Staff Reporter
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/ 9 May 2008

Half-a-million computers infected with malware

Experts are warning internet users to be on their guard after more than half-a million computers were infected with a single piece of malicious software. In just seven days more than 530 000 instances of a single booby-trapped file have been spotted by analysts at internet security company McAfee, leading them to claim it is the biggest outbreak for several years.

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/ 9 May 2008

You want fries with that? YES!

The Swiss government has agreed to ease restrictions on the importation of potatoes following fears that Euro 2008 soccer fans could face a shortage of French fries next month. A spokesperson for the country’s department of agriculture told national radio on Wednesday that the government would allow an additional 5 000 tonnes of potatoes to be brought in.

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/ 9 May 2008

Indian mobile giant has its eye on MTN

Two of the developing world’s cellphone giants are sizing each other up, while other contendors look on with interest. There is little difference between MTN and Bharti Airtel — India’s largest mobile operator — at the weigh-in, which makes it difficult to predict which company would win a bout between them.

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/ 9 May 2008

Science in brief

At first dismissed as a prank, and later cited as proof that God has a sense of humour, the duck-billed platypus has finally given up its evolutionary secrets. The creature has become the latest to have its genetic code sequenced, revealing it to be a bizarre mix of mammal, bird and reptile, with very complex sexuality.

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/ 9 May 2008

Mbeki will fly to Zimbabwe in mediation bid

President Thabo Mbeki is expected to fly to Zimbabwe on Friday amid growing pressure on Robert Mugabe not to continue delaying a second round of the presidential election after he lost the first vote. The head of Zimbabwe’s election commission said this week that it might postpone the run-off by up to a year, effectively extending Mugabe’s rule.

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/ 8 May 2008

Probe into deaths of 78 children in E Cape

The Department of Health and the Department of Water Affairs are still collecting door-to-door information on the outbreak of diarrhoea in the Eastern Cape which cost 78 children’s lives, the provincial government said on Thursday. Spokesperson Papama Mfenyana said the province was still waiting for information from the team on the ground.

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/ 8 May 2008

Power saving: So far, so good, say Erwin

Power cuts in the winter months ahead are unlikely if the present power-saving trends continue, according to Public Enterprises Minister Alec Erwin. The overall savings target remains 10%, and the key factor is the behavioural changes that are crucial in the short-term, he told a media briefing at Parliament on Thursday.