Saturday, November 28, 2009

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News | Local news | News headlines | Daily news | News channel


Two bodies found after flat fire

Posted: 28 Nov 2009 07:15 AM PST

Two bodies found after flat fire


Two bodies found after flat fire

Posted: 28 Nov 2009 06:55 AM PST

Firefighters find the bodies of an adult and a child in a flat following a fire in Earlsfield, south-west London.

Man thrown from car in M4 crash

Posted: 28 Nov 2009 04:05 AM PST

A man suffers life-threatening injuries when he is thrown from his car into a lane on the M4 motorway in Berkshire.

Bartering begins for works of art

Posted: 28 Nov 2009 03:55 AM PST

Art lovers barter for anonymous works by established and emerging artists at a gallery in east London.

Crime victims in violence debate

Posted: 28 Nov 2009 05:13 AM PST

More than 500 young people take part in a Question Time-style debate with victims of youth violence.

West Ham v Burnley

Posted: 27 Nov 2009 04:08 PM PST

Preview followed by live coverage of Saturday's game between West Ham and Burnley in the Premier League.

Wenger wants key win over Chelsea

Posted: 27 Nov 2009 11:22 AM PST

Arsene Wenger tells his young Arsenal team to prove their "moment has come" as they prepare to host Chelsea on Sunday.

Where to skate outdoors

Posted: 25 Nov 2009 07:29 AM PST

From classic venues to this season's newcomers, we round up the ice rinks spearheading London's skating revival and mark out what's special about each one.

London to have new sewer system

Posted: 27 Nov 2009 09:29 AM PST

Plan backed by government and Mayor's office for new sewer tunnels.

The Apertium Project's First Google Summer of Code

Posted: 28 Nov 2009 07:11 AM PST

The Apertium Project's First Google Summer of Code


The Apertium Project's First Google Summer of Code

Posted: 27 Nov 2009 05:41 AM PST

The Apertium Project works on open-source machine translation and language technology. We try to focus our efforts on lesser-resourced and marginalized languages, but also work with larger languages. To date, we have released translators for 21 language pairs, covering languages spoken by 1.1 billion people, ranging from English (est. 500m speakers) to Aranese (est. 4,000 speakers). A similar number of additional language pairs are in development. The Apertium software is licensed under the GPL, but in addition (a rarer situation in the machine translation field) so is the data for all these language pairs. This means that the data can be re-used by other language projects (e.g. in developing spelling or grammar checkers, thesauri, etc).

This was our first year in Google Summer of Code and we were very fortunate to receive nine student slots. We filled them with some great students and are pleased to report that out of the nine projects, eight were successful.

The completed project were:

A translator for Norwegian Bokmål (nb) and Norwegian Nynorsk (nn)

This project was accepted as part of our "adopt a language pair" idea from our ideas page. Some work had already been done on the translator but it was a long way from finished. Kevin Unhammer from the University of Bergen was mentored by Trond Trosterud from the University of Tromsø. The final result, after an epic effort, is a working translator (and the first free software translator for nb-nn) that makes a mistake in only 11 words out of every 100 translated, making using the system for post-edition feasible.

One of the key aspects of Kevin's work was the re-use and adaptation of existing open source resources. Much of the bilingual dictionary was statistically inferred from the existing translations in KDE, using ReTraTos and GIZA++ (created by Franz Och). In addition to this, Kevin used the Oslo-Bergen Constraint Grammer, contributing fixes not only to that, but to the VISL CG3 software itself. After the GSoC deadline, Kevin has continued his work, including incorporating some changes from feedback from the Nynorsk Wikipedia.

A translator for Swedish (sv) to Danish (da)

Another language pair adoption, Michael Kristensen, who had previously done some work on this translator, was mentored by Jacob Nordfalk, the author of our English to Esperanto translator. As there are very few free linguistic resources for Swedish and Danish the work was pretty much started from scratch, although we took great advantage of the Swedish Wiktionary. The translator is only unidirectional, from Swedish to Danish, and it has an error rate of around 20%.

The completion of this translator is something of a triumph for Apertium. Begun back in 2005, the project had been neglected for many years. This was the first translator for the Apertium platform that focused on non-Romance languages.

Multi-engine machine translation (MEMT)

Gabriel Synnaeve was mentored by Francis Tyers to work on a module to improve the quality of machine translation by taking translations from different systems and merging their strengths and discarding their weaknesses. The two systems focused on in the initial prototype are Apertium (rule-based MT) and Moses (statistical MT) but it can easily be extended to more. The idea behind the system is that for some languages there is often not one MT system which is better than all others, but some are better at some phrases and some are better at others. Thus, if we can combine the output of two or more systems with different strengths/weaknesses, we can make better translations.

Perhaps the most exciting aspect of the MEMT project is its potential for use as a research platform for future work on hybrid machine translation, by allowing the researcher to focus only on the algorithms they wish to implement. During the project, Gabriel was joined by Francis in person for a 'mini-hackathon', which, despite something of a farcical start involving requests made on IRC for phone calls across Europe on behalf of two people who were in the same city, lead to a greater degree of functionality and modularization in the code.

Highly scalable web service architecture for Apertium

Víctor Manuel Sánchez Cartagena
worked with mentor Juan Antonio Perez-Ortiz on a highly-scalable web service architecture, or, Apertium for Cloud computing. Initially targeting Amazon's EC2, as well as standalone servers, the scalable web service allows the use of multiple translation services on multiple physical or virtual servers, scaling to meet the translation demands of users, from a single user-facing service, which implements the Google Language API.

The core of the system is the translation router, which controls the flow between user and translation server, based on a variety of factors, including the availability of the language pair, the current load on the server, as well as providing a framework to allow these factors to have different priorities on a per-user basis. It also takes into account the cost of each translation request. The project is a complete package; as well as the router, it includes a translation daemon, and convenience scripts to ease the rollout of server instances.

In addition to his work on his project, Víctor is also serving as an organiser for the FreeRBMT workshop.

Conversion of Anubadok


Abu Zaher was mentored by Kevin Donnelly and Francis Tyers to convert Anubadok, an open-source MT system for English to Bengali to work with the Apertium engine. This was an ambitious project and not all of the goals were realised, but we were able to make the first wide-coverage morphological analyser / generator for Bengali and a substantial amount of lexical transfer, so the project was a great success.

Zaher is also looking at improving the Ankur spell checker with information from his analyser / generator, so the work done is already being reused; there is also interest in using the data to create a Bengali stemmer, for more efficient searching/indexing of Bengali texts, and a number of tools which were created to model the various aspects of Bengali inflection will certainly prove useful in other areas of NLP for Bengali.

Apertium going SOA

Pasquale Minervini's work was motivated by the needs of Informatici senza Frontiere to have a translation engine that would fit into a Service-Oriented architecture. To this end, Pasquale, mentored by Jimmy O'Regan, designed an XML-RPC-based server that efficiently contains the Apertium pipeline, and layered it with JSON (still under development), SOAP, and CORBA services, which, as well as making Apertium more buzzword compliant, gives a greater range of options to programmers wishing to integrate Apertiums translation services into a wider range of architectures. This is undoubtedly a popular project idea: Alexa's keywords for Apertium show 'apertium going soa' and 'deadbeef apertium' (deadbeef is Pasquale's IRC nick) in 2nd and 4th place for search keywords leading to Apertium.

Because of the potential overlap between their projects, in the first weeks of their GSoC work, Pasquale and Víctor agreed on the Google Language API as a standard for their projects to communicate; Pasquale took this agreement one step further by implementing the 'language detection' feature of the API - something previously unavailable in Apertium. In addition to that, Pasquale also contributed memory leak checks against the Apertium platform, as well as other fixes, and has helped another (non-GSoC) student in the goal of porting Apertium to Windows.

Trigram part-of-speech tagging

Zaid Md. Abdul Wahab Sheikh
was mentored by Felipe Sánchez Martínez to improve our part-of-speech tagging module to use trigrams instead of bigrams, as well as implementing changes to the training tools to create data for it.

Apertium was originally designed for closely related languages, but is growing to meet the challenges of translating between more distant languages. One of the unique aspects of Dr. Sanchez's work on Part-of-Speech tagging is the use of target language information which allows an accurate tagger to be trained using much less data than usual. Zaid's work builds on Dr. Sanchez's work with first-order Hidden Markov Models, extending it to second-order HMMs, similarly to TnT. This enables more accurate translation between more distant languages, using the same methods, so that the rest of the Apertium system can continue to grow.

Java port of lttoolbox

Raphaël Laurent worked with Sergio Ortiz Rojas to port lttoolbox to Java. lttoolbox is the core component of the Apertium system; as well as providing morphological analysis and generation, it also provides pattern matching and dictionary lookup to the rest of Apertium, so a Java port is the first step towards a version of Apertium for Java-based devices. Raphaël finished an earlier line-for-line port contributed by Nic Cotrell, first making it work; then making it binary compatible.


As it stands currently, lttoolbox-java can be integrated into other Java-based tools, facilitating the re-use of our software and our extensive repository of morphological analysers. Tools such as LanguageTool, the open source proofreading tool, also make extensive use of morphological analysis, but OmegaT, the open source CAT tool, could use it for dictionary look-up of inflected words; it could even be used with our own apertium-morph tool: a plugin for Lucene that allows linguistically-rich document indexing.

FreeRBMT

On the 2nd and 3rd of November, we held the first FreeRBMT workshop, which was heavily inspired by the Google Summer of Code program, both as a way for students and mentors to meet in person, and to provide the students with an opportunity to present peer-reviewed papers about the work they completed during the program. The entire proceedings are available from the University of Alicante; in particular, we would like to highlight the papers which were successfully presented by the students who took part in GSoC:

Apertium goes SOA: an efficient and scalable service based on the Apertium rule-based machine translation platform; Minervini, Pasquale

Development of a morphological analyser for Bengali; Faridee, Abu Zaher Md.; Tyers, Francis M.

An open-source highly scalable web service architecture for the Apertium machine translation engine
; Sánchez-Cartagena, Víctor M.; Pérez-Ortiz, Juan Antonio

Reuse of free resources in machine translation between Nynorsk and Bokmål; Unhammer, Kevin; Trosterud, Trond

A trigram part-of-speech tagger for the Apertium free/open-source machine translation platform
; Sheikh, Zaid Md Abdul Wahab; Sánchez-Martínez, Felipe

In addition, the following paper was presented by the mentors of a successful project (Michael, the student, was unfortunately too busy to participate in its writing):

Shallow-transfer rule-based machine translation for Swedish to Danish; Tyers, Francis M.; Nordfalk, Jacob



We would like to thank Google for providing us with the opportunity to participate in the Summer of Code program; in particular, Leslie, Cat, and Ellen, for making it run so smoothly. We would also like to make special mention of two students: Ankitha Rao and Daniel Beck, who, despite being unsuccessful in their applications, continued to work on their proposed projects (an English to Hindi translator, and a module for multi-word units, respectively). Finally, we would like to thank all of the students, mentors, and administrators who contributed their time and skill to Apertium.


Agoda partners with Carte Bleue to give members more payment options

Posted: 28 Nov 2009 03:13 AM PST

Agoda partners with Carte Bleue to give members more payment options


Agoda partners with Carte Bleue to give members more payment options

Posted:

Agoda.com, one of the leading Asian hotel booking site and a part of Priceline.com, has announced a partnership with Carte Bleue, offering Agoda's French members an additional method of secure online purchase. Operated by Groupement des Cartes Bancaires CB, Carte Bleue or 'Blue Card' is an integrated debit card system that links to the card─holder's chosen bank accounts and allows for quick and secure purchases across multiple platforms. Due to this partnership with Agoda, Carte Bleue holders can now use their card to book discount room rates through the Agoda website.<br><br>According to a report in etravelblackboardasia.com, a 'smart card' that acts like an ATM card, the micro─chipped, PIN─protected Carte Bleue is accepted almost universally across France and handles approximately 220 million international transactions a year. Carte Bleue holders can use their card to pay for everything from metro tickets to household utility bills – it is accepted in most shops and restaurants within France, and Visa─partnered cards can be used to withdraw money from automatic tellers internationally.

Malaysia Airlines to reinstate two additional flights between Kuala Lumpur and Brisbane on March 28, 2010

Posted:

According to a report in etravelblackboardasia.com, Malaysia Airlines will reinstate two additional flights between Kuala Lumpur and Brisbane on March 28, 2010. Peter Lawlor, Tourism Minister, Queensland said that the two flights will be reinstated in 2010 following their withdrawal in 2007. The new services will add to the existing five flights per week between Kuala Lumpur and Brisbane via Sydney. Lawlor said the non─stop Boeing 777 services from Kuala Lumpur will operate on Fridays and Sundays, adding 564 weekly seats into Queensland on top of the 705 already provided via Sydney. <br><br>Lawlor said, “In addition to adding capacity to the growing Malaysian market, Kuala Lumpur is a key hub for UK, European and Indian travellers, this is good news for Brisbane and other Queensland tourism destinations. Malaysia Airlines and Virgin Blue have an agreement in place which allows the seamless transfer of Malaysia Airlines passengers onto Virgin Blue flights to other key tourism regions such as Tropical North Queensland and the Whitsundays.”

Jet Airways still in talks with Kingfisher Airlines for code sharing

Posted:

According to a PTI report, Jet Airways is still in talks with Kingfisher Airlines for code sharing and other initiatives to achieve operational synergies and reduce costs. In October 2008, the two carriers had announced strategic alliance to help reduce cost and enhance efficiency through code sharing on domestic and international flights, joint fuel management, common ground─handling services and cross─selling flights through the global ticketing system. <br><br>On Jet Airways plans to raise USD 400 million (about Rs 2,000 crore) through Qualified Institutional Placement (QIP) of shares, Naresh Goyal, Chairman, Jet Airways said, “We have applied to Foreign Investment Promotion Board (FIPB) for approval. We are waiting for the approval.”&nbsp; Jet Airways had taken shareholders' approval for raising the amount through QIP to meet cash flow requirements. <br><br>Goyal recently met Anand Sharma, Minister of Commerce and Industry in New Delhi on the backdrop of the aviation industry's demand that foreign carriers be allowed to pick up stake in domestic airlines.

STB along with TUI and F Bar & Lounge promotes Zoukout 2009 in New Delhi

Posted:

Singapore Tourism Board (STB) in association with TUI and F Bar &amp; Lounge has organised slew of initiatives to promote ZoukOut 2009 in India. ZoukOut 2009 is a music and dance festival which will be organised on December 12, 2009 at Siloso Beach in Singapore. As part of the promotion in India, DJ Jeremy Boon from Singapore was brought down to perform a musical extravaganza at Hotel Ashok in New Delhi recently.&nbsp; The main aim of the event was to attract more youngsters from North India to Singapore for ZoukOut 2009. Prior to New Delhi, the tourism board organised the event in Chennai. This is the first time that STB has taken the initiative to promote ZoukOut 2009 in India though it has been organising the event in Singapore for the last nine years. <br><br>With its alliance with TUI, STB has organised a radio contest on HIT 95FM in Delhi in which it will give four complimentary tickets to the winners. TUI is also bringing out special packages for ZoukOut 2009. The packages include three nights/four days' trip to Singapore with return Economy Class airfare and stay at Siloso Beach Resort, Sentosa.

Emirates, Etihad Airways, Qatar Airways predict Japan as lucrative route in 2010

Posted:

According to a report in etravelblackboardasia.com, three Middle Eastern airlines ─ Emirates, Etihad Airways and Qatar Airways have predicted that Japan will become a lucrative route in 2010. <br><br>Emirates revealed that it will launch five─times a week non─stop services to Tokyo Narita, on March 28, 2010 complementing its Japanese operation to Osaka. The service will be operated with Boeing 777─300ERs. Etihad Airways recently received traffic rights to launch services to Nagoya and Tokyo in Quarter One of 2010, marking the airline's first destinations in Japan. Doha's Qatar Airways has also announced plans to launch daily flights to Tokyo early next year.Emirates has already received regulatory approvals to introduce services to Tokyo, whilst both Etihad and Qatar Airways are still awaiting respective official sanctions. <br><br>Sheikh Ahmed bin Saeed Al Maktoum, Chairman and Chief Executive, Emirates said, “We have always stated our desire to expand our links with Japan ─ a market we are extensively committed to. During the seven years of our operations to and from Osaka,

'Puri Beach Festival' in Orissa witnesses large number of tourists this year

Posted:

According to an ANI report, the 'Puri Beach Festival' in Orissa which started on November 23, 2009 is witnessing large number of tourists including foreigners.&nbsp; The five─day annual Festival is aimed at promoting tourism in Puri, which is sacred place to Hindus for the famous Jagannath Temple dedicated to Hindu God Krishna. <br><br>The coastal province's art, craft, cuisine and dances is being showcased during the Festival. For the first time in 15 years of the Festival, overseas artistes are participating and exhibiting their talent, thus making it the 'International Puri Beach Festival'. The Festival features various cultural programmes with potential artistes from different states of the country performing classical and folk dances to showcase their talent. Around 2,500 artistes from various states are participating. <br><br>Ram Krushna Dasmohapatra, organiser of the Puri Beach Festival said that the Festival gives the much─needed boost to tourism in the state. “Growth of tourism is the main aim behind the Festival. Many people have come here to attend the show and we are expecting a lot more.

Gulf Air unveils new restructuring plan till 2012

Posted:

According to a report in etravelblackboardasia.com, Gulf Air has unveiled its new restructuring plan till 2012, in which it has outlined the need to launch 20 new routes within Middle East, Africa, Asia and Europe regions, while cutting 15 existing routes. <br><br>The airline executives informed employees that better services can be expected to leading financial markets, which signal that Gulf Air will be following the corporate and business travel sector closer than before. Routes cut include Shanghai, Hyderabad and Bangalore and will also signal the local Gulf Air office closures. Gulf Air's fleet will also be reworked, with the airline considering more planes both long and short haul, along with the sale of five old A340s. The airline executives hoped to find profitability at the end of 2012. <br><br>Samer Majali, CEO, Gulf Air said, “The new strategy best reflects the needs and demands of our customers. Consequently, this strategy will create more value for money, re─aligning the network to reflect customer demand, as well as redesigning the product to deliver more customer value on a consistent basis. For the first time,

Agoda partners with Carte Bleue to give members more payment options

Posted:

Agoda.com, one of the leading Asian hotel booking site and a part of Priceline.com, has announced a partnership with Carte Bleue, offering Agoda's French members an additional method of secure online purchase. Operated by Groupement des Cartes Bancaires CB, Carte Bleue or 'Blue Card' is an integrated debit card system that links to the card─holder's chosen bank accounts and allows for quick and secure purchases across multiple platforms. Due to this partnership with Agoda, Carte Bleue holders can now use their card to book discount room rates through the Agoda website.<br><br>According to a report in etravelblackboardasia.com, a 'smart card' that acts like an ATM card, the micro─chipped, PIN─protected Carte Bleue is accepted almost universally across France and handles approximately 220 million international transactions a year. Carte Bleue holders can use their card to pay for everything from metro tickets to household utility bills – it is accepted in most shops and restaurants within France, and Visa─partnered cards can be used to withdraw money from automatic tellers internationally.

Agoda partners with Carte Bleue to give members more payment options

Posted:

Agoda.com, one of the leading Asian hotel booking site and a part of Priceline.com, has announced a partnership with Carte Bleue, offering Agoda's French members an additional method of secure online purchase. Operated by Groupement des Cartes Bancaires CB, Carte Bleue or 'Blue Card' is an integrated debit card system that links to the card─holder's chosen bank accounts and allows for quick and secure purchases across multiple platforms. Due to this partnership with Agoda, Carte Bleue holders can now use their card to book discount room rates through the Agoda website.<br><br>According to a report in etravelblackboardasia.com, a 'smart card' that acts like an ATM card, the micro─chipped, PIN─protected Carte Bleue is accepted almost universally across France and handles approximately 220 million international transactions a year. Carte Bleue holders can use their card to pay for everything from metro tickets to household utility bills – it is accepted in most shops and restaurants within France, and Visa─partnered cards can be used to withdraw money from automatic tellers internationally.

Agoda partners with Carte Bleue to give members more payment options

Posted:

Agoda.com, one of the leading Asian hotel booking site and a part of Priceline.com, has announced a partnership with Carte Bleue, offering Agoda's French members an additional method of secure online purchase. Operated by Groupement des Cartes Bancaires CB, Carte Bleue or 'Blue Card' is an integrated debit card system that links to the card─holder's chosen bank accounts and allows for quick and secure purchases across multiple platforms. Due to this partnership with Agoda, Carte Bleue holders can now use their card to book discount room rates through the Agoda website.<br><br>According to a report in etravelblackboardasia.com, a 'smart card' that acts like an ATM card, the micro─chipped, PIN─protected Carte Bleue is accepted almost universally across France and handles approximately 220 million international transactions a year. Carte Bleue holders can use their card to pay for everything from metro tickets to household utility bills – it is accepted in most shops and restaurants within France, and Visa─partnered cards can be used to withdraw money from automatic tellers internationally.

Malaysia Airlines to reinstate two additional flights between Kuala Lumpur and Brisbane on March 28, 2010

Posted:

According to a report in etravelblackboardasia.com, Malaysia Airlines will reinstate two additional flights between Kuala Lumpur and Brisbane on March 28, 2010. Peter Lawlor, Tourism Minister, Queensland said that the two flights will be reinstated in 2010 following their withdrawal in 2007. The new services will add to the existing five flights per week between Kuala Lumpur and Brisbane via Sydney. Lawlor said the non─stop Boeing 777 services from Kuala Lumpur will operate on Fridays and Sundays, adding 564 weekly seats into Queensland on top of the 705 already provided via Sydney. <br><br>Lawlor said, “In addition to adding capacity to the growing Malaysian market, Kuala Lumpur is a key hub for UK, European and Indian travellers, this is good news for Brisbane and other Queensland tourism destinations. Malaysia Airlines and Virgin Blue have an agreement in place which allows the seamless transfer of Malaysia Airlines passengers onto Virgin Blue flights to other key tourism regions such as Tropical North Queensland and the Whitsundays.”

Jet Airways still in talks with Kingfisher Airlines for code sharing

Posted:

According to a PTI report, Jet Airways is still in talks with Kingfisher Airlines for code sharing and other initiatives to achieve operational synergies and reduce costs. In October 2008, the two carriers had announced strategic alliance to help reduce cost and enhance efficiency through code sharing on domestic and international flights, joint fuel management, common ground─handling services and cross─selling flights through the global ticketing system. <br><br>On Jet Airways plans to raise USD 400 million (about Rs 2,000 crore) through Qualified Institutional Placement (QIP) of shares, Naresh Goyal, Chairman, Jet Airways said, “We have applied to Foreign Investment Promotion Board (FIPB) for approval. We are waiting for the approval.”&nbsp; Jet Airways had taken shareholders' approval for raising the amount through QIP to meet cash flow requirements. <br><br>Goyal recently met Anand Sharma, Minister of Commerce and Industry in New Delhi on the backdrop of the aviation industry's demand that foreign carriers be allowed to pick up stake in domestic airlines.

STB along with TUI and F Bar & Lounge promotes Zoukout 2009 in New Delhi

Posted:

Singapore Tourism Board (STB) in association with TUI and F Bar &amp; Lounge has organised slew of initiatives to promote ZoukOut 2009 in India. ZoukOut 2009 is a music and dance festival which will be organised on December 12, 2009 at Siloso Beach in Singapore. As part of the promotion in India, DJ Jeremy Boon from Singapore was brought down to perform a musical extravaganza at Hotel Ashok in New Delhi recently.&nbsp; The main aim of the event was to attract more youngsters from North India to Singapore for ZoukOut 2009. Prior to New Delhi, the tourism board organised the event in Chennai. This is the first time that STB has taken the initiative to promote ZoukOut 2009 in India though it has been organising the event in Singapore for the last nine years. <br><br>With its alliance with TUI, STB has organised a radio contest on HIT 95FM in Delhi in which it will give four complimentary tickets to the winners. TUI is also bringing out special packages for ZoukOut 2009. The packages include three nights/four days' trip to Singapore with return Economy Class airfare and stay at Siloso Beach Resort, Sentosa.

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