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Archive for March, 2008

LONDON and PRAGUE, March 31 /PRNewswire/ —

- ALWIL Software a.s. is Pleased to Announce the Next Major Release of avast! antivirus, avast! 4.8.

avast! antivirus 4.8 is a major technology upgrade to the avast! product line, which includes the addition of anti-spyware detection, certified by West Coast Lab’s Checkmark process, and the implementation of anti-rootkit capabilities, all directly from within avast! antivirus.

Eduard Kucera, ALWIL Software a.s. CEO, said of the release, "While only an upgrade of avast!, this version represents a major evolution of the avast! …

Read the rest of this article with a Free Trial at HighBeam Research.

Information provided by: Findarticles.com

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M2 PRESSWIRE-31 March 2008-LSI Corporation: Lsi Introduces Industry’s First Single-Chip, Low-Cost Solution For Content Inspection; New RAM-Less Operating Mode Enables Significantly Lower-Cost Solutions For Silicon-Based Intrusion Prevention And Anti-Virus Applications(C)1994-2008 M2 COMMUNICATIONS LTD

RDATE:31032008

LSI Corporation, today announced the Tarari T1000 series of silicon-based content inspection processors for networking OEMs. The T1000 series supports either completely RAM-less or single-memory chip operating modes and provides scalable throughput up to 2 Gb/s, …

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To: NATIONAL EDITORS

Contact: Laura McNaughton of Salmon of the Americas, +1- 305-266-
7670, laura@salmonoftheamericas.com

MIAMI, March 31 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ — The following is being
issued by Salmon of the Americans Inc. in response to the New York
Times article, Salmon Virus Indicts Chiles Fishing Methods, by
Alexei Barrionuevo:

Considering the article written in the New York Times, our
association must clarify some of the issues incorrectly raised
regarding the salmon anemia virus (ISA) and the boldly erroneous
reference to the lack of sanitary controls as contributing factors.
ISA …

Read the rest of this article with a Free Trial at HighBeam Research.

Information provided by: Findarticles.com

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To: STATE EDITORS

Contact: Chuck Ardo of the Pennsylvania Office of the Governor,
+1-717-783-1116, or Neil Weaver, DEP, +1-717-787-1323

$5.3 Million in Grants to Benefit Prevention, Control Efforts in
Every County

HARRISBURG, Pa., March 31 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ — Every county
in Pennsylvania will benefit from an aggressive effort to monitor
and control mosquitoes this summer, said Governor Edward G. Rendell
today as he announced a $5.3 million investment that will help fight
to stop the West Nile Virus.

Weve worked diligently over the past several years to protect the
publics health by …

Read the rest of this article with a Free Trial at HighBeam Research.

Information provided by: Findarticles.com

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To: FOOD EDITORS

Contact: Laura McNaughton of Salmon of the Americas, Inc., +1-
305-266-7670, laura@salmonoftheamericas.com

MIAMI, March 31 /PRNewswire/ — The Chilean Salmon Industry
Association deeply regrets the numerous errors of the article,
offering a biased view of our industry and product, which is
consumed daily by over 6 million consumers worldwide.

The article falsely accuses us of using hormones in the
production of salmon. Also includes the idea of abusive use of
antibiotics. All products used in Chile are authorized and
controlled by our authorities. Inspections of products are …

Read the rest of this article with a Free Trial at HighBeam Research.

Information provided by: Findarticles.com

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RED DEER, ALBERTA, Mar 28, 2008 (Marketwire via COMTEX) — MP Bob Mills, Member of Parliament for Red Deer, today announced on behalf of Health Minister Tony Clement, a $10,000 contribution to the Central Alberta AIDS Network Society (CAANS) to fund a project that aims to reduce the incidence of hepatitis C virus (HCV) in Central Alberta by assessing the health needs of those most at-risk of becoming infected.

The project, entitled Street Smarts Outreach: Rural Needs Assessment in Central Alberta, will determine the health needs of drug users in the region and the capacity of …

Read the rest of this article with a Free Trial at HighBeam Research.

Information provided by: Findarticles.com

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The latest tech gadgets are exciting to own and even more fun to use. From MP3 players to portable GPS systems, technology has given Americans more options for digitalizing their everyday lives than ever before.

However, owning one of the newest high-tech items can be more than some people bargained for.

Consumers are discovering some of their most prized possessions are actually harboring pre-installed viruses that can steal passwords, open doors for hackers and automate computers to send unsolicited spam messages.

The tainted devices, including some iPods, TomTom navigation systems and digital picture frames, rely on connections to a host computer. Once connected, the viruses are deposited and become activated while continually spreading through the user’s operating system.

It is believed the majority of the tainted electronics have resulted from lax quality standards in several Chinese factories. The recent discovery has ironically become the digital equivalent to many other dangerous revelations about consumer products manufactured in China.

In general, two significant opportunities exist for viruses to become uploaded during production of most electronics. Occasionally, viruses can be introduced in the beginning stages when the operating software is uploaded into the item.

However, more often than not, viruses are uploaded in the final stage of production when the item is plugged into the computer for testing and malicious software from a tainted computer is transferred.

Overall, it has been difficult to track and tally the number of items that have been infected, due to the stringent business policies among electronics manufacturers, but efforts have been started to tighten security standards.

The vast majority of the viruses that may exist in a new gadget can be detected and quickly eliminated with common anti-virus software. So it is critically important to update anti-virus software regularly and take a few extra minutes to run the scan after plugging in a new item.

A few minutes spent on a virus scan could mean the difference between enjoying your new gadget or regretting you ever purchased it.

(Larry Fiorino, the founder and chief executive of G.1440, a Baltimore-based e-solutions firm, writes every week for The Daily Record. He can be reached at 410-843-3800 or at his company’s Web site, www.G1440.com.)

Copyright 2008 Dolan Media Newswires
Provided by ProQuest Information and Learning Company. All rights Reserved.

Information provided by: Findarticles.com

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The way dengue virus matures and becomes infectious has been determined by biologists at Purdue University in Indiana.

The dengue virus, which is spread by mosquitoes, infects more than 50 million people a year and kills about 24,000, primarily in tropical regions. The virus is prevalent in Southeast Asia, Central America and South America.

The Purdue team identified important changes that occur as the virus is assembled and moves from the inner to the outer portions of a host cell before the virus is secreted and can infect other cells.

Virus particles are exposed to progressively less acidic conditions as they move along this “secretory pathway.” The changing acidity plays a critical role in the maturation of the Dengue virus.

“This is possibly the most detailed understanding of …


Read the full article with a Free Trial at MyWire.

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CHICAGO (AFP) — Biologists have mapped how a deadly class of viruses including dengue, West Nile, yellow fever and encephalitis become infectious in a pair of studies published in the journal Science.

“This is possibly the most detailed understanding of how any virus matures,” said study author Michael Rossmann of Purdue University in Indiana.

Rossmann and his colleagues detailed critical structural changes that take place as the dengue virus moves from the inner to the outer portions of its host cell.

The findings pertain to all viruses in the family of flaviviruses which are carried by mosquitoes and ticks.

They found that a protein which coats the genome of the virus particle undergoes large changes in its structure so that it becomes capable of fusing with cell membranes.

This structural change, which occurs as the virus is being secreted from its host, allows the protein to infect other cells rather …


Read the full article with a Free Trial at MyWire.

Information provided by: Findarticles.com

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Corporations go to great lengths to protect
systems from malware — a threat that only seems to worsen as time goes on.
Keeping anti-malware software constantly updated, and ensuring virus scans
are performed on all company computers regularly is part and parcel of
properly maintaining a computer system. What many IT personnel may not
realize, however, is the impact of disk file fragmentation on virus scan
run times.

When files are split into hundreds or even thousands of fragments
(a not-uncommon scenario today), a virus scan will of course take
significantly longer having to scan each fragment of each file. Not only do
longer virus scans mean higher susceptibility to quickly catching and
heading off viruses, spyware or worms, it also means a greater tax on
system resources. Regularly defragmenting drives can significantly reduce
the time it takes to perform regular antivirus scans, increasing the
operating safety of an enterprise’s computers as well as economizing on
resources.

Keeping hard drives fragmentation free, however, can be more of a task than
it used to be. Because of exponentially increasing disk capacity, as well
as ever-increasing file sizes, fragmentation occurs at higher-than-ever
rates. This could mean that, with many defragmentation solutions,
fragmentation is not being completely eliminated, and the effort may still
result in longer-than-needed antivirus scans.

Therefore, it is not only important to employ a defragmentation solution –
attention should be paid to the defragmentation technology as well.
For most sites, manual defragmentation — the launching of a defragmenter
system-by-system when desired or needed — is no longer an option due to
fragmentation levels and time required for a defragmenter to run. For many
years, defragmenters have been available with scheduling options which
would allow specific times for defragmentation to be set.

In the last few years, however, even scheduled defragmentation is starting
to become out-of-date — it simply cannot keep up with fragmentation rates
and disk sizes, and evolution of defragmentation technology that will
work constantly in the background has begun to appear.

The malware threat is always there. The solution is to always keep your
anti-malware solution up-to-date, regularly perform antivirus scans of all
systems, and keep disks thoroughly defragmented so antivirus scans use the
least amount of time and system resources possible.

Contact:
Bruce Boyers Marketing Services
Email: Email Contact

Information provided by: Findarticles.com

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