Getting an accurate picture of information and people is difficult. If you start counting people in China today, by the time you finish there are a lot more. Ditto with information. So you may get only a snapshot accurate to milliseconds.

But researchers at the University of California, San Diego, have announced a new study to quantify the amounts and kinds of information being produced worldwide by businesses and consumers alike.

The “How Much Information?” study will be completed by a multi-disciplinary, multi-university faculty team supported by corporate and foundation sponsorship. The program will be undertaken at the Global Information Industry Center (GIIC) at the School of International Relations and Pacific Studies (IR/PS), with support from the Jacobs School of Engineering and the San Diego Supercomputer Center.

Disinfectants are routinely used on hard surfaces in hospitals to kill bacteria, with antimicrobial containing wipes increasingly being employed for this purpose.

A study by the University's Welsh School of Pharmacy looked into the ability of antimicrobial-surface wipes to remove, kill and prevent the spread of such infections as MRSA. They found that current protocols utilized by hospital staff have the potential to spread pathogens, particularly due to the ineffectiveness of wipes to actually kill bacteria.

The team, led by microbiologist Dr Jean-Yves Maillard is now calling for a 'one wipe – one application – per surface' approach to infection control in healthcare environments.

Scientists in Portugal just found a new molecular mechanism behind colorectal cancer in which a mutated and a normal, but over-expressed, gene cooperate and are both needed to create the disease. The research, published in the journal Gastroenteroloy1, also reveals how a technique called RNA interference can – by inactivating both genes - kill, in just 48 hours, as much as 80% of cancer cells. These are extremely promising results if transferred into new therapies for humans against a disease, which is still one of the most common cancers in the western world.

Colorectal cancer affects the colon, rectum and appendix and is not only the third most common form of cancer, but also the second cancer-related cause of death in the Western world, according to the World Health Organization. The disease kills about 655,000 people per year worldwide, with 16,000 only in the UK, even if it has a high cure rate if early detected and treated.

JOHANNESBURG, South Africa, June 3 /PRNewswire/ --

- More than 5 Million South Africans Living with HIV Gain Access to First and Only Co-formulated, Non-refrigerated Protease Inhibitor

Abbott (NYSE: ABT) today announced that the new tablet formulation of its protease inhibitor Aluvia(R) (lopinavir/ritonavir), for the treatment of HIV-1, is now available to HIV/AIDS patients in South Africa -- a step the company hopes will positively impact millions of lives across the country.

Mind readers have long been the domain of folklore and science fiction. But some new findings demonstrate the power of computational modeling to improve our understanding of how the brain processes information and thoughts and it brings scientists closer to knowing how specific thoughts activate our brains.

In their most recent work a computer scientist, Tom Mitchell, and a cognitive neuroscientist, Marcel Just, both of Carnegie Mellon University, used fMRI data to develop a sophisticated computational model that can predict the brain activation patterns associated with concrete nouns, or things that we experience through our senses, even if the computer did not already have the fMRI data for that specific noun.

The researchers first built a model that took the fMRI activation patterns for 60 concrete nouns broken down into 12 categories including animals, body parts, buildings, clothing, insects, vehicles and vegetables. The model also analyzed a text corpus, or a set of texts that contained more than a trillion words, noting how each noun was used in relation to a set of 25 verbs associated with sensory or motor functions. Combining the brain scan information with the analysis of the text corpus, the computer then predicted the brain activity pattern of thousands of other concrete nouns.

In cases where the actual activation patterns were known, the researchers found that the accuracy of the computer model's predictions was significantly better than chance. The computer can effectively predict what each participant's brain activation patterns would look like when each thought about these words, even without having seen the patterns associated with those words in advance.

TAIPEI, Taiwan, June 3 /PRNewswire/ --

- Award-Winning SuperBlade(TM) and 1U Twin(TM) Product Lines, Future Server Technology, 2.5" SAS/SATA and Universal I/O (UIO) Solutions

SANTA CLARA, California, June 3 /PRNewswire/ --

- Marvell's Shiva CPU Technology Combines Gigahertz-Class Performance with Ultra Low Power Consumption

Marvell (Nasdaq: MRVL), a leader in storage, communications and consumer silicon solutions, today introduced Shiva(TM), the company's next-generation internally developed CPU technology, raising the bar on performance and low power consumption for embedded CPU applications. Shiva will be integrated in a broad range of Marvell(R) system-on-a-chip (SoC) products spanning mobile, consumer and enterprise infrastructure applications.

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SANTA CLARA, California, June 3 /PRNewswire/ --

- SoCs with Marvell's Powerful Embedded Shiva CPU Deliver High Performance and Low Power Consumption for Digital Home Appliances, PCs and MIDs.

Marvell (Nasdaq: MRVL) a leader in storage, communications and consumer silicon solutions, today introduced the Marvell(R) 88F6000 series, featuring Shiva(TM) embedded CPU Technology. These System-on-Chip (SoC) devices bring low power, high performance application processing to next-generation digital home gateways and are designed to expand consumers' entertainment and personal content choices by enabling video, audio and photos from multiple network and in-home sources to be distributed throughout the home.

SANTA CLARA, California, June 3 /PRNewswire/ --

- Solid state controller to boost PC and MID performance

Marvell (Nasdaq: MRVL), an industry leader in storage, communications and consumer silicon solutions, today announced Marvell's entry into the solid state controller market with the introduction of the ultra-slim Marvell(R) 88NV8120 PCI Express (PCIe)-based NAND flash controller, the first Marvell product in a planned range of solid state storage controllers.

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EDISON, New Jersey, June 2 /PRNewswire/ --

ZSL, a leading information technology integrator specializing in enterprise software and solutions development, today announced its Enterprise 2.0 Computing Framework built on IBM WebSphere sMash and Service Oriented Architecture (SOA).

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ZSL's new Enterprise 2.0 computing framework offerings will enable businesses to protect core legacy system investments while leveraging cutting-edge tools and development languages to streamline programming, processing, enhancements, and integration of new applications.