Archive for June, 2017

Microsoft SA launches online portal to give students free software – BusinessTech

Microsoft South Africa, together with Intervate and 2enable, has created a portal for students to activate licenses for the Microsoft Office 365 suite and OneDrive cloud-based storage services free of charge.

Called Mahala.ms, the objective is to enable learners from grade R to 12 to become more productive and better prepared for the next phase of their academic careers or the workplace, by gaining free access to Office 365s services, including Microsoft Word, Excel, OneNote and PowerPoint.

In addition, students receive one terabyte (1000 GB) worth of free OneDrive online storage to save their documents, class notes, assignments, research, podcasts and vodcasts.

Through the Mahala.ms portal, students and parents are able to self-provision their licenses and install the software on up to five devices, including desktops, laptops, tablets or smartphones.

Students can organise their school and personal data in one secure location, and are able to create and share content as well as collaborate on documents in real-time.

Lionel Moyal, Office Business Group Lead at Microsoft South Africa, said: There are around 12 million learners and students in SA, but only a fraction of them have access to digital tools.

As such, there is an immense opportunity to change the fortunes of millions of young people through the Mahala.ms portal, enabling many more students to master the use of technology and acquire 21st century learning skill sets such as collaborating within groups and delivering captivating presentations.

Read: Make upgrades free or face more ransomware attacks in SA expert

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Microsoft SA launches online portal to give students free software - BusinessTech

BlackBerry shares plunge after weak software revenue, negative cash flow – MarketWatch

Shares of BlackBerry Ltd. were on track Friday for their worst one-day decline in more than two years Friday, after the company reported weak software and services revenue.

Though BlackBerry BBRY, -12.21% reported a surprise profit in its first-quarter, its revenue of $169 million in the software and services segment came in below some analyst expectations. In addition to the weak revenue, TD Securities Inc. analysts said they believed the stock drop came due to commentary around the companys free cash flow, which would be negative if its payment from Qualcomm Inc. QCOM, +0.78% were excluded.

The company received $940 million out of its arbitration with Qualcomm, in a case about Qualcomm charging phone makers excessive royalty payments. Without that payment, the analysts attributed the weakness in BlackBerrys free cash flow to the company moving away from its hardware business.

We expect this to normalize over the coming quarters as the company completes its hardware exit over the coming quarters, said Daniel Chan, lead analyst on the note.

BlackBerrys stock were sinking 11.1% in active midday trade, putting the stock on track for its worst one-day decline since Jan. 15, 2015. The decline would also be the biggest one-day, post-results selloff since the company reported fiscal first-quarter 2013 results on June 28 of that year.

Volume reached 27.4 million shares, nearly tripled the full-day average.

TD Securities analysts had software and services revenue expectations of $203 million. They say the next couple of quarters could be weak for the company, but they were encouraged by management commentary saying that they expect software and services revenue to grow 10% to 15% for the full year.

That growth is expected to come in the second half of the year, driven by strong billings as well as professional services.

This gives us confidence that management can hit its Software & Services target growth for the full year, Chan said.

BlackBerry said it expects to be profitable on a non-GAAP basis and to have positive free cash flow for the full year.

BlackBerry shares have gained 36% in the past three months, compared with the SPDR Technology Select Sector exchange-traded funds XLK, +0.63% 6.5% rise and the S&P 500s SPX, +0.16% gain of 4%.

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BlackBerry shares plunge after weak software revenue, negative cash flow - MarketWatch

Old Questions But No New Answers in the Philando Castile Verdict – The New Yorker

The cycle of lethal police violence, community outrage, and legal proceedings that yield no consequences came around again last Friday in St. Paul, Minnesota. A jury acquitted a police officer, Jeronimo Yanez, of all three chargesone count of second-degree manslaughter and two counts of dangerous discharge of a firearmarising from the shooting death, a year ago, of Philando Castile.

On Tuesday, four days after the verdict, Minnesota state investigators made public the dash-cam video from Yanezs car. Officer Yanez had said that he saw Castile drive by, thought he resembled a suspect in a robbery case, and decided to pull him over. In the video, the officer can be heard calmly telling Castile that his brake light is broken, and asking to see his license and registration. Castile then says, also calmly, Sir, I have to tell you I do have a firearm on me. Listening to the audio, it seems reasonable to assume that Castile is informing the officer that he has a weaponfor which he turned out to have a valid permitto avoid trouble rather than to court it. Still, Yanez is prompted to place his hand on his own gun, and shortly afterward he shouts, Dont pull it out! Castiles actions cannot be seen in the video, but he and his girlfriend, Diamond Reynolds, who was also in the car, along with her four-year-old daughter, tell Yanez that Castile isnt reaching for his gun; she later says that he was getting his identification from his wallet. Within seconds, the officer fires seven shots into the car. Two of the bullets hit Castile, who is heard to say, I wasnt reaching. He died half an hour later.

That video now serves as a tragic prequel to one that Reynolds live-streamed to Facebook, after the shooting, as she sat next to Castile in the front seat of his car. That videoan unnerving first-person testimony, in which she tells Yanez, with stunning composure, You killed my boyfriendwas viewed millions of times, and brought an inescapable notoriety to the case. Reynolds later told reporters that she and Castile had done nothing but what the police officer asked of us and added, of Castile, that nothing within his body language said kill me.

The decision in the Castile case differed from other, similar cases of police violence in that it highlighted a kind of divided heart of Second Amendment conservatism, at least with regard to race. David French, in National Review , called the decision a miscarriage of justice. He wrote, Castile was following Yanezs commands, and its simply false that the mere presence of a gun makes the encounter more dangerous for the police. It all depends on who possesses the gun. If hes a concealed-carry permit-holder, then hes in one of the most law-abiding demographics in America. Colion Noir, an African-American gun-rights activist who serves as the face of the N.R.A.s black-outreach campaign, also criticized the decision, writing in an online post that Yanezs mistakes cost Castile his life, and that covert racism is a real thing and is very dangerous. In the days after the shooting, the N.R.A. itself had offered only a tepid response, without mentioning Castiles name: The reports from Minnesota are troubling and must be thoroughly investigated. In the meantime, it is important for the NRA not to comment while the investigation is ongoing. Rest assured, the NRA will have more to say once all the facts are known. After Yanez was acquitted, it said nothing at all. Noir, in his post, also questioned whether Yanez would have had the same reaction had a white motorist identified himself as armed. The same might be asked of the N.R.A.s non-reaction to the verdict.

The Black Lives Matter movement emerged, fundamentally, as a response to the disparate valuation that we place upon human lives. That is why the rejoinder all lives matter misses the point. In the hours following last weeks shocking shooting of Representative Steve Scalise and three others, in Alexandria, Virginia, the broad outpouring of concern reminded us of how society responds when people whose lives it values are harmed. In that sentiment, media coverage of the shootings did not automatically focus on controversial statements that Scalise has made or votes he has cast. To do so at such a moment seemed unbefitting.

Responses to the deaths of unarmed victims of police violence, by contrast, routinely feature the victims failures, shortcomings, and oversights. We were told, for example, that Eric Garner, who died after police on Staten Island put him in a choke hold, had been arrested on numerous occasions for petty offenses. Representative Peter King, of New York, pointed to the factor of Garners physical unfitness. If he had not had asthma and a heart condition and was so obese, almost definitely he would not have died, King said. Imperfect victims, as feminists who fought for stronger rape laws a generation ago understood, become perfect excuses in an unequal judicial system.

Yet there was some feeling that the verdict in Philando Castiles death would be different from the decisions in similar cases that had preceded it. That thought hinged on a belief that his status as a lawfully licensed gun-owner, his long-standing employment as a cafeteria manager at an elementary school, and his general lack of serious missteps might exempt him from the idea that his death was his own fault. And, in fact, less blame was levelled in this case: Castile had been stopped by the police fifty times in the thirteen years before his death, but that record was widely interpreted as evidence of racial profiling rather than of personal culpability.

There was also an evidentiary reason to believe that this case might turn out differently. A second officer, Joseph Kauser, who arrived at the scene before the shooting, when Yanez called for support, and approached Castiles car with his fellow-officer, testified that Castile was relaxed and calm during his exchange with Yanez. Kauser said that he believed that Yanez had acted appropriately, but that he himself had not drawn his gun, and he testified that he had not felt threatened. In the end, however, the result was indistinguishable from those in previous cases. There were no appeals for a less vitriolic dialogue, no impermeable hope that this time things would change. There was simply the numb reckoning that well all go down this road again.

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Old Questions But No New Answers in the Philando Castile Verdict - The New Yorker

New Jersey Agrees to Lift Longstanding Ban on Stun Guns – New Brunswick Today


New Brunswick Today
New Jersey Agrees to Lift Longstanding Ban on Stun Guns
New Brunswick Today
TRENTON, NJFederal judge Michael A. Shipp issued an order stating that the state's ban on "stun guns" is an unconstitutional violation of the Second Amendment to the US Constitution, and should no longer be enforced by the state. The case, NJ Second ...

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New Jersey Agrees to Lift Longstanding Ban on Stun Guns - New Brunswick Today

Theresa May pledges 75MILLION of taxpayers’ cash to tackle the … – The Sun

The PM plans to use Britains overseas aid budget to prevent Africans from risking their lives by paying smugglers to get on a boat in Libya

THERESA MAY will today launch an EU charm offensive by vowing to spend 75million of taxpayers cash on tackling the migrant crisis in the Med.

At the start of a crunch two-day summit in Brussels, the PM will outline plans to use Britains overseas aid budget to prevent Africans from risking their lives by paying smugglers to get on a boat in Libya.

Alamy

The package will provide the funds to take thousands of migrants back to their home countries in Africa through voluntary returns.

And it will stump up money for food, water and humanitarian relief for those cut adrift by people traffickers in the desert.

Aid Secretary Priti Patel said the package which nearly doubles the UK commitment in the Med so far would target transit routes running from the Horn of Africa and West of Africa through to countries including Niger, Egypt and Libya.

Reuters

Last year some 181,000 people arrived in Italy via this route.

The commitment comes at the start of vital EU Council where the PM is expected to seek her first big Brexit breakthrough by making a generous offer on residency rights for 3 million EU citizens living in Britain.

Getty Images

Senior Government sources said the PM would outline the deal over a working dinner tonight before the full proposal is unveiled at the start of next week.

She will be forced to leave the dinner immediately after so the remaining 27 EU leaders can discuss the divorce talks among themselves.

AP:Associated Press

Senior Government sources last night denied the UK had asked for a special session on Brexit.

EU insiders said the PM was also due to meet EU Council President Donald Tusk for a one-on-one meeting.

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Theresa May pledges 75MILLION of taxpayers' cash to tackle the ... - The Sun