In this area you can put any information you would like, such as: special offers, corporate motos, greeting message to the visitors or the business phone number.
This theme comes with detailed instructions on how to customize this area. You can also remove it completely.
Sony Corp., the maker of Bravia televisions, said it will use technology from RealD to make 3-D capable TV sets, starting next year.
Sony is licensing RealD’s stereoscopic format to show three-dimensional images on TV screens, as well as the know-how needed to make 3-D glasses, the Tokyo-based company said yesterday in a statement.
Hollywood studios are planning to release Blu-ray discs in 3-D in 2010 after enjoying record box-office sales this year that were buoyed in part by higher ticket prices for 3-D movies. Sony and RealD already work together on 3-D theater systems.
Sony American depositary receipts fell 43 cents to $28.58. The ADRs have gained 31 percent this year. Closely held RealD is based in Beverly Hills, Calif.
VGP-BPS10A VGP-BPS10A/B VGP-BPS10B
Earlier this month at the Mobile Healthcare Industry Summit, Vodafone Group CEO Vittoro Colao announced that the carrier was working with pharmaceutical company Novartis on a program called SMS For Life in Tanzania. Vodafone, Novartis and their partner IBM announced the program officially today.
As Colao noted, the program covers some 135 villages (more than 1 million people) in Tanzania after going live just this past September. SMS For Life allows health workers to keep track of and send reports on supply and demand for medications, especially anti-malarial drugs. Colao said the system already has a 97 percent compliance rate with workers and it is a “simple application which has an incredible impact in terms of saving lives.”
“During the first few weeks of the pilot, the number of health facilities with stock-outs in one district alone, was reduced by over 75 percent. The early success of the SMS for Life pilot project has the Tanzanian authorities interested in implementing the solution across the rest of the country. Tanzania has around 5,000 clinics, hospitals and dispensaries, but at any one time, as many as half could potentially be out of stock of anti-malarial drugs,” the release stated.
The companies said the program could be rolled out nationwide in Tanzania and it already has some interest from other countries in Africa.
VGP-BPS13A/B VGP-BPS13B/B VGP-BPS10A