Nortel sells patents for $4.5bn

Apple logo seen on a window outside of the New York flagship Apple storeThe auction drew interest from major tech companies such as Apple, Google, Microsoft and Intel
Related Stories

Bankrupt telecoms firm Nortel has sold its remaining patent portfolio for $4.5bn (£2.8bn) to a consortium of six firms including Apple and Microsoft.

The other consortium members are Sony, Research In Motion, Ericsson, and EMC.

The auction of Nortel’s assets had been hotly contested, with Google and Intel losing out.

The sale included more than 6,000 patents and patent applications including areas such as data networking and semiconductors.

“The size and dollar value for this transaction is unprecedented, as was the significant interest in the portfolio among major companies around the world,” said George Riedel, chief strategy officer at Nortel.

Google had opened the bidding in April at $900m.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Is the British roundabout conquering the US?

Roundabout in Carmel, Indiana

Sit in on a driving lesson in the American roundabout capital, Carmel

A roundabout revolution is slowly sweeping the US. The land of the car, where the stop sign and traffic light have ruled for decades, has started to embrace the free-flowing British circular.

A few moments after entering Carmel, it’s clear why the city has been described as the Milton Keynes of the US.

As the sat-nav loudly and regularly points out, there’s often a roundabout up ahead.

But unlike in the English town famous for its roundabouts, driving into this pretty city on the outskirts of Indianapolis also involves passing several under construction.

Mayor Jim Brainard

“We are saving thousands of gallons of fuel per roundabout per year”

Mayor Jim Brainard

The city is at the forefront of a dizzying expansion, across several American states, of the circular traffic intersection redesigned in 1960s Britain and then exported globally. The first arrived in the US in 1990 and about 3,000 have sprung up since.

The Mayor of Carmel, Jim Brainard, has become America’s evangelist-in-chief on the matter. He has demolished 78 sets of traffic light intersections in his city and replaced them all with those round islands so familiar to drivers in the UK. Four more will be finished in the coming months.

“We have more than any other city in the US. It’s a trend now in the United States. There are more and more roundabouts being built every day because of the expense saved and more importantly the safety.”

He quotes a study by the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety which suggests there is on average a 40% decrease in all accidents and a 90% drop in fatal ones when a traffic intersection is replaced by a roundabout.

The long-term financial saving is about £150,000, he says, due to reduced maintenance costs, and there are also fuel savings.

“Not just the cars that aren’t idling at traffic lights, but starting from a dead stop takes up more fuel also, so we are saving thousands of gallons of fuel per roundabout per year,” says the Republican mayor.

“And aesthetically, we think they’re much nicer. If one is looking out their living room window, would you prefer to see a blinking traffic light all night or a beautifully landscaped roundabout with a fountain and flowers?”

Roundabouts v Rotaries

A British roundabout and the rotary at the Arc de Triomphe

The modern roundabout gives way on entry and priority to cars already on itThey are usually smaller than rotariesAnd vehicles usually travel at lower speedsRotaries may have traffic lights and stop signsMarble Arch in London and the Arc de Triomphe in Paris are found on rotary systems

The mayor’s unlikely passion began while studying in the UK, and his strong Anglophile credentials are in evidence from a glance around his office – a book by Prince Charles entitled Vision of Britain lies on the coffee table.

“I remembered those roundabouts in England and it raised the question in my mind – why don’t we do this? I remembered they worked better than traffic lights so I started to do a bit of research and convinced my traffic engineers to try some.”

There was scepticism at first, he says, but public education is critical and there was a newsletter and video campaign to tell people about the safety and environmental advantages.

Before every roundabout, there are squiggly lines on the road and on roadside signs to warn drivers which lane they need to be in.

The mayor’s ambition is to replace the city’s remaining 43 traffic lights too, apart from one. The traffic lights on the corner of Main Street and Range Line Street will survive – not because a plaque at the spot claims the country’s first automatic traffic signals were installed here in 1923, but the street’s just too narrow to fit a roundabout.

Leading roundabout statesWashingtonColoradoCaliforniaFloridaKansasOregonMarylandIndianaWisconsinArizona

The ornate fountain roundabouts of Carmel are a far cry from the large, one-way rotary systems conceived in the US and in Europe in the early 20th Century but which largely fell out of favour due to congestion problems.

Then forward-thinking British traffic engineers like Frank Blackmore tinkered with the designs and the UK established the modern roundabout by introducing a mandatory “Give way” rule for cars entering.

The US still has the older versions, called rotaries or circles, in cities like Washington DC and they remain quite unpopular, a confusing sprawl of signals, stop signs and concentric lanes.

The simpler British version first came to the US in 1990 in Nevada and it is these which are now proliferating. California has built nearly 200 in the last two or three years.

Countries with British-style roundaboutsFrance (has about 30,000, the most in the world)AustraliaNew ZealandThailandUSBelgiumIraqJordan

The problems Americans have navigating them was satirised in the film European Vacation starring Chevy Chase, who takes his family sightseeing in London but gets stuck until nightfall on a roundabout next to Big Ben.

There is some truth in that caricature. Some drivers in Carmel have been known to wait for the whole roundabout to clear before entering, says driving instructor Mike Ward, but learners soon get used to them.

But police in the city say the number of accidents on them, often caused by confusion or unfamiliarity, is still a lot fewer and less serious than at a traffic light.

The people of Carmel seem happy living in the country’s unofficial roundabout capital. The mayor, who has made roundabouts a central plank of his manifesto, is on the verge of earning his fifth term in office.

Roundabout in CarmelRoundabouts in Carmel have to look good

“I think they’re awesome,” says Blair Clark, who has lived in the area for 26 years. “They keep the traffic flowing, you don’t have to stop, you save gas and there are less accidents.”

Another driver, filling up his gas tank, says: “We’re proud of our city and proud of our roundabouts.”

But beyond Carmel, there has been greater resistance to them. One newspaper columnist in Atlanta says this undesirable European import will lead to higher taxes and accidents.

And Dan Neil, a motoring journalist at the Wall Street Journalist who personally welcomes their arrival, thinks there is something deep in the American psyche which is fundamentally opposed to them.

“This is a culture predicated on freedom and individualism, where spontaneous cooperation is difficult and regimentation is resisted.

A UK view of US roundaboutswell landscapedlower speedsbetter for cyclists and pedestrians

Clive Sawers, British traffic engineer who has consulted US cities on roundabouts

“You see it in the way Americans get in line, or as the Brits say, queue. We don’t do that very well.

“Behind the wheel, we’re less likely to abide by an orderly pattern of merging that, though faster for the group, make require an individual to slow down or, God forbid, yield.”

Americans tend to be orthogonal in their thinking and behaviour, he says.

“We like right angles, yes and no answers, Manichean explanations. Roundabouts require more subtlety than we’re used to.”

Un-American or not, it’s only a matter of time before they are covering every US state, says Gene Russell, a leading civil engineering professor at Kansas State University.

So while the Americans give the British fast food, rock and roll and baby showers, in return they get free-flowing, circular traffic intersections. A fair cultural exchange?

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Quiz of the week’s news

7 days quiz

It’s the Magazine’s 7 days, 7 questions quiz – an opportunity to prove to yourself and others that you are a news oracle. Failing that, you can always claim to have had better things to do during the past week than swot up on current affairs.

Graphic of a number seven

1.) Multiple Choice Question

Police in Newquay, Cornwall, say they will be confiscating certain items this summer in a crackdown on anti-social behaviour. Which of these is not on their list?

Policeman in Newquay Sexually explicit inflatablesClothes with offensive slogansNovelty handcuffsSex toys

2.) Multiple Choice Question

“I hadn’t planned on doing it… it was just, yeah, sort of off the cuff.” Said who?

Duke of Cambridge, Wimbledon queue and Andy Murray A Murray fan who queued for 75 hours for a ticketAndy Murray bowing to the Royal BoxPrince William, joining a Mexican wave

3.) Multiple Choice Question

A handbag belonging to the former British Prime Minister Lady Thatcher has fetched £25,000 ($40,000) at a charity auction in London. Who bought it?

Thatcher's handbag A man said to be a fanThe Ronald Reagan museumA Russian oligarch

4.) Multiple Choice Question

After a mini-heatwave, thunderstorms struck the South East of England on Tuesday. Which of these was not struck by a bolt out of the blue?

Lightning Gatwick Airport control towerSouthern Railway train servicesTelevision coverage of Wimbledon

5.) Multiple Choice Question

Californian firemen created a video-cutie when they filmed the rescue of a four-week-old kitten from a metal pipe. But what did they name the animal?

Rescued kitten PiperSqueezyMetallica

6.) Multiple Choice Question

And sticking to the theme of animal names, Blue Peter has made its final broadcast from London ahead of its move to Salford. Which of the show’s pets featured in a pop song?

Jason the SiameseJason the Siamese catGeorge the tortoiseGeorge the tortoiseShep the Border CollieShep the Border Collie

7.) Multiple Choice Question

Which age group did figures reveal this week is driving most of Facebook’s growth in the UK?

Computer keyboard Under 18s30 to 40-year-oldsOver-50s

Answers

It’s novelty handcuffs. The crackdown is because residents are worried that the behaviour of drunken revellers in Newquay is forcing families away from the town centre. It was Andy Murray. The player said he had only been told by a reporter that the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge were attending when he came off the practice courts. But he wasn’t entirely convinced. It’s the man believed to be a fan. The black glossy leather bag was owned by Lady Thatcher for more than 30 years and was on her arm during Cold War-era negotiations with the former American president, Ronald Reagan, and the then leader of the Soviet Union, Mikhail Gorbachev. Air passengers at the West Sussex airport faced delays, as did passengers on several rail lines, including the Southern London to Brighton route. The roof over Wimbledon’s centre court did spring a leak but there was no lightning. Piper was freed with the help of a mechanical cutter and has been adopted by a local television station employee. Although the firefighters have visiting rights. John Noakes’ catchphrase “get down Shep” was incorporated into a pop song of the same name by The Barron Knights in 1978, reaching number 44 in the charts. It’s the over-50s. According to research by Nielsen, in the last year the number of over-50s using the site has increased by 84%.

Your Score

0 – 3 : Ignore

4 – 6 : Like

7 – 7 : Friend

For past quizzes including our weekly news quiz, 7 days 7 questions, expand the grey drop-down below – also available on the Magazine page (and scroll down).

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

How defectors come in from the cold

It is 60 years since British spies Burgess and Maclean sensationally fled to the Soviet Union, and now top Libyan football figures have defected to the rebels. But how do defectors adjust to their new lives?

You have spent years in the half-light, betraying those closest to you. And now your secret is out.

Spirited away to the foreign power you covertly served all along, you know you can never return to the homeland that now reviles you as a traitor.

With your loyalties out in the open, you must make a life for yourself in your adopted nation. How?

In June 1951, the press was filled with speculation about the whereabouts of two missing British diplomats, Guy Burgess and Donald Maclean, who had disappeared the previous month.

The pair, it would later transpire, were in the Soviet Union, having fled from their imminent exposure as double-agents passing state secrets to Moscow.

These two urbane, upper-middle class Englishmen – part of the notorious Cambridge Five spy ring – would now have to adjust to life in a regime they had idealised as a workers’ paradise.

It was not a task for which both men were equally suited.

Cambridge FiveA Communist spy ring recruited at Cambridge University in the 1930sThey secured sensitive government posts from which they passed valuable intelligence to the Soviet UnionGuy Burgess and Donald Maclean were exposed in 1951 while working at the Foreign OfficeKim Philby, who had worked in senior positions both within the Foreign Office and the intelligence services, was exposed five years laterIn 1964 a former member of the intelligence services, Anthony Blunt, was named as a fourth member of the ring. The identity of a fifth member, John Cairncross, a former MI6 officer, was not confirmed until 1990BBC History: The Cambridge Spies

Maclean assimilated enthusiastically into Communist Moscow, establishing himself as a European security expert whom his colleagues affectionately nicknamed Donald Donaldovitch.

Burgess, however, proved less adaptable. As depicted in Alan Bennett’s television play An Englishman Abroad, he slumped into lonely alcoholism, scarcely bothering to learn Russian and continuing to order his suits from Saville Row. He drank himself to death aged 52.

Their contrasting experiences raise the question of how a defector should go about constructing a new life.

Despite the end of the cold war, defectors are, after all, back in the news.

After Col Gaddafi’s foreign minister and former spy chief Moussa Koussa defected to the UK, Foreign Secretary William Hague urged other Libyan officials to follow suit, promising they would be “treated with respect” in Britain.

In the wake of this call, a group of 17 leading Libyan football figures, nation’s goalkeeper, and three other national team members, announced their defection to the rebels within Libya.

One adopted Briton in a position to offer defectors guidance is former KGB Colonel Oleg Gordievsky, who worked for MI6 as a double agent for 11 years until he came under suspicion from Soviet authorities in 1985.

Gordievsky had been based at the USSR’s embassy in London when he was ordered back to Moscow on a pretext and interrogated. But, in an astonishing escape which rivals any episode in espionage fiction, he managed to reach the border with Finland and was smuggled across by British officials.

Oleg Gordievsky

“I had no problems because I was friends with British people… I was used to British culture”

Oleg Gordievsky Double agent

Feted for his daring as well as the invaluable information he provided, Gordievsky settled happily into life in the Surrey commuter belt. He wrote a series of books and articles and, he says, felt gratified to be welcomed into London’s intelligence and literary community.

Indeed, such was his familiarity with UK customs – he had been posted to London in 1982 – and the length of his service for MI6 prior to, he dislikes the label “defector”. Gordievsky insists he had been British all along.

But he admits that his first wife, Leyla, did not share his motivation to embrace his adopted country. Their marriage collapsed after she managed to join him in the UK.

“I had no problems because I was friends with British people for 11 years,” he says. “I was used to British culture and the British way of life.

“But my wife, who joined me later – she had problems and had to go back to Russia because she couldn’t find balance in her life in Britain.

“I was very happy to be in Britain, British culture.”

Indeed, both ideological commitment and a sense that one continues to be useful to one’s adopted country appear to be crucial to sustaining defectors in exile.

The journalist and historian Phillip Knightley met Kim Philby, another of the Cambridge spies, shortly before his death in Moscow in 1988.

The Soviet authorities had never entirely trusted Philby and denied him the senior KGB post he had been expecting.

Bridge of spies

Glienicke bridge

During the cold war, the Glienicke bridge linked West Berlin with Potsdam in the east, allowing both sides to exchange prisonersIn 1962, Soviet spy Rudolf Abel was swapped for US pilot Francis Gary Powers at the bridgeTwo years later, Konon Molody, who masterminded the Portland spy ring in south-west England, was exchanged for MI6 agent Greville WynneIn 1985, 23 American agents were traded at the bridge for four Warsaw Pact officers. Further exchanges were made the following year

As a result, Knightley recalls him as a broken, pathetic figure, pining nostalgically for “Coleman’s mustard, the Times, the crossword and English cricket”.

But what Knightley believes kept Philby, who did not live to see the collapse of the Berlin Wall, going was his unswerving Marxist-Leninist views and his conviction that he had done the right thing.

“All of the defectors I have ever met complained about the way they were treated – they didn’t feel they had enough recognition, they didn’t feel they were properly compensated,” Knightley says.

“If you are told you have got to live in a place for the rest of your life, you are bound to be discomfited.

“You are cut off from your previous life completely. You have the stigma of being a traitor for the rest of your life.”

Not all highly-prized defectors, of course, have been spies. When the ballet dancer Rudolf Nureyev fled the USSR for France in 1961, according to some sources, Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev personally signed an order to have him killed.

And on the other side, host governments have an incentive to keep their assets in good spirits – whether or not they are defectors.

According to Prof Keith Jeffery, the official historian of MI6, intelligence agencies are haunted by the memory of Peter Wright. The former MI5 officer revealed the secrets of the service in his book Spycatcher after becoming disgruntled with his pension arrangements.

As a consequence, Prof Jeffery argues, agencies are keen to make sure that anyone under their care still feels important.

“There’s a marketing dimension to it,” he says. “They do put a lot of effort into keeping (defectors) happy because they hope this would encourage others to do the same.

“It’s very important to keep them happy. While they’re happy they’ll tell you stuff.”

It seems defectors, like the rest of us, just need to feel wanted.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Quebec City welcomes royal couple

The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge greet the crew of HMCS MontrealThe couple sailed from Montreal to Quebec City
Related Stories

The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge are on board a Canadian naval ship, travelling from Montreal to Quebec City, on the latest leg of their first overseas tour as a married couple.

Overnight they sailed up the St Lawrence river to the city on the frigate HMCS Montreal.

Their agenda for Sunday involves morning prayers with the crew on the helicopter deck of frigate.

They will then visit a youth project and attend a military ceremony.

The ceremony honours the Royal 22nd Regiment of Canada in the city, as well as a Freedom of the City Ceremony, at Quebec City Hall.

They will also attend a community event, including barbecues and stalls, before a short flight to Prince Edward Island.

Prince Edward Island is the most easterly point of the tour, and is known as the home of Anne of Green Gables – a fictional character said to be a favourite of the duchess.

2011 itinerary highlights

The Duchess and Duke of Cambridge

30 June: Arrival in Ottawa1 July: Canada Day celebrations in Ottawa2 July: Visit to a Montreal cookery school3 July: Freedom of the city ceremony in Quebec City4 July: William takes part in Sea King helicopter training session on Prince Edward Island5 July: Visit to Yellowknife, Northwest Territories7 July: Arrival in Calgary8 July: Attend Calgary Stampede. Leave for USHighlights of the royal tour

The official welcome to Prince Edward Island is on Monday, and the Canadian government expects their visit may be a focal point for many well-wishers from across the Maritimes provinces, Clarence House said earlier.

On Monday, still on Prince Edward Island, Prince William will take part in a Sea King helicopter training session.

A dragon boat race is scheduled for later, with the husband and wife steering opposing teams.

Their first overseas tour has involved a tree-planting ceremony in the grounds of Government House, in Ottawa; a Montreal children’s hospital visit; and a citizenship ceremony for 25 new Canadians who had come from 12 different countries.

They were also guests of honour for celebrations for Canada Day, when about 100,000 people joined events on Parliament Hill as part of a national holiday to mark the country’s 144th birthday.

In Montreal there was a protest outside the hospital the couple visited, with about 60 protesters shouting “down with the monarchy” and “We will never bend, Willy go home!”

They also chanted “French Quebec!” and “Parasite go home!”

The couple are visiting seven Canadian cities in eight days in their first official overseas tour.

Send your pictures and videos to [email protected] or text them to 61124 (UK) or +44 7725 100 100 (International). If you have a large file you can upload here.

Read the terms and conditions

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

UK aid for drought-hit Ethiopia

A market in EthiopiaDrought-hit Ethiopia is about to suffer its driest three months of the year
Related Stories

The UK has pledged £38m ($61m) in food aid to drought-hit Ethiopia – enough to feed 1.3m people for three months.

International Development Secretary Andrew Mitchell said the World Food Programme cash would also treat 329,000 malnourished children and mothers.

The African country faces its worst drought for a decade with an estimated 3.2m people in need of emergency aid.

The UN has called for international aid across the Horn of Africa where 10 million people are affected.

Some areas have suffered the worst drought in 60 years and the UN now classifies large areas of Somalia, Ethiopia, Djibouti and Kenya as in a crisis or an emergency.

Mr Mitchell warned that other countries across the world must give money if a full-scale disaster was to be avoided.

“Through no fault of its own, the Horn of Africa is experiencing a severe drought caused by the failed rains,” he said.

Market in Addis Ababa

“Britain is acting quickly and decisively in Ethiopia to stop this crisis becoming a catastrophe. We will provide vital food to help 1.3 million people through the next three months.

“This situation needs an international response and Britain is calling on the international community to provide fast, effective relief.”

Oxfam welcomed the announcement and said the money could not come soon enough.

Humanitarian director Jane Cocking said: “There are already critical and life-threatening food shortages in Ethiopia and across the Horn of Africa region.

Map of drought in the Horn of Africa

“Two successive poor rains have left millions of people struggling to get food as hundreds of thousands of livestock have died and crops have failed.

“Other donors now need to follow suit and increase funding before it is too late.”

UN humanitarian affairs chief, Baroness Amos, urged the world’s nations to channel aid to the Horn of Africa where she said agencies were seeing more and more malnourished children and adults.

“In the drought-affected areas we now have 10 million people who are affected,” she told BBC Radio 4’s The World This Weekend programme.

“In Somalia the numbers have now gone up to 2.5 million people. So we are talking about an extremely serious situation.

“I think as a world community we have recognised that when people are in this kind of desperate emergency situation that you have to be neutral and you have to be impartial in the way that you help people.”

Mr Mitchell urged the Ethiopian government to provide the latest estimates of those affected – particularly in the south – so that aid agencies could target their relief.

“For the response to be effective, we need the most up-to-date, accurate information on the level of need in Ethiopia,” he said.

“The country has made great strides in many areas over the past 30 years and this emergency relief will help to ensure that these gains are not eroded.”

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Migrants’ family rights reviewed

Passengers arriving at a UK border checkThe government says the review is part of managing migration
Related Stories

The government is to review some of its immigration policy relating to the European Convention on Human Rights clause about family life.

The Home Office will look at how it works with Article 8 of the ECHR, which guarantees the right to a family life.

The review comes after a Burundi asylum seeker won permission to bring her children to the UK – a move not usually allowed.

The Home Office said the review was part of managing migration.

In the case of the Burundi woman, reported in the Sunday Telegraph, she was granted “indefinite leave to remain” in the UK after the Home Office lost her paperwork.

Her immigration status would not normally allow her to bring dependents, but she won that right under Article 8.

“This is part of a package of reforms we are putting in place to manage migration”

Home Office

The newspaper said a second similar case was currently being considered by a judge.

A Home Office spokesman said: “We don’t think these cases set any precedent. Article 8 does not give an absolute right to remain here.

“We will continue to remove those who break the rules and try to play the system.

“We are going to consult on the family route shortly and look at what requirements we should place on foreign nationals who wish to establish a family life in the UK.

“This is part of a package of reforms we are putting in place to manage migration.”

Critics have called Article 8 a legal loophole, used by some people with children abroad to fight deportation.

It is possible further restrictions could be placed on immigrants who wish to stay or a tighter definition of the right to a family life could be proposed, says BBC political correspondent Robin Brant.

The government announced in February that a commission, jointly chaired by Justice Secretary Ken Clarke and Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg, would look at whether a UK Bill of Rights could overrule the European Convention of Human Rights.

The Conservatives had wanted to replace the Human Rights Act 1998 with a UK Bill of Rights however that was opposed by their Lib Dem coalition partners.

The Conservatives have been strongly critical of the Human Rights Act – legislation which introduced into British law the principles of the 1950 European Convention on Human Rights – of which Britain was one of the authors.

It was aimed at allowing people to claim the rights enshrined in the Convention without having to go to the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg. These include the right to life, the right to family, freedom from torture and the right to a fair trial.

But critics say the act makes it harder for British courts to extradite criminals and has also led the recent controversies over prisoners being able to vote and sex offenders having the right to appeal to get their name removed from the sex offenders register.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Beyonce conquers UK album chart

Beyonce performs at GlastonburyBeyonce headlined Glastonbury’s main stage last Sunday night
Related Stories

US star Beyonce has claimed pole position in the UK album chart with her new record 4.

The singer, who displaced Lady Gaga from number one, saw previous albums return to the chart in the wake of her performance at Glastonbury last Sunday.

I Am Sasha Fierce, Dangerously In Love and No 1s by Destiny’s Child all marched back into the Top 50.

Beyonce’s single Best Thing I Never Had entered at three, although Jason Derulo held onto the top spot.

Colplay, who took to Glastonbury’s main stage on Saturday night, saw their 2002 single In My Place creep back into the top 40.

And most recent single Every Tear Drop Is A Waterfall, which clambered back to number 10 from last week’s 42.

Their previous album releases also surged into the top 50 on the back of their festival performance, according to the Official Charts Company.

Radio 1 Official Chart show logo

See the UK Top 40 singles chart See the UK Top 40 albums chart BBC Radio 1’s Official Chart Show

Other acts who benefitted from the “Glastonbury effect” in the week following the festival were Plan B, Noah and the Whale and Mumford and Sons.

U2, who played there for the first time in their career, saw their singles collection U218 rise up the ranks to number 61.

Beyonce has scored the second UK chart-topping album of her career with 4. Her solo debut, Dangerously In Love, hit the pinnacle in 2003.

She also had a 2001 number one album with Destiny’s Child and performed a number of their hit singles during her Glastonbury set.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.