 2015 will provide a platform for in-depth discussion of steep challenges in such emerging application domains as smart and connected health, wearable computing, Internet of Things, cyber-physical systems, and smart planet. To find out more or submit your paper, visit http://www.computer.org/COMPSAC. This year's COMPSAC will feature several symposia, each focusing on a particular technical segment. COMPSAC 2015 will also include a student research competition, doctoral symposium, and fast abstract, in addition to special sessions, panels, and keynotes to facilitate discussion and deepen the understanding of challenges by furthering the fundamental contributions needed for advances in computing systems.

Reinventing the Internet to Make It Safer


SAN FRANCISCO — What if it isn’t too late to start from scratch? It was only about 40 years ago that Vinton G. Cerf and Robert E. Kahn holed up in the conference room of a Hyatt hotel in Palo Alto, Calif., and sketched out the sets of rules and protocols that laid the foundation of the modern Internet. Photo “Everything was built with performance, not security, in mind.” — Howard E. Shrobe, computer science professor at M.I.T. “Everything was built with performance, not security, in mind.” — Howard E. Shrobe, computer science professor at M.I.T.Credit Katherine Taylor for The New York Times Despite big advances in speed, performance, memory and machines, their decisions continue to form the basis for modern digital communications — much to the detriment of security, some experts argue. But the United States government is teaming up with computer scientists to do something about it. Five years ago, the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, or Darpa, decided to explore what the Internet might look like if we could rebuild the computer systems from the ground up, employing the hard lessons we have learned about security. The idea was simple, yet seemingly impossible. The program, called Clean Slate, consisted of two separate but related efforts: Crash — short for Clean-Slate Design of Resilient, Adaptive, Secure Hosts — a multiyear project aimed at building systems that were much harder to break into, that could continue to fully function when they were breached and that could heal themselves, and MRC, short for Mission-Oriented Resilient Clouds, which applied similar thinking to computer networking and cloud computing. While Clean Slate was designed to make machines more aware of their environment, a separate effort at Darpa, called Active Authentication, is intended to make machines more aware of their operator. The program is exploring ways that machines could recognize humans by analyzing behavior, like a typing pattern, rather than a password or a fingerprint. The Clean Slate programs were designed to run for only four years. The Crash program finished last year, though three of its projects have continued for a fifth year. The MRC program will wrap up this year. With the advent of cloud computing and shiny new phones, tablets and watches, it can be easy to forget that in many ways our computer systems are still very old. “The software we run, the programming language we use and the architecture of the chips we use haven’t changed much in over 30 years,” Howard E. Shrobe, a computer science professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, said in a recent phone interview. Dr. Shrobe and others note that the Internet’s basic design decisions were made when computer hardware was significantly more expensive than it is today. Forty years later, the consequences of decisions made in those resource-constrained days remain. “Everything was built with performance, not security, in mind,” Dr. Shrobe said. “We left it to programmers to incorporate security into every line of code they wrote. One little mistake is all it takes for the bad guy to get in.” Never before has the problem been laid so bare. Last spring, security researchers stumbled on a two-year-old mistake a programmer had made in a critical piece of security software used by companies like Amazon, Netflix and Yahoo as well as by the F.B.I. and the Pentagon. It was built into a range of technology from weapons systems to home Wi-Fi routers. They called it Heartbleed. Five months later, researchers discovered another serious error, this one in a program run by 70 percent of the machines that connect to the Internet. Only this time, it had taken 22 years to discover the bug, which could be used to seize control of hundreds of millions of computers. They named it Shellshock. Together, the Heartbleed and Shellshock bugs affected more than half the Internet, putting web vulnerabilities in the limelight. But for security experts, the bugs were just further evidence that it may be time for a do-over. Dr. Shrobe, who oversaw the Clean Slate program for Darpa until last year, said that from the beginning he wanted the programs to be more than a thought experiment. “It was always my intent to offer a menu of technical options that companies who make computers and computer software could introduce into the commercial stream,” he said. “We’re beginning to see some of that work take effect now.” He points to one Crash program called Clean Slate Trustworthy Secure Research and Development, which those involved with it nicknamed Custard. It is not a full replacement of existing infrastructure but a way to use software and other technologies to run computers in a safer mode that can sort out who has permission to conduct which operations. “It is a huge, phenomenal step forward,” said Peter G. Neumann, a computer security pioneer at SRI International, the Silicon Valley engineering research laboratory that worked with Cambridge University on the Custard project. Dr. Neumann and Dr. Shrobe say Custard can eliminate an entire class of cyberattacks caused by buffer overflows, a common design flaw that allows hackers to send a message that overwhelms a computer’s memory, causing the program to fail and allowing the attacker to inject malicious code. Over the last year, there has been significant and growing interest from companies in using Custard in their products, as well as from nonprofits, research communities and academia. While nobody expects an entirely new Internet infrastructure to emerge in 2016, Dr. Shrobe and others say they see demand building for a long-term solution to computer security. And there may be a window to do it as the world’s computing goes mobile and the Internet braces for the Internet of Things — the hundreds of millions of cars, shoes, thermostats and lampposts that will soon be online. “Everyone has been burned by now,” Dr. Shrobe said. “People are much more aware of the problem. The question is, What do you do now?”

China to fine internet companies Tencent, Baidu for porn: Report


BEIJING: China's ministry of culture said it would fine 11 internet companies including Tencent Holdings and Baidu for spreading pornography and violence, state news agency Xinhua said. China launched an anti-pornography campaign in April as part of wider efforts to "clean up" the internet. The move has coincided with a crackdown on online freedom of expression, which has intensified since President Xi Jinping came to power early last year. Xinhua said mobile game platforms run by Tencent, which runs one of the most popular mobile messaging apps in China, search engine giant Baidu and another nine companies were alleged to be involved in pornography, gambling and violence. The report cited a statement from the culture ministry as saying that some products had challenged "accepted moral values". Spokespeople for Tencent and Baidu did not answer calls to their mobile phones late on Tuesday in China. Liu Qiang, a deputy director in the market department of the ministry, said the fine amounts would be published later. "We hope that major companies can shoulder their due, social responsibilities and offer healthy, quality, cultural products," Xinhua cited Liu as saying. The ministry also discovered comic and animated products that contained "bloody, terror and violent content" on 21 websites run by companies such as China Telecom and Tencent, Xinhua said. In August, Chinese authorities warned Baidu to clean up its content after pornographic files were found on its online storage service. In May, internet firm Sina Corp was fined 5.1 million yuan by Beijing authorities for allowing "unhealthy and indecent content" on its online reading channel and on its main website. http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/followceleb.cms?alias=internet porn China,China porn,Tencent Holdings,Baidu,Sina Corp Stay updated on the go with The Times of India’s mobile apps. Click here to download it for your device.

Singapore Exchange Delays Trading Start Following Software Glitch


[unable to retrieve full-text content]SINGAPORE— Singapore Exchange Ltd. Wednesday delayed the start of trading in its securities market by over three hours to give brokerages a chance to correct any errors on behalf of clients caused by a software glitch two days earlier. The interruption ... Dropbox Opens Up to Business Software Developers As Dropbox pushes to become an online-storage provider for businesses, the startup is learning it has to play nice with the dozens of enterprise software products those organizations already use. The company today announced a new set of tools to help integrate Dropbox’s file storage and security features with other business software. The tools, part of an application programming interface, or API, include the ability to manage employee activity logs, authenticate teams of workers with single sign-on services and back up large amounts of data, the company said in a press release. Dropbox, already a popular app with millions of consumers, hopes to bolster its credibility with the corporate-tech managers who buy software for large companies and want tools that work well with the applications they already run. The storage service is used in more than 4 million businesses and is increasingly deployed in bigger organizations, including Hyatt, Hearst, National Geographic and Under Armour. More than 100,000 companies now pay for Dropbox, up from 80,000 in July. “What customers were asking us is not to build our own solutions, but to open up and make [Dropbox] accessible to existing providers,” said Dennis Woodside, a veteran of Google who in February left his job running that company’s Motorola division to become Dropbox’s first operating chief. Woodside is leading a push into business software that could be critical to Dropbox’s future. Over the past year, larger rivals including Google and Microsoft have courted consumers — Dropbox’s core customers — by lowering the prices of their storage services for individual users. That’s put pressure on the startup to sell to higher-margin business customers. Woodside is also overseeing the company’s expansion internationally, including new sales offices in Japan and Australia. The majority, or 70%, of Dropbox users are outside of the U.S., and a “large percentage of revenue” comes from international markets, Woodside said. Offices in the U.K., France and Germany are scheduled to open next year, he said. Dropbox gives its basic service away for free, but charges $10 a month for extra storage and other features. Its business service costs $15 a month per user and includes additional security and administration features. More than 20 business software makers already have taken advantage of Dropbox’s new business API. Splunk, a data-tracking service for businesses, now pulls into its dashboard information about employees logging into and out of Dropbox files. Guidance Software, which helps companies prepare for litigation and regulatory investigations, added support for files stored in Dropbox. The business API extends the software development tools previously made available through Dropbox’s general API. More than 300,000 applications use the general API to incorporate Dropbox capabilities such as the ability to save and attach files from Dropbox in Yahoo Mail messages. The new tools follow Dropbox’s partnership last month with Microsoft to let users easily save Microsoft Office files to Dropbox from their desktop or mobile phones. Woodside said Dropbox is following in the tradition of large enterprise software companies like Salesforce, which have become more useful to a variety of businesses by opening up and partnering with outside developers. “Salesforce has expanded its API to thousands of developers,” Woodside said. “It’s become a much stronger company because of it.” ______________________________________________________ For the latest news and analysis, Get breaking news and personal-tech reviews delivered right to your inbox. More from WSJ.D: And make sure to visit WSJ.D for all of our news, personal tech coverage, analysis and more, and add our XML feed to your favorite reader.

Tuesday, December 2, 2014

How startups are making software more appealing for end users


BENGALURU: Chennai-based software maker Zoho is focused on making its products more intuitive and appealing to end users amid a growing trend of no longer treating business software as a utilitarian product but one that can work across personal devices that employees bring to the office. "There have been so many instances that people sign up independent of their corporate policy," said Sridhar Vembu, chief executive of Zoho, which competes with some of the largest enterprise software makers such as Microsoft and Google. Over the past four years, the company has learned to consciously think about design so that its suite of enterprise software comes with a friendly, easy-to-use interface. This phenomenon of consumerisation of IT - where enterprises are coping with changes brought on by end consumers and tech-savvy employees - is in turn benefiting start-ups that are primed for this transformation. "Every CIO's top agenda today is to do something with start-ups," said Lalit Ahuja, co-founder of Kyron accelerator and former managing director of the Indian arm of US-based Target Corp. Thanks to mobility and cloud, large enterprises are trying to appeal to and make themselves visible to their end consumer. "Enterprise software is beginning to become cool. That's the new mantra," said Virender Aggarwal, CEO of Ramco Systems. "Phones can support so many apps, employees demand cool software for internal IT teams," said Aggarwal, whose company is working with several start-ups to augment its everyday IT needs. Gone are the days when enterprises would buy licences for software, install them on each system and spend a few days training employees to work on it. The intuitive interface and the subscription-based services of cloud-based products and services have eliminated it all. "Start-ups have now started enterprise grade software, robust in quality and security," said Jayant Kolla, analyst at Convergence Catalyst. Being mobile-first economies that skipped the desktop era, the leaders in the consumerisation trend are China and India, followed by Brazil and Mexico, according to the US-based Burrus Research. Consumerisation of IT can help not just start-ups but is imperative to enterprises as well, according to experts. "Additionally, your Gen-Y and Gen-X employees are very techno-savvy and need to use what they consider to be the newest devices so they can feel empowered," said Daniel Burrus, CEO of Burrus research, adding that better communication, collaboration and greater satisfaction of the workforce can be achieved through consumerisation of IT. Earlier this year, VMWare acquired AirWatch for $1.54 billion (about Rs 9,537 crore), to help professionals seamlessly access their private cloud from a multitude of devices. But with mobility comes the threat of security of data. Two-year-old i7 Networks, which sells security solutions for the BYOD age, has bagged Aditya Birla group, online bus ticketing service Redbus and IT firm Happiest Minds as his customers. "The IT teams have no control over what devices employees bring," said CEO Manjunath Gowda, whose company is growing at 50% every year and expects revenue of $1 million (about Rs 6 crore) in the next two years. Previously, IT companies in India moved slow on technology, laying a greater emphasis on robustness than efficiency. "Now, we're past that stage. Companies want efficiency; products that will give them an edge over their competitors," said Akilesh Tuteja , an analyst at professional services firm KPMG. "And start-ups are best positioned to do that." "There have been so many instances that people sign up independent of their corporate policy," said Sridhar Vembu, chief executive of Zoho, which competes with some of the largest enterprise software makers such as Microsoft and Google. Over the past four years, the company has learned to consciously think about design so that its suite of enterprise software comes with a friendly, easy-to-use interface. This phenomenon of consumerisation of IT - where enterprises are coping with changes brought on by end consumers and tech-savvy employees - is in turn benefiting startups that are primed for this transformation. "Every CIO's top agenda today is to do something with startups," said Lalit Ahuja, co-founder of Kyron accelerator and former managing director of the Indian arm of US-based Target Corp. Thanks to mobility and cloud, large enterprises are trying to appeal to and make themselves visible to their end consumer. "Enterprise software is beginning to become cool. That's the new mantra," said Virender Aggarwal, CEO of Ramco Systems. "Phones can support so many apps, employees demand cool software for internal IT teams," said Aggarwal, whose company is working with several startups to augment its everyday IT needs. Gone are the days when enterprises would buy licences for software, install them on each system and spend a few days training employees to work on it. The intuitive interface and the subscriptionbased services of cloud-based products and services have eliminated it all. "Startups have now started enterprise grade software, robust in fessionals seamlessly access their private cloud from a multitude of devices. But with mobility comes the threat of security of data. Twoyear-old i7 Networks, which sells security solutions for the BYOD age, has bagged Aditya Birla group, online bus ticketing service Redbus and IT firm Happiest Minds as his customers. "The IT teams have no control over what devices employees bring," said CEO Manjunath Gowda, whose company is growing at 50% every year and expects revenue of $1 million (about Rs 6 crore) in the next two years. Previously, IT companies in India moved slow on technology, laying a greater emphasis on robustness than efficiency. "Now, we're past that stage. Companies want efficiency; products that will give them an edge over their competitors," said Akhilesh Tuteja, an analyst at professional services firm KPMG. "And startups are best positioned to do that." quality and security," said Jayant Kolla, analyst at Convergence Catalyst. Being mobile-first economies that skipped the desktop era, the leaders in the consumerisation trend are China and India, followed by Brazil and Mexico, according to the US-based Burrus Research. Consumerisation of IT can help not just startups but is imperative to enterprises as well, according to experts. "Additionally, your Gen-Y and Gen-X employees are very technosavvy and need to use what they consider to be the newest devices so they can feel empowered," said Daniel Burrus, CEO of Burrus research, adding that better communication, collaboration and greater satisfaction of the workforce can be achieved through consumerisation of IT. Earlier this year, VMWare acquired AirWatch for $1.54 billion (about Rs 9,530 crore).

U.S. hospitals making fewer deadly errors, study finds


A federal review of hospital medical records and other data has found a 17 percent decline in infections, drug mistakes, bed sores and other preventable errors from 2010 to 2013, according to a report released Tuesday. Using methods developed by health care quality experts, the report estimated that 50,000 fewer patients died in the hospital and about $12 billion in health care costs was saved as a result of the decline. The report, while acknowledging that the reasons for the improvements aren't fully understood, does list likely contributing causes. They include incentives such as technical help, public reporting on errors and financial penalties established by the Affordable Care Act. "Today's results are welcome news for patients and their families," Health and Human Services Secretary Sylvia Burwell said in a statement. "These data represent significant progress in improving the quality of care that patients receive while spending our health care dollars more wisely." 12 Photos 11 Deadly Hospital Mistakes: Don't be a Victim! Medical Mistakes Kill Hundreds of Thousands a Year. Will You Be Next? Dr. Peter Angood of the American Association for Physician Leadership, who wasn't involved in the federal report, said the health care industry has a long way to go, and it's still unclear which patient safety strategies work best in hospitals. He noted that the report finds that one in 10 hospital patients still experience such errors. "A 10 percent significant error rate that creates harm, disability and possible death is way too high in American health care," Angood said. The report analyzed conditions patients develop in the hospital such as adverse drug events, catheter-associated urinary tract infections, bloodstream infections, pressure ulcers and surgical site infections. Most of these so-called hospital-acquired conditions are considered avoidable. The improvement mostly happened in 2012 and 2013, according to the report, and most of the decline came from fewer adverse drug events and pressure ulcers, or bed sores. More than 1.3 million fewer hospital-acquired conditions were experienced by patients over the three years compared with the number that would have occurred if 2010 rates remained steady, according to the report. Another recent study on hospital errors found the number of mistakes could be reduced by at least 25 percent if doctors improved communications and followed a standard checklist for sharing patient information during the handoff from one shift to the next.

Diabetes Linked to Poor Brain Power Later in Life


Diabetes A new study found that people diagnosed with diabetes have poorer brain power later in life than those with normal blood sugar levels. (Photo : Reuters) A new study found that people diagnosed with diabetes have poorer brain power later in life than those with normal blood sugar levels. The results suggests that keeping the blood sugar levels at bay can lower one's risk of memory problems in the future. "It gives you an enormous window of opportunity for prevention," co-author Dr. A. Richey Sharrett, of Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health in Baltimore, told Reuters Health. "After all, I think people dread dementia more than they dread anything in old age." Sharrett and his colleagues looked at the data of 13,551 adults who underwent brain evaluation between 1990 and 2013. The average age of the participants was 57, and about 13 percent of them were diagnosed with diabetes. During the 20-year study period, the researchers saw that those who had diabetes had poorer brain power compared to the healthy participants. The same observation was seen for those who were considered pre-diabetes, or with higher than normal blood sugar but not high enough to be considered diabetic. The findings contradict an earlier study that found having a healthy blood sugar level does not affect the brain power of the seniors. "This one says you got a 20-year lead time," Sharrett said. "You can do something about it now, when you're in your 50s - not later." The researchers clarified that the results of their study do not imply that those with healthy blood sugars are not vulnerable to memory and thinking problems later in life. They weren't sure as well if high blood sugar was the primary cause of poor brain power. "The study is consistent with other literature we have seen," Heather Snyder, director of medical and scientific operations for the Alzheimer's Association, told Healthday News. Snyder reviewed the study and was not part of it. Researchers recommend keeping a healthy weight, maintaining a proper diet and exercising regularly to lower one's risk to type 2 diabetes, especially during middle age. This study was published in the Dec.2 issue of the Annals of Internal Medicine.

Monday, December 1, 2014

HealthCare.gov’s insurance marketplace for small businesses gets off to a slow start


A year after the Obama administration temporarily shelved an unfinished part of HealthCare.gov intended for small businesses, it has opened with reports of only modest technical flaws — but with doubts that it will soon benefit the millions of workers at little companies with inadequate health insurance or none at all. Insurance brokers are, at times, having trouble getting into their accounts and, in scattered cases, are not showing up in the computer system’s lists of local insurance professionals available to coach small businesses. More broadly, interviews with brokers and others suggest that, in the two weeks since the marketplace’s health plans went on sale for 2015, interest within the niche they are intended to help seems scant. During the first week, that part of HealthCare.gov drew 200,000 visits, compared with more than 1.5 million people who looked at the Web site’s health plans for individuals, according to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), the branch of the Department of Health and Human Services overseeing the ­online insurance marketplaces. CMS officials would not provide figures on how many small businesses in that first week decided to offer workers coverage through the health plans created for them — or how many workers, in turn, have bought it. But John Arensmeyer, chief executive of Small Business Majority, a group eager for this part of the marketplace to succeed, voiced a widespread view. “We are not expecting a massive surge,” he said. The fate of the Small Business Health Options Program, known as SHOP, has attracted less attention than the part of HealthCare.gov designed for individuals who cannot get insurance through their jobs. But when Congress enacted the Affordable Care Act in 2010, the idea of providing a new breed of health plans to small companies was one pillar of the law’s strategy to usher in the largest expansion in health insurance the government had ever attempted. Who gets health insurance through their jobs Employers have been the main conduit to health coverage for generations, but that model has not always worked well for people employed by little companies. With few employees to pool the costs if someone gets sick, insurance for small businesses has tended to be expensive, and small-business owners for years have been backing away from offering it. About half of workers at companies with fewer than 50 employees — the group for whom the SHOP marketplace is intended — are offered insurance by their bosses. More than one-fourth are uninsured. The idea behind this part of the health-care law was to create marketplaces in which small businesses would be banded together, prompting insurers to offer better and more affordable coverage. And employees would get a choice of health plans — something common at large companies but less so at small ones. Unlike with the rest of HealthCare.gov, which is open now for a few months for individuals to buy insurance, there is no specific insurance-buying season for small businesses, but the SHOP plans for 2015 went on sale on the same day as individual health plans. Administration officials have been working lately to pump up interest in these health plans. In late October, the White House hosted insurance brokers specializing in small-business customers for a demonstration and a pep talk. And federal health officials this fall allowed brokers and small employers in five states an early peek at that part of the site to drum up interest and check how well it was working. “It was rather good, compared to nonexistent,” said David Mordo, a longtime insurance broker on the Jersey Shore who was part of the group invited to the White House and works in one of the five early states. Last year, in the 32 states that are relying on the federal small-business marketplace, SHOP insurance plans existed but could not be purchased online. Federal health officials have declined to say how many people bought them for 2014. In the 18 states that run their own small-business marketplaces, 76,000 people were enrolled as of June — a small fraction of the 2 million SHOP customers this year that congressional budget analysts estimated in their most recent forecast. “It is an emerging market,” said Andy Slavitt, CMS’s principal deputy administrator. “I don’t know how long it takes new offerings to ramp [up] and accelerate.” Administration officials are heartened by data, analyzed by the White House Council of Economic Advisers, showing that the number of health plans participating in the small-business marketplace has increased slightly from last year, while monthly insurance premiums have been relatively stable. Obamacare A look back at every Affordable Care Act deadline that was extended by the Obama administration. Still, interviews with brokers, state health-care officials and small-business organizations sug­gest that progress this year is likely to be slow — for reasons rooted in both the computer system and a few of the Obama administration’s decisions. Lingering flaws Confidential federal documents show that testing of parts of the online SHOP marketplace is still going on. Aaron Albright, a CMS spokesman, said the portions of SHOP that companies and workers need to explore health plans and choose coverage already have been “thoroughly tested,” including in the five states given early access to the Web site. Brokers in those states say they noticed several problems, only some of which have been fixed. At first, for instance, the Web site would not allow business owners to progress to the next screen until they submitted an employee number for each worker they were offering coverage — even though many small companies do not assign numbers to their employees. Still uncorrected is a section that asks employers how long they want new employees to wait before becoming eligible for insurance. Under the law, employers can require a 90-day wait, but the computer system does not allow more than 60 days. “We started scratching our heads and saying, ‘Where is the 90 days?’ ” Mordo said. Some brokers say they and their clients are easily getting onto the Web site. Others still are having trouble. Last year, Sam Fiorentino, a broker near Cleveland who is vice president of the Ohio Association of Health Underwriters, created PowerPoint presentations to teach other brokers how to help customers under the Affordable Care Act. This year, Fiorentino has had his own problems using HealthCare.gov. First, the Web site did not recognize his password. Then, a fishing buddy who runs a small machine-tool cutting company told Fiorentino that he wanted to designate him as his broker from a drop-down list on the site, but Fiorentino’s name did not appear. After many calls to federal phone numbers, Fiorentino discovered the problem: The computer system was not accepting his “national producer number” — a kind of ID number the Web site requires — because an insurance agent in Michigan had already entered his number by mistake. A week after finding the root of his problem, Fiorentino still has not been able to get it fixed. “Now my clients can’t find me. Therefore, they can’t buy from me right now. I might as well not be in business,” he said. “Unbelievable.” Requirement is waived Beyond such technical problems, some brokers and others say, the SHOP marketplace’s popularity has been blunted by decisions the Obama administration has made. For instance, administration officials last year postponed a requirement under the law that small-business employees be guaranteed a choice among health plans in their areas — a main selling point of SHOP. This year, a few months before the SHOP part of the Web site was to open, federal health officials said states could avoid that requirement again for the coming year. Of the 32 states relying on the federal SHOP marketplace, 18 decided to continue to skip the choice requirement. Sandy Praeger, Kansas’s insurance commissioner and the head of the health insurance section of the National Association of Insurance Commissioners, said her state and others thought it was best to wait until it was clear that the computer technology worked well. Plus, insurance companies that already had some SHOP customers were not eager for more competition. But the decision drew protests from some of SHOP’s advocates, who argued that it would deter small businesses that already have insurance elsewhere from exploring the new options. “We made our case at the highest level,” meeting with CMS’s administrator, Marilyn Tavenner, said Arensmeyer, of Small Business Majority. Without a choice of plans, said Lee Wilbers, an insurance broker in Jefferson City, Mo., the only insurance available to his clients through SHOP is a Blue Cross Blue Shield plan with a smaller network of doctors than a health plan the same insurer is selling to small businesses outside the federal marketplace. “Most of our clients have kept what they had,” Wilbers said. The main businesses that might benefit from the new marketplace, brokers said, are the relatively few — with fewer than 25 workers and specified salary levels, and meeting other federal rules — that qualify for tax credits through the SHOP exchange. Those credits last for just two years. “You really run out of reasons to go into the SHOP,” said Nicholas Moriello, a broker in Newark, Del., who runs that state’s largest independent health insurance agency. “We’ve only had a small handful of businesses dipping their toe in the water. Less than five.” A better deal? Figuring out whether SHOP coverage would be worthwhile is not always easy. Ryan Epple, a veterinarian in Phillipsburg, N.J., has been trying. Six years ago, he took over Harmony Animal Hospital, which his father had run for three decades next to the house where he grew up. Suddenly, he was a small-business owner with three other veterinarians, other staffers and health insurance costs that were spiking. The coverage he inherited from his father was “really stellar,” Epple said, but he kept cutting it, year by year, to blunt cost increases. So last year, when he heard about the new small-business insurance, he tried to go onto HealthCare.gov — “an endeavor that didn’t get very far,” he said, with that part of the Web site not yet working. This time, he had some trouble getting HealthCare.gov to recognize his e-mail address, but he eventually switched to a different address and was able to create an account. “They have some nice coverage,” he said, but the best plans cost more than he is paying now. The site shows that some plans are about the same price, but he wants to confer with his accountant and Mordo, his broker, about whether the temporary tax credit he could get through SHOP would save him more money than tax deductions he already can take for insuring some of his workers outside the marketplace. Will he become a SHOP customer? “I am solidly not sure,” he said.

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Mortgage approvals hit 16-month low, consumer credit at 8-year high, UK


Mortgage approvals were at a 16-month low in October, lower than in any month since June 2013, while consumer lending soared, the Bank of England announced on Monday. Despite the housing market losing momentum, consumer morale remains high. The number of mortgage approvals in October dropped to 59,426, compared to 61,234 in September. Nationwide, a major UK mortgage lender, announced on Friday that mortgage approvals were well below historical trends and house prices rose in the 3-month period ending in November at the slowest rate since the middle of 2013. Stricter mortgage lending regulations introduced earlier this year have dampened demand. Consumer lending expanded by an annual rate of 6.4% in October, the highest rate since July 2006. Loan Approvals Source: Bank of England. The BoE figures match data from the Office for National Statistics last week showing household spending rising rapidly in the third quarter, with consumers going more for larger purchases. Credit card borrowing increased by 5% annually in October, the BoE informed. With consumers no longer wanting to de-lever, the economic recovery should gather pace, economists believe. Many analysts suggest that people are borrowing more because their wages have not kept up with inflation, meaning their purchasing power is being squeezed. Net mortgage lending in October increased by £1.496 billion, the smallest rise in 11 months. Net mortgage lending typically lags behind approvals. Over the past 12 months, total mortgage lending has been 1.8% higher than the preceding 12 months. Most of the increase, however, occurred in the first months.

Surry County's commonwealth attorney charged with DUI in James City


VGTV morning newscast for December 1, 2014 Ryan Murphy rmurphy@dailypress.com 10:10 p.m. EST, November 29, 2014 Surry County's chief prosecutor was arrested and charged with driving under the influence Saturday afternoon in James City County. Gerald Glen Poindexter, 73, was trying to drive his vehicle onto a Jamestown-Scotland Wharf ferry on the Surry side of the river when he hit a curb, and ferry attendants tried to stop him from getting on the boat, according to James City County police Deputy Chief Steve Rubino. Poindexter refused to stop, driving onto the ferry and hitting and causing minor damage to the rear of another vehicle, Rubino said in a release. Ferry officials called James City County police and said they thought the driver might be under the influence of alcohol. Police responded at 3:41 p.m. and met Poindexter at the James City County dock. They arrested him for driving under the influence and not having his driver's license in his possession. According to Daily Press archives, Poindexter was first elected as Surry's commonwealth's attorney in 1995. In 2007, he faced scrutiny for his handling of the Michael Vick dogfighting case, with critics accusing him of dragging his feet before federal prosecutors stepped in. Vick, an NFL quarterback and Newport News native, eventually served time in prison. As of press time, Poindexter was still being processed at the Virginia Peninsula Regional Jail. He was set to be released on bond once he had been processed, according to jail officials. Murphy can be reached by phone at 757-247-4760. Attorney: Darren Wilson resignation prompted by safety concerns November 30, 2014, 6:02 PM|City officials say Ferguson police officer Darren Wilson, who fatally shot teenager Michael Brown, is receiving no severance pay. His attorney says his resignation was prompted by safety concerns. Vladimir Duthiers reports.