Archive for February, 2008

Telefon bimbit tidak sebabkan kanser otak

Thursday, February 7th, 2008

Telefon bimbit tidak sebabkan kanser otak

LONDON 6 Feb. _ Sekumpulan saintis dari Jepun mendapati penggunaan telefon bimbit tidak menyumbang kepada peningkatan risiko jangkitan kanser otak seperti yang didakwa sebelum ini.

Saintis dari Universiti Perubatan Wanita Tokyo itu menjalankan kajian penggunaan telefon bimbit di kalangan 322 pesakit kanser dan 683 pengguna yang sihat.

Hasil kajian yang diterbitkan dalam Jurnal Kanser Britain itu mendapati, penggunaan telefon bimbit secara kerap tidak menunjukkan tanda-tanda jangkitan kanser otak.

Selain itu, kumpulan penyelidik turut menjalankan kajian mengenai sinar radiasi daripada pelbagai jenis telefon bimbit bagi mengenal pasti kemungkinan penggunaannya memberi kesan kepada bahagian otak yang berbeza.

“Dengan menggunakan kaedah dan teknik terbaru yang kami bangunkan, didapati tiada kaitan antara penggunaan telefon bimbit dengan kanser, sekali gus membuktikan telefon bimbit tidak menyebabkan kanser otak,” kata ketua kumpulan berkenaan, Naohito Yamaguchi. - Reuters

Petikan daripada : http://www.utusan.com.my/

Microsoft Offers to Buy Yahoo for $44.6 Billion

Saturday, February 2nd, 2008

Microsoft Corp., the world’s biggest software maker, made an unsolicited $44.6 billion offer for Yahoo! Inc. to challenge Google Inc.’s dominance in Internet search services and advertising.

The $31-a-share bid of cash or Microsoft stock is 62 percent more than Yahoo’s closing price yesterday. Yahoo, which posted a 23 percent drop in fourth-quarter profit this week, had fallen 18 percent in Nasdaq Stock Market trading this year before today. Microsoft fell the most since 2006 as investors expressed disapproval of the deal.

Microsoft Chief Executive Officer Steve Ballmer is attempting the biggest-ever technology takeover after failing to compete with Google in a market that may almost double to $80 billion by 2010. Microsoft’s shares have dropped more than 40 percent since Ballmer took over from co-founder Bill Gates in 2000.

“With Microsoft paying a full price for a broken business where there’s not accelerating organic growth, I can’t make that work at all,'’ said Jon Fisher, a Minneapolis-based portfolio manager at Fifth Third Asset Management, which manages $22 billion, including Microsoft shares. “I don’t see what they get out of it. The strategy behind the deal was wrong.'’

(more…)