• Cybersecurity jobs are in high demand. Execs in the field explain why.
    www.businessinsider.com
    The demand for cybersecurity jobs is expected to grow significantly in the coming years.Cybersecurity executives told BI that the threat landscape has changed in the wake of AI.They also explained why it's been difficult to meet demand.The launch of ChatGPT just over two years ago sparked an AI race among tech companies. The resulting easy access to the AI tools also ushered in new risks that have led to increased demand for cybersecurity talent."Every time you create something for good or for growth, some adversary is going to use that," Chris Schueler, CEO of cyber solution provider Cyderes, told BI.In short, the bad guys can access the same AI smarts and efficiencies the tools unlock.And while AI companies have safeguards in place to prevent bad actors from using tools maliciously, cybersecurity professionals have to actively work to "stay one step ahead of them," Schueler said."The bad guys are getting really good," Chris Risley, CEO of wireless threat intelligence company Bastille, told BI.As the threat landscape changes, cybersecurity jobs are in high demand as companies and governments seek to safeguard against AI-fueled cyberattacks.The number of employed information security analysts, who focus on protecting computer systems, is expected to grow 33% between 2023 and 2033, according to the US Bureau of Labor Statistics.In conversations with Business Insider, more than half a dozen cybersecurity executives explained why demand for cybersecurity roles has grown and how the security concerns facing companies have evolved.Paul Caron, head of cybersecurity of Americas at global corporate intelligence and cybersecurity consultancy S-RM, said that attackers are using AI to "better understand behavioral analytics," such as the time someone logs into work.Danny Jenkins, the CEO, and cofounder of cybersecurity platform ThreatLocker, said that AI also opened the door to anyone with a computer being able to create malicious software."Two years ago, if you wanted to write a piece of malware, you had to be skilled enough to write malware," Jenkins, whose company has clients including Jet Blue, told BI, adding that you "no longer need to be a smart engineer."AI tools have also made it easier for traditional phishing scams to mask some of theusual red flags, like detectable spelling errorsor poorly constructed messages. It's also advanced newer attack methods for bad actors, like deepfakes, with AI-powered audio and video."All I need is one good picture of your face, and I can run a deepfake video on you within 20 minutes," Schueler said.Mike Britton, chief information officer for Abnormal Security, told BI that the evolution of the digital age has also allowed bad actors to attack from virtually anywhere around the globe."That's essentially taken a lot of my natural perimeters and protections, and it's dropped all of those walls," Britton said, adding that attackers no longer have to "beat your firewall" or "get into your building."Technology is also much more deeply integrated into everyday life than it used to be, offering would-be attackers new devices to try to compromise."The old insider threat was the disgruntled employee," Risley said. "But the new insider threat is the loyal employee with a compromised device."'It's a harder job than it was'There's a growing gap in the workforce of about 4.8 million cybersecurity jobs globally, according to a 2024 study from cybersecurity member association ISC2 a 19% year-over-year increase.As cybersecurity risks become more sophisticated, the job has also become more challenging, industry executives told BI, which has made it difficult to meet the rising demand. Cybersecurity roles take 21% longer on average to fill than other jobs in the IT field, according to data analytics firm Cyberseek."It's a harder job than it was a few years ago," Risley said. "There's just so many more protocols, so many more policies."MK Palmore,Google Cloud's office of the chief information security officer, previously told BI that many cybersecurity professionals started in IT and transitioned over. He said it can be difficult for a new candidate to get the needed hands-on experience in the field.Schueler, who's been in the industry for 25 years, said cyberattacks are "escalating at a pace" he's never seen. That's made it challenging for candidates to keep up with the skills needed. He said an employee taking just three months off could face a "pretty massive" knowledge gap upon return.The stakes are also incredibly high. DNA-testing company 23andMe agreed to pay $30 million in September to settle a lawsuit after hackers accessed the personal data of millions of its customers.Last year, a software issue caused by cybersecurity firm CrowdStrike resulted in a global IT outage that disrupted several industries, including airlines, banks, and emergency services. While the incident wasn't the result of a bad actor gaining access to a system, it's a testament to how integrated cybersecurity systems are within the tech that powers the world.While some companies like Cyderes or S-RM offer specialized training programs, smaller firms may not be able to provide that kind of programming. Risley told BI that his company doesn't usually hire recent graduates, and looks more for "battle-hardened cyber security people."If you do happen to get a job in the field though, it may be worth holding onto. Schueler told BI the career path is here to stay and will become increasingly important as technology evolves.Plus, it tends to pay well.At the top ranks of the profession, US-based CISOs make about $565,000 annually, with some exceeding $1 million, according to an IANS Research and Artico Search report that includes data from over 755 CISOs between April and August 2024.Schueler told BI that recent grads and seasoned professionals in cybersecurity can earn above-average salaries."This industry does pay very, very well," he said.
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  • With Trump taking an ax to DEI, companies in the private sector should legally bulletproof their diversity practices
    www.businessinsider.com
    President Donald Trump signed an executive order ending DEI programs in the federal government.Given the spotlight on DEI, lawyers say private sector companies should asses their own policies.It's "almost certain to create a chilling effect on corporate DEI initiatives," one lawyer said.Corporate America's DEI practices are facing scrutiny like never before.And thanks to President Donald Trump's executive order ending diversity, equity, and inclusion programs in the federal government, the private sector's DEI efforts have come under heightened legal risk.Trump's order encourages the private sector to end "illegal DEI discrimination and preferences." As part of that plan, the order tasks each federal agency to "identify up to nine potential civil compliance investigations" of enterprises including publicly traded corporations and large nonprofits.Given the current spotlight on DEI initiatives and Trump's executive actions targeting them, employment attorneys told Business Insider that companies would be wise to assess their own diversity-related programs with legal counsel to make sure they are ironclad in the face of potential federal investigations or workplace lawsuits."The main thing that employers should be doing right now is conducting what we call either a DEI audit or a vulnerability assessment," said Michael Thomas, a California-based attorney specializing in corporate diversity practices at the law firm Jackson Lewis.Under this type of assessment, companies would work with outside counsel to review their policies and practices related to DEI and equal employment opportunity.DEI initiatives that focus on the requirements of federal equal employment opportunity laws are most likely to be legally compliant, Thomas said.Hiring quotas or preferential treatment to certain groups of people were already illegal and now pose a higher legal risk, Thomas said."The law hasn't changed," Thomas said, explaining, however, "Your scrutiny has increased, the attention has increased, and you face potential legal, reputational, and brand risk from both your majority, for lack of a better phrase, and also your underrepresented groups."Jon Solorzano, a partner at the law firm Vinson & Elkins, told BI the legal grounds involving diversity initiatives haven't really changed, "but the risks have.""DEI initiatives are not, in and of themselves, problematic," said Solorzano, who advises public and private companies on areas related to ESG (environmental, social, and governance) and risk management."It's just that there is more scrutiny on the acronym and now the full force of the federal government has squarely taken aim at this concept," Solorzano said of DEI.Solorzano said that he has already spoken with numerous companies that have inquired about whether their DEI policies are compliant with the law, and what, if anything, they should do to change their practices to minimize their risks of being a target of an investigation."This executive order is almost certain to create a chilling effect on corporate DEI initiatives," said Solorzano, who added that he expects to see even more companies roll back their DEI efforts. Trump signed a flurry of executive orders after taking office. Reuters/Jonathan Ernst Though, companies "need to be careful about clumsily nixing all initiatives," Solorzano said. "Pulling out of initiatives, just because it is politically disfavored at the moment, may not be the right thing for a business over the long term. But careful calibration of the risks and values of pursuing these initiatives remain critical."Domenique Camacho Moran, a partner at the law firm Farrell Fritz in New York, also called it "critical" that every organization continues to evaluate its DEI-related policies to ensure they are not "in the interest of doing something good, inadvertently crossing the line."DEI programs, which many companies have adopted in recent years, "often talked about commitment to equal opportunity" and about "educating the workforce," Camacho Moran said. "They rarely included numbers or targets for specific diversity initiatives."Those programs, however, "were not scrutinized closely by a variety of government agencies, and so some of those programs were outlined and articulated programming and opportunities that emphasized a particular minority group or particular protected class," Camacho Moran said.Attorneys told BI they now expect, due to the current political climate, employers to face an uptick of lawsuits alleging discrimination and so-called reverse discrimination.Peter Woo, also an attorney at the firm Jackson Lewis, said it is likely employers will see a rise in internal complaints from employees who are for and against DEI initiatives, which will likely translate to more lawsuits."Companies should have a heightened sense of awareness now in terms of how to approach these because of the fact there will be more inquiries, more complaints internally," Woo said.Thomas said there had been legal challenges to DEI programs since the Supreme Court's 2023 ruling ending affirmative action in college admissions, and expects those challenges to increase post Trump's executive actions taking aim at DEI initiatives.Ron Zambrano, the employment litigation chairman at the California law firm West Coast Trial Lawyers, told BI he also expects to see a rise in lawsuits related to companies' DEI efforts.The potential complaints may even cite Trump's executive order targeting DEI initiatives "as a form of legitimacy," Zambrano said.Those possible lawsuits would succeed only "if they would have succeeded regardless of Trump or Trump's executive order," Zambrano said."It does happen. There is reverse discrimination. It absolutely does exist, but it's not as pervasive as just, like, well, the existence of DEI means that only minorities are going to have the advantage," said Zambrano. "That's the implication, right? That's the fear. That's the messaging."
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  • Scans for the memories: why old games magazines are a vital source of cultural history and nostalgia
    www.theguardian.com
    Before the internet, if you were an avid gamer then you were very likely to be an avid reader of games magazines. From the early 1980s, the likes of Crash, Mega, PC Gamer and the Official PlayStation Magazine were your connection with the industry, providing news, reviews and interviews as well as lively letters pages that fostered a sense of community. Very rarely, however, did anyone keep hold of their magazine collections. Lacking the cultural gravitas of music or movie publications, they were mostly thrown away. While working at Future Publishing as a games journalist in the 1990s, I watched many times as hundreds of old issues of SuperPlay, Edge and GamesMaster were tipped into skips for pulping. I feel queasy just thinking about it.Because now, of course, I and thousands of other video game veterans have realised these magazines are a vital historical resource as well as a source of nostalgic joy. Surviving copies of classic mags are selling at a vast premium on eBay, and while the Internet Archive does contain patchy collections of scanned magazines, it is vulnerable to legal challenges from copyright holders.Thankfully, there are institutions taking the preservation of games magazines seriously. Last week, the Video Game History Foundation, a non-profit organisation dedicated to the preservation of games and their history, announced that from 30 January, it would be opening up its digital archive of out-of-print magazines to read and study online. So far 1,500 issues of mostly American games mags are available, as well as art books and other printed ephemera, but the organisation is busy scanning its entire collection. The digitised content will be fully tagged and searchable by word or phrase, so youll be able to easily track down the first mentions of, say, Minecraft, John Romero, or the survival horror genre.In a recent video introducing the archive, VGHF librarian Phil Salvador explained: We wanted to make something thats going to be useful and easy for anyone studying video game history, whether youre an academic writing a book or a creator making a YouTube video, or youre just a curious person.Founded by game historian Frank Cifaldi in 2017, the VGHF is part of a growing number of archives, academic institutions and museums dedicated to preserving games history. While the focus is usually on tracking down and preserving the games themselves, there is a growing understanding that magazines provide vital context. Video game magazines are often representative of peoples relationships to video games they accompany that journey, says John OShea, creative director and co-CEO of the National Videogame Museum in Sheffield, which has a growing collection of printed materials. They have a similar lineage to football and music fanzine culture, in that they provide perspectives on the players and the fans and what they were thinking at the time. They also provide insight into particular trends and narratives, what gets emphasised, what doesnt. They provide direct access to a particular historical period.Magazines then tell a sociocultural story that the games themselves cannot. Looking at these magazines now, through the lens of contemporary video game culture, its not just what is there, but what is not there, says OShea. The majority of characters featured in magazines up to the early 2010s are men. I looked at a selection of PC magazines from 2011 and there were the same number of female protagonists represented as there were panda protagonists.Games mags were often written for very specific, very dedicated demographics, and reflected the focus of the industry itself. Many adverts throughout the 90s and into the early 00s featured skimpily dressed women, even when the games were military shooters or strategy sims. Classified ads for premium rate video game tips lines were accompanied by photos of women in bikinis. Its there because that was the demographic they were aiming at teenage boys, says the museums collections officer, Ann Wain. The marketing shows who was getting the attention and why. The letters pages also tell us a lot about player culture. What topics were people discussing, what was the conversation around games. It contextualises games in a way that just playing them cant.The Video Game History Foundation in the US are digitising their archive of classic video game magazines. Photograph: VGHFBoth the VGHF and the National Videogame Museum are reliant on donations: the latter has just received an almost complete collection of PC Gamer from a collector who also kept all the cover demo discs and inserts. Its important work because often the magazine publishers themselves have patchy records on preservation. Future Publishing does have an archive at its Bath office but it is not complete, and whole collections have been lost when other companies have shut. In a post on LinkedIn last year, veteran games media publisher Stuart Dinsey recalled that when he sold Intent Media in 2013, the new owner pulped almost the entire back catalogue of its industry publications CTW and MCV.skip past newsletter promotionSign up to Pushing ButtonsFree weekly newsletterKeza MacDonald's weekly look at the world of gamingPrivacy Notice: Newsletters may contain info about charities, online ads, and content funded by outside parties. For more information see our Privacy Policy. We use Google reCaptcha to protect our website and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.after newsletter promotionLooking back on video game history, its easy to imagine a smooth narrative flow, a sense of inevitability about which games or technologies would be successful and which would fail. But it wasnt usually like that: contemporary reporting reveals a mass of complications and uncertainties. Video game magazines provide a lot of resistance to that very linear idea of history, says OShea. Especially the technologically deterministic view that more powerful tech would inevitably be more interesting and successful.When you go to the VGHFs digital archive next month, look at contemporary news around the Sega Mega Drive, the original PlayStation or the Nintendo Wii there was no agreement at the time over their impending success. Games mags were on the frontline of games history. In this uncertain era for the industry, their voices, dimmed and distant though they seem, are more important than ever.
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  • Call of Duty Warzone fans demand Season 2 'PC cheats' fix - and see flaw already
    www.dailystar.co.uk
    Call of Duty Warzone Season 2 arrives today, but some fans don't think one change goes far enough to help combat cheaters in the popular battle royale here's what they want to seeTech10:17, 28 Jan 2025Season 2's quality-of-life improvements could tee up a Verdansk return nicely(Image: Call of Duty)Call of Duty fans will no doubt be itching to download the Season 2 update for Warzone and Black Ops 6 when it arrives later today.The update is expected to focus on improving the core experience for Warzone, but one change, while welcomed by the community, doesn't go far enough.That's because while Activision continues to target cheaters after plenty of complaints, the team has allowed players to turn off cross-play on console so PS5 and Xbox players won't come up against PC players.Here's why that's important, and why there's a catch.By virtue of being a more open platform, it's easier to get cheats running on PC than it is on console. That, combined with the free-to-play nature of Warzone, means that players can create accounts and cheat on PC, then start again if and when they're caught.Letting console players avoid PC players entirely helps anyone playing on PS5 or Xbox have a more level playing field, but it's very much a short-term solution to a long-term problem.The top comment on the Warzone subreddit, see above, for the patch notes is "Turning off 'Crossplay' first thing. So long PC players", but as other comments note, this is only for Ranked mode.That means players not interested in playing sweaty, competitive matches are still stuck with potential cheaters (and that's to say nothing of the advantage a mouse and keyboard have over a controller)."It's for ranked only so guess you better start getting good at that mode," one player joked, while another said it's "so stupid" it's just for ranked.Activision has claimed it bans players hourly, clearing the Warzone Ranked leaderboard regularly, but community sentiment (and trust in the RICHOCHET anti-cheat team) is lower than ever.Article continues belowWith Season 2 focused on improving the core of Warzone before a rumoured return to Verdansk in Season 3, here's hoping the team gets it right.For the latest breaking news and stories from across the globe from the Daily Star, sign up for our newsletters.RECOMMENDED
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  • PS Plus February free games predictions as fans wait for underrated 2024 title and EA FC 25
    www.dailystar.co.uk
    PS5 players have high hopes for PS Plus this month, with many predicting Prince of Persia: The Lost Crown or EA FC 25 could be included in the monthly games lineupTech08:00, 28 Jan 2025Could EA FC 25 be in the PS Plus lineup this month?(Image: Electronic Arts)Sony's PS Plus reveal date for the next lot of Essential games is creeping up, and fans have massive expectations for February 2025.While we're still chomping through the Extra lineup for January which includes Like A Dragon and God of War Ragnarok, Essential gives out three games for subscribers on the basic tier of PS Plus.Last month we got Suicide Squad: Kill The Justice League, Need for Speed Hot Pursuit Remastered and the Stanley Parable Ultra Deluxe, but fans are even more hopeful of big-hitters for February, including the current EA FC title and more.As is tradition, Reddit users on the PS Plus subreddit have been putting together their predictions for the Essential lineup for February.There's a lot of expectation that EA will be featured somehow, with comments suggesting Star Wars: Jedi Survivor and EA FC 25 could be included in the lineup.Prince of Persia: The Lost Crown is more than a year old and reportedly underperformed, but it could be ripe for a spot in the lineup. It's one of 2024's best games, too.It's been a good year for EA FC fansNaturally, some are convinced THIS is the month Hogwarts Legacy will arrive on the service, as well as Stray, but both of those get rumoured seemingly every month.Kingdom Come Deliverance is mentioned a few times and could be a solid contender given its sequel launches in February.Other big games launching next month include Monster Hunter Wilds, so there's a chance Monster Hunter World could be included as a PS4 title but given it's been part of the PS Plus Collection that's not around anymore, maybe we'll get Rise instead that one has been included in PS Plus Extra, but not Essential.Two Point Museum is creeping up, too, so there's every chance Two Point Hospital or Two Point Campus are included for anyone looking for a delightful management sim title.Article continues belowAnd, while we'd love to play Black Myth Wukong, we're not entirely sure the mega-selling action game will be on PS Plus just yet although we admire the optimism.For the latest breaking news and stories from across the globe from the Daily Star, sign up for our newsletters.RECOMMENDED
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  • Serpentine Announces Marina Tabassum as the Designer of the 2025 Pavilion
    www.archdaily.com
    Serpentine Announces Marina Tabassum as the Designer of the 2025 PavilionSave this picture!Serpentine Pavilion 2025 designed by Marina Tabassum, Marina Tabassum Architects (MTA). Design render, exterior view.. Image Marina Tabassum Architects (MTA), Courtesy: SerpentineSerpentine has announced the selection of Bangladeshi architect and educator Marina Tabassum and her firm, Marina Tabassum Architects, to design the 2025 Pavilion. Titled "A Capsule in Time," the proposal takes inspiration from the ephemeral nature of architecture in the Bengal Delta, incorporating a semi-transparent structure intended to evoke a sense of community and connection. The Pavilion will open to the public on June 6th, 2025, marking 25 years since the Serpentine's first commission of Zaha Hadid's inaugural structure in Hyde Park in 2000.Save this picture!Marina Tabassum Architects' work focuses on socially, environmentally, and politically engaged projects, particularly addressing the challenges faced by marginalized communities in Bangladesh. Their notable projects include the Khudi Bari, modular housing designed for adaptability in flood-prone areas. Tabassum's architectural approach emphasizes a contemporary style rooted in local climate, context, culture, and history.Save this picture!The 2025 Pavilion, supported by Goldman Sachs, incorporates four wooden capsule forms with a translucent faade, creating a play of light and shadow. A central, movable capsule element adds a kinetic dimension to the structure, inspired by traditional South Asian Shamiyana tents. The design aims to create a versatile space for diverse events and public gatherings, fostering community interaction. The pavilion's design will be accompanied by a catalogue published by Serpentine in June 2025, featuring essays and a conversation between Tabassum and Serpentine's Artistic Director. Related Article A Look at the Last 8 Editions of the Serpentine Pavilion When conceiving our design, we reflected on the transient nature of the commission which appears to us as a capsule of memory and time. The relationship between time and architecture is intriguing: between permanence and impermanence, of birth, age and ruin; architecture aspires to outlive time. Architecture is a tool to live behind legacies, fulfilling the inherent human desire for continuity beyond life. In the Bengal delta, architecture is ephemeral as dwellings change locations with the rivers shifting courses. Architecture becomes memories of the lived spaces continued through tales. The archaic volume of a half capsule, generated by geometry and wrapped in light semi-transparent material will create a play of filtered light that will pierce through the structure as if under a Shamiyana at a Bengali wedding. The Serpentine Pavilion offers a unique platform under the summer sun to unite as people rich in diversity. The stage is set, the seats are placed. We envision various events and encounters taking place in this versatile space that unifies people through conversations and connections. - Marina Tabassum, Architect, Marina Tabassum Architects (MTA) Save this picture!The previous pavilion, "Archipelagic Void," designed by Minsuk Cho of Mass Studies, was open to the public from June 7th to October 27th, 2024, in London's Kensington Gardens. Continuing the direction of previous designers, Minsuk Cho used references from his local context to design a space that encourages interaction and community gathering. Beyond design, the pavilion has represented an opportunity to explore and promote wider ideals of sustainability and labor ethics. For the 21st Pavilion, Theaster Gates collaborated with NGOs to ensure an ethical production process and eliminate forced labor in the building materials supply chain.Image gallerySee allShow lessAbout this authorCite: Maria-Cristina Florian. "Serpentine Announces Marina Tabassum as the Designer of the 2025 Pavilion" 28 Jan 2025. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/1026244/serpentine-announces-marina-tabassum-as-the-designer-of-the-2025-pavilion&gt ISSN 0719-8884Save!ArchDaily?You've started following your first account!Did you know?You'll now receive updates based on what you follow! Personalize your stream and start following your favorite authors, offices and users.Go to my stream
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  • A Cultural, Architectural, and Territorial Tradition: Houses That Recycle and Showcase Wooden Shingles in Chile
    www.archdaily.com
    A Cultural, Architectural, and Territorial Tradition: Houses That Recycle and Showcase Wooden Shingles in ChileSave this picture!Abovedada House / Edward Rojas Arquitectos. Image Antonella TortiOn a slope, along the banks of a river, among trees, or on an expansive hillside, each territory serves as a living testament to its local traditions. Through its architecture, the experimentation, appreciation, and use of certain materials, construction techniques, local crafts, and site-specific tools aim to preserve stories and pass on the discoveries and learnings that have shaped many of the practices still used in construction today. In Chile, the language of wooden shingles evokes a reflection rooted in history and an understanding of relationships, timelines, and life networks. Shingles are flat, thin rectangular wooden boards commonly used in the construction of houses, churches, and buildings in southern Chile, mainly in the Region of Los Lagos and particularly in the archipelago of Chilo. For many years, they have been applied to facades, roofs, and indoors in various dimensions, shapes, finishes, and thicknesses. They are installed by layering one piece over another to prevent rain and cold from entering.Save this picture!The most commonly used wood in Chile is alerce (larch), due to its resistance to moisture, versatility, aesthetic beauty, and ease of manipulation in the form of shingles. However, due to excessive logging, this species is now endangered, and cutting down live trees has been prohibited since 1976. Today, synthetic shingles made of fiber cement or recycled materials from older constructions are being developed. Related Article What If Every Brick Had a Future? Rethinking Demolition and Material Reuse in the Circular Economy Save this picture!The Totoral House by LAGAR Arquitectos and the Abovedada House by Edward Rojas Arquitectos use recycled shingles in their cladding, which are part of the local heritage, maintaining a connection to a craft that may be on the verge of extinction and to a community shaped by wooden constructions. While alerce shingles have captivated many artists, artisans, designers, and architecture professionals, there are also shingles made from other species like lenga, present in projects such as House IV by Staudt Arquitectura or the Hats House by SAA architecture + territory, which aim to bring local construction traditions closer to their inhabitants through architecture.Save this picture!While the reflection on ecological materials includes variables such as maintenance, sustainability, resource conservation, and the potential for reuse or recycling, the craft of making shingles also stands out as part of the cultural identity of individuals and their communities. The facade restoration of the Jardn Infantil Lobito Marino in the Aysn Region, for example, demonstrates how it is possible to empower and value the carpenter's craft through teaching technical knowledge and practices in support of quality construction.Save this picture!Understanding the role of humans in habitable spaces and their active and conscious commitment to fostering more sustainable practices in the construction industry goes beyond considering which tools or technological systems can be incorporated. Given the varying climatic, geographical, and economic conditions of environments worldwide, it is worth questioning: what will be the future of materials around us, like wood, bamboo, concrete, and their derivatives? How will reuse and/or recycling practices impact the environment in the coming years, and what techniques will replace them?Next, we propose to explore the design decisions and strategies for applying wooden shingles in contemporary architecture through a selection of houses in Chile that use demolition, recycled, and reused shingles, among others, as cladding for exteriors and interiors.MM House / Benjamin Goi Arquitectos + Claro + Westendarp arquitectosSave this picture!La Puntilla House / M3 ArquitectosSave this picture!House 4 Aguas / Viento NorteSave this picture!Totoral House / LAGAR ArquitectosSave this picture!Maytue House / Juan Carlos Sabbagh ArquitectosSave this picture!Pier House / Ciudad nueva, Arquitectura y PaisajeSave this picture!Abovedada House / Edward Rojas ArquitectosSave this picture!House IV / Staudt ArquitecturaSave this picture!Casa Haus III / Staudt ArquitecturaSave this picture!Vodanovic House / Duarte Fournies ArquitectosSave this picture!Hats House / SAA arquitectura + territorioSave this picture!Maullin Lodge / AVON ArquitectosSave this picture!Casa LM / Juan Pablo LabbSave this picture!Image gallerySee allShow lessAbout this authorAgustina IiguezAuthorCite: Iiguez, Agustina. "A Cultural, Architectural, and Territorial Tradition: Houses That Recycle and Showcase Wooden Shingles in Chile" [Una tradicin cultural, arquitectnica y territorial: casas que reciclan y ponen en valor las tejuelas de madera en Chile] 28 Jan 2025. ArchDaily. (Trans. Pieiro, Antonia ) Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/1026166/a-cultural-architectural-and-territorial-tradition-houses-that-recycle-and-showcase-wooden-shingles-in-chile&gt ISSN 0719-8884Save!ArchDaily?You've started following your first account!Did you know?You'll now receive updates based on what you follow! Personalize your stream and start following your favorite authors, offices and users.Go to my stream
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  • Unreal Engine 5.5 Multi Colored Outlines
    www.youtube.com
    Project Files: https://www.patreon.com/posts/120940904 . In this unreal engine 5 tutorial, I am going to implement a way to add multicolored outlines to objects. Using this method you will be able to have outlines in many different colors. We will be using custom depth stencil value to define the outline color we need and use a color look up method inside a post process material to select the color of the outline. this system is based on following tutorials. part 1: https://youtu.be/BUXI6DkEsYo .part 2: https://youtu.be/-gfZrTMeKMo .part 3: https://youtu.be/sbdDJhHMVhU . // ! https://www.patreon.com/codelikeme Patrons will have access to project files of all the stuff I do in the channel and other extra benefitsJoin this channel to get access to perks:https://www.youtube.com/channel/UClb6Jh9EBV7a_Nm52Ipll_Q/join Like my facebook page for more content : https://www.facebook.com/gamedevelopersclub/ Follow me on twitter : https://twitter.com/CodeLikeMe2 Follow me on reddit : https://www.reddit.com/user/codelikeme #CodeLikeMe #unrealengine #ue4 #indiegamedev
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  • Canadas postgraduate funding gap is still yawning even after budget increases
    www.nature.com
    Nature, Published online: 28 January 2025; doi:10.1038/d41586-025-00254-5Canadas postgraduate funding gap is still yawning even after budget increases
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  • Ancient human genomes offer clues about the earliest migrations out of Africa
    www.nature.com
    Nature, Published online: 28 January 2025; doi:10.1038/d41586-025-00182-4Analyses of 45,000-year-old bones from Europe allow scientists to pin down when modern humans interbred with Neanderthals, shedding light on the histories of populations with no present-day descendants.
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