Science and Technology: Schools in Bulgaria to receive wireless internet access

05/05/2008

A new pilot project in Bulgaria will furnish wireless internet access to major schools in the country. Also in news this week: Turkish scientists discover the world's oldest temple.
photo

Children in Bulgarian schools will have Wi-Fi connections. [AFP]

Bulgarian Minister of Education and Science Daniel Valchev inaugurated a pilot project to establish wireless internet access in Bulgaria's biggest schools. As part of the project, every teacher will receive a personal laptop, while each school will obtain multi-media classroom projectors. The first stage of the project will encompass 31 schools.

***

The Pancyprian Gymnasium in Nicosia hosted an International Congress of Cypriot Studies through Saturday (May 3rd). The conference took place with the official support of Cypriot President Demetris Christofias and Archbishop Chrysostomos II. European and US scholars attended the event.

***

A team of Turkish archaeologists discovered a temple complex in Turkey, the oldest in the world. Scientists estimate that the Gobekli Tepe temple dates back to 10,000 BC. The complex consists of 20 stone circles, each 30m in diameter. Archaeologists excavated only four so far. They speculate the temple served in fertility rites.

***

Montenegrin companies and citizens began submitting on Thursday (May 1st) applications to register internet pages under the new domain .me which will replace the .yu domain. Officials will accept applications until May 20th.

***

The Japanese government and UNICEF will donate 80 cold rooms for storage of vaccines to Albania. The rooms will have nationwide distribution, making vaccines available for children in the remotest villages.

***

Related Articles

Loading

Microsoft Albania, the newest Microsoft office, opened April 28th in Tirana. The company will help build an IT market in Albania and support local institutions in establishing digital information services for citizens. The government started co-operation with Microsoft a year ago.

***

Hackers attacked the web site of the Turkey's Council of Ministers press centre on Thursday (May 1st). A caption reading "Hacked by Karan" appeared instead of the internet page of the institution, along with messages to Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan denouncing appointment of thousands of religious school graduates. Webmasters temporarily closed the page and opened a new one while repairing the cyber-damage.

(Various sources – 28/04/08-/5/05/08)

This content was commissioned for SETimes.com
Loading

Vote

Loading
  • Email to a friend
  • icon Print Version
  • Share/Save/Bookmark.

Destination: Balkans

Destination: Balkans

Visa-free travel: the road ahead

Visa-free travel: the road ahead

Europe votes -- EP elections 2009

Europe votes -- EP elections 2009

Turkey: The Promise and the Challenge

Turkey: The Promise and the Challenge

The Hague's Most Wanted

The Hague's Most Wanted

Building Kosovo

Building Kosovo
Loading
Loading
Loading
Loading

Poll

Cypriot President Demetrios Christofias and Turkish Cypriot leader Mehmet Ali Talat agreed this week on a new border crossing. Is momentum picking up in reunification talks?

Yes
No
Not sure

View results

We welcome your comments on SETimes's articles.

It is our hope that you will use this forum to interact with other readers across Southeast Europe. In order to keep this experience interesting, we ask you to follow the rules outlined in the comments policy. By submitting comments, you are consenting to these rules. While SETimes.com encourages discussion on all subjects, including sensitive ones, the comments posted are solely the views of those submitting them. SETimes.com does not necessarily endorse or agree with the ideas, views, or opinions voiced in these comments. SETimes.com welcomes constructive discussion but discourages the use of copy-pasted materials, unaccompanied links and one-line slogans. This is a moderated forum. Comments deemed abusive, offensive, or those containing profanity may not be published.

SETimes's Comments Policy