LONDON, October 15 /PRNewswire/ -- Solcara has today launched a new version of its popular Spotlight Media Relations Management product specifically designed for media relations teams wanting to get more out of their budget.

Spotlight is already used by many of the busiest media relations teams in the UK and beyond. This latest version, Spotlight 6, provides teams of all sizes the option of using Spotlight for a simple comprehensive monthly subscription; often called Software-as-a-Service. As well as this new subscription option, Spotlight 6 benefits from many months of development resulting in a range of enhanced features and an exciting new 'look-and-feel'.

BORDEAUX, France, October 15 /PRNewswire/ --

- First Such Board on the Market, Stantum's SMK Series Will let Vendors Cost-Effectively Develop Their own Resistive Multi-Touch Applications

Stantum Technologies (http://www.stantum.com), a pioneer developer of multi-touch sensing technology, today introduced a demo, evaluation and development board based on its patented PMatrix(TM) resistive multi-touch technology, which lets users simultaneously move an unlimited number of fingers, nails or utensils (such as styli) on a screen.

LOS ALTOS, California, October 15 /PRNewswire/ --

- Company Opens UK Office to Meet Increased Demand for Secure and Managed USB Memory Sticks in Europe

IronKey, maker of the world's most secure flash drive, today announced that the company has opened a new European office in the UK as part of its expansion efforts into more worldwide markets. IronKey's new office will help support its rapid growth in Europe.

DÜSSELDORF, Germany, October 15 /PRNewswire/ --

- Sales in the Third Quarter up by 7.2% to EUR268.0m

- Adjusted Group Results More Than Doubled in the Third Quarter of 2008 From EUR7.4m to EUR16.5m

- Sales Process Started for Technical Plastics Business

- CEO Dr. Axel Herberg Confirms the Outlook for 2008

Physicists working to disprove "Lorentz invariance" -- Einstein's prediction that matter and massless particles will behave the same no matter how they're turned or how fast they go -- won't get that satisfaction from muon neutrinos, at least for the time being, says a consortium of scientists.

The test of Lorentz invariance, conducted by MINOS Experiment scientists and reported in the Oct. 10 issue of Physical Review Letters, started with a stream of muon neutrinos produced at Fermilab particle accelerator, near Chicago, and ended with a neutrino detector 750 meters away and 103 meters below ground. As the Earth does its daily rotation, the neutrino beam rotates too.

Scientists have detected long wavelength radio emissions from a colliding, massive galaxy cluster which, surprisingly, is not detected at the shorter wavelengths typically seen in these objects.

The discovery implies that existing radio telescopes have missed a large population of these colliding objects. It also provides an important confirmation of the theoretical prediction that colliding galaxy clusters accelerate electrons and other particles to very high energies through the process of turbulent waves.

This new population of objects is most easily detected at long wavelengths. Professor Greg Taylor of the University of New Mexico and scientific director of the Long Wavelength Array (LWA) points out, "This result is just the tip of the iceberg. When an emerging suite of much more powerful low frequency telescopes, including the LWA in New Mexico, turn their views to the cosmos, the sky will 'light up' with hundreds or even thousands of colliding galaxy clusters."

HELSINKI, October 15 /PRNewswire/ --

- Turkcell Surpasses 1.8 Million Mark in Mobile Transactions in 19 Months

HELSINKI, October 15 /PRNewswire/ --

Valimo, the selected technology provider for Turkcell, today announced that after only 19 months from implementation, Turks have made over 1.8 million mobile transactions. With the Valimo solution Turkcell has provided its 35.4 million customers unparalleled convenience.

(Logo: http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20081015/324936 )

Newly exposed parts of Tiktaalik roseae--the intermediate fossil between fish and the first animals to walk out of water onto land 375 million years ago--are revealing how this major evolutionary event happened. A new study in Nature provides a detailed look at the internal head skeleton of Tiktaalik roseae and reveals a key intermediate step in the transformation of the skull that accompanied the shift to life on land by our distant ancestors.

A predator, up to nine feet long, with sharp teeth, a crocodile-like head and a flattened body, Tiktaalik's anatomy and way of life straddle the divide between fish and land-living animals. First described in 2006, and quickly dubbed the "fishapod," it had fish-like features such as a primitive jaw, fins and scales, as well as a skull, neck, ribs and parts of the limbs that are similar to tetrapods, four-legged animals.

Another multi-billion-dollar taxpayer bailout could lie ahead, this time to rescue a cash-strapped government program that insures pensions of 44 million American workers and retirees, a University of Illinois finance professor warns.

Jeffrey R. Brown says the troubled Pension Benefit Guaranty Corp., which steps in when private-sector employers with under funded defined-benefit plans go bankrupt, was $14 billion short of the cash it will need to cover pensions based on the latest estimates released a year ago.

But he predicts the shortfall will soar as a sour economy shutters more businesses and a plunging stock market carves into pension fund assets, with a government fix similar to this month's $700 billion Wall Street bailout as the likely solution.

People with autism-related disorders are less likely to make irrational decisions, and are less influenced by gut instincts, according to research funded by the Wellcome Trust. The study adds to the growing body of research implicating altered emotional processing in autism.

Decision-making is a complex process, involving both intuition and analysis: analysis involves computation and more "rational" thought, but is slower; intuition, by contrast, is much faster, but less accurate, relying on heuristics, or "gut instincts".