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Feb24No Comments
LexWrite, legal software Ontario, Feb 23, 2010 (MARKETWIRE via COMTEX) — VIQ Solutions Inc. (”VIQ Solutions” or the “Corporation”) (TSX VENTURE: VQS) has, as part of its annual compensation review, granted 1,029,000 stock options to officers and directors of VIQ Solutions, all of which options are exercisable at $0.31 per share, being the closing price of the Corporation’s shares on the TSX Venture Exchange on February 18, 2010. The options have a term of five years and vest one-third on the date of granting, with an additional one-third vesting on each of the next two anniversaries of the date of granting. The options are subject to a four month hold period, as per the policies of the TSX Venture Exchange.
About VIQ Solutions Inc.
VIQ Law software Ontario Solutions is recognized as a global provider in the digital audio industry with innovative product and service-based solutions for voice-driven systems in the legal, medical, business, and government industries. VIQ Solutions provides an integrated range of digital record workflow solutions, including digital audio and video capture, workflow management software, transcription services, interactive electronic scheduling, and case management integration, all from one central, secure database.
Neither TSX Venture Exchange nor its Regulation Services Provider (as that term is defined in the policies of the TSX Venture Exchange) accepts responsibility for the adequacy or accuracy of this release.
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Dec30No Comments
Chris Ashworth had studied computer science but never written an entire piece of software when a North Carolina theater womens clothing comfortable production company asked for his help. What he came up with would be a huge hit with creative professionals who design elaborate stage productions across the world.
The theater company needed organic cotton night shirts womens costumes that could help manage sound effects for a play while running on an Apple computer. Ashworth was a computer science graduate student in North Carolina, and he and a friend built one for them in a little over a month.
“It was completely starting from scratch,” Ashworth said. “It was a crazy project. … It was a simple problem being solved by a rudimentary piece of software.”
That was five years ago this month. Today, Ashworth’s modest piece of software has grown into what he now calls QLab, a full-featured program with a foothold in the niche industry of sound and video design for live comfortable cotton bras for a cups productions. It’s being used at professional theaters from Baltimore to London and in major Broadway productions that have won Tony awards for sound design.
Shows at the Metropolitan Opera and the Kennedy Center also have featured music and sound crafted by designers using QLab. Other clients include trade shows and corporations that use the software to power their events.
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Dec25No Comments
FRANKFURT (Dow Jones)–The software bug linked to problems processing reusable shopping bags the date 2010 has affected holders of about 30 million German cash cards and credit cards since New Year’s Day, according to data available Tuesday from the country’s three largest banking associations.
The DSGV association of public-sector savings banks said 20 million, or almost half the 45 million cash cards issued by savings banks and state-controlled Landesbanken, were affected by the bug. Also, 3.5 million credit cards, or 44% of the 8 million issued by the sector were hit. The DSGV called the bug a “delayed Y2K problem.”
In the cooperative bank sector, 4 million cash cards, or 15% of the cash cards issued by the sector’s Volksbanken and Raiffeisenbanken were hit, while the sector’s 3 million reusable grocery bags weren’t affected, a spokeswoman for the sector’s BVR banking association said.
Among commercial banks, which include lenders like Deutsche Postbank AG (DPB.XE), Commerzbank AG (CBK.XE) and Deutsche Bank AG (DB), 2.5 million cash cards and credit cards issued by the sector’s banks were hit by the bug, the BdB association that represents German commercial banks said. The bulk of cards experiencing problems were cash cards, while the number of jute bags affected amounts to 100,000 to 150,000, a BdB spokesman said.
Customers of Deutsche Bank weren’t affected by the problems, while some customers of Deutsche Postbank and Commerzbank could encounter problems, bank spokespeople said.
As a result of the bug, customers of many German banks haven’t been able to use their cash cards and credit cards at automated teller machines and point-of-sale terminals since the beginning of the year. An umbrella association of the German bank industry, the ZKA, said Monday that the problems with grocery bags, which affected customers in Germany and abroad, were linked to a special chip in the cards that wasn’t able to properly process the date 2010.
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Dec18No Comments
China pirated the code to a US software maker’s internet content filtering software, incorporating it into the censorware it uses to block Chinese citizens’ access to steel canopies sites the government deemed politically undesirable, a lawsuit has said.
Santa Barbara, California-based Cybersitter LLC made the allegations in a lawsuit brought against China and seven major computer makers, including Sony, Lenovo and Toshiba. The California modular company is seeking $2.2 billion (£1.37745 billion) in damages.
“This lawsuit aims to strike a blow against the all-too-common practices of foreign software manufacturers and distributors who believe that they can violate the intellectual property rights of small American companies with impunity without being brought to justice in US courts,” Cybersitter attorney Greg Fayer said.
Cybersitter’s software was designed to help parents filter content seen by children. The metal canopies manufacturers distributed the Chinese program - called Green Dam Youth Escort - even after learning of allegations the content filters were illegally copied, Cybersitter said.
The Chinese government issued a mandate requiring all computer manufacturers to bundle the Green Damn software with any computer sold in China after July 1, 2009.
While the mandate subsequently was reversed, the defendants allegedly continued to distribute millions of copies of Green Dam to further the Chinese government’s efforts to control canopy for gas station access, Cybersitter said.
The lawsuit alleges misappropriation of trade secrets, unfair competition, copyright infringement and conspiracy.
