Mr Balsillie said that the biggest change to the company was entering the tablet market Blancer.com Tutorials and projects
Freelance Projects, Design and Programming Tutorials
world news,online new,us news,uk news
Mr Balsillie said that the biggest change to the company was entering the tablet market Research In Motion’s boss has dismissed suggestions that its Blackberry devices are no longer a major player in the smartphone race.
Jim Balsillie told BBC News that the firm should not be written off.
It follows comments by Nokia’s Stephen Elop, who said that the smartphone ecosystem was now a three horse race between Windows, Android and Apple.
“I don’t know how you can say that we are not in the race,” said Mr Balsillie at Mobile World Congress in Barcelona.
He said that Blackberry had experienced 70% growth last year and was the number one phone in the UK.
Figures from research firm Gfk show that the phone maker had 28.2% of the UK smartphone market in 2010.
However, the firm trails Google, Nokia and Apple in terms of market share, according to figures from Canalys.
“Are people writing us off? We have had huge growth in the last year. I wouldn’t write us off,” he said.
He was also keen to shake off RIM’s business focussed image.
“80% of our subscribers are consumers.”
Blackberry is forging a new link with younger, teenage consumers who are flocking to the handset because of Blackberry messaging.
Analysts have characterised 2011 as a year of transition for Blackberry as it moves away from its traditional business roots.
But for Mr Balsillie the greatest change is the move into larger devices.
“The biggest transition for us is that we are coming out with tablets,” he said.
The firm announced its Playbook tablet device in September 2010.
In Barcelona, the firm also said that would be launching a 4G Playbook in the second half of the year. None of its tablets have yet hit shop shelves, but are expected in the coming weeks.
It has been a difficult year for RIM in countries such as Saudi Arabia and India, where governments want to gain greater access to the tight security system used for Blackberry’s business users.
Mr Balsillie said the company’s policy had not changed, despite significant growth amongst Indian consumers.
“We want to abide by local laws while also supporting our systems,” he said.
RIM has always maintained that it cannot interfere with the encryption system set up to protect its business customers’ messages.
It remained in talks with the government in India, said a spokesman.
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
The military is trying to quell strikes and protests still being held around the country Egypt’s ruling military council has announced that work on reforming the country’s constitution is to be completed in 10 days.
A committee led by a retired judge has been tasked with proposing legal changes, said the council.
It earlier suspended the current constitution, which was amended during ousted President Hosni Mubarak’s tenure to strengthen his grip on power.
Mr Mubarak stepped down last week after more than two weeks of protests.
The higher military council – which assumed power after Mr Mubarak stepped down – said on Tuesday that the amended constitution would be put to a popular referendum.
The eight-member committee is mostly made up of experts in constitutional law but it includes a senior figure from the opposition group, the Muslim Brotherhood.
It is headed by Tariq el-Bishri, considered one of Egypt’s top legal minds, and on Tuesday held its opening meeting with Defence Minister Mohamed Hussein Tantawi.
The committee is instructed to “amend all articles as it sees fit to guarantee democracy and the integrity of presidential and parliamentary elections”.
The BBC’s Jon Leyne in Cairo says it looks as if the military council is fulfilling its pledge to hand the country back to civilian rule as quickly as possible.
Tahrir Square, the focus of protests in Cairo, has largely returned to normal The speed of the move will reassure the opposition, he says, although there might be some nervousness about whether it is an attempt to push through changes in too much of a rush.
The military council has also repeated its calls for an end to strikes that spread across the country during Sunday and Monday.
The stoppages are dealing a further blow to Egypt’s ailing economy, damaged by three weeks of unrest.
“The supreme council is aware of the economic and social circumstances society is undergoing, but these issues cannot be resolved before the strikes and sit-ins end,” the state news agency Mena quoted the military as saying.
“The result of that will be disastrous,” it added.
Strikes eased on Tuesday, mainly because offices and businesses were closed for an Islamic holiday.
But correspondents said some smaller protests continued in provinces outside Cairo, mainly called by workers demanding higher pay.
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Lenders are asking for significant deposits for all types of homes Housing and lending bodies are facing government calls to lend to first-time buyers – but the UK’s major lenders are not at Tuesday’s summit.
Housing minister Grant Shapps has summoned various parties to “frank and open” discussions on difficulties for first-time buyers.
The government estimates 1.4 million households want to own their own home, but face a mortgage squeeze.
However, the major lenders were not specifically invited to the meeting.
The Council of Mortgage Lenders (CML) and the Building Societies Association – which represent lenders – are attending the summit.
Mr Shapps is expected to use the meeting to call on banks to offer more help to first-time buyers, such as creating new products specifically aimed at helping people get on the property ladder.
Figures show a downward trend in first-time buyer numbers throughout 2010.
There was a sharp fall at the end of the year, according to the British Bankers’ Association (BBA), although this was skewed by the rush to beat the end of the stamp duty holiday at the end of 2009.
Nearly three years ago, Adam Gannon, of Bolton, e-mailed the BBC to express how difficult it was to get a mortgage.
He had been saving for a year.
After buying his first home a year ago, his views have changed slightly.
“Saving up initially was the hardest part,” he said.
“But they [lenders] were right to be careful. They got themselves into a difficult situation in the first place because of what they lent out.”
First-time buyers are regarded as crucial to any housing revival, but many have only been able to get onto the ladder with financial assistance from relatives.
The average deposit required when buying a property was 23% in December, according to the BBA, up from 21% the previous month.
This has been partly the result of strict lending criteria from mortgage providers – including turning down potential borrowers with any blot on their credit history.
“We want to do more to help aspiring first-time buyers – the average age of the first-time buyer with no support from their family is now 37, and there are 1.4 million households who aspire to own a home but are simply unable to do so because of house prices and mortgage availability,” Mr Shapps said.
“So I am calling together key figures from across industry to discuss how we can tackle this problem. This cannot be achieved simply by top-down diktats from government – there will need to be a unified effort and creative solutions from across the board to make sure we do not lock young people out of the housing market.”
Extra help cannot come soon enough for Nick and Marie Smith. They had been renting a home for four years, while saving for a deposit.
Nick and Marie Smith have been trying to save up for a deposit The couple, who have two young children, realised that to raise enough money they needed to move in with Mr Smith’s mother in Wiltshire.
“It cannot be for ever. I would be nice to be together in our own home,” said Mrs Smith.
They were keen for Mr Shapps to demand that lenders loosen their lending criteria.
“They have got to do something about this level of deposit. It is just ridiculous. Nobody can save that level of deposit,” Mr Smith said.
“It does not just affect first-time buyers, it affects everyone up the chain. He [Mr Shapps] really needs to get something going and improve their lending.
“The banks should be working for us, not the other way around.”
Separate research from housing website Rightmove found that 23% of people who planned to buy a property in the coming year would be first-time buyers.
Generally, it is thought that double this proportion of first-time buyers is a sign of a healthy housing market.
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Paul Collins was spotted by officers riding along the same road A speeding motorcyclist who made a rude gesture at a speed camera because “his mates told him he would not get caught” has been fined.
Paul Collins was riding his bike, which had no front registration plate, at 48mph in a 30mph zone along Maybray King Way in Southampton last October.
Police traced him through his distinctive bike which was later spotted by officers on the same road.
Collins, 26, of Hillson Drive, Fareham, admitted speeding and was fined £117.
He was also given five points on his licence at Southampton Magistrates’ Court and fined a further £60 for driving otherwise in accordance to his licence.
Pc Mick Gear, from Hampshire Police, said: “When we visited him at home, the rider admitted the offence, telling us his mates told him he wouldn’t get caught.
“I think this is a lesson to all irresponsible motorcyclists that we will seek to prosecute anyone caught speeding through these areas.
“Collins did so knowingly and his arrogance was plain to see from the enforcement image.
“I hope the sentence will encourage other riders to be more responsible.”
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
The authorities are worried that thousands of patients may have been misdiagnosed Five Nigerian men are due to appear in a court in South Africa accused of impersonating doctors and endangering people’s lives.
Special police investigators say they are believed to be part of a syndicate.
The men are alleged to have been running at least six private practices in at least three provinces.
CSI Africa, a private investigation firm, says the medical profession is one of the most targeted by fraudsters in South Africa.
According to its research, fake qualifications run at between 15% and 18% across various professions in the country.
The five Nigerian men are due to appear in the Middleburg Magistrates court in Mpumalanga province along with two qualified Nigerian doctors who are alleged to have allowed their medical numbers to be used to register more practices.
South Africa’s Board of Health Care Funders (BHCF), a medical lobby group, has said it is concerned that thousands of people may have been misdiagnosed by the suspects.
The authorities are also investigating reports that up to 17 other people suspected of being fake doctors have been treating patients in government and private hospitals.
Last week, a man who claimed to be a doctor was arrested after the woman he performed a caesarean section on died in the Eastern Cape province.
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Detlef S is not expected to speak during the trial A German trucker has admitted fathering seven children with his stepdaughter in a major sexual abuse case.
Prosecutors accuse the 48-year-old, named as Detlef S, of abusing the stepdaughter along with his daughter and stepson for more than 20 years.
The authorities believe he first abused them when they were four years old, and say he forced both girls to work as prostitutes.
He faces 350 charges, and a verdict is expected by 25 February.
The trucker’s lawyers say he is unlikely to speak at the trial in Koblenz in western Germany, but his defence team may read out a statement on his behalf.
Prosecutors say his wife will appear at the trial as a witness.
Local media have likened the case to that of Austrian Josef Fritzl, who enslaved his daughter for 24 years in a case that shocked the world.
One of Detlef S’s lawyers read a statement at the start of the hearing in which his client admitted being the father of his stepdaughter’s seven children.
“He acknowledged paternity… but paternity is not part of the indictment,” Thomas Dueber later told reporters.
The defendant’s stepson attended part of the hearing in the morning and told reporters that social workers had failed to spot signs of abuse.
The stepdaughter gave evidence during the afternoon at which point the public was asked to leave the court.
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
The Army said it had apologised to the men for the distress the e-mail “will have caused” The Ministry of Defence has apologised after a newspaper reported that 38 soldiers – including one on the Afghan front line – were sacked by e-mail.
An Army spokesperson said commanding officers had spoken to those concerned to ensure they got advice and support.
The men, all warrant officers, were told they were the victims of the defence cuts, according to the Sun.
It comes as up to 100 trainee RAF pilots – a quarter of the total – will be told on Tuesday they have to leave.
The Sun said the Army soldiers each received a message advising them to “start planning your resettlement”.
It said the warrant officers included a Royal Tank Regiment veteran who was serving on the front line in Afghanistan.
Meanwhile, up to 20 fast jet pilots, 30 helicopter pilots and 50 transport aircraft pilots are said to be facing the axe because of defence cuts.
The Ministry of Defence would not comment directly on the RAF claims but said all three services were facing cuts.
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
As sets were still being constructed, comedian and host James Corden claimed he had “the best seat in the house”.
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
MEPs debated the creation of a European patent system.
Europe’s complex and costly procedures for patenting inventions look set to be simplified after Euro MPs gave the go-ahead for a new system.
Under the plan, 25 of the 27 EU member states will adopt a uniform procedure for registering patents in Europe.
Currently European patents can cost ten times more than patents registered in the US because of translation costs.
Italy and Spain oppose the plan, which envisages using English, French and German for translating patents.
For about a decade, efforts to get an EU-wide agreement on patents have been blocked by language disputes and the lack of unanimity.
The European Parliament vote means that a common patent system can be launched under the EU “enhanced co-operation” procedure – an innovation under the Lisbon Treaty.
The fast-track mechanism enables nine or more EU countries to push ahead with a measure, even if it has not been agreed by all 27.
The mechanism has only been used once before – to get a divorce law adopted in 2010. It clarifies the rules for spouses in cross-border lawsuits involving different jurisdictions.
New patent legislation is a vital component in the EU’s drive to make the single European market function better.
The European Commission has warned that Chinese firms are rapidly narrowing the performance gap with the EU.
The legal affairs spokesman of the European Conservatives and Reformists (ECR) group, Sajjad Karim MEP, said emerging economies “are literally breathing down Europe’s neck” and the new patents regime “will be a big part of what is needed by our entrepreneurs”.
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
BBC’s Matt Cole: “They really are swamped”
Italy has warned that an influx of Tunisian migrants arriving on its shores could have devastating consequences for all European nations.
Interior Minister Roberto Maroni said migrants who have landed on the island of Lampedusa threaten the institutional and social structures of Europe.
Italy is asking the EU for about 100m euros (£84m) to tackle the influx.
In another development, a boat was intercepted off Sicily carrying about 30 people believed to be from Egypt.
Italian police said the boat was intercepted overnight off the coast near Ragusa.
Meanwhile, in Tunisia, the authorities have lifted a night-time curfew.
But the interior ministry said the state of emergency, which has been in place since President Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali went into exile last month, will continue “until further notice”.
More than 5,000 immigrants have reached Lampedusa – south of Sicily – by boat in the past week.
The upsurge follows last month’s mass protests over unemployment and poverty in Tunisia which resulted in the overthrow of President Ben Ali.
The vast majority of the men here seem young, perhaps in their early 20s.
They carry small bags or tiny backpacks but little else. Speaking mainly French, they talk of wanting freedom – “liberte” is a word heard again and again.
Late on Monday evening, about 100 were flown from Lampedusa to the larger Italian island of Sicily.
As they queued for security checks, most revealed they weren’t aware of their next destination, but they didn’t seem too concerned.
Instead, they said they were glad not to be in Tunisia and said they hoped they would be given the chance of freedom to live and work in Europe.
Most of those arriving in Lampedusa say they are seeking work and a better life in Europe, although correspondents say they could include escaped convicts and members of the ousted regime fleeing retribution.
“It is a question that risks igniting an extremely fast process of change in North African countries, that can have devastating consequences on the institutional and social structures of European nations,” Mr Maroni said.
“I have asked, and I think it is fundamental, that Europe at its top levels – meaning heads of state and government – defines a strategy… and starts a strong diplomatic action towards all countries that are touched by these phenomena.”
Mr Maroni also said he had asked for the intervention of the EU’s border management agency, Frontex, and deployed an extra 200 soldiers to supervise centres where migrants are staying.
Lampedusa Mayor Bernadino Rubeis has declared a state of emergency.
“There is an entire nation trying to escape Tunisia to reach Italy and then to go on to other countries,” he said.
Laura Boldrini of the UN refugee agency (UNHCR) who is on Lampedusa, told the BBC World Service that the situation on the island was “critical”.
She said conditions had improved slightly since the island’s reception centre re-opened on Sunday but it was important to move people to other reception centres in Italy.
Ms Boldrini said migrants were either saying they wanted to escape “insecurity” in Tunisia or had left to look for jobs in Europe.
She said some planned to travel on to France and other European countries to be reunited with family members already there.
Italian Interior Minister Roberto Maroni: “It’s not a question of traditional immigration involving Italy alone”
“This influx is affecting many other countries, not only Italy,” she said.
The BBC’s Jim Muir in Tunis says many people there are puzzled by the upsurge in the number of people trying to get to Italy, as the situation in Tunisia is seen to be stabilising.
Some of those trying to leave are said to be well-dressed and paying over the odds for the trip, our correspondent says – indicating they might be associated with the former regime and trying to avoid retribution.
But most are believed to be economic migrants taking advantage of a security loophole, he adds.
Michele Cercone, spokesman for the European Commission for Home and Justice affairs, said there had to be a European common approach to increasing migration sparked by recent turmoil in northern Africa.
“On one hand we have to intervene, if needed, with urgent measures to assist member states and on the other hand we have to be sure that we co-operate with… countries of origin of these migrants, in order to have a more consistent and long term solution,” he said.
Meanwhile, unconfirmed reports say at least five migrants died and others are missing after their boat sank off the Tunisian coast near Zarzis.
Alleged survivors told AFP news agency that a Tunisian coastguard ship rammed their boat on Friday as it was making its way to Italy.
“The boat… was carrying 120 passengers – 85 people were saved, five died and 30 are still missing,” 23-year-old Ziad Ben Abdaalah is reported to have said.
Coastguard officials in Zarzis contacted by AFP confirmed that a boat had sunk but blamed it on the poor condition of the boat and declined to make any further comment.
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Linda Norgrove’s parents have said no-one was to blame for her death An inquest into the death of Scottish aid worker Linda Norgrove in Afghanistan has heard she had a bullet wound on her lower right leg.
Ms Norgrove, 36, from Lewis, on the Western Isles, was taken hostage in September 2010 and died during a US special forces operation on 8 October.
A military investigation found that she was killed by a grenade thrown by one of her rescuers.
An inquest into her death has resumed in Trowbridge.
Wiltshire coroner David Ridley said the hearing will not apportion blame.
It has heard that, as well as injuries caused by a grenade, she also had a bullet wound on her right leg.
The first witness to give evidence was senior British officer Brig Robert Nitch who was involved in the joint UK and US investigation into the American rescue attempt.
He said there was no attempt to hide the facts of what happened during the operation and was struck by the integrity of the US special forces.
Ms Norgrove’s parents, Lorna and John Norgrove, are attending the inquest and have previously said they do not blame anyone for the death of their daughter.
BBC Scotland reporter Tim Reid has been given permission by the coroner to use the messaging website Twitter to tweet short reports from the inquest.
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Muslims make up nearly two-thirds of Malaysia’s 28 million population Islamic morality police in Malaysia have arrested more than 80 Muslims in an operation to stop them celebrating Valentine’s Day.
Officers raided budget hotels in the central state of Selangor and capital, Kuala Lumpur, detaining unmarried Muslim couples who were sharing rooms.
The religious authorities in Malaysia say Valentine’s Day is synonymous with immoral activities.
Those arrested could be jailed for up to two years if convicted.
The anti-Valentine’s Day campaign by the country’s Islamic authorities goes back to a fatwa issued in 2005.
On Monday evening, religious enforcement officers launched co-ordinated raids, targeting budget hotels and public parks in Selangor and Kuala Lumpur.
In Selangor alone, officials said 80 people were detained for khalwat or close proximity – an Islamic law that prevents unmarried Muslims from being alone with someone of the opposite sex.
In the capital, officials detained 16 mainly teenage Muslims, who had paid about 50 ringgit (£9) for a hotel room for two hours, according to a report from the AFP news agency.
The raids stem from a campaign launched last week by the religious authorities, called Mind the Valentine’s Day Trap.
The government-run Department of Islamic Development said Valentine’s Day was “synonymous with vice activities” and that it contravened Islamic teachings.
Deputy Prime Minister Muhyiddin Yassin had labelled Monday’s celebration as “not suitable” for Muslims.
Other faiths were not affected by the boycott in a country where Muslims make up nearly two-thirds of the 28 million population.
But not all Malaysian Muslims agreed with the campaign, with some saying Valentine’s Day is harmless.
Human rights groups say actions such as the Valentine’s Day ban harm Malaysia’s image as a moderate and progressive Muslim state.
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Satellite image showing snow across the UK, Monday 20th December Railway bosses have admitted that they made mistakes in their response to the severe weather at the end of last year.
Thousands of services were cancelled, and passengers were sometimes stranded on trains for hours.
Robin Gisby from Network Rail told MPs on the Transport Committee that basic operating mistakes had been made, but that they had been “little things”.
Firms said they were improving their ability to cope with bad weather.
Mr Gisby said “We made a number of mistakes in the first week (of the bad weather). We learnt from this quite rapidly.” He said that Network Rail “got into a pickle” on one day by trying to run a full timetable rather than a temporary one.
The rail bosses denied that trains had been cancelled in order to avoid paying compensation for the services being late. They insisted that decisions were taken to give the best, most robust service to passengers – rather than to avoid fines.
The man leading the government review of how the bad weather affected the transport network in December, Chairman of the RAC Foundation David Quarmby, also gave evidence to the Committee.
He agreed that Network Rail had been “caught short” by the weather. But he said the performance of the rail network had been better in the second cold snap, just before Christmas.
Mr Quarmby said he refuted the suggestion that the UK was worse than other countries in dealing with snow. “As a nation we tend to deprecate ourselves”, he said, “and the media play into that.”
Last year, Prime Minister David Cameron said the weather disruption was understandable but he was “frustrated” at how long it took to improve the situation.
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Paul Scott, 22, died at a flat in Toll House Gardens, Tranent A man has been arrested and charged in connection with the murder of a 22-year-old in East Lothian.
Paul Scott, from the Niddrie area of Edinburgh, died at a flat in Toll House Gardens, Tranent, having been the victim of a “violent attack”.
Police were called to the scene at about 0400 GMT on Monday 7 February, where Mr Scott’s body was found.
Police said a 29-year-old man was to appear at Haddington Sheriff Court on Wednesday.
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Stuxnet may have been designed to target Iran’s nuclear programme A powerful internet worm repeatedly targeted five industrial facilities in Iran over 10 months, ongoing analysis by security researchers shows.
Stuxnet, which came to light in 2010, was the first-known virus specifically designed to target real-world infrastructure, such as power stations.
Security firm Symantec has now revealed how waves of new variants were launched at Iranian industrial facilities.
Some versions struck their targets within 12 hours of being written.
“We are trying to do some epidemiology,” Orla Cox of Symantec told BBC News. “We are trying to understand how and why it spread.”
The worm first grabbed headlines late last year after initial analysis showed that the sophisticated piece of malware had likely been written by a “nation state” to target Iran’s nuclear programme, including the uranium enrichment centrifuges at the Natanz facility.
Russia’s Nato ambassador recently said the virus “could lead to a new Chernobyl,” referring to the 1986 nuclear accident.
Although speculation surrounds which countries may have been involved in its creation, the origins of the worm still remain a mystery.
“One organisation was attacked three times, another was targeted twice”
Orla Cox Symantec
Iranian officials have admitted that the worm infected staff computers. However, they have repeatedly denied that the virus caused any major delays to its nuclear power programme, although its uranium enrichment programme is known to have suffered setbacks.
The new research, which analysed 12,000 infections collected by various anti-virus firms, shows that the worm targeted five “industrial processing” organisations in Iran.
“These were the seeds of all other infections,” said Ms Cox.
The firm was able to identify the targets because Stuxnet collected information about each computer it infected, including its name, location and a time stamp of when it was compromised.
This allowed the researchers to track the spread of the virus.
Symantec declined to name the five organisations and would not confirm whether they had links to the country’s nuclear programme.
However, Ms Cox, said that previous research confirmed that the worm could disrupt the centrifuges used to enrich uranium.
The five organisations were targeted repeatedly between June 2009 and April 2010, she said.
“One organisation was attacked three times, another was targeted twice,” she said.
These waves of attacks used at least three different variants of the worm.
“We believe there was also a fourth one but we haven’t seen it yet,” she said.
The worm seeks out specific industrial hardware once inside an organisation Analysis of the different strains and the time it took between the code being written and it making its first infection suggested that the virus writers had “infiltrated” targeted organisations, she said.
The researchers drew this conclusion because Stuxnet targeted industrial systems not usually connected to the internet for security reasons.
Instead, it infects Windows machines via USB keys – commonly used to move files around and usually plugged into a computer manually.
The virus therefore had to be seeded on to the organisation’s internal networks by someone, either deliberately or accidentally.
The virus could have been spread between the organisations by contractors that worked for more than one of them, she said.
“We see threads to contractors used by these companies,” she said. “We can see links between them.”
Once on a corporate network, the worm is designed to seek out a specific configuration of industrial control software made by Siemens.
The code can then reprogram so-called PLC (programmable logic control) software to give attached industrial machinery new instructions.
Previous analysis suggests that it targeted PLCs operating at frequencies between 807 and 1210Hz, a range that includes those used to control uranium enrichment centrifuges.
Subverting PLCs requires detailed knowledge and, although security researchers had raised concerns about exploits in the past, had not been seen before Stuxnet.
Ms Cox said the firm’s analysis revealed incomplete code in Stuxnet that looked like it was intended to target another type of PLC.
“The fact that it is incomplete could tell us that [the virus writers] were successful in what they had done,” she said.
The novelty of the virus, combined with attack mechanisms that targeted several previously unknown and unpatched vulnerabilities in Windows, have led many to describe Stuxnet as “one of the most sophisticated pieces of malware ever”.
However, research by Tom Parker from security firm Securicon says that elements of it were “not that advanced at all”.
“I’ve compared this less advanced code to other malware and it does not score very highly,” he said last year.
Ms Cox agrees that elements of the code and some of the techniques it uses are relatively simple. But, she says, that misses the bigger picture.
“If you look at the sum of its parts, then it is certainly very sophisticated,” she said.
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.