• In Alberta, DIALOG caps highway with a wildlife overpass

    High in the Canadian Rockies, and southeast of Banff—Alberta’s premier ski town—a provincial highway spur has been capped with a landscaped overpass that allows local wildlife to pass safely above the treacherous road. The intervention, known as the Bow Valley Gap Wildlife Overpass, was designed by DIALOG, a practice based in Canada and the U.S.

    Consisting of two large concrete arches topped by soil and plantings, the overpass is essentially a land bridge that spans each side of the roadway. To prevent animals from crossing elsewhere along the highway, DIALOG installed over 7 miles of fencing in the area surrounding the crossing. The fenced-in area also includes “jump-outs,” segments of lowered fencing allowing animals that unknowingly entered the roadway a chance to escape.
    The crossing and surrounding roadway are fenced in to prevent animal-vehicle collisions.The Bow Valley Gap Overpass is the first such overpass located outside of Banff National Park, where Parks Canada has been installing animal crossing infrastructure since 1978. The park maintains 24 crossings. These bridges curb animal-vehicle strikes, which occur regularly around Banff, and also reconnect habitat interrupted by the highway.

    Wildlife overpasses were first introduced in Europe in the 1950s during the heyday of highway construction. Canada has been a leader in wildlife overpass construction, and similar projects have been built in the western United States.
    Trail cameras have already captured animals using the overpass.DIALOG reports that wildlife cameras have already captured images of animals using the bridge. Ultimately, Parks Canada’s campaign in Banff has eliminated 80 percent of wildlife-vehicle collisions, and similar metrics are targeted by this new campaign led by Alberta Transportation and Economic Corridors, a provincial agency that has an additional three animal crossings in development.

    The project’s completion marks DIALOG’s seventh wildlife overpass. The Bow Valley Gap Overpass was also awarded the Minister’s Award for Transportation by the Consulting Engineers of Alberta and the Environmental Achievement Award by the Transportation Association of Canada.
    “At DIALOG, we’re proud to partner with Alberta Transportation and Economic Corridors on initiatives that enhance both driver safety and the protection of Alberta’s wildlife,” said Neil Robson, a project manager and design lead at the firm. “Our focus remains on designing innovative infrastructure solutions that balance the needs of people and the environment, ensuring long-term benefits for all,” he added.
    #alberta #dialog #caps #highway #with
    In Alberta, DIALOG caps highway with a wildlife overpass
    High in the Canadian Rockies, and southeast of Banff—Alberta’s premier ski town—a provincial highway spur has been capped with a landscaped overpass that allows local wildlife to pass safely above the treacherous road. The intervention, known as the Bow Valley Gap Wildlife Overpass, was designed by DIALOG, a practice based in Canada and the U.S. Consisting of two large concrete arches topped by soil and plantings, the overpass is essentially a land bridge that spans each side of the roadway. To prevent animals from crossing elsewhere along the highway, DIALOG installed over 7 miles of fencing in the area surrounding the crossing. The fenced-in area also includes “jump-outs,” segments of lowered fencing allowing animals that unknowingly entered the roadway a chance to escape. The crossing and surrounding roadway are fenced in to prevent animal-vehicle collisions.The Bow Valley Gap Overpass is the first such overpass located outside of Banff National Park, where Parks Canada has been installing animal crossing infrastructure since 1978. The park maintains 24 crossings. These bridges curb animal-vehicle strikes, which occur regularly around Banff, and also reconnect habitat interrupted by the highway. Wildlife overpasses were first introduced in Europe in the 1950s during the heyday of highway construction. Canada has been a leader in wildlife overpass construction, and similar projects have been built in the western United States. Trail cameras have already captured animals using the overpass.DIALOG reports that wildlife cameras have already captured images of animals using the bridge. Ultimately, Parks Canada’s campaign in Banff has eliminated 80 percent of wildlife-vehicle collisions, and similar metrics are targeted by this new campaign led by Alberta Transportation and Economic Corridors, a provincial agency that has an additional three animal crossings in development. The project’s completion marks DIALOG’s seventh wildlife overpass. The Bow Valley Gap Overpass was also awarded the Minister’s Award for Transportation by the Consulting Engineers of Alberta and the Environmental Achievement Award by the Transportation Association of Canada. “At DIALOG, we’re proud to partner with Alberta Transportation and Economic Corridors on initiatives that enhance both driver safety and the protection of Alberta’s wildlife,” said Neil Robson, a project manager and design lead at the firm. “Our focus remains on designing innovative infrastructure solutions that balance the needs of people and the environment, ensuring long-term benefits for all,” he added. #alberta #dialog #caps #highway #with
    In Alberta, DIALOG caps highway with a wildlife overpass
    www.archpaper.com
    High in the Canadian Rockies, and southeast of Banff—Alberta’s premier ski town—a provincial highway spur has been capped with a landscaped overpass that allows local wildlife to pass safely above the treacherous road. The intervention, known as the Bow Valley Gap Wildlife Overpass, was designed by DIALOG, a practice based in Canada and the U.S. Consisting of two large concrete arches topped by soil and plantings, the overpass is essentially a land bridge that spans each side of the roadway. To prevent animals from crossing elsewhere along the highway, DIALOG installed over 7 miles of fencing in the area surrounding the crossing. The fenced-in area also includes “jump-outs,” segments of lowered fencing allowing animals that unknowingly entered the roadway a chance to escape. The crossing and surrounding roadway are fenced in to prevent animal-vehicle collisions. (Neil Zeller) The Bow Valley Gap Overpass is the first such overpass located outside of Banff National Park, where Parks Canada has been installing animal crossing infrastructure since 1978. The park maintains 24 crossings. These bridges curb animal-vehicle strikes, which occur regularly around Banff, and also reconnect habitat interrupted by the highway. Wildlife overpasses were first introduced in Europe in the 1950s during the heyday of highway construction. Canada has been a leader in wildlife overpass construction, and similar projects have been built in the western United States. Trail cameras have already captured animals using the overpass. (Courtesy Alberta Transportation and Economic Corridors) DIALOG reports that wildlife cameras have already captured images of animals using the bridge. Ultimately, Parks Canada’s campaign in Banff has eliminated 80 percent of wildlife-vehicle collisions, and similar metrics are targeted by this new campaign led by Alberta Transportation and Economic Corridors, a provincial agency that has an additional three animal crossings in development. The project’s completion marks DIALOG’s seventh wildlife overpass. The Bow Valley Gap Overpass was also awarded the Minister’s Award for Transportation by the Consulting Engineers of Alberta and the Environmental Achievement Award by the Transportation Association of Canada. “At DIALOG, we’re proud to partner with Alberta Transportation and Economic Corridors on initiatives that enhance both driver safety and the protection of Alberta’s wildlife,” said Neil Robson, a project manager and design lead at the firm. “Our focus remains on designing innovative infrastructure solutions that balance the needs of people and the environment, ensuring long-term benefits for all,” he added.
    0 Commentaires ·0 Parts ·0 Aperçu
  • Interview: Rom Kosla, CIO, Hewlett Packard Enterprise

    When Rom Kosla, CIO at Hewlett Packard Enterprise, joined the technology giant in July 2023, the move represented a big shift in direction. Previously CIO at retailer Ahold Delhaize and CIO for enterprise solutions at PepsiCo, Kosla was a consumer specialist who wanted to apply his knowledge in a new sector.
    “I liked the idea of working in a different industry,” he says. “I went from consumer products to retail grocery. Moving into the tech industry was a bit nerve-wracking because the concept of who the customers are is different. But since I grew up in IT, I figured I’d have the ability to navigate my way through the company.”
    Kosla had previously worked as a project manager for Nestlé and spent time with the consultancy Deloitte. Now approaching two years with HPE, Kosla leads HPE’s technology strategy and is responsible for how the company harnesses artificial intelligenceand data. He also oversees e-commerce, app development, enterprise resource planningand security operations.
    “The role has exceeded my expectations,” he says. “When you’re a CIO at a multinational, like when I was a divisional CIO at PepsiCo, you’re in the back office. Whether it’s strategy, transformation or customer engagement, the systems are the enablers of that back-office effort. At HPE, it’s different because we are customer zero.”
    Kosla says he prefers the term “customer gold” because he wants HPE to develop high-quality products. In addition to setting the internal digital strategy, he has an outward-facing role providing expert advice to customers. That part of his role reminds him of his time at Deloitte.
    “Those are opportunities to flex my prior experience and capabilities, and learn how to take our products, enable them, and share best practices,” he says. “HPE is like any other company. We use cloud systems and software-as-a-service products, including Salesforce and others. But underneath, we have HPE powering a lot of the capabilities.”

    The press release announcing Kosla’s appointment in 2023 said HPE believed his prior experiences in the digital front-end and running complex supply chains made him the perfect person to build on its digital transformation efforts. So, how has that vision panned out?
    “What’s been interesting is helping the business and IT team think about the end-to-end value stream,” he says. “There was a lot of application-specific knowledge. The ability for processes to be optimised at an application layer versus the end-to-end value stream was only happening in certain spots.”
    Kosla discovered the organisation had spent two years moving to a private cloud installation on the company’s hardware and had consolidated 20-plus ERP systems under one SAP instance. With much of the transformation work complete, his focus turned to making the most of these assets.
    “The opportunity was not to shepherd up transformation, it was taking the next step, which was optimising,” says Kosla, explaining how he had boosted supply chain performance in his earlier roles. He’s now applying that knowledge at HPE.
    “What we’ve been doing is slicing areas of opportunity,” he says. “With the lead-to-quote process, for example, we have opportunities to optimise, depending on the type of business, such as the channel and distributors. We’re asking things like, ‘Can we get a quote out as quickly as possible, can we price it correctly, and can we rely less on human engagement?’”
    HPE announced a cost-reduction programme in March to reduce structural operating costs. The programme is expected to be implemented through fiscal year 2026 and deliver gross savings of approximately m by fiscal year 2027, including through workforce reductions. The programme of work in IT will help the company move towards these targets.
    Kosla says optimisation in financials might mean closing books faster. In the supply chain, the optimisation might be about predicting the raw materials needed to create products. He takes a term from his time in the consumer-packaged goods sector – right to play, right to win – to explain how his approach helps the business look for value-generating opportunities.
    “So, do we have the right to play, meaning do we have the skills? Where do we have the right to win, meaning do we have the funding, business resources and availability to deliver the results? We spend time focusing on which areas offer the right to play and the right to win.”

    Kosla says data and AI play a key role in these optimisations. HPE uses third-party applications with built-in AI capabilities and has developed an internal chat solution called ChatHPE, a generative AI hub used for internal processes.
    “There are lots of conversations around how we unlock the benefits of AI in the company,” he says. Professionals across the company use Microsoft Copilot in their day-to-day roles to boost productivity. Developers, meanwhile, use GitHub Copilot.
    Finally, there’s ChatHPE, which Kosla says is used according to the functional use case. HPE started developing the platform about 18 months ago. A pipeline of use cases has now been developed, including helping legal teams to review contracts, boosting customer service in operations, re-using campaign elements in marketing and improving analytics in finance.

    “We spend time focusing on which areas offer the right to play and the right to win”
    Rom Kosla, Hewlett Packard Enterprise

    “We have a significant amount of governance internally,” says Kosla, referring to ChatHPE, which is powered by Azure and OpenAI technology. “When I started, there wasn’t an internal HPE AI engine. We had to tell the teams not to use the standard tools because any data that you feed into them is ultimately extracted. So, we had to create our platform.”
    Embracing AI isn’t Kosla’s only concern. Stabilisation is a big part of what he needs to achieve during the next 12 months. He returns to HPE’s two major transformation initiatives – the shift to private cloud and the consolidation of ERP platforms – suggesting that the dual roll-out and management of these initiatives created a significant number of incidents.
    “When I look back at PepsiCo, we had about 300,000 employees and about 600,000 tickets, which means two tickets per person per year. I said to the executive committee at HPE, ‘We have 60,000 employees, and we have a couple of million tickets’, which is an insane number. The goal was to bring that number down by about 85%,” he says.
    “Now, our system uptime is 99% across our quoting and financial systems. That availability allows our business to do more than focus on internal IT. They can focus on the customer. Stabilisation means the business isn’t constantly thinking about IT systems, because it’s a challenge to execute every day when systems are going down because of issues.”

    Kosla says the long-term aim from an IT perspective is to align the technology organisation with business outcomes. In financials, for example, he wants to produce the data analytics the business needs across the supply chain and operational processes.
    “We have embedded teams that work together to look at how we enable data, like our chat capabilities, into some of the activities,” he says. “They’ll consider how we reduce friction, especially the manual steps. They’ll also consider planning, from raw materials to the manufacturing and delivery of products. That work involves partnering with the business.”
    The key to success for the IT team is to help the business unlock value quicker. “I would say that’s the biggest part for us,” says Kosla. “We don’t even like to use the word speed – we say velocity, because velocity equals direction, and that’s crucial for us. I think the business is happy with what we’ve been able to achieve, but it’s still not fast enough.”
    Being able to deliver results at pace will rely on new levels of flexibility. Rather than being wedded to a 12-month plan that maps out a series of deliverables, Kosla wants his team to work more in the moment. Prior experiences from the consumer sector give him a good sense of what excellence looks like in this area.
    “You don’t need to go back to the top, go through an annual planning review, go back down, and then have the teams twiddling their thumbs while they wait for the OK,” he says.
    “The goal is that teams are constantly working on what’s achievable during a sprint window. Many companies take that approach; I’ve done it in my prior working life. I know what can happen, and I think flexibility will drive value creation.”
    Kosla says some of the value will come from HPE’s in-house developed technologies. “One of the things that makes this role fun is that there’s a significant amount of innovation the company is doing,” he says, pointing to important technologies, such as Morpheus VM Essentials virtualisation software, the observability platform OpsRamp, and Aruba Networking Access Points.
    “What I’m proud of is that we now show up to customers with comparability,” he says, talking about the advisory part of his role. “We can say, ‘Look, we use both products, because in some cases, it’s a migration over time.’ So, for example, when a customer asks about our observability approach, we can compare our technology with other providers.”

    Kosla reflects on his career and ponders the future of the CIO role, suggesting responsibilities will vary considerably according to sector. “Digital leaders still maintain IT systems in some industries,” he says.
    “However, the rest of the business is now much more aware of technology. The blurring of lines between business and IT means it’s tougher to differentiate between the two areas. I think we’ll see more convergence.”
    Kosla says a growing desire to contain costs often creates a close relationship between IT and finance leaders. Once again, he expects further developments in that partnership. He also anticipates that cyber will remain at the forefront of digital leaders’ priority lists.
    More generally, he believes all IT professionals are becoming more focused on business priorities. “I think the blurring will continue to create interesting results, especially in technology companies,” he says. “We want to do things differently.”

    interviews with tech company IT leaders

    Interview: Joe Depa, global chief innovation officer, EY – Accounting firm EY is focused on ‘AI-ready data’ to maximise the benefits of agentic AI and enable the use of emerging frontier technologies for its business and clients.
    Interview: Cynthia Stoddard, CIO, Adobe – After nearly 10 years in post, Adobe’s CIO is still driving digital transformation and looking to deliver lasting change through technology.
    Interview: Tomer Cohen, chief product officer, LinkedIn – The professional social network’s product chief is leading the introduction of artificial intelligence for the firm’s in-house development processes and to enhance services for users.
    #interview #rom #kosla #cio #hewlett
    Interview: Rom Kosla, CIO, Hewlett Packard Enterprise
    When Rom Kosla, CIO at Hewlett Packard Enterprise, joined the technology giant in July 2023, the move represented a big shift in direction. Previously CIO at retailer Ahold Delhaize and CIO for enterprise solutions at PepsiCo, Kosla was a consumer specialist who wanted to apply his knowledge in a new sector. “I liked the idea of working in a different industry,” he says. “I went from consumer products to retail grocery. Moving into the tech industry was a bit nerve-wracking because the concept of who the customers are is different. But since I grew up in IT, I figured I’d have the ability to navigate my way through the company.” Kosla had previously worked as a project manager for Nestlé and spent time with the consultancy Deloitte. Now approaching two years with HPE, Kosla leads HPE’s technology strategy and is responsible for how the company harnesses artificial intelligenceand data. He also oversees e-commerce, app development, enterprise resource planningand security operations. “The role has exceeded my expectations,” he says. “When you’re a CIO at a multinational, like when I was a divisional CIO at PepsiCo, you’re in the back office. Whether it’s strategy, transformation or customer engagement, the systems are the enablers of that back-office effort. At HPE, it’s different because we are customer zero.” Kosla says he prefers the term “customer gold” because he wants HPE to develop high-quality products. In addition to setting the internal digital strategy, he has an outward-facing role providing expert advice to customers. That part of his role reminds him of his time at Deloitte. “Those are opportunities to flex my prior experience and capabilities, and learn how to take our products, enable them, and share best practices,” he says. “HPE is like any other company. We use cloud systems and software-as-a-service products, including Salesforce and others. But underneath, we have HPE powering a lot of the capabilities.” The press release announcing Kosla’s appointment in 2023 said HPE believed his prior experiences in the digital front-end and running complex supply chains made him the perfect person to build on its digital transformation efforts. So, how has that vision panned out? “What’s been interesting is helping the business and IT team think about the end-to-end value stream,” he says. “There was a lot of application-specific knowledge. The ability for processes to be optimised at an application layer versus the end-to-end value stream was only happening in certain spots.” Kosla discovered the organisation had spent two years moving to a private cloud installation on the company’s hardware and had consolidated 20-plus ERP systems under one SAP instance. With much of the transformation work complete, his focus turned to making the most of these assets. “The opportunity was not to shepherd up transformation, it was taking the next step, which was optimising,” says Kosla, explaining how he had boosted supply chain performance in his earlier roles. He’s now applying that knowledge at HPE. “What we’ve been doing is slicing areas of opportunity,” he says. “With the lead-to-quote process, for example, we have opportunities to optimise, depending on the type of business, such as the channel and distributors. We’re asking things like, ‘Can we get a quote out as quickly as possible, can we price it correctly, and can we rely less on human engagement?’” HPE announced a cost-reduction programme in March to reduce structural operating costs. The programme is expected to be implemented through fiscal year 2026 and deliver gross savings of approximately m by fiscal year 2027, including through workforce reductions. The programme of work in IT will help the company move towards these targets. Kosla says optimisation in financials might mean closing books faster. In the supply chain, the optimisation might be about predicting the raw materials needed to create products. He takes a term from his time in the consumer-packaged goods sector – right to play, right to win – to explain how his approach helps the business look for value-generating opportunities. “So, do we have the right to play, meaning do we have the skills? Where do we have the right to win, meaning do we have the funding, business resources and availability to deliver the results? We spend time focusing on which areas offer the right to play and the right to win.” Kosla says data and AI play a key role in these optimisations. HPE uses third-party applications with built-in AI capabilities and has developed an internal chat solution called ChatHPE, a generative AI hub used for internal processes. “There are lots of conversations around how we unlock the benefits of AI in the company,” he says. Professionals across the company use Microsoft Copilot in their day-to-day roles to boost productivity. Developers, meanwhile, use GitHub Copilot. Finally, there’s ChatHPE, which Kosla says is used according to the functional use case. HPE started developing the platform about 18 months ago. A pipeline of use cases has now been developed, including helping legal teams to review contracts, boosting customer service in operations, re-using campaign elements in marketing and improving analytics in finance. “We spend time focusing on which areas offer the right to play and the right to win” Rom Kosla, Hewlett Packard Enterprise “We have a significant amount of governance internally,” says Kosla, referring to ChatHPE, which is powered by Azure and OpenAI technology. “When I started, there wasn’t an internal HPE AI engine. We had to tell the teams not to use the standard tools because any data that you feed into them is ultimately extracted. So, we had to create our platform.” Embracing AI isn’t Kosla’s only concern. Stabilisation is a big part of what he needs to achieve during the next 12 months. He returns to HPE’s two major transformation initiatives – the shift to private cloud and the consolidation of ERP platforms – suggesting that the dual roll-out and management of these initiatives created a significant number of incidents. “When I look back at PepsiCo, we had about 300,000 employees and about 600,000 tickets, which means two tickets per person per year. I said to the executive committee at HPE, ‘We have 60,000 employees, and we have a couple of million tickets’, which is an insane number. The goal was to bring that number down by about 85%,” he says. “Now, our system uptime is 99% across our quoting and financial systems. That availability allows our business to do more than focus on internal IT. They can focus on the customer. Stabilisation means the business isn’t constantly thinking about IT systems, because it’s a challenge to execute every day when systems are going down because of issues.” Kosla says the long-term aim from an IT perspective is to align the technology organisation with business outcomes. In financials, for example, he wants to produce the data analytics the business needs across the supply chain and operational processes. “We have embedded teams that work together to look at how we enable data, like our chat capabilities, into some of the activities,” he says. “They’ll consider how we reduce friction, especially the manual steps. They’ll also consider planning, from raw materials to the manufacturing and delivery of products. That work involves partnering with the business.” The key to success for the IT team is to help the business unlock value quicker. “I would say that’s the biggest part for us,” says Kosla. “We don’t even like to use the word speed – we say velocity, because velocity equals direction, and that’s crucial for us. I think the business is happy with what we’ve been able to achieve, but it’s still not fast enough.” Being able to deliver results at pace will rely on new levels of flexibility. Rather than being wedded to a 12-month plan that maps out a series of deliverables, Kosla wants his team to work more in the moment. Prior experiences from the consumer sector give him a good sense of what excellence looks like in this area. “You don’t need to go back to the top, go through an annual planning review, go back down, and then have the teams twiddling their thumbs while they wait for the OK,” he says. “The goal is that teams are constantly working on what’s achievable during a sprint window. Many companies take that approach; I’ve done it in my prior working life. I know what can happen, and I think flexibility will drive value creation.” Kosla says some of the value will come from HPE’s in-house developed technologies. “One of the things that makes this role fun is that there’s a significant amount of innovation the company is doing,” he says, pointing to important technologies, such as Morpheus VM Essentials virtualisation software, the observability platform OpsRamp, and Aruba Networking Access Points. “What I’m proud of is that we now show up to customers with comparability,” he says, talking about the advisory part of his role. “We can say, ‘Look, we use both products, because in some cases, it’s a migration over time.’ So, for example, when a customer asks about our observability approach, we can compare our technology with other providers.” Kosla reflects on his career and ponders the future of the CIO role, suggesting responsibilities will vary considerably according to sector. “Digital leaders still maintain IT systems in some industries,” he says. “However, the rest of the business is now much more aware of technology. The blurring of lines between business and IT means it’s tougher to differentiate between the two areas. I think we’ll see more convergence.” Kosla says a growing desire to contain costs often creates a close relationship between IT and finance leaders. Once again, he expects further developments in that partnership. He also anticipates that cyber will remain at the forefront of digital leaders’ priority lists. More generally, he believes all IT professionals are becoming more focused on business priorities. “I think the blurring will continue to create interesting results, especially in technology companies,” he says. “We want to do things differently.” interviews with tech company IT leaders Interview: Joe Depa, global chief innovation officer, EY – Accounting firm EY is focused on ‘AI-ready data’ to maximise the benefits of agentic AI and enable the use of emerging frontier technologies for its business and clients. Interview: Cynthia Stoddard, CIO, Adobe – After nearly 10 years in post, Adobe’s CIO is still driving digital transformation and looking to deliver lasting change through technology. Interview: Tomer Cohen, chief product officer, LinkedIn – The professional social network’s product chief is leading the introduction of artificial intelligence for the firm’s in-house development processes and to enhance services for users. #interview #rom #kosla #cio #hewlett
    Interview: Rom Kosla, CIO, Hewlett Packard Enterprise
    www.computerweekly.com
    When Rom Kosla, CIO at Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE), joined the technology giant in July 2023, the move represented a big shift in direction. Previously CIO at retailer Ahold Delhaize and CIO for enterprise solutions at PepsiCo, Kosla was a consumer specialist who wanted to apply his knowledge in a new sector. “I liked the idea of working in a different industry,” he says. “I went from consumer products to retail grocery. Moving into the tech industry was a bit nerve-wracking because the concept of who the customers are is different. But since I grew up in IT, I figured I’d have the ability to navigate my way through the company.” Kosla had previously worked as a project manager for Nestlé and spent time with the consultancy Deloitte. Now approaching two years with HPE, Kosla leads HPE’s technology strategy and is responsible for how the company harnesses artificial intelligence (AI) and data. He also oversees e-commerce, app development, enterprise resource planning (ERP) and security operations. “The role has exceeded my expectations,” he says. “When you’re a CIO at a multinational, like when I was a divisional CIO at PepsiCo, you’re in the back office. Whether it’s strategy, transformation or customer engagement, the systems are the enablers of that back-office effort. At HPE, it’s different because we are customer zero.” Kosla says he prefers the term “customer gold” because he wants HPE to develop high-quality products. In addition to setting the internal digital strategy, he has an outward-facing role providing expert advice to customers. That part of his role reminds him of his time at Deloitte. “Those are opportunities to flex my prior experience and capabilities, and learn how to take our products, enable them, and share best practices,” he says. “HPE is like any other company. We use cloud systems and software-as-a-service products, including Salesforce and others. But underneath, we have HPE powering a lot of the capabilities.” The press release announcing Kosla’s appointment in 2023 said HPE believed his prior experiences in the digital front-end and running complex supply chains made him the perfect person to build on its digital transformation efforts. So, how has that vision panned out? “What’s been interesting is helping the business and IT team think about the end-to-end value stream,” he says. “There was a lot of application-specific knowledge. The ability for processes to be optimised at an application layer versus the end-to-end value stream was only happening in certain spots.” Kosla discovered the organisation had spent two years moving to a private cloud installation on the company’s hardware and had consolidated 20-plus ERP systems under one SAP instance. With much of the transformation work complete, his focus turned to making the most of these assets. “The opportunity was not to shepherd up transformation, it was taking the next step, which was optimising,” says Kosla, explaining how he had boosted supply chain performance in his earlier roles. He’s now applying that knowledge at HPE. “What we’ve been doing is slicing areas of opportunity,” he says. “With the lead-to-quote process, for example, we have opportunities to optimise, depending on the type of business, such as the channel and distributors. We’re asking things like, ‘Can we get a quote out as quickly as possible, can we price it correctly, and can we rely less on human engagement?’” HPE announced a cost-reduction programme in March to reduce structural operating costs. The programme is expected to be implemented through fiscal year 2026 and deliver gross savings of approximately $350m by fiscal year 2027, including through workforce reductions. The programme of work in IT will help the company move towards these targets. Kosla says optimisation in financials might mean closing books faster. In the supply chain, the optimisation might be about predicting the raw materials needed to create products. He takes a term from his time in the consumer-packaged goods sector – right to play, right to win – to explain how his approach helps the business look for value-generating opportunities. “So, do we have the right to play, meaning do we have the skills? Where do we have the right to win, meaning do we have the funding, business resources and availability to deliver the results? We spend time focusing on which areas offer the right to play and the right to win.” Kosla says data and AI play a key role in these optimisations. HPE uses third-party applications with built-in AI capabilities and has developed an internal chat solution called ChatHPE, a generative AI hub used for internal processes. “There are lots of conversations around how we unlock the benefits of AI in the company,” he says. Professionals across the company use Microsoft Copilot in their day-to-day roles to boost productivity. Developers, meanwhile, use GitHub Copilot. Finally, there’s ChatHPE, which Kosla says is used according to the functional use case. HPE started developing the platform about 18 months ago. A pipeline of use cases has now been developed, including helping legal teams to review contracts, boosting customer service in operations, re-using campaign elements in marketing and improving analytics in finance. “We spend time focusing on which areas offer the right to play and the right to win” Rom Kosla, Hewlett Packard Enterprise “We have a significant amount of governance internally,” says Kosla, referring to ChatHPE, which is powered by Azure and OpenAI technology. “When I started, there wasn’t an internal HPE AI engine. We had to tell the teams not to use the standard tools because any data that you feed into them is ultimately extracted. So, we had to create our platform.” Embracing AI isn’t Kosla’s only concern. Stabilisation is a big part of what he needs to achieve during the next 12 months. He returns to HPE’s two major transformation initiatives – the shift to private cloud and the consolidation of ERP platforms – suggesting that the dual roll-out and management of these initiatives created a significant number of incidents. “When I look back at PepsiCo, we had about 300,000 employees and about 600,000 tickets, which means two tickets per person per year. I said to the executive committee at HPE, ‘We have 60,000 employees, and we have a couple of million tickets’, which is an insane number. The goal was to bring that number down by about 85%,” he says. “Now, our system uptime is 99% across our quoting and financial systems. That availability allows our business to do more than focus on internal IT. They can focus on the customer. Stabilisation means the business isn’t constantly thinking about IT systems, because it’s a challenge to execute every day when systems are going down because of issues.” Kosla says the long-term aim from an IT perspective is to align the technology organisation with business outcomes. In financials, for example, he wants to produce the data analytics the business needs across the supply chain and operational processes. “We have embedded teams that work together to look at how we enable data, like our chat capabilities, into some of the activities,” he says. “They’ll consider how we reduce friction, especially the manual steps. They’ll also consider planning, from raw materials to the manufacturing and delivery of products. That work involves partnering with the business.” The key to success for the IT team is to help the business unlock value quicker. “I would say that’s the biggest part for us,” says Kosla. “We don’t even like to use the word speed – we say velocity, because velocity equals direction, and that’s crucial for us. I think the business is happy with what we’ve been able to achieve, but it’s still not fast enough.” Being able to deliver results at pace will rely on new levels of flexibility. Rather than being wedded to a 12-month plan that maps out a series of deliverables, Kosla wants his team to work more in the moment. Prior experiences from the consumer sector give him a good sense of what excellence looks like in this area. “You don’t need to go back to the top, go through an annual planning review, go back down, and then have the teams twiddling their thumbs while they wait for the OK,” he says. “The goal is that teams are constantly working on what’s achievable during a sprint window. Many companies take that approach; I’ve done it in my prior working life. I know what can happen, and I think flexibility will drive value creation.” Kosla says some of the value will come from HPE’s in-house developed technologies. “One of the things that makes this role fun is that there’s a significant amount of innovation the company is doing,” he says, pointing to important technologies, such as Morpheus VM Essentials virtualisation software, the observability platform OpsRamp, and Aruba Networking Access Points. “What I’m proud of is that we now show up to customers with comparability,” he says, talking about the advisory part of his role. “We can say, ‘Look, we use both products, because in some cases, it’s a migration over time.’ So, for example, when a customer asks about our observability approach, we can compare our technology with other providers.” Kosla reflects on his career and ponders the future of the CIO role, suggesting responsibilities will vary considerably according to sector. “Digital leaders still maintain IT systems in some industries,” he says. “However, the rest of the business is now much more aware of technology. The blurring of lines between business and IT means it’s tougher to differentiate between the two areas. I think we’ll see more convergence.” Kosla says a growing desire to contain costs often creates a close relationship between IT and finance leaders. Once again, he expects further developments in that partnership. He also anticipates that cyber will remain at the forefront of digital leaders’ priority lists. More generally, he believes all IT professionals are becoming more focused on business priorities. “I think the blurring will continue to create interesting results, especially in technology companies,” he says. “We want to do things differently.” Read more interviews with tech company IT leaders Interview: Joe Depa, global chief innovation officer, EY – Accounting firm EY is focused on ‘AI-ready data’ to maximise the benefits of agentic AI and enable the use of emerging frontier technologies for its business and clients. Interview: Cynthia Stoddard, CIO, Adobe – After nearly 10 years in post, Adobe’s CIO is still driving digital transformation and looking to deliver lasting change through technology. Interview: Tomer Cohen, chief product officer, LinkedIn – The professional social network’s product chief is leading the introduction of artificial intelligence for the firm’s in-house development processes and to enhance services for users.
    0 Commentaires ·0 Parts ·0 Aperçu
  • Samsung is selling the popular Frame TV with a free bezel for up to $1,800 off

    Samsung is slashing prices on various Frame TVs and offering free bezels with select purchases ahead of Memorial Day weekend.
    #samsung #selling #popular #frame #with
    Samsung is selling the popular Frame TV with a free bezel for up to $1,800 off
    Samsung is slashing prices on various Frame TVs and offering free bezels with select purchases ahead of Memorial Day weekend. #samsung #selling #popular #frame #with
    Samsung is selling the popular Frame TV with a free bezel for up to $1,800 off
    www.zdnet.com
    Samsung is slashing prices on various Frame TVs and offering free bezels with select purchases ahead of Memorial Day weekend.
    0 Commentaires ·0 Parts ·0 Aperçu
  • Understanding Google's Pixel 10 Pro Pricing Decisions

    Yet Google's Pixel 10 and Pixel 10 Pro devices are expected to be price-matched to last year's Pixel 9 and Pixel 9 Pro... with one exception.
    #understanding #google039s #pixel #pro #pricing
    Understanding Google's Pixel 10 Pro Pricing Decisions
    Yet Google's Pixel 10 and Pixel 10 Pro devices are expected to be price-matched to last year's Pixel 9 and Pixel 9 Pro... with one exception. #understanding #google039s #pixel #pro #pricing
    Understanding Google's Pixel 10 Pro Pricing Decisions
    www.forbes.com
    Yet Google's Pixel 10 and Pixel 10 Pro devices are expected to be price-matched to last year's Pixel 9 and Pixel 9 Pro... with one exception.
    0 Commentaires ·0 Parts ·0 Aperçu
  • Unlock Mac-formatted drives on Windows with TransMac

    TransMac is a Windows application that allows users to read, write, and format Mac-formatted disks, including HFS, HFS+, and APFS volumes. It's commonly used to create macOS bootable USB drives from DMG files on Windows systems.
    TransMac runs under all versions of Windows 11, 10, 8, 7 and Vista.

    Features

    Apple File Systemvolume read support.
    Open Mac APFS/HFS/HFS+ format disk drives, flash drives, CD/DVD/Blu-ray media, HD floppies, dmg, dmgpart, sparsebundle and sparseimage files.
    Copy files to Mac HFS+ disks and dmg images.
    Format as HFS+ for Mac .
    and restore images of disks and flash drives.
    Create, compress, expand and split dmg files.
    Built in burner functionality to burn ISO and dmg files directly to CD/DVD/Blu-Ray.
    Read Mac multisession and hybrid CDs.
    View partition layout.

    Note: After attaching a Mac format disk drive, Windows may display a dialog offering to format it. DO NOT SELECT FORMAT! Windows does this because it does not recognize Mac format disks. Just cancel that window without formatting and run TransMac. Click the drive in the left pane of the TransMac window. You can then browse the drive and copy files from within TransMac.
    All features are the same but TransMac will run for 15 days from installation to allow user evaluation. After that a license key must be purchased and entered to allow continued use.
    What's New
    This version introduces a new license key system. Keys for older versions will not work.
    Changes:

    Fixed problem recognizing some partition maps.
    Fixed some files showing zero size.
    Some fixes for Windows 11.
    Ability to burn ISO files to USB drives.
    Added option to enlarge volume to disk size for restore
    Enhanced error messages
    Copy speed improvements
    #unlock #macformatted #drives #windows #with
    Unlock Mac-formatted drives on Windows with TransMac
    TransMac is a Windows application that allows users to read, write, and format Mac-formatted disks, including HFS, HFS+, and APFS volumes. It's commonly used to create macOS bootable USB drives from DMG files on Windows systems. TransMac runs under all versions of Windows 11, 10, 8, 7 and Vista. Features Apple File Systemvolume read support. Open Mac APFS/HFS/HFS+ format disk drives, flash drives, CD/DVD/Blu-ray media, HD floppies, dmg, dmgpart, sparsebundle and sparseimage files. Copy files to Mac HFS+ disks and dmg images. Format as HFS+ for Mac . and restore images of disks and flash drives. Create, compress, expand and split dmg files. Built in burner functionality to burn ISO and dmg files directly to CD/DVD/Blu-Ray. Read Mac multisession and hybrid CDs. View partition layout. Note: After attaching a Mac format disk drive, Windows may display a dialog offering to format it. DO NOT SELECT FORMAT! Windows does this because it does not recognize Mac format disks. Just cancel that window without formatting and run TransMac. Click the drive in the left pane of the TransMac window. You can then browse the drive and copy files from within TransMac. All features are the same but TransMac will run for 15 days from installation to allow user evaluation. After that a license key must be purchased and entered to allow continued use. What's New This version introduces a new license key system. Keys for older versions will not work. Changes: Fixed problem recognizing some partition maps. Fixed some files showing zero size. Some fixes for Windows 11. Ability to burn ISO files to USB drives. Added option to enlarge volume to disk size for restore Enhanced error messages Copy speed improvements #unlock #macformatted #drives #windows #with
    Unlock Mac-formatted drives on Windows with TransMac
    www.techspot.com
    TransMac is a Windows application that allows users to read, write, and format Mac-formatted disks, including HFS, HFS+, and APFS volumes. It's commonly used to create macOS bootable USB drives from DMG files on Windows systems. TransMac runs under all versions of Windows 11, 10, 8, 7 and Vista. Features Apple File System (APFS) volume read support. Open Mac APFS/HFS/HFS+ format disk drives, flash drives, CD/DVD/Blu-ray media, HD floppies, dmg, dmgpart, sparsebundle and sparseimage files. Copy files to Mac HFS+ disks and dmg images. Format as HFS+ for Mac . Save and restore images of disks and flash drives. Create, compress, expand and split dmg files. Built in burner functionality to burn ISO and dmg files directly to CD/DVD/Blu-Ray. Read Mac multisession and hybrid CDs. View partition layout. Note: After attaching a Mac format disk drive, Windows may display a dialog offering to format it. DO NOT SELECT FORMAT! Windows does this because it does not recognize Mac format disks. Just cancel that window without formatting and run TransMac. Click the drive in the left pane of the TransMac window. You can then browse the drive and copy files from within TransMac. All features are the same but TransMac will run for 15 days from installation to allow user evaluation. After that a license key must be purchased and entered to allow continued use. What's New This version introduces a new license key system. Keys for older versions will not work. Changes: Fixed problem recognizing some partition maps. Fixed some files showing zero size. Some fixes for Windows 11. Ability to burn ISO files to USB drives. Added option to enlarge volume to disk size for restore Enhanced error messages Copy speed improvements
    0 Commentaires ·0 Parts ·0 Aperçu
  • This Samsung TV is a home decor staple, and it’s $500 off

    While most TVs are thin enough for the average bear, there’s a special category of television designed to blend in with home decor. Samsung’s The Frame QLED started this boutique TV craze, and now brands like Hisense and TCL have followed suit. As luck would have it, you can score one of Samsung’s Frame sets for a discounted price this week.
    As long as the sale is still live, you’ll be able to purchase Samsung’s 55-inch The Frame 4K QLEDfor only which is a discount off its original price. 

    Why you should buy Samsung’s The Frame
    First and foremost, The Frame comes with Samsung’s Slim-Fit Wall Mount, which allows the TV to sit as flush to the wall as possible. When it’s powered off or displaying art or family photos, you’d swear it was an actual museum piece. The high-matte display gives The Frame an iconic look, and the screen’s anti-glare coating keeps the picture quality strong, even in the brightest of rooms. 
    Once connected to the internet, you’ll have access to Samsung’s Art Store, which is home to numerous digital art prints. Should you want even more options, you’ll need to sign up for an Art Store subscription, but you can also display your own photos by uploading them to the TV. 
    The Framedoes a nice job of upscaling low-res content to look clearer and more colorful, too. While three of the four HDMI ports are only 2.0 certified, the fourth is an HDMI 2.1 connection, which is what you’ll want to hook up your PS5 or Xbox with. The Frame also has a native 120Hz refresh rate and exceptionally low input lag when set to Game Mode. 
    We’re not sure how long this sale is going to last, so today might be the last day to save this much on a Frame TV for quite some time. 
    Take advantage of the markdown when you purchase right now! You should also take a look at our lists of the best Samsung The Frame TV deals, best Samsung TV deals, best Samsung deals, and best TV deals, too!
    #this #samsung #home #decor #staple
    This Samsung TV is a home decor staple, and it’s $500 off
    While most TVs are thin enough for the average bear, there’s a special category of television designed to blend in with home decor. Samsung’s The Frame QLED started this boutique TV craze, and now brands like Hisense and TCL have followed suit. As luck would have it, you can score one of Samsung’s Frame sets for a discounted price this week. As long as the sale is still live, you’ll be able to purchase Samsung’s 55-inch The Frame 4K QLEDfor only which is a discount off its original price.  Why you should buy Samsung’s The Frame First and foremost, The Frame comes with Samsung’s Slim-Fit Wall Mount, which allows the TV to sit as flush to the wall as possible. When it’s powered off or displaying art or family photos, you’d swear it was an actual museum piece. The high-matte display gives The Frame an iconic look, and the screen’s anti-glare coating keeps the picture quality strong, even in the brightest of rooms.  Once connected to the internet, you’ll have access to Samsung’s Art Store, which is home to numerous digital art prints. Should you want even more options, you’ll need to sign up for an Art Store subscription, but you can also display your own photos by uploading them to the TV.  The Framedoes a nice job of upscaling low-res content to look clearer and more colorful, too. While three of the four HDMI ports are only 2.0 certified, the fourth is an HDMI 2.1 connection, which is what you’ll want to hook up your PS5 or Xbox with. The Frame also has a native 120Hz refresh rate and exceptionally low input lag when set to Game Mode.  We’re not sure how long this sale is going to last, so today might be the last day to save this much on a Frame TV for quite some time.  Take advantage of the markdown when you purchase right now! You should also take a look at our lists of the best Samsung The Frame TV deals, best Samsung TV deals, best Samsung deals, and best TV deals, too! #this #samsung #home #decor #staple
    This Samsung TV is a home decor staple, and it’s $500 off
    www.digitaltrends.com
    While most TVs are thin enough for the average bear, there’s a special category of television designed to blend in with home decor. Samsung’s The Frame QLED started this boutique TV craze, and now brands like Hisense and TCL have followed suit. As luck would have it, you can score one of Samsung’s Frame sets for a discounted price this week. As long as the sale is still live, you’ll be able to purchase Samsung’s 55-inch The Frame 4K QLED (2024) for only $1,000, which is a $500 discount off its original $1,500 price.  Why you should buy Samsung’s The Frame First and foremost, The Frame comes with Samsung’s Slim-Fit Wall Mount, which allows the TV to sit as flush to the wall as possible. When it’s powered off or displaying art or family photos, you’d swear it was an actual museum piece. The high-matte display gives The Frame an iconic look, and the screen’s anti-glare coating keeps the picture quality strong, even in the brightest of rooms.  Once connected to the internet, you’ll have access to Samsung’s Art Store, which is home to numerous digital art prints. Should you want even more options, you’ll need to sign up for an Art Store subscription, but you can also display your own photos by uploading them to the TV.  The Frame (2024) does a nice job of upscaling low-res content to look clearer and more colorful, too. While three of the four HDMI ports are only 2.0 certified, the fourth is an HDMI 2.1 connection, which is what you’ll want to hook up your PS5 or Xbox with. The Frame also has a native 120Hz refresh rate and exceptionally low input lag when set to Game Mode.  We’re not sure how long this sale is going to last, so today might be the last day to save this much on a Frame TV for quite some time.  Take advantage of the $500 markdown when you purchase right now! You should also take a look at our lists of the best Samsung The Frame TV deals, best Samsung TV deals, best Samsung deals, and best TV deals, too!
    0 Commentaires ·0 Parts ·0 Aperçu
  • RFK Jr. calls WHO “moribund” amid US withdrawal; China pledges to give $500M

    America last

    RFK Jr. calls WHO “moribund” amid US withdrawal; China pledges to give M

    As the rest of the world signed a pandemic agreement, the US sent an abrasive video.

    Beth Mole



    May 21, 2025 7:07 pm

    |

    27

    World Health Organization Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus speaks during the 78th World Health Assembly in Geneva, Switzerland, May 19, 2025.

    Credit:

    Getty | Xinhua News Agency

    World Health Organization Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus speaks during the 78th World Health Assembly in Geneva, Switzerland, May 19, 2025.

    Credit:

    Getty | Xinhua News Agency

    Story text

    Size

    Small
    Standard
    Large

    Width
    *

    Standard
    Wide

    Links

    Standard
    Orange

    * Subscribers only
      Learn more

    China is poised to be the next big donor to the World Health Organization after Trump abruptly withdrew the US from the United Nations health agency on his first day in office, leaving a critical funding gap and leadership void.
    On Tuesday, Chinese Vice Premier Liu Guozhong said that China would give an additional million to WHO over the course of five years. Liu made the announcement at the World Health Assemblybeing held in Geneva. The WHA is the decision-making body of WHO, comprised of delegations from member states, which meet annually to guide the agency's health agenda.
    “The world is now facing the impacts of unilateralism and power politics, bringing major challenges to global health security," Liu told the WHA, according to The Washington Post. "China strongly believes that only with solidarity and mutual assistance can we create a healthy world together."
    This year, China sent its largest-ever delegation—180—to the WHA, while the US was absent, according to Health Policy Watch. The increased involvement and large donation are seen as clear examples that China is working to take the place of the US.
    Although the US has cut all ties with the WHO—and reportedly still owes the agency million in 2024–2025 dues—US health secretary and anti-vaccine advocate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. made an unexpected appearance at the WHA via a six-minute video.
    Isolated
    In the abrasive, pre-recorded speech, Kennedy described the WHO as "moribund" and "mired in bureaucratic bloatentrenched paradigms."

    "WHO's priorities have increasingly reflected the biases and interests of corporate medicine," Kennedy said, alluding to his anti-vaccine and germ-theory denialist views. He chastised the health organization for allegedly capitulating to China and working with the country to "promote the fiction that COVID originated in bats."
    Kennedy ended the short speech by touting his Make America Healthy Again agenda. He also urged the WHO to undergo a radical overhaul similar to what the Trump administration is currently doing to the US government—presumably including dismantling and withholding funding from critical health agencies and programs. Last, he pitched other countries to join the US in abandoning the WHO.
    "I would like to take this opportunity to invite my fellow health ministers around the world into a new era of cooperation.... we're ready to work with you," Kennedy said.
    Meanwhile, the WHA embraced collaboration. During the assembly this week, WHO overwhelmingly voted to adopt the world's first pandemic treaty, aimed at collectively preventing, preparing for, and responding to any future pandemics. The treaty took over three years to negotiate, but in the end, no country voted against it—124 votes in favor, 11 abstentions, and no objections."The world is safer today thanks to the leadership, collaboration and commitment of our Member States to adopt the historic WHO Pandemic Agreement,” WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said. “The Agreement is a victory for public health, science and multilateral action. It will ensure we, collectively, can better protect the world from future pandemic threats. It is also a recognition by the international community that our citizens, societies and economies must not be left vulnerable to again suffer losses like those endured during COVID-19.”

    Beth Mole
    Senior Health Reporter

    Beth Mole
    Senior Health Reporter

    Beth is Ars Technica’s Senior Health Reporter. Beth has a Ph.D. in microbiology from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and attended the Science Communication program at the University of California, Santa Cruz. She specializes in covering infectious diseases, public health, and microbes.

    27 Comments
    #rfk #calls #who #moribund #amid
    RFK Jr. calls WHO “moribund” amid US withdrawal; China pledges to give $500M
    America last RFK Jr. calls WHO “moribund” amid US withdrawal; China pledges to give M As the rest of the world signed a pandemic agreement, the US sent an abrasive video. Beth Mole – May 21, 2025 7:07 pm | 27 World Health Organization Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus speaks during the 78th World Health Assembly in Geneva, Switzerland, May 19, 2025. Credit: Getty | Xinhua News Agency World Health Organization Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus speaks during the 78th World Health Assembly in Geneva, Switzerland, May 19, 2025. Credit: Getty | Xinhua News Agency Story text Size Small Standard Large Width * Standard Wide Links Standard Orange * Subscribers only   Learn more China is poised to be the next big donor to the World Health Organization after Trump abruptly withdrew the US from the United Nations health agency on his first day in office, leaving a critical funding gap and leadership void. On Tuesday, Chinese Vice Premier Liu Guozhong said that China would give an additional million to WHO over the course of five years. Liu made the announcement at the World Health Assemblybeing held in Geneva. The WHA is the decision-making body of WHO, comprised of delegations from member states, which meet annually to guide the agency's health agenda. “The world is now facing the impacts of unilateralism and power politics, bringing major challenges to global health security," Liu told the WHA, according to The Washington Post. "China strongly believes that only with solidarity and mutual assistance can we create a healthy world together." This year, China sent its largest-ever delegation—180—to the WHA, while the US was absent, according to Health Policy Watch. The increased involvement and large donation are seen as clear examples that China is working to take the place of the US. Although the US has cut all ties with the WHO—and reportedly still owes the agency million in 2024–2025 dues—US health secretary and anti-vaccine advocate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. made an unexpected appearance at the WHA via a six-minute video. Isolated In the abrasive, pre-recorded speech, Kennedy described the WHO as "moribund" and "mired in bureaucratic bloatentrenched paradigms." "WHO's priorities have increasingly reflected the biases and interests of corporate medicine," Kennedy said, alluding to his anti-vaccine and germ-theory denialist views. He chastised the health organization for allegedly capitulating to China and working with the country to "promote the fiction that COVID originated in bats." Kennedy ended the short speech by touting his Make America Healthy Again agenda. He also urged the WHO to undergo a radical overhaul similar to what the Trump administration is currently doing to the US government—presumably including dismantling and withholding funding from critical health agencies and programs. Last, he pitched other countries to join the US in abandoning the WHO. "I would like to take this opportunity to invite my fellow health ministers around the world into a new era of cooperation.... we're ready to work with you," Kennedy said. Meanwhile, the WHA embraced collaboration. During the assembly this week, WHO overwhelmingly voted to adopt the world's first pandemic treaty, aimed at collectively preventing, preparing for, and responding to any future pandemics. The treaty took over three years to negotiate, but in the end, no country voted against it—124 votes in favor, 11 abstentions, and no objections."The world is safer today thanks to the leadership, collaboration and commitment of our Member States to adopt the historic WHO Pandemic Agreement,” WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said. “The Agreement is a victory for public health, science and multilateral action. It will ensure we, collectively, can better protect the world from future pandemic threats. It is also a recognition by the international community that our citizens, societies and economies must not be left vulnerable to again suffer losses like those endured during COVID-19.” Beth Mole Senior Health Reporter Beth Mole Senior Health Reporter Beth is Ars Technica’s Senior Health Reporter. Beth has a Ph.D. in microbiology from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and attended the Science Communication program at the University of California, Santa Cruz. She specializes in covering infectious diseases, public health, and microbes. 27 Comments #rfk #calls #who #moribund #amid
    RFK Jr. calls WHO “moribund” amid US withdrawal; China pledges to give $500M
    arstechnica.com
    America last RFK Jr. calls WHO “moribund” amid US withdrawal; China pledges to give $500M As the rest of the world signed a pandemic agreement, the US sent an abrasive video. Beth Mole – May 21, 2025 7:07 pm | 27 World Health Organization Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus speaks during the 78th World Health Assembly in Geneva, Switzerland, May 19, 2025. Credit: Getty | Xinhua News Agency World Health Organization Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus speaks during the 78th World Health Assembly in Geneva, Switzerland, May 19, 2025. Credit: Getty | Xinhua News Agency Story text Size Small Standard Large Width * Standard Wide Links Standard Orange * Subscribers only   Learn more China is poised to be the next big donor to the World Health Organization after Trump abruptly withdrew the US from the United Nations health agency on his first day in office, leaving a critical funding gap and leadership void. On Tuesday, Chinese Vice Premier Liu Guozhong said that China would give an additional $500 million to WHO over the course of five years. Liu made the announcement at the World Health Assembly (WHA) being held in Geneva. The WHA is the decision-making body of WHO, comprised of delegations from member states, which meet annually to guide the agency's health agenda. “The world is now facing the impacts of unilateralism and power politics, bringing major challenges to global health security," Liu told the WHA, according to The Washington Post. "China strongly believes that only with solidarity and mutual assistance can we create a healthy world together." This year, China sent its largest-ever delegation—180—to the WHA, while the US was absent, according to Health Policy Watch. The increased involvement and large donation are seen as clear examples that China is working to take the place of the US. Although the US has cut all ties with the WHO—and reportedly still owes the agency $260 million in 2024–2025 dues—US health secretary and anti-vaccine advocate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. made an unexpected appearance at the WHA via a six-minute video. Isolated In the abrasive, pre-recorded speech, Kennedy described the WHO as "moribund" and "mired in bureaucratic bloat [and] entrenched paradigms." "WHO's priorities have increasingly reflected the biases and interests of corporate medicine," Kennedy said, alluding to his anti-vaccine and germ-theory denialist views. He chastised the health organization for allegedly capitulating to China and working with the country to "promote the fiction that COVID originated in bats." Kennedy ended the short speech by touting his Make America Healthy Again agenda. He also urged the WHO to undergo a radical overhaul similar to what the Trump administration is currently doing to the US government—presumably including dismantling and withholding funding from critical health agencies and programs. Last, he pitched other countries to join the US in abandoning the WHO. "I would like to take this opportunity to invite my fellow health ministers around the world into a new era of cooperation.... we're ready to work with you," Kennedy said. Meanwhile, the WHA embraced collaboration. During the assembly this week, WHO overwhelmingly voted to adopt the world's first pandemic treaty, aimed at collectively preventing, preparing for, and responding to any future pandemics. The treaty took over three years to negotiate, but in the end, no country voted against it—124 votes in favor, 11 abstentions, and no objections. (The US, no longer being a member of WHO, did not have a vote.) "The world is safer today thanks to the leadership, collaboration and commitment of our Member States to adopt the historic WHO Pandemic Agreement,” WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said. “The Agreement is a victory for public health, science and multilateral action. It will ensure we, collectively, can better protect the world from future pandemic threats. It is also a recognition by the international community that our citizens, societies and economies must not be left vulnerable to again suffer losses like those endured during COVID-19.” Beth Mole Senior Health Reporter Beth Mole Senior Health Reporter Beth is Ars Technica’s Senior Health Reporter. Beth has a Ph.D. in microbiology from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and attended the Science Communication program at the University of California, Santa Cruz. She specializes in covering infectious diseases, public health, and microbes. 27 Comments
    0 Commentaires ·0 Parts ·0 Aperçu
  • The first teeth were sensory organs on the skin of ancient fish

    CT scan of the front of a skate, showing the hard, tooth-like denticleson its skinYara Haridy
    Teeth first evolved as sensory organs, not for chewing, according to a new analysis of animal fossils. The first tooth-like structures seem to have been sensitive nodules on the skin of early fish that could detect changes in the surrounding water.
    The finding supports a long-standing idea that teeth first evolved outside the mouth, says Yara Haridy at the University of Chicago.
    Advertisement
    While there was some evidence to back this up, there was an obvious question. “What good is having all these teeth on the outside?” says Haridy. One possibility was that they served as defensive armour, but Haridy thinks there was more to it. “It’s great to cover yourself in hard things, but what if those hard things could also help you sense your environment?”
    True teeth are only found in backboned vertebrates, like fish and mammals. Some invertebrates have tooth-like structures, but the underlying tissues are completely different. This means teeth originated during the evolution of the earliest vertebrates: fish.
    Haridy and her team re-examined fossils that have been claimed to be the oldest examples of fish teeth, using a synchrotron to scan them in unprecedented detail.

    Unmissable news about our planet delivered straight to your inbox every month.

    Sign up to newsletter

    They focused first on fragmentary fossils of animals called Anatolepis, which date from the later part of the Cambrian Period, which ran from 539 million to 487 million years ago, and early in the Ordovician Period, which ran from 487 million to 443 million years ago. These animals had a hard exoskeleton, dotted with tubules.
    These had been interpreted as being tubules of dentine, one of the hard tissues that make up teeth. In human teeth, dentine is the yellow layer under the hard white enamel and it performs many functions, including sensing pressure, temperature and pain.
    This led to the idea that the tubules are precursors to teeth called odontodes and that Anatolepis is an early fish.
    That isn’t what Haridy and her team found. “We saw that the internal anatomydidn’t actually look like a vertebrate at all,” she says. After examining structures from a range of animals, they found that the tubules were most similar to features called sensilla found on the exoskeletons of arthropods like insects and spiders. These look like pegs or small hairs and detect a range of phenomena. “It can be everything from taste to vibration to changes in air currents,” says Haridy.
    This means Anatolepis is an arthropod, not a fish, and its tubules aren’t the direct precursors to teeth.

    “Dentine is likely a vertebrate novelty, yet the sensory capabilities of a hardened external surface were present much earlier in invertebrates,” says Gareth Fraser at the University of Florida in Gainesville, who wasn’t involved in the study.
    With Anatolepis out of the picture, the team says, the oldest known teeth are those of Eriptychius, which is only known from the Ordovician Period. These do have true dentine – in odontodes on their skin.
    Haridy says invertebrates like Anatolepis and early vertebrates like Eriptychius independently evolved hard, sensory nodules on their skin. “These two very different animals needed to sense their way through the muck of ancient seas,” she says. In line with this, the team found that the odontodes on the skin of some modern fish still have nerves – suggesting a sensory function.
    Once some fish became active predators, they needed a way to hold onto their prey, so the hard odontodes made their way to the mouth, where they could be used to bite.
    “Based on the available data, tooth-like structures likely first evolved in the skin of early vertebrates, prior to the oral invasion of these structures that became teeth,” says Fraser.
    Journal reference:Nature DOI: 10.1038/s41586-025-08944-w
    Topics:
    #first #teeth #were #sensory #organs
    The first teeth were sensory organs on the skin of ancient fish
    CT scan of the front of a skate, showing the hard, tooth-like denticleson its skinYara Haridy Teeth first evolved as sensory organs, not for chewing, according to a new analysis of animal fossils. The first tooth-like structures seem to have been sensitive nodules on the skin of early fish that could detect changes in the surrounding water. The finding supports a long-standing idea that teeth first evolved outside the mouth, says Yara Haridy at the University of Chicago. Advertisement While there was some evidence to back this up, there was an obvious question. “What good is having all these teeth on the outside?” says Haridy. One possibility was that they served as defensive armour, but Haridy thinks there was more to it. “It’s great to cover yourself in hard things, but what if those hard things could also help you sense your environment?” True teeth are only found in backboned vertebrates, like fish and mammals. Some invertebrates have tooth-like structures, but the underlying tissues are completely different. This means teeth originated during the evolution of the earliest vertebrates: fish. Haridy and her team re-examined fossils that have been claimed to be the oldest examples of fish teeth, using a synchrotron to scan them in unprecedented detail. Unmissable news about our planet delivered straight to your inbox every month. Sign up to newsletter They focused first on fragmentary fossils of animals called Anatolepis, which date from the later part of the Cambrian Period, which ran from 539 million to 487 million years ago, and early in the Ordovician Period, which ran from 487 million to 443 million years ago. These animals had a hard exoskeleton, dotted with tubules. These had been interpreted as being tubules of dentine, one of the hard tissues that make up teeth. In human teeth, dentine is the yellow layer under the hard white enamel and it performs many functions, including sensing pressure, temperature and pain. This led to the idea that the tubules are precursors to teeth called odontodes and that Anatolepis is an early fish. That isn’t what Haridy and her team found. “We saw that the internal anatomydidn’t actually look like a vertebrate at all,” she says. After examining structures from a range of animals, they found that the tubules were most similar to features called sensilla found on the exoskeletons of arthropods like insects and spiders. These look like pegs or small hairs and detect a range of phenomena. “It can be everything from taste to vibration to changes in air currents,” says Haridy. This means Anatolepis is an arthropod, not a fish, and its tubules aren’t the direct precursors to teeth. “Dentine is likely a vertebrate novelty, yet the sensory capabilities of a hardened external surface were present much earlier in invertebrates,” says Gareth Fraser at the University of Florida in Gainesville, who wasn’t involved in the study. With Anatolepis out of the picture, the team says, the oldest known teeth are those of Eriptychius, which is only known from the Ordovician Period. These do have true dentine – in odontodes on their skin. Haridy says invertebrates like Anatolepis and early vertebrates like Eriptychius independently evolved hard, sensory nodules on their skin. “These two very different animals needed to sense their way through the muck of ancient seas,” she says. In line with this, the team found that the odontodes on the skin of some modern fish still have nerves – suggesting a sensory function. Once some fish became active predators, they needed a way to hold onto their prey, so the hard odontodes made their way to the mouth, where they could be used to bite. “Based on the available data, tooth-like structures likely first evolved in the skin of early vertebrates, prior to the oral invasion of these structures that became teeth,” says Fraser. Journal reference:Nature DOI: 10.1038/s41586-025-08944-w Topics: #first #teeth #were #sensory #organs
    The first teeth were sensory organs on the skin of ancient fish
    www.newscientist.com
    CT scan of the front of a skate, showing the hard, tooth-like denticles (orange) on its skinYara Haridy Teeth first evolved as sensory organs, not for chewing, according to a new analysis of animal fossils. The first tooth-like structures seem to have been sensitive nodules on the skin of early fish that could detect changes in the surrounding water. The finding supports a long-standing idea that teeth first evolved outside the mouth, says Yara Haridy at the University of Chicago. Advertisement While there was some evidence to back this up, there was an obvious question. “What good is having all these teeth on the outside?” says Haridy. One possibility was that they served as defensive armour, but Haridy thinks there was more to it. “It’s great to cover yourself in hard things, but what if those hard things could also help you sense your environment?” True teeth are only found in backboned vertebrates, like fish and mammals. Some invertebrates have tooth-like structures, but the underlying tissues are completely different. This means teeth originated during the evolution of the earliest vertebrates: fish. Haridy and her team re-examined fossils that have been claimed to be the oldest examples of fish teeth, using a synchrotron to scan them in unprecedented detail. Unmissable news about our planet delivered straight to your inbox every month. Sign up to newsletter They focused first on fragmentary fossils of animals called Anatolepis, which date from the later part of the Cambrian Period, which ran from 539 million to 487 million years ago, and early in the Ordovician Period, which ran from 487 million to 443 million years ago. These animals had a hard exoskeleton, dotted with tubules. These had been interpreted as being tubules of dentine, one of the hard tissues that make up teeth. In human teeth, dentine is the yellow layer under the hard white enamel and it performs many functions, including sensing pressure, temperature and pain. This led to the idea that the tubules are precursors to teeth called odontodes and that Anatolepis is an early fish. That isn’t what Haridy and her team found. “We saw that the internal anatomy [of the tubules] didn’t actually look like a vertebrate at all,” she says. After examining structures from a range of animals, they found that the tubules were most similar to features called sensilla found on the exoskeletons of arthropods like insects and spiders. These look like pegs or small hairs and detect a range of phenomena. “It can be everything from taste to vibration to changes in air currents,” says Haridy. This means Anatolepis is an arthropod, not a fish, and its tubules aren’t the direct precursors to teeth. “Dentine is likely a vertebrate novelty, yet the sensory capabilities of a hardened external surface were present much earlier in invertebrates,” says Gareth Fraser at the University of Florida in Gainesville, who wasn’t involved in the study. With Anatolepis out of the picture, the team says, the oldest known teeth are those of Eriptychius, which is only known from the Ordovician Period. These do have true dentine – in odontodes on their skin. Haridy says invertebrates like Anatolepis and early vertebrates like Eriptychius independently evolved hard, sensory nodules on their skin. “These two very different animals needed to sense their way through the muck of ancient seas,” she says. In line with this, the team found that the odontodes on the skin of some modern fish still have nerves – suggesting a sensory function. Once some fish became active predators, they needed a way to hold onto their prey, so the hard odontodes made their way to the mouth, where they could be used to bite. “Based on the available data, tooth-like structures likely first evolved in the skin of early vertebrates, prior to the oral invasion of these structures that became teeth,” says Fraser. Journal reference:Nature DOI: 10.1038/s41586-025-08944-w Topics:
    0 Commentaires ·0 Parts ·0 Aperçu
  • Here's how many tanks, aircraft, and soldiers are joining the huge Army anniversary parade on Trump's birthday

    Fireworks burst in the background behind a Bradley fighting vehicle at the 2019 Salute to America event that was initially supposed to be a military parade.

    Sarah Silbiger/Getty Images

    2025-05-21T21:31:44Z

    d

    Read in app

    This story is available exclusively to Business Insider
    subscribers. Become an Insider
    and start reading now.
    Have an account?

    The Army is preparing for a massive 250th birthday parade in Washington, DC, on June 14.
    The event, designated a national security special event, coincides with President Donald Trump's birthday.
    The parade will feature tanks, aircraft, and 6,700 soldiers from all Army units.

    The US Army has shared new details for its massive 250th birthday celebration, which is set to be a mind-boggling logistical feat, with Abrams tanks, artillery, Strykers, horses, and a lot more descending on the nation's capital.The week-long celebratory event is officially designated as a "national security special event," a term used for major events like the Super Bowl or presidential inaugurations. These require extensive inter-agency coordination.This event has been in the works for two years, but was only recently updated to include a parade on June 14 that will coincide with President Donald Trump's birthday. Army officials on Wednesday did not specify to reporters whose idea it was to insert the military parade into the already-planned events.Trump made it known during his first term that he wanted a major military parade. That event never came to fruition.At least 200,000 people are expected to attend the upcoming event, officials said.The parade will start in the early evening and will proceed along Constitution Avenue and continue near the National Mall, a shorter route than previously expected.Here's what's coming to DC for the parade:There will be 28 M1A1 Abrams tanks, each roughly 70-ton tracked vehicle equipped with a 120mm cannon, among other armaments, as well as 28 Bradley Fighting vehicles, lighter tracked armor with 25mm M242 Bushmaster chain guns. Additionally, 28 Strykers will also be included, flexible 20-ton eight-wheeled vehicles with mixed armaments used for a range of missions.Abrams tanks, Strykers, and Bradley infantry fighting vehicles form the backbone of two of the three types of Army "brigade combat teams," self-sufficient units that can fight and maneuver on the battlefield. Some are centered on infantry, others on "armor" like the Abrams and Bradley, and others on the versatile Strykers.

    A Bradley fighting vehicle sits as a static display at the 2019 Salute to America event.

    BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/AFP via Getty Images

    The parade will also feature 4 Paladins, tracked self-propelled 155mm howitzers each weighing over 27 tons. There will also be "several" pieces of towed artillery including M777s and M119s.
    Fifty aircraft are expected to participate, including helicopters like the multi-mission Black Hawks, heavy-lift Chinooks, and attack Apaches. Army officials told reporters they are working closely with the FAA and DC's Reagan National Airport for parade flyover deconfliction, though final details regarding impact to local airports are still being hashed out.All weapons systems will be disabled and inspected by the Secret Service prior to the event, officials told reporters. No ammunition, be it blank or live rounds, will be distributed to soldiers.Roughly 6,700 soldiers — including active duty, reserve, National Guard, Reserve Officer Training Corps, and special operations forces — are expected to participate.Some soldiers will wear historical uniforms specially made for this event, officials shared Wednesday, to reflect US Army traditions from the Revolutionary War through the Global War on Terror.World War II-era equipment including M4 Sherman tanks, B25 bombers, P51 Mustang fighter planes, and C47 Skytrains, will also be featured.Army equine units from across the country are also expected, including Arlington National Cemetery's Caisson Platoon.The Army's prestigious Golden Knights parachute team will end the celebration with a jump and will present a folded flag to the president. Folded flags are usually presented to grieving military families during funerals, but they are also sometimes presented at military retirement ceremonies or other milestone events as a gesture of respect.
    #here039s #how #many #tanks #aircraft
    Here's how many tanks, aircraft, and soldiers are joining the huge Army anniversary parade on Trump's birthday
    Fireworks burst in the background behind a Bradley fighting vehicle at the 2019 Salute to America event that was initially supposed to be a military parade. Sarah Silbiger/Getty Images 2025-05-21T21:31:44Z d Read in app This story is available exclusively to Business Insider subscribers. Become an Insider and start reading now. Have an account? The Army is preparing for a massive 250th birthday parade in Washington, DC, on June 14. The event, designated a national security special event, coincides with President Donald Trump's birthday. The parade will feature tanks, aircraft, and 6,700 soldiers from all Army units. The US Army has shared new details for its massive 250th birthday celebration, which is set to be a mind-boggling logistical feat, with Abrams tanks, artillery, Strykers, horses, and a lot more descending on the nation's capital.The week-long celebratory event is officially designated as a "national security special event," a term used for major events like the Super Bowl or presidential inaugurations. These require extensive inter-agency coordination.This event has been in the works for two years, but was only recently updated to include a parade on June 14 that will coincide with President Donald Trump's birthday. Army officials on Wednesday did not specify to reporters whose idea it was to insert the military parade into the already-planned events.Trump made it known during his first term that he wanted a major military parade. That event never came to fruition.At least 200,000 people are expected to attend the upcoming event, officials said.The parade will start in the early evening and will proceed along Constitution Avenue and continue near the National Mall, a shorter route than previously expected.Here's what's coming to DC for the parade:There will be 28 M1A1 Abrams tanks, each roughly 70-ton tracked vehicle equipped with a 120mm cannon, among other armaments, as well as 28 Bradley Fighting vehicles, lighter tracked armor with 25mm M242 Bushmaster chain guns. Additionally, 28 Strykers will also be included, flexible 20-ton eight-wheeled vehicles with mixed armaments used for a range of missions.Abrams tanks, Strykers, and Bradley infantry fighting vehicles form the backbone of two of the three types of Army "brigade combat teams," self-sufficient units that can fight and maneuver on the battlefield. Some are centered on infantry, others on "armor" like the Abrams and Bradley, and others on the versatile Strykers. A Bradley fighting vehicle sits as a static display at the 2019 Salute to America event. BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/AFP via Getty Images The parade will also feature 4 Paladins, tracked self-propelled 155mm howitzers each weighing over 27 tons. There will also be "several" pieces of towed artillery including M777s and M119s. Fifty aircraft are expected to participate, including helicopters like the multi-mission Black Hawks, heavy-lift Chinooks, and attack Apaches. Army officials told reporters they are working closely with the FAA and DC's Reagan National Airport for parade flyover deconfliction, though final details regarding impact to local airports are still being hashed out.All weapons systems will be disabled and inspected by the Secret Service prior to the event, officials told reporters. No ammunition, be it blank or live rounds, will be distributed to soldiers.Roughly 6,700 soldiers — including active duty, reserve, National Guard, Reserve Officer Training Corps, and special operations forces — are expected to participate.Some soldiers will wear historical uniforms specially made for this event, officials shared Wednesday, to reflect US Army traditions from the Revolutionary War through the Global War on Terror.World War II-era equipment including M4 Sherman tanks, B25 bombers, P51 Mustang fighter planes, and C47 Skytrains, will also be featured.Army equine units from across the country are also expected, including Arlington National Cemetery's Caisson Platoon.The Army's prestigious Golden Knights parachute team will end the celebration with a jump and will present a folded flag to the president. Folded flags are usually presented to grieving military families during funerals, but they are also sometimes presented at military retirement ceremonies or other milestone events as a gesture of respect. #here039s #how #many #tanks #aircraft
    Here's how many tanks, aircraft, and soldiers are joining the huge Army anniversary parade on Trump's birthday
    www.businessinsider.com
    Fireworks burst in the background behind a Bradley fighting vehicle at the 2019 Salute to America event that was initially supposed to be a military parade. Sarah Silbiger/Getty Images 2025-05-21T21:31:44Z Save Saved Read in app This story is available exclusively to Business Insider subscribers. Become an Insider and start reading now. Have an account? The Army is preparing for a massive 250th birthday parade in Washington, DC, on June 14. The event, designated a national security special event, coincides with President Donald Trump's birthday. The parade will feature tanks, aircraft, and 6,700 soldiers from all Army units. The US Army has shared new details for its massive 250th birthday celebration, which is set to be a mind-boggling logistical feat, with Abrams tanks, artillery, Strykers, horses, and a lot more descending on the nation's capital.The week-long celebratory event is officially designated as a "national security special event," a term used for major events like the Super Bowl or presidential inaugurations. These require extensive inter-agency coordination.This event has been in the works for two years, but was only recently updated to include a parade on June 14 that will coincide with President Donald Trump's birthday. Army officials on Wednesday did not specify to reporters whose idea it was to insert the military parade into the already-planned events.Trump made it known during his first term that he wanted a major military parade. That event never came to fruition.At least 200,000 people are expected to attend the upcoming event, officials said.The parade will start in the early evening and will proceed along Constitution Avenue and continue near the National Mall, a shorter route than previously expected.Here's what's coming to DC for the parade:There will be 28 M1A1 Abrams tanks, each roughly 70-ton tracked vehicle equipped with a 120mm cannon, among other armaments, as well as 28 Bradley Fighting vehicles, lighter tracked armor with 25mm M242 Bushmaster chain guns. Additionally, 28 Strykers will also be included, flexible 20-ton eight-wheeled vehicles with mixed armaments used for a range of missions.Abrams tanks, Strykers, and Bradley infantry fighting vehicles form the backbone of two of the three types of Army "brigade combat teams," self-sufficient units that can fight and maneuver on the battlefield. Some are centered on infantry, others on "armor" like the Abrams and Bradley, and others on the versatile Strykers. A Bradley fighting vehicle sits as a static display at the 2019 Salute to America event. BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/AFP via Getty Images The parade will also feature 4 Paladins, tracked self-propelled 155mm howitzers each weighing over 27 tons. There will also be "several" pieces of towed artillery including M777s and M119s. Fifty aircraft are expected to participate, including helicopters like the multi-mission Black Hawks, heavy-lift Chinooks, and attack Apaches. Army officials told reporters they are working closely with the FAA and DC's Reagan National Airport for parade flyover deconfliction, though final details regarding impact to local airports are still being hashed out.All weapons systems will be disabled and inspected by the Secret Service prior to the event, officials told reporters. No ammunition, be it blank or live rounds, will be distributed to soldiers.Roughly 6,700 soldiers — including active duty, reserve, National Guard, Reserve Officer Training Corps (ROTC), and special operations forces — are expected to participate.Some soldiers will wear historical uniforms specially made for this event, officials shared Wednesday, to reflect US Army traditions from the Revolutionary War through the Global War on Terror.World War II-era equipment including M4 Sherman tanks, B25 bombers, P51 Mustang fighter planes, and C47 Skytrains, will also be featured.Army equine units from across the country are also expected, including Arlington National Cemetery's Caisson Platoon.The Army's prestigious Golden Knights parachute team will end the celebration with a jump and will present a folded flag to the president. Folded flags are usually presented to grieving military families during funerals, but they are also sometimes presented at military retirement ceremonies or other milestone events as a gesture of respect.
    0 Commentaires ·0 Parts ·0 Aperçu
  • America is on the precipice of an academic brain drain 

    Other countries may benefit. Science will suffer
    #america #precipice #academic #brain #drain
    America is on the precipice of an academic brain drain 
    Other countries may benefit. Science will suffer #america #precipice #academic #brain #drain
    America is on the precipice of an academic brain drain 
    www.economist.com
    Other countries may benefit. Science will suffer
    0 Commentaires ·0 Parts ·0 Aperçu
CGShares https://cgshares.com