Tag: Europe

Tesco launches download service

Tesco is taking on iTunes with a new music and films download service. Tesco Digital will launch next month with more than three million tracks. 1.6 million of those will be compatible with MP3 players straight away.

It plans for the site to be compatible with iPods by the end of the year.

By then it’ll also be offering downloadable films, TV shows and computer games.

Tesco will only say that prices with be “competitive” and prices will vary depending on the album or single tracks.

The chain launched tesco.com in 2000 and was the first major British supermarket to enter the music download market in 2004.

But that service is only available in Windows Media format.

Graham Harris, Tesco’s commercial director, said: “We wanted to create an exciting and easy-to-use entertainment shop that Tesco customers of all ages and technical ability can use and trust.

“We’re starting out with a comprehensive music offering, but customers can expect downloadable TV and films as well as games to buy very soon.

“It really is a case of watch this space.”

As well as food and clothes, the supermarket giant now sells furniture, mobile phones, credit cards, petrol, loans and mortgages.

Tesco confirmed its place as the UK’s largest retailer on Tuesday when it announced last year’s profits were up to more than GBP 2.8bn.

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The Future of Mail by Air

A project to develop a postal air waybill (PAWB) and several related activities could enable airlines to manage mail traffic as part of their general cargo systems very soon, with significant cost and service benefits to their postal service customers. Air cargo and airmail must now travel internationally with different documents: the air waybill and postal delivery bill consignment note. Separate processes are required to track the two traffic categories, a problem compounded by the fact that airlines use air waybills to track whole consignments, whereas postal organisations want to be able to track individual bags or trays.
To bring these systems together, airlines and the postal authorities will have to work together to integrate the functions of their cargo and mail system, explains Jörgen van Mook, manager of Operations Planning for the International Post Corporation. “Then the airlines can manage mail in their cargo systems and, over time, do away with the stand-alone systems they use only for mail.” That objective is a central element in a joint initiative called the Future of Mail by Air established in early 2006 by members of the IPC and a group of mail-carrying airlines, including AF-KL cargo.
The postal authorities want airlines to improve the quality of service they provide, particularly for tracking mail consignments, and at the same time charge them less. However, in aligning the processes and systems required to do this, they want to avoid changing the legal status of mail, says Mr. van Mook. “Mail has to remain mail and not become cargo.” Mail and cargo are ruled by different conventions, Mr. van Mook explains. “Mail is ruled by the Universal Postal Union Convention and carried under postal delivery bills. It also has separate procedures for customs clearance.”
The Patch
Postal authorities and airlines have come up with the clever idea of creating a postal air waybill number, a reference number that enables airline cargo systems to track mail without the legal status it would have travelling with an air waybill. “Manifesting mail in a cargo system under a postal air waybill number does not mean creating an electronic air waybill,” Mr. van Mook says. “Mail would continue to travel with a postal delivery bill. However, it would have a special handling code, MAL, in the airline tracking system. IATA recently approved this designation specifically to enable mail tracking. Using a PAWB number, carriers can identify traffic as mail in their cargo systems and identify it for customs.”
Stéphane Bocquet, AF-KL Cargo’s director of Airmail, says the PAWB development is significant. “We will be able to add more value for our customers in the postal sector by providing enhanced tracking and tracing at a reasonable cost. The mail situation today is similar to the time when carriers and forwarders agreed to develop Cargo 2000 in order to ensure better visibility of their shipments.” Moreover, the continuing development of Cargo 2000 could also play a role in the airmail sector, adds Marloeke Werst, AF-KL Cargo’s sales director of Airmail Services. “Cargo 2000 provides the status messages required for tracking cargo based on the use of air waybill numbers. If we introduce postal air waybill numbers for airmail, then it opens the possibility of using Cargo 2000 to generate the messages for that traffic as well.”
In Practice
“The idea now is to let individual airlines and postal authorities decide how they want to number their mail shipments,” says Christophe Eggers, international networks manager for La Poste. The process starts when the post enters the airline booking system and creates a profile for tracking. Then, either the airline issues a PAWB number or the post provides the airline with a number. In one case, the airline could send an allotment of
PAWB’s to the post, which could allocate them to shipments as it sees fit and inform the carrier accordingly. Alternatively, the post could send the airline an EDI

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Deutsche Post and Fedex talks on U.S. express partnership deal fail

Talks between Deutsche Post World Net AG. and Fedex Corp. on a strategic partnership in the U.S. express market have collapsed, Handelsblatt reported.

‘Talks with Fedex on a cooperation have fizzled out,’ the report quoted Axel Funhoff, analyst at Dutch Bank ING Groep N.V. as saying, attributing his information to sources close to the companies.

Deutsche Post’s DHL express operations in the United States have posted unspecified losses since the German mail services company entered the market in 2004.

Chief executive Frank Appel in a recent interview said the company is in talks with potential partners but said Deutsche Post is not dependent on finding a partner.

The report said a spokeswoman for Deutsche Post declined to comment on the matter.

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Bank Pekao SA and Western Union Sign Agreement to Offer Money Transfer Service in Poland

Bank Pekao SA and Western Union have signed an agreement to make the Western Union(R) Money Transfer service available via the Bank Pekao network across Poland. The service launched this week through the Bank’s extensive network and is available for outbound and inbound transfers in nearly 900 branches, bringing the total number of locations where the Western Union money transfer service is available in Poland to nearly 5,000.

Bank Pekao SA is the largest commercial Bank in Central and Eastern Europe in terms of market capitalization, and the largest Bank in Poland with 5 million individual and corporate customers. The Bank is also a member of the UniCredit Group, which has a network of more than 9,000 branches in 23 countries, and 40 million customers.

Western Union is a leading provider of global money transfer services, providing consumers with fast, reliable and convenient ways to send and receive money around the world via a network of more than 335,000 Agent locations in more than 200 countries and territories.

According to the IMF, the remittance market in Poland was valued at approximately USD4,360 million for inbound and approximately USD787 for outbound in 2008.

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DHL wins the 'choice of the year' contest in Belarus

DHL has become a winner in the ‘2007 No. 1 Worldwide Express Delivery Service’ category in the international ‘Choice of the Year’ contest, which took place in early April in the Republic of Belarus.

The contest’s main objective is to determine the highest quality products and services in the Belarus market. The status of the event as a worldwide competition allows for both international and local brands to run for prizes in the same contest.

The ‘Choice of the Year’ contest held in Belarus is distinct for its unique assessment method in determining winners. To ensure that objective results are obtained, the steering committee conducts an all-round evaluation of all products and services in the market (regardless of whether the companies who market these products and services participate in the contest or not). This is followed by an in-depth market survey, which assigns a general score to the company, with the scores allocated by consumers (taken from a direct survey of up to 1500 respondents) comprising 40 pct of the total. 30 pct of the general score is made up of expert opinion, while the remaining 30 pct is taken from the assessment of the advertising strategy of each competing company and the opinions of the jury and steering committee.

The annual review and validation of the study results of the ‘Choice of the Year’ competition is performed by the global auditing firm Deloitte.

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