Tuesday, 25 October 2011

RM142mil satellite is 37km off target

PETALING JAYA: The RM142mil RazakSAT remote sensing satellite, which failed to operate fully a year after its 2009 launch, was found to be off-target when capturing images.
The Auditor-General's Report said the images, which were supposed to be observed from Sungai Buloh and Subang, had deviated 37km from its original target
It was supposed to produce pictures of the Raja Muda Musa Batang Berjuntai forest reserve in Kuala Selangor.
Remote sensing purpose: Workers loading the RazakSAT into the Royal Malaysian Air Force C-130 aircraft for its launch in this file picture
The report said Malaysia Remote Sensing Agency (ARSM) had claimed that corrections were made by Astronautic Technology (M) Sdn Bhd (ATSB), RazakSAT's developer.
“However, checks on Dec 31 showed that the problem was not solved.”
The report added that ATSB and the Science, Technology and Innovation Ministry had agreed to stop the project last December.
The Treasury said ATSB would monitor its corporate strategic plans from time to time.
Last year, Science, Technology and Innovation Minister Datuk Seri Dr Maximus Ongkili had said that the allocation under the 10th Malaysia Plan would allow the country to continue with the next phase of the programme called RazakSAT2.

Monday, 24 October 2011

Fish spa treatment may spread water-borne germs, says minister

SUBANG JAYA: People using fish spa treatment have been warned of possible health risks due to the nature of the treatment and the use of untreated water.
“Our concern is the spread of water-borne germs as not only one person uses the fish pond,” said Health Minister Datuk Seri Liow Tiong Lai.
Citing an example, he said a person with an infected leg may spread it to the other users of the pond.
“Also a concern is that the water in the pond is not treated with chlorine or changed regularly,” he added.
However, Liow said the ministry was merely issuing a health advisory and not a ruling.
Liow was speaking to reporters after closing the National Combi (Communication for Behavioural Impact) Convention here yesterday.
A United Kingdom Health Protect­ion Agency had reported that fish spa treatment could be risky for those with weak immune systems or underlying medical conditions.
Fish spa treatment involves patrons placing their feet in tanks of warm water containing dozens of tiny scavenger fish which are said to clean and exfoliate the skin by taking tiny bites.
Good job: Liow (left) looking at the winning entry at the convention yesterday. Looking on are winners Jamly Osman (centre) and Ahmad Pozi Ishak.
Liow said there were no immediate plans to act against fish spa operators.
On another matter, Liow said besides bringing in the floods, the year-end monsoon season could see a higher number of deaths due to dengue haemorrhagic fever.
“Dengue cases have risen sharply and it is a reminder to be vigilant over the next two months,” he said.
Liow said efforts by 2,177 Combi teams nationwide had helped reduce the number of dengue cases and related deaths.
“The effort had brought about positive results as a total of 15,524 dengue cases with 26 deaths were recorded as of Oct 21 this year compared to 39,264 cases with 117 deaths during the same period last year.”

Google may also want to buy Yahoo, report says.

Google Inc has spoken to at least two private equity firms about possibly helping them finance a deal to buy Yahoo Inc's core business, The Wall Street Journal reported on Saturday, citing a person familiar with the matter.
Google and prospective partners have held preliminary discussions but have not come up with a formal proposal, and Google may end up deciding not to pursue a bid, the source said.
It is not clear which private equity firms Google has spoken to, the WSJ said.
Representatives of Google could not immediately be reached for comment. Any potential deal between the two biggest Internet companies would likely arouse antitrust scrutiny.
Google is interested in selling some advertising across Yahoo's websites, the Journal said, citing people familiar with the matter.
Microsoft Corp is now considering financing part of a bid for Yahoo by a private equity firm, people familiar with the matter have said.
(Msnbc.com is a joint-venture of Microsoft and NBC Universal.)
Yahoo has been in a state of chaos since it fired former CEO Carol Bartz in early September. The company retained investment banking firm Allen & Co to help conduct a "strategic review" of its business and is reportedly working with executive search firm Heidrick & Struggles to find a new CEO.
A number of potential buyers have expressed interest in a deal with Yahoo. Private equity firms Silver Lake Partners, Providence Equity Partners, Bain Capital, Hellman & Friedman, Blackstone Group, and KKR are among those likely to get a look at the limited financial data Yahoo's advisers are circulating.-MSNBC

Thailand Floods Expected To Last Six More Weeks



(BANGKOK) — Thailand's catastrophic floods may take up to six weeks to recede, the prime minister said Saturday, as residents living in Bangkok's outskirts sloshed through waist-high waters in some areas and the human toll from the crisis nationwide rose to 356 dead and more than 110,000 displaced.
Water bearing down on the capital from the north began spilling through Bangkok's outer districts on Friday and continued creeping in on Saturday. So far, however, most of the metropolis of 9 million people has escaped unharmed, and its two airports are operating normally.
Bangkokians are girding for the worst, though, after Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra this week urged all residents to move valuables to higher ground. A mild panic prompted a run on grocery stores, with many running out of bottled water. A Thai company that distributes drinking water across the city sent out an SMS to customers announcing deliveries had been halted because of the crisis. 
The government's emergency relief center said flooding in the city was occurring at "concentrated points." One of them, the northern district of Don Muang, was partially inundated after floodwaters burst through a canal barrier wall that workers were scrambling to repair overnight.
Don Muang is home to the capital's second airport, as well as the government flood relief center. But some residents in swamped areas there said they were running short on food. Volunteers who had been preparing to send emergency supplies to Ayutthaya, a city north of Bangkok which has been submerged for more than two weeks, were forced to consume them instead. "Now we've become flood victims" ourselves, said 53-year-old Pimnipha Na Bangchang. "We're distributing this food aid to our community because we haven't received any help."
Also Saturday, Bangkok's governor advised several thousand people living along the city's main Chao Phraya river to move as high tides expected Sunday could cause the river to overflow its banks in some areas.
Excessive monsoon rains have drowned a third of the Southeast Asian nation since late July, causing billions of dollars in damage and putting nearly 700,000 people temporarily out of work.
Some flooding on Bangkok's outskirts was expected after Yingluck ordered floodgates opened Thursday in a risky move to drain the dangerous runoff through urban canals and into the sea. Nobody knows with any certainty to what extent the city will flood.
In a weekly radio address Saturday, Yingluck said that "during the next four to six weeks, the water will recede."
In the meantime, the government will step up aid to those whose lives have been disrupted, including 113,000 people living in temporary shelters after being forced to abandon submerged homes, she said.
The government said at least 356 people have died in the floods since July. The flooding is the worst to hit the country since 1942, and the crisis is proving a major test for Yingluck's nascent government, which took power in July after heated elections and has come under fire for not acting quickly or decisively enough to prevent major towns north of the capital from being ravaged by floodwaters.
The Labor Ministry says many of the nearly 700,000 people put temporarily out of work are from five major industrial estates north of Bangkok that were forced to suspend operations. Among those affected are Japanese carmakers Toyota and Honda, which have halted major assembly operations. The electronics industry has also suffered, including computer hard drive maker Western Digital, which has two major production facilities in the flooded zone.
In an interview published in the Bangkok Post, Science and Technology Minister Plodprasop Suraswadi said natural and manmade factors combined to create the crisis.
Seasonal monsoons came six weeks early and have lasted longer than usual, filling reservoirs, dams and fields with 30 percent more rainfall than average. At the same time, the government kept too much water in dams over the summer in a bid to save water for rice cultivation, Plodprasop said. Overall, about 700 billion cubic feet (20 billion cubic meters) of rainfall has drenched Thailand over the last several months, Plodprasop said.
About half of that has already drained into the sea, leaving about 350 billion cubic feet (10 billion cubic meters) of water threatening Bangkok, much of it spread across rice fields in Thailand's central plains.
Plodprasop said it will take about 20 more days to drain those floodwaters into the Gulf of Thailand, a task he said was complicated by the fact that the nation's irrigation system was designed to control water flows for farming and consumption — not to prevent floods. "We have never faced such a huge mass of floodwater in the fields," Plodprasop said.
He said he believed inner Bangkok "should be safe, as we have an extensive drainage system with water pumps to drain excess water out quickly." But some of the city's outskirts could flood up to 6 feet (2 meters) deep, he said.-TIMES