Saturday, April 26, 2008

US biotech company offers to clone man's best friend

WASHINGTON (AFP) - A US biotech company on Wednesday announced it will auction off the right for five dog owners to have their furry best friend cloned, with bidding starting at 100,000 dollars.

"BioArts International ... will sell five dog cloning service slots to the general public via a worldwide online auction," the California-based biotech start-up said in a statement.

Registration for the auctions opens Wednesday. Bidding in that first auction begins on June 18 at 1300 GMT and runs for 24 hours, BioArts says on its bestfriendsagain.com website.

BioArts is the only company in the world licensed to clone dogs, cats and endangered species, the company statement says.

It uses the same cloning method that gave the world Dolly the sheep, the first mammal to be cloned in July 1996 from an adult cell.

Dogs are arguably the most difficult mammal to clone, according to BioArts.

"We may or may not perform any additional commercial dog cloning services after this auction," the company says on its website.


Tuesday, April 22, 2008

Pilots run out of fuel, pray, land near Jesus sign

WELLINGTON, New Zealand - It seemed like an almost literal answer to their prayers. When two New Zealand pilots ran out of fuel in a microlight airplane they offered prayers and were able to make an emergency landing in a field — coming to rest right next to a sign reading, "Jesus is Lord."

Grant Stubbs and Owen Wilson, both from the town of Blenheim on the country's South Island, were flying up the sloping valley of Pelorus Sound when the engine spluttered, coughed and died.

"My friend and I are both Christians so our immediate reaction in a life-threatening situation was to ask for God's help," Stubbs told The Associated Press on Wednesday.

He said he prayed during the ill-fated flight Sunday that the tiny craft would get over the top of a ridge and that they would find a landing site that was not too steep — or in the nearby sea.

Wilson said that the pair would have been in deep trouble if the fuel had run out five minutes earlier.

"If it had to run out, that was the place to be," he said. "There was an instantaneous answer to prayer as we crossed the ridge and there was an airfield — I didn't know it existed till then."

After Wilson glided the powerless craft to a landing on the grassy strip, the pair noticed they were beside a 20-foot-tall sign that read, "Jesus is Lord — The Bible."

"When we saw that, we started laughing," Stubbs said.

Nearby residents provided them with gas to fly the home-built plane back to base.


Monday, April 21, 2008

Microsoft to offer money for search engine use

REDMOND, Washington (Reuters) - Microsoft Corp said on Wednesday it launched a new "cashback" search service that pays users a rebate for buying products they found through the company's Windows Live search engine.

Live Search cashback is the latest attempt by the world's largest software maker to draw users to its online search engine, which is a distant third behind market leader Google Inc and Yahoo Inc.

"This is giving you a reason why you should use a particular search engine," Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates said at the company's Advance 08 advertising conference.

Microsoft sees online search as a critical component to establishing an online advertising powerhouse. By placing text-based ads next to results from its ubiquitous search engine, Google has become the leader in Web advertising.

A product search on Windows Live will call up links to online retailers offering that item. The user who buys that item from the retailer's site will get 2 percent to 30 percent of the purchase price back as a rebate.

Consumers would have to sign up for a free Windows Live cashback account to participate in the program. Rebates would be issued after a 60-day waiting period to make sure there are no returned products.

Microsoft's Gates said it will partner with more than 700 retailers including eBay Inc, Barnes & Noble, Sears and Home Depot Inc.

Redmond, Washington-based Microsoft will offer advertisers a cost-per-acquisition model of payment, meaning that they only pay for ads that lead to purchases. The current cost-per-click model charges advertisers for every click on a sponsored link associated with certain keywords.

"If you knew the user and watched their behavior you could do a lot better for them in terms of taking them directly to the information or presentation they want. Search can be dramatically better," said Gates.

"We think we're entering a period where there'll be quite a bit of change (in search)."

The company's effort to gain more market share in Web search led to its unsolicited offer to buy Yahoo Inc earlier this year. It withdrew a sweetened $47.5 billion offer a few weeks ago, but said on Sunday it had re-approached Yahoo with an alternative deal.

A source familiar with the talks said Microsoft had offered to buy Yahoo's search business and take a minority stake in the rest of the company after selling off its Asian assets. Microsoft executives did not address the Yahoo issue directly at the conference.

Microsoft also launched Live Search Farecast, based on the airfare-predicting technology that the company bought in April through its acquisition of travel site Farecast. Microsoft also said it will consider cash rebates for flights booked through the search.

Shares of Microsoft fell 51 cents, or 1.77 percent, to $28.25 on Nasdaq.

(Reporting by Bruce Rutledge, writing by Daisuke Wakabayashi in Los Angeles, editing by Maureen Bavdek, Richard Chang)


American to charge $15 for 1st checked bag

FORT WORTH, Texas - American Airlines will start charging $15 for the first checked bag, cut domestic flights and lay off workers — probably in the thousands — as the nation's largest carrier grapples with record-high fuel prices.

American plans to cut domestic flight capacity by 11 percent to 12 percent in the fourth quarter, after the peak summer season is over. The carrier was previously planning a 4.6 percent cut.

Shares of American parent AMR Corp. tumbled 24 percent, down $1.98 to $6.22, as oil prices shot past $130 per barrel for the first time, signaling even more trouble for the nation's airlines.

American said rising oil prices have increased its expected annual fuel costs by nearly $3 billion since the start of the year.

In a further sign of the problems facing the industry, Southwest Airlines Co., the only major U.S. carrier to post a profit in the first quarter, won't earn as much for the rest of 2008 as it did a year earlier, its chief executive warned.

American said Wednesday that the fee for the first checked bag starts June 15, and it will raise other fees for services ranging from reservation help to oversized bags. Those fees could cost between $5 to $50.

United Airlines, the nation's No. 2 carrier, is "seriously studying" imposing its own fee on first bags, spokeswoman Robin Urbanski said. Delta Air Lines, the third-largest, has no current plans for a fee but is considering all options, spokeswoman Betsy Talton said. AirTran Airways and Northwest Airlines said they were weighing their response.

Last month, American joined other carriers in charging $25 for a second bag checked by passengers. The major airlines have also raised fares about a dozen times in recent months.

The first-bag fee will be charged to everyone except people who belong to elite levels of its frequent flyer program, those who bought full-fare tickets, and those traveling overseas.

Chairman and Chief Executive Gerard J. Arpey said he expects the fees will raise "several hundred million dollars" for American.

Arpey said American was reducing flights and charging more fees to adapt to "the current reality of slow economic growth and high oil prices." He said the fees would also get customers to pay for services they want.

Arpey didn't put a figure on the layoffs, but when asked whether he expected them to be in the thousands, he replied, "I would think so."

International flights are more profitable, even with costly fuel, so they are largely untouched by Wednesday's announcement. Overall, American will cut global capacity by 7 to 8 percent.

Arpey said he wanted to cut overhead and costs by the same 7 to 8 percent, but he declined to comment whether layoffs would equal a similar percentage of the work force. American has 82,000 employees, while regional affiliate American Eagle has 13,000. Both are owned by AMR Corp.

American expects to retire 45 to 50 planes, most of them gas-guzzling MD-80 aircraft. Those were the planes grounded for faulty wiring last month. American Eagle will also retire 30 to 35 jets, he said.

Even before news of the new fees and layoffs, Lehman Brothers lowered its earnings outlook for nearly all major U.S. carriers, and Soleil Securities cut its rating on AMR stock to "sell." Soleil also downgraded Continental Airlines Inc. to "hold" and United parent UAL Corp. to "sell."

American announced its changes as AMR shareholders attended their annual meeting. During the meeting and outside on the street, hundreds of uniformed pilots and flight attendants protested against stock bonuses for management.

Southwest shareholders met a few miles away, and the mood was festive despite the somber backdrop of industry problems. Shareholders gave a celebratory farewell to co-founder Herb Kelleher, who was presiding over his last meeting as chairman.

CEO Gary C. Kelly, who added the title of chairman on Wednesday, said he expects Southwest to remain profitable, as it has in every quarter since early 1991, but not as profitable as it was in the second, third and fourth quarters of last year.

"I would love for Southwest to grow modestly next year and in 2010, but at this point we're not making any announcements," he added.

Southwest shares fell 57 cents, or 4.4 percent, to $12.43 on Wednesday.