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Worldwide Computer Products News-31 August 2006-BitDefender announces beta availability of Mobile Antivirus v2(C)1995-2006 M2 COMMUNICATIONS LTD http://www.m2.com

BitDefender, a provider of security solutions, announced on Wednesday (30 August) the beta availability of BitDefender Mobile Antivirus v2.

According to the company, BitDefender Mobile Antivirus v2 is an antivirus scanner designed to protect mobile devices, including PDAs and smartphones, which run on Symbian 60, Symbian 80 or Windows Mobile operating systems. The new beta software offers on-access protection against malware as well as on-demand scanning. It can be updated either via GPRS from the service provider or via ActiveSync from an internet-connected PC, the company claims.

BitDefender Mobile Antivirus v2 beta is available for download at http://beta.bitdefender.com/mobile.login.php.

((Comments on this story may be sent to info@m2.com))

COPYRIGHT 2006 M2 Communications Ltd.
COPYRIGHT 2008 Gale, Cengage Learning

Information provided by: Findarticles.com

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PARIS (AFP) — France has become the latest European country to report cases of the bluetongue virus, in dairy cows in the north of the country. The insect-borne disease, which is fatal to sheep but not contagious or known to affect humans, was identified in a cow in the town of Brognon and in another in the town of Beaurieux, the agriculture ministry said Thursday.

Sheep are generally worst affected by the disease, which causes swelling of the head and haemorrhages. Cattle and …


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Byline: Sheila Ahern Daily Herald Staff Writer A man tried to rob an Arlington Heights bank by informing the teller he had infected her with a virus and would give her the cure only if she handed over money. The man walked up to a drive-through window at the Chase Bank, 43 E. Golf Road in Arlington Heights, about 5 p.m.

Tuesday, according to Arlington Heights police. The man then passed a note through the bank’s pneumatic tube system saying he had just infected the teller with a virus, said Arlington Heights police Capt. Jerry Lambert. In the note, the man also claimed to …

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M2 PRESSWIRE-30 August 2006-BitDefender: BitDefender releases Mobile Antivirus Beta; Top antivirus provider prevents latest mobile security threats by including all of the powerful functionality of its PC-based software into new mobile security beta(C)1994-2006 M2 COMMUNICATIONS LTD RDATE:29082006 FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla.

- BitDefender , an award-winning provider of Internet security and antivirus solutions, today announced the beta availability of BitDefender Mobile Antivirus v2, an antivirus scanner designed to protect mobile devices, including PDAs and smartphones which run on …

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HANOI (AFP) — Vietnam has said the H5 strain of bird flu virus had been detected in a flock of ducks in a Hanoi suburb, raising fears of a resurgence of the deadly H5N1 virus in the communist country. On Monday, “two ducks sold in Tan Trieu market, Thanh Tri district, tested positive” to the H5 strain, said Nguyen Van Cam, director of the National Center for Animal Health Diagnosis in Hanoi.

Five ducks were tested, all of them in good health. The N component of the virus has yet to be identified but the H5N1 virus that has killed 42 people in Vietnam since late 2003 is now considered endemic in the country. The official said prevention measures would be stepped up in the capital to avoid the virus spreading and curtail further human infections. “We will take every month a hundred samples of poultry sold in Hanoi markets …


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STANFORD, Calif. — As part of its planned precautionary efforts, the Stanford Blood Center is testing all donated blood for West Nile Virus in response to 88 cases of the infection being reported in California, including one in Santa Clara County and three in Contra Costa County.

The Stanford center, along with the Blood Centers of the Pacific and the American Red Cross, are testing every unit of collected blood for the virus using tests either being evaluated in clinical trials or recently cleared by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. Since 2004, the Stanford Blood Center has tested all donated blood whenever cases of West Nile Virus appear in the area.

West Nile Virus is an infection that is transmitted to humans via mosquitoes that have previously fed on birds that carry the disease. Most people infected with the virus have no symptoms. About 20 percent will develop mild flu-like symptoms such as fever, body aches, chills and general tiredness. Rarely, symptoms of infection can be severe, especially in the elderly, infants and people who have weakened immune systems as a result of treatments for cancer or other diseases. Severe infections can lead to encephalitis (an infection of the brain), meningitis (an infection of the membrane covering the brain) and paralysis.

"There is no risk of contracting West Nile Virus, or any other disease, through donating blood," said Stanford Blood Center spokesman Michelle Bussenius. She also encouraged residents to consider donating blood since the blood supply is lower during the summer months while traumas and transplant surgeries typically increase during the same time period.

While Bay Area blood banks are taking steps to ensure the safety of the blood supply, officials encourage local residents to take preventive action against West Nile Virus by wearing protective clothing and using insect repellents containing DEET in areas known to have mosquitoes.

Those interested in donating or wishing more information can contact the Stanford Blood center at (650) 723-7831 or (888) 723-7831. Appointments can also be scheduled online at http://bloodcenter.stanford.edu.

Stanford University Medical Center integrates research, medical education and patient care at its three institutions — Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford Hospital & Clinics and Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital at Stanford. For more information, please visit the Web site of the medical center’s Office of Communication & Public Affairs at http://mednews.stanford.edu.

COPYRIGHT 2006 Business Wire
COPYRIGHT 2008 Gale, Cengage Learning

Information provided by: Findarticles.com

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MIDDLEBOROUGH, Mass. — In this wet, low-lying town, the football team ends practice before 6 p.m. In Holbrook, the high school’s playing fields are protected by bug-zapping Mosquito Magnets. And in Brockton, landscapers are being urged to slather themselves with insect spray at least twice a day.

With three cases of Eastern equine encephalitis now confirmed in the state, including a 9-year-old Middleborough boy in critical condition, jittery residents across southeastern Massachusetts are struggling to defend themselves against a ubiquitous foe that they can see, hear and feel, but not completely avoid.

“I think we’re all concerned. It’s a different world,” said Allison J. Ferreira, the assistant to the Middleborough town manager.

Apprehension in the community, which calls itself the “cranberry capital of the world,” escalated after John Fontaine, 9, collapsed at football practice Aug. 19. A meeting for the parents of 300 children enrolled in the youth-football league was scheduled for last evening, after health officials Monday confirmed his illness as the latest case of the disease.

Town Manager John F. Healey said concern about the mosquito- borne virus is the most intense he’s seen in 21 years on the job. “People are being much more cautious,” Healey said. “They’re curtailing activities in the dusk period, and pretty much everything’s been shut down.”

With the height of mosquito season in the last two weeks in August, precautions were being taken in communities throughout the area. In Pembroke, officials were determining if they should curtail nighttime activities involving children. Parents of school athletes in several towns are being asked to give permission for their children to use DEET during outdoor practices. The Boy Scouts posted a note on its website seeking to reassure parents in the area that Camp Norse in Kingston had been sprayed.

The Plymouth County Mosquito Control Project, which responds to individual requests to spray homes, has received a record number of complaints this year, officials said. Since May, the office has received 12,200 requests for spraying, an increase of 3,500 through the same time in 2005, said project superintendent Ray Zucker. Zucker thinks public awareness is on the rise.

“Last year with EEE activity, we had two deaths and we didn’t have the number of spray requests that we had this year,” said Zucker, whose agency collects mosquitos killed by aerial spraying and sends them to the state Department of Public Health for screening.

In addition to Fontaine, who was being treated at Children’s Hospital in Boston, a 52-year-old woman from Lakeville and a 23- year-old man from Acushnet have contracted the virus this year. In the last four years, a total of four people in the state have been killed by the virus, which can cause inflammation of the brain and lead to a coma and death.

Feman makes sure he shuts the door to the house now, and is more careful when he lets the dogs in and out. But, the contractor said, “we have mosquitoes in the house still. Where the hell do they come from?”

Since an aerial spraying by the state on Aug. 9, the first in 16 years, no new cases of the virus have been detected in mosquitos caught in traps in the town, Healey said. “It’s an indicator that what was here is no longer here,” the town manager said.

Additional aerial spraying over southeastern Massachusetts was begun Aug. 22. Together, the two rounds of spraying appear to have largely eliminated the area’s mosquito population, with some officials estimating that more than 80 percent of mosquitoes were eradicated.

The state Department of Public Health is expected to know the results of last week’s spraying within a few days. The agency will then decide if another round of aerial spraying is needed, said Ed Kiely, chief of staff for the department.

Kiely cautioned residents to remain vigilant and use repellent, despite the progress in the mosquito wars. “There’s no way to kill 100 percent of the mosquitos, and aerial spraying is not a silver bullet,” Kiely said. “It reduces risk; it doesn’t eliminate it.”

Fran Cass, a maintenance worker for Middleborough, said he believes townspeople recognize the mosquito problem as a potentially long-term threat.

“Everybody knows there’s a reasonable risk,” he said, standing near the playing field where Fontaine collapsed.

For his part, Cass said, he wears pants and long-sleeve shirts whenever possible. In addition, Cass endorses another idea that he believes could help reduce mosquitoes.

“Bat houses,” he said. “They’re a natural predator. Bats are the way to go.”

Copyright C 2006 Deseret News Publishing Co.
Provided by ProQuest Information and Learning Company. All rights Reserved.

Information provided by: Findarticles.com

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Worldwide Computer Products News-28 August 2006-Panda introduces Panda Antivirus 2007(C)1995-2006 M2 COMMUNICATIONS LTD http://www.m2.com

Panda Software, a provider of integrated security solutions, has announced it is launching the new Panda Antivirus 2007, the lightest antivirus in the Panda Software consumer solutions range.

According to the company, the new antivirus solution offers complete protection against Internet threats with a minimal use of system resources. System requirements for installing Panda Antivirus 2007 are 64MB RAM and a 150MHz Pentium processor. The solution is reportedly aimed at home users whose Internet use does not require all the features offered by a complete security suite, and can be installed on two PCs at no additional cost.

Panda Antivirus 2007 is said to combine antivirus, anti-spyware and anti-phishing technologies with the Genetic Heuristic Engine, a new generation heuristic scanner, to protect home users against viruses, worms, Trojans and spyware. Pricing is USD29.95 for two licenses, including complete protection and associated services, such as updates and tech support, for one year.

((Comments on this story may be sent to info@m2.com))

COPYRIGHT 2006 M2 Communications Ltd.
COPYRIGHT 2008 Gale, Cengage Learning

Information provided by: Findarticles.com

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BRUSSELS (AFP) — Health experts baffled by the appearance in Europe of a strain of virus that is deadly to sheep believe it could come from sub-Saharan Africa, a European Commission spokesman said. European scientists have identified the strain of bluetongue — a disease transmitted to sheep by insects but which is not contagious nor known to affect humans — as “serotype eight”, the commission’s health spokesman said.

“It’s a strain which has never been identified before in Europe,” said Philip Tod. “The laboratory experts tell us that is likely to be a strain which is sub-Saharan in origin. We don’t know how this strain ended up in Europe.” The outbreak was detected on August 17 in the southern Netherlands, but Belgium and Germany have since reported cases. Although bluetongue is frequently reported in southern Europe, the outbreak is the first in northern Europe, according to the EU’s executive body. …


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HANOI (AFP) — Vietnam has said the deadly H5N1 strain of bird flu had been detected in a flock of ducks in the southern Mekong Delta, raising fears of a resurgence of the virus. The H5N1 strain was found in unvaccinated ducks that showed no symptoms, in Thanh Phu district of Ben Tre province, said the animal health department in an online statement that did not mention how many animals tested positive.

“Monitoring has shown that the highly virulent strain of the bird flu virus is circulating among waterfowl, especially those that have not been vaccinated,” said the department. “Therefore, the risk of a resurgence of bird flu in the near future is high, particularly in provinces with large flocks of …


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