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/ 12 October 2005
South Africa’s broadband market is expected to be dominated by mobile and wireless technologies as service providers and mobile networks look to reach a larger segment of the market with always-on internet access offerings, Nashua Mobile managing director Mark Taylor said on Wednesday.
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/ 12 October 2005
The intensive odour in many new cars results from a toxic cocktail of more than 100 different chemicals that can have serious health effects, the German environmental organisation Bund has warned. Bund and its sister organisation in Austria, Global 2000, conducted tests on six cars including models from Opel, Mercedes-Benz, Renault, Mitsubishi, Volkswagen and Alfa Romeo.
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/ 12 October 2005
A member of the Swedish Academy that will award this year’s Nobel prize for literature tomorrow has attacked last year’s surprise winner, Elfriede Jelinek, dismissing her work as ”whingeing, unenjoyable, violent pornography”. The Swedish author Knut Ahnlund said on Tuesday he was quitting the academy in disgust over the decision to award the 2004 prize to the Austrian novelist.
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/ 12 October 2005
A battle has erupted over who governs the internet, with the United States demanding to maintain a key role in the network it helped create and other countries demanding more control. The European commission is warning that if a deal cannot be reached at a meeting in Tunisia next month the internet will split apart.
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/ 12 October 2005
Efforts to deliver aid in remote areas of earthquake-ravaged Pakistan descended into chaos on Tuesday night as survivors mobbed relief convoys grabbing whatever food they could after days of going hungry. In Muzaffarabad, the capital of Pakistani Kashmir, where 11 000 people died, aid workers struggled to prevent the distribution collapsing into anarchy.
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/ 12 October 2005
"The wind in your hair, the African sun on your face, the blue skies above. My week with the upgraded Mercedes-Benz CLK 350 convertible would have been a near-perfect driving experience had it not been for that subspecies of male drivers and passengers who see the convertible as an opportunity to support the idea that there is indeed biological proof of the missing link," writes Sukasha Singh.
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/ 12 October 2005
"I love teaching and I do not think I can swap it for any profession, however well it pays," says Mavis Shongwe. After a career in teaching spanning 30 years, she is currently deputy principal at Emmangweni Primary School in Tembisa in Gauteng, where she has been teaching since 1979.
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/ 12 October 2005
In the same way field trips transform textbook topics into experiences of true value for learners, international teacher-exchange programmes have the power to add zing to classroom practice.
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/ 12 October 2005
A government drive to standardise HIV/Aids policies in schools over the past three years has highlighted the need for schools to formalise their strategies to tackle the epidemic and its effects.
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/ 12 October 2005
Are you earning money for yourself, your children, your home and your retirement — or are you working hard just to make other people rich?