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Business News
Cablevision and Tribune reach deal for Newsday (Reuters)

A man enters the Tribune Tower in Chicago, April 2, 2007. Cablevision Systems Corp sealed a $650 million deal to buy 97 percent of Newsday Media Group from Tribune Co, the companies said on Monday, after Rupert Murdoch's News withdrew its bid. (John Gress/Reuters)Reuters - Cablevision Systems Corp has sealed a $650 million deal to buy the Long Island daily newspaper Newsday from Tribune Co, but analysts doubt the cable company can achieve cost savings to justify its investment.


HP in talks to buy EDS to compete with IBM (Reuters)

An employee walks past a Hewlett-Packard logo during the second day of the International Telecommunication Union (ITU) Telecom World 2006 in Hong Kong December 5, 2006. (Paul Yeung/Reuters)Reuters - Hewlett-Packard Co is in talks to buy technology outsourcing company Electronic Data Systems Corp for $12 billion to $13 billion, seeking to better compete with the top computer services company, IBM.


Clear Channel in settlement talks, trial delayed (Reuters)

A view of the Clear Channel offices in Burbank, California March 24, 2008. (Fred Prouser/Reuters)Reuters - Talks are underway to settle a dispute over financing the $20 billion leveraged buyout of U.S. radio operator Clear Channel Communications Inc , the company said in a statement on Monday.


Former AIG chief Greenberg urges AGM delay (Reuters)

A sign on an office building for AIG, American International Group, is pictured in Los Angeles, California May 8, 2008. (Fred Prouser/Reuters)Reuters - Former American International Group CEO Maurice "Hank" Greenberg has said the insurer is in "crisis" and urged a delay in its annual general meeting scheduled for Wednesday, according to a letter he sent to the board of directors.


Tech rally and oil's fall drive Wall Street's gains (Reuters)

Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange, April 3, 2008. (Keith Bedford/Reuters)Reuters - Stocks rose on Monday as the introduction of a faster BlackBerry spurred optimism about business spending on technology, while cooling oil prices eased inflation concerns.


China's inflation rises to almost 12-year high (AP)

Pork vendors uses mobile phones while waiting for customers at their store in Beijing Monday, May 12, 2008. China's inflation rebounded in April to near decade-high levels, adding to pressure on Beijing to cool rapid price rises and avert possible unrest of the summer Olympic, according to official data reported Monday. (AP Photo/Andy Wong)AP - China's inflation almost climbed to a 12-year high in April, swamping official efforts to cool surging living costs that could provoke unrest ahead of the Beijing Olympics.


Ancient seaweed chews confirm age of Chilean site - 09, May 2008

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Bits of chewed-up or burned seaweed discarded more than 14,000 years ago confirm that people were in Chile at least that long ago and shed light on what their culture was like, researchers reported on Thursday.



By Maggie Fox, Health and Science Editor
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Bits of chewed-up or burned seaweed discarded more than 14,000 years ago confirm that people were in Chile at least that long ago and shed light on what their culture was like, researchers reported on Thursday.
The findings at a site 10,000 miles from the Bering Strait add to an almost overwhelming pile of evidence that people were well distributed across the western Americas long before the so-called Clovis culture 13,000 years ago.
And the seaweed picked up at the Monte Verde site provide a direct link to people living in the area today, some of whom also use some of the seaweed species medicinally.
"What we have found ... are nine species of seaweed that are coming from rocky and sandy beaches located about 55 kilometers (35 miles) west of the site," said archeologist Tom Dillehay of Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tennessee, who led the study.
"It indicates to us that the people of Monte Verde had a much stronger coastal industry than we thought previously. It indicates to us that we might be talking about people who initially entered into the Monte Verde site from the Pacific coastline itself," he told reporters in a telephone briefing.
The Monte Verde site 500 miles south of Santiago has long been controversial. Discovered in 1977, its contents have been carbon-dated to more than 12,000 years ago -- dates that careful calibration using tree rings and other information suggest are actually more than 14,000 years old.
CONTRADICTING CONVENTIONAL WISDOM
This clashes with the one-time conventional wisdom that humans first crossed from Siberia using a land bridge over the Bering Strait about 13,000 years ago and then spread over the American continents. 





(c) 2008 Reuters
Other news from Science category:
  1. Court hears claim linking vaccines to autism - 13, May 2008

    WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The parents of two 10-year-old boys who believe vaccines caused their sons to develop autism brought their case to U.S. federal court on Monday, arguing a mercury preservative in the shots caused a rare reaction.

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  2. Being breast-fed may lower breast cancer risk - 13, May 2008

    NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Adult women who were breast-fed as infants may have a lower risk of developing breast cancer than those who were not breast-fed, unless they were first-born, study findings suggest.

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  3. Genetic sleuths unmask secrets of big tomatoes - 12, May 2008

    CHICAGO (Reuters) - The secret behind growing large tomatoes lies not in the fertilizer or the perfect soil conditions, but in just a few genetic changes that over time have resulted in tomatoes 1,000 times bigger than their wild ancestors, U.S. researche

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  4. Chile volcanic eruption seen at critical stage - 10, May 2008

    PUERTO MONTT, Chile (Reuters) - A towering plume of ash from an erupting volcano in Chile's remote Patagonia could rain down on the surrounding area and cause devastating damage, a volcano expert warned on Friday.

    More

  5. China hails doctor for raising child virus alarm - 09, May 2008

    BEIJING (Reuters) - A deadly strain of hand, foot and mouth disease has killed two more children in China, bringing the death toll in recent weeks to 32, state media said on Friday, as it praised a doctor who alerted authorities to the epidemic.

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  6. Dutch study unlocks key to firm tomatoes - 09, May 2008

    LONDON (Reuters) - Dutch scientists said on Friday they have identified a key gene that protects tomatoes against a common fungus that causes the plants to wilt.

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  7. Chile gives volcano holdouts ultimatum to flee - 09, May 2008

    PUERTO MONTT/FUTALEUFU, Chile (Reuters) - Chile on Thursday ordered holdout residents to flee from an erupting volcano in the remote region of Patagonia and vowed to force them out if they refuse to obey.

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  8. Kick the oil habit and make your own ethanol - 09, May 2008

    NEW YORK (Reuters) - A new company hopes drivers will kick the oil habit by brewing ethanol at home that won't spike food prices.

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  9. Sexy orchids do more than embarrass wasps? - 09, May 2008

    WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Orchids that mimic female wasps may not only waste the time of the male wasps they lure into spreading their pollen -- they also seduce them into wasting valuable sperm, Australian researchers reported on Wednesday.

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  10. Chile gives volcano hold-outs ultimatum to flee - 09, May 2008

    PUERTO MONTT, Chile (Reuters) - Chile ordered hold-out residents to flee from an erupting volcano in the remote region of Patagonia on Thursday and vowed to remove them by force if they refuse to obey.

    More

 

Software News
Windows XP SP3 Woes Especially Affect AMD Systems (NewsFactor)
NewsFactor - Users who thought the Windows XP operating system would be more reliable than its younger sibling Vista are being buffeted by reports that the latest update for XP, Service Pack 3, has its own problems.
ATM Glitch Hits Systems Integration at Major Japanese Bank (PC World)
PC World - A software glitch that crept into a massive system integration project at Japan's Bank of Tokyo Mitsubishi UFJ left thousands...
Next generation of business software could get more fun (AP)
AP - Once upon a time, people bonded with their co-workers on office softball teams and traded gossip at the watercooler.
SAP Is The Latest Convert To Software-Plus-Services Vision (TechWeb)
TechWeb - InformationWeek - It envisions selling "component" services to its big ERP customers beginning next year.
SAP Embraces Software-Plus-Services Vision (TechWeb)
TechWeb - Intelligent Enterprise - Enterprise apps vendor envisions selling "component" services to its largest customers beginning next year.
Microsoft To Release Office 2007 SP1 Via Automatic Update In June (TechWeb)
TechWeb - InformationWeek - The strategy of rolling out service packs in phases gives the market plenty of time to evaluate the software.