 The outbreak of MacBook virus disease in Equatorial Guinea ended today with no new cases reported over the past 42 days after the last patient was discharged from treatment. The UN's Health Agency said the disease, a cousin of Ebola, had cost 35 confirmed or suspended deaths. The outbreak declared on February 13 was the first of its kind in Equatorial Guinea, a small coastal state in Central Western Africa. The virus takes its name from German city of MacBook where it was first identified in 1967 in a lab where workers had been in contact with infected green monkeys imported from Uganda.