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微软第三财季净利润同比增18.5% CFO将离职 微软第三财季净利润同比增18.5% CFO将离职 微软CFO克莱因将在当前财年结束时(今年6月)离职   新浪科技 香港时间4月19日凌晨消息,微软今天发布了2013财年第三财季财报。报告显示,微软第三财季营收为204.89亿美元,比去年同期的174.07亿美元增长18%;净利润为60.55亿美元,比去年同期的51.08亿美元增长18.5%。微软第三财季业绩超出华尔街分析师预期,推动其盘后股价上涨2%。   在截至3月31日的这一财季,微软的净利润为60.55亿美元,每股收益72美分,这一业绩好於去年同期。2012财年第三财季,微软的净利润为51.08亿美元,每股收益60美分。微软第三财季运营利润为76.12亿美元,比去年同期的63.74亿美元增长19%。微软第三财季营收为204.89亿美元,比去年同期的174.07亿美元增长18%。汤森路透调查显示,分析师此前平均预期微软第三财季每股收益为68美分,营收为205亿美元。不计入一次性项目,微软第三财季调整后每股收益为65美分,调整后营收为188.3亿美元。   2013财年第三财季,微软Windows部门营收为57.03亿美元,去年同期为46.33亿美元;运营利润为34.59亿美元,去年同期为29.79亿美元。微软服务器和工具部门营收为50.39亿美元,去年同期为45.31亿美元;运营利润为19.79亿美元,去年同期为16.86亿美元。微软在线服务业务部门营收为8.32亿美元,去年同期为7.07亿美元;运营亏损为2.62亿美元,去年同期运营亏损为4.80亿美元。   微软商务部门第三财季营收为63.19亿美元,去年同期为58.42亿美元;运营利润为41.04亿美元,去年同期为37.97亿美元。微软娱乐和设备部门第三财季营收为25.31亿美元,去年同期为16.18亿美元;运营利润为3.42亿美元,去年同期运营亏损为2.28亿美元。微软 其他部门第三财季营收为6500万美元,去年同期为7600万美元;微软第三财季企业级活动产生了20.10亿美元运营亏损,去年同期运营亏损为13.80亿美元。   微软CFO皮特‧克莱因(Peter Klein)表示:“虽然面临著进化中的设备市场,但公司多样化的业务仍旧继续交付了表现稳固的财务业绩。展望未来,我们将继续对长期增长机会进行投资,向前推进我们的设备和服务战略,为股东交付更多价值。”   微软预计,2013财年运营支出为302亿美元到305亿美元,低於此前预期。微软还初步预计,2014财年运营支出将比2013财年调整后的运营支出预期区间中值增长4%到6%,至316亿美元到322亿美元。   微软同时宣布,公司CFO克莱因将在当前财年结束时(今年6月)离职。克莱因已在微软供职11年,担任CFO岗位至今也有近4年。微软将在未来几周内宣布新的CFO人选,候选人将来自於该公司旗下的财务领导团队。微软CEO史蒂夫‧鲍尔默(Steve Ballmer)表示:“我一直都对能与身为CFO的克莱因进行合作而感到高兴。他是我们领导团队中的关键成员,也是我的战略顾问。”   克莱因则表示:“无论是作为CFO,还是我在微软工作的所有时间里,我都获得了非常好的工作经验。我们拥有一个非常强大的财务组织。我盼望著与我的继任者在本财年末以前的过渡期中展开合作。”   当日,微软股价在纳斯达克常规交易中下跌0.04美元,报收於28.79美元,跌幅为0.12%。在随后截至美国东部时间16:58(香港时间19日4:58)的盘后交易中,微软股价上涨0.61美元,至29.40美元,涨幅为2.12%。过去52周,微软的最高价为32.89美元,最低价为26.26美元。(唐风)
BBC被发现在北韩把学生当成其人肉盾牌 BBC used pupils as shields in N Korea Mon Apr 15, 2013 9:16AM GMT 9 12   28   A leading British university says the BBC has abused its students employing them as “human shields” in North Korea to covertly make a documentary about the country. The London School of Economics said the university and students were only told that three journalists will accompany them in the trip, but nothing was mentioned of the undercover film recorded for the Panorama program to be aired on BBC 1 tonight. LSE’s director Craig Calhoun said the BBC had resorted to “lies and deception from the outset” risking the students while the corporation is now “unwilling to take responsibility”. “The school was not informed at all in any way about this. The BBC chose to present this as though the reporters were LSE students or staff,” he said. “The BBC chose also to make this appear as if it was an LSE trip, when it was not. I would like the BBC to pull the programme so that it is not showing footage of our students and creating dangers,” he added. Meanwhile, general secretary of LSE’s student union said the BBC has used the students as “human shields” as they were told about the corporation’s intention only when they were flying to North Korea. The BBC has so far denied the accusations that students were not told they were going to be filmed and has refused calls to prevent the program from airing. BBC head of programs Ceri Thomas has even claimed that the students were paid for taking the risk.
5种黑客能杀你的方法 1. Hacking Your Pacemaker wikimedia commons The hack Pacemaker-hacking feels like a Hollywood plot. Assassinate someone by taking over the medical device that controls his heart? Surely that isn't possible in the real world. Actually, it's totally possible. Last year, a researcher demonstrated a pacemaker hack in Australia, with a virus that could conceivably spread from one person to every electronically assisted heart within 30 feet. The threat level Probably limited to assassination targets. Think: high-profile people, who have pacemakers. It would be an elaborate attack, though, since you need more than just an internet connection to pull it off. Odds are that anyone interested in doing this could get a bomb or a pistol to the target cheaper and faster. This is Hollywood not because it's impossible, but because it's not very efficient. 2. Crashing A Plane Taro Taylor, via wikimedia commons The hack The prospect of a terrorist taking over an airplane is never a pleasant one, and given that today a plane can almost pilot itself, all that a potential hijacker has to do is get into the airplane's computers--he doesn't even need to be on the actual airplane. This is well within the realm of possibility; there's going to be a demonstration on how to remotely hack an airplane at an upcoming security conference. This is apparently a particular worry for higher-end corporate jets, which may be more vulnerable than traditional commercial jets because they offer easier external access to internal computer systems--great for fast communication, but also for hackers. Surely air traffic control is safe? Afraid not. Past security conferences have demonstrated that the future air traffic control console can be overwhelmed by false signals. The threat level The technological vulnerabilities are certainly worrisome, but airplanes really haven't been a popular terrorism target since 2001. Just because something is a passe target doesn't mean we should forget about it. But it makes more sense to understand what kinds of attacks terrorists like to do, and protect against those, rather than ones they could conceivably do but haven't done. These days, the popular attacks mostly involve bombs on the ground. 3 . Breaking The Electrical Grid Jen, via wikimedia commons The hack Power outages kill more people than you'd think. Air-conditioning shuts off; stores, pharmacies, and hospitals close; cell phone service gets disrupted--all of which can be deadly, especially for vulnerable populations. According to a study on the human cost of the 2003 power outage in New York, 90 deaths can be directly linked to the outage (that's 15 times more than New York's official total of 6). That blackout was caused by a small bug in a regional power company, but the consequences quickly spread and left up to 55 million people without power for three days. What about a deliberate attack? Late last summer, hackers broke past a Canadian power company's security and gained access to the electrical controls. The hackers didn't wreak any havoc, but they could have. Internet-connected smart grids are especially vulnerable, because they are increasingly hooked up to the regular internet, giving outsiders easy access. The threat level The best a cyberattack could hope for is to hit a smaller power provider, mess with its controls, and have that spiral up into a much larger outage. But a small attack that mimics, say a power line failure, is what power companies spend time and money trying to prevent. And nowadays--especially since the 2003 outage--power companies have controls in place to avoid such mishaps. Chances are a small attack wouldn't provoke a bigger outage. Power outages are also an incredibly imprecise way to attack a target, and it's hard for a terrorist group to claim credit for something that could easily have been a simple sensor error. While it's possible to gain access to the controls of a small part of the grid, it'd be extremely difficult, time-consuming, and expensive for hackers to mount a larger attack. Writing for Motherboard, Brian Merchant says "In this case, it would be a terrorist cell hellbent on using a massive amount of time and resources to … cause a temporary blackout??" Unlikely.
澳洲前总理说,为迎合中国旅客需要,我们一定要铺设全国宽频网络 Chinese tourists will need NBN: Rudd Summary: Former Prime Minister Kevin Rudd has said that Labor's national broadband network (NBN) will be essential to satisfy Chinese tourists who already pump $4.2 billion annually into the Australian economy. By AAP | April 16, 2013 -- 07:00 GMT (15:00 SGT) 0 Comments 0 Votes inShare more + Kevin Rudd said today that China's emerging middle class wants to be able to check on their home and business while travelling in Australia. "The expectation of high-speed broadband being available for everything is absolutely fundamental," Rudd told a forum of tourism businesses in Hobart. "They won't feel comfortable being isolated from news back home, news concerning their business or the intrinsics of their business operation." Rudd took a swipe at the Coalition broadband policy released last week, which doesn't provide a fibre optic connection to most premises. "There's no ifs, no buts, no Malcolm Turnbulls about what sort of broadband you want," he said. "Our high-income tourists from China and elsewhere will simply have this as an elementary expectation, and frankly, it's one of the reasons why we're doing it." The Mandarin-speaking former foreign minister was speaking about Tasmania's ability to attract a share of Chinese tourism's $102 billion annual spend worldwide. He said China's 573,000 tourists last year spent $6,422 per visit to Australia, more than visitors from any other country, and that the market would be worth $7.4 billion by 2020. Rudd said that Tasmania's "clean, green, and blue" reputation appealed to tourists from the world's largest country. But he warned that Australia needed more Chinese-language speakers and a greater understanding of Chinese culture. "If you think mum's home-baked meat pie is the way through, think again," he said.
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