• Data center tweaks could unlock 76 GW of new power capacity in the U.S.
    techcrunch.com
    Tech companies, data center developers, and power utilities have been panicking over the prospect of runaway demand for electricity in the U.S. in the face of unprecedented growth in AI.Amidst all the hand wringing, a new paper published this week suggests the situation might not be so dire if data center operators and other heavy electricity users curtail their use ever so slightly.By limiting power drawn from the grid to 90% of the maximum for a couple hours at a time for a total of about a day per year new users could unlock 76 gigawatts of capacity in the United States. Thats more than all data centers use globally, according to Goldman Sachs. To put that number into perspective, its about 10% of peak demand in the U.S.If data centers were to curtail their use more, they could unlock progressively more capacity.Such programs arent exactly new.For decades, utilities have encouraged big electricity users like shopping malls, universities, and factories to curtail their use when demand peaks, like on hot summer days. Those users might turn down the air conditioning or turn off thirsty machines for a few hours, and in return, the utility gives them a credit on their bill.Data centers have largely sat on the sidelines, instead opting to maintain uptime and performance levels for their customers. The study argues that data centers could be ideal demand-response participants because they have the potential to be flexible.There are a few ways that data centers can trim their power use, the study says. One is temporal flexibility, or shifting computing tasks to times of lower demand. AI model training, for example, could easily be rescheduled to accommodate a brief curtailment.Another is spatial flexibility, where companies shift their computational tasks to other regions that arent experiencing high demand. Even with data centers, operators can consolidate loads and shut down a portion of their servers.And if tasks are mission critical and cant be delayed or shifted, data center operators can always turn to alternative power sources to make up for any curtailment. Batteries are ideally suited for this since even modestly sized installations can provide several hours of power almost instantaneously.Some companies have already participated in ad hoc versions of these.Google has used its carbon-aware computing platform, originally developed to trim emissions, to enable demand response. Enel X has worked with data centers to tap into the batteries in their uninterruptible power supplies (UPS) to stabilize the grid. And PG&E is offering to connect data centers to the grid quicker if operators agree to participate in a demand response program.These tweaks wont completely eliminate the need for new sources of power. But they might turn a potentially catastrophic situation in which half of all new AI servers are underpowered into one thats more easily solved.
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  • CyberArk snaps up Zilla Security for up to $175M
    techcrunch.com
    Identity security company CyberArk has acquired identity governance and administration (IGA) platform Zilla Security in a deal worth up to $175 million. The transaction consists of a $165 million cash portion and an additional $10 million earn-out which is payable upon meeting certain milestones it can be seen as an incentive for the founders or other key personnel to hang about through the transition phase.Founded in 1999, Boston-based CyberArk specializes in access management, including privileged access security which helps organizations protect sensitive data and critical infrastructure from external (and internal) threats. CyberArk has made eight known acquisitions previously, the largest by some distance being the $1.54 billion it paid for machine identity company Venafi last year. Zilla, for its part, is another Boston-based security company operating in the identity and access management realm. But given that it was founded in 2019, Zilla is a nimbler cloud-native player that has been adding more automation and AI-enabled features to the mix, making it an alluring proposition for a much larger company founded in the days before SaaS or cloud computing had taken hold. What worked 20 years ago clearly doesnt work today, Zilla CEO and co-founder Deepak Taneja said in a statement. Zilla had raised around $19 million since its inception six years ago, with backers including FirstMark, Pillar VC, and Tola Capital. Reshaping identity governanceThe long and short of all this is that CyberArk wants to bolster its own products with tools purpose-built for the cloud, with AI at its core and easy integrations for hybrid- and multi-cloud environments. By expanding the CyberArk Identity Security Platform with Zillas modern IGA capabilities, we will reshape identity governance with scalable automation that delivers compliance and helps maximize security for the modern enterprise, CyberArk CEO Matt Cohen added in a statement. Thats not to say that CyberArk hasnt already been modernizing, though. The company went public on the Nasdaq in 2014, and its shares currently sit more than 1,000% up on its IPO price in the past year alone, its valuation has surged 41% to more than $18 billion. Earlier today, the company posted its Q4 results that revealed a year-on-year revenue hike of 41%. Specifically, its subscription revenue in particular grew by 62%, with its annual recurring revenue (ARR) surpassing the $1 billion mark.As a result of the transaction, CyberArk will offer key Zilla services including Zilla Comply and Zilla Provisioning as standalone products through the CyberArk identity security platform. Additionally, Zillas co-founders Deepak Taneja and Nitin Sonawane and their team will be joining CyberArk.
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  • A Minecraft Movie
    www.artofvfx.com
    Step into a realm where imagination meets reality. Watch this TV Spot for the live action adaptation of Minecraft and witness the cult classic transform into an epic cinematic adventure!The VFX are made by:Sony Pictures ImageworksWeta FXDigital DomainThe Production VFX Supervisor is Dan Lemmon.The Production VFX Producer is Jason Bath.Director: Jared HessRelease Date: April 4, 2025 (USA) Vincent Frei The Art of VFX 2024
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  • TheBoyHasNoPatience Shanghai Pop-up Concept Space by Fon Studio
    archeyes.com
    TheBoyHasNoPatience Shanghai Pop-up | Fon Studio In the ever-evolving urban landscape of Shanghai, pop-up architecture has become an experimental tool for brands seeking to establish ephemeral yet immersive experiences. Unlike conventional retail spaces, these temporary structures operate at the intersection of commerce, culture, and architecture, offering a rapid yet refined form of spatial storytelling. The TBHNP Shanghai Pop-up Concept Space, designed by Fon Studio, exemplifies this architectural typology, demonstrating how a concise material and geometric strategy can transcend mere branding to engage in a more profound discourse on temporality, light, and spatial intent.TheBoyHasNoPatience Pop-up Technical InformationArchitects1-4: Fon StudioLocation: Yongyuan Road, Jingan District, Shanghai, ChinaArea: 60 m2 | 645 Sq. Ft.Project Year: 2024Photographs: Fon StudioThrough pure geometric shapes and symmetrical order, the architecture exudes an immortal strength while fostering a profound dialogue between light and dark. Fon Studio ArchitectsTheBoyHasNoPatience Pop-up Photographs Fon Studio Fon Studio Fon Studio Fon Studio Fon Studio Fon Studio Fon Studio Fon Studio Fon Studio Fon StudioGeometry, Light, and Darkness: Architectural Translation of a Brand EthosAt its core, the TBHNP Shanghai Pop-up Concept Space is an exercise in distilled geometry. The structures conical form is not arbitrary but rather a calculated abstraction of the fashion brands ethosimbued with themes of cutting with strength and undercurrents of avant-garde. This geometric purity establishes a striking visual presence in the urban environment while simultaneously creating a sense of monumentality within a compact footprint of just 60 square meters.The interplay of light and shadow is integral to the spatial experience. A singular triangular skylight punctures the monolithic volume, acting as both an aperture for natural illumination and a dynamic register of time. As daylight shifts, sharp contrasts emerge across the interior, amplifying the material tactility and reinforcing the architectural language of restraint and precision. The controlled interplay of brightness and darkness evokes an almost scenographic experience, where visitors are immersed in a setting that oscillates between stillness and intensitymuch like the garments TBHNP produces.Materially, the space is wrapped in deep gray textured coatings, a nod to the brands signature black and gray tones. This material selection is both aesthetic and conceptual; it extends the philosophy of TBHNP into the realm of architecture, evoking a sense of rawness and rebellion while maintaining a controlled, disciplined execution. The result is a space that does not merely house the brands collections but becomes an architectural embodiment of its identity.Prefabrication and Precision: Rethinking the Efficiency of Ephemeral StructuresGiven the inherent temporality of pop-up architecture, efficiency in construction is paramount. The TBHNP Shanghai Pop-up Concept Space employs a prefabricated component system, drastically reducing on-site labor and environmental disruption. The structure was fabricated off-site in just eight days and assembled within threea testament to the growing relevance of modular and prefabricated techniques in contemporary architectural practice.The geometric stability of the triangular form is not merely an aesthetic decision but a structural one. The triangle, one of the most rigid and self-supporting shapes in geometry, allows for minimal internal supports, ensuring both stability and openness within the limited interior volume. This precision extends to the integration of concealed wiring and fixtures, maintaining the visual purity of the space. By eliminating unnecessary visual noise, the architecture intensifies the visitors focus on the play of light, form, and materiality.The projects construction methodology raises broader questions about the sustainability of temporary architecture. While pop-ups are inherently transient, the efficiency and reduced waste achieved through prefabrication suggest a more responsible approach to ephemeral spaces. Rather than disposable spectacles, projects like this demonstrate how prefabrication can yield architectural interventions that, while short-lived, possess a rigor and thoughtfulness akin to permanent structures.Beyond Commerce: The Cultural and Architectural Relevance of Temporary SpacesThough conceived as a retail environment, the TBHNP Shanghai Pop-up Concept Space operates at a more nuanced level. The spatial narrative extends beyond the immediate function of showcasing products; it fosters an immersive engagement between visitors and space, between materiality and meaning. The deliberate manipulation of volume, light, and surface texture transforms the act of entering and inhabiting the space into a sensorial experience.The cultural significance of temporary architecture lies in its ability to challenge conventional notions of permanence. In an era where architecture is increasingly driven by rapid urbanization and shifting economic conditions, pop-up spaces emerge as laboratories for new forms of spatial expression. Projects like TBHNP Shanghai Pop-up demonstrate how architecture can be a temporal yet impactful forceleaving behind not a physical imprint, but a collective memory and an evolving discourse on the role of space in contemporary culture.Ultimately, the project underscores the idea that architecture is not solely defined by its longevity but by the clarity of its intent. Though dismantled, The Shape of Shadows remains imprinted in the minds of its visitors, proving that even the most fleeting of spaces can resonate with lasting significance.TheBoyHasNoPatience Pop-up PlansFloor Plan | Fon StudioAxonometric | Fon StudioAxonometric | Fon StudioTheBoyHasNoPatience Pop-up Image GalleryAbout Fon StudioFon Studio is a Shanghai-based architectural and design firm known for its innovative approach to spatial storytelling and material exploration. Specializing in immersive brand environments, Fon Studio merges geometric precision, prefabrication techniques, and minimalist aesthetics to create impactful architectural experiences. Their work often blurs the boundaries between commercial, cultural, and experimental spaces, emphasizing the interplay of light, form, and texture.Credits and Additional NotesClient: TBHNPConstruction: Beijing Yida Hexin Decoration Engineering Co., Ltd.Main Materials: Carbonized wood, flame retardant board, texture paintMain Brands: Shangzhi Wood Industry, Keyuan Building Materials, Art Master Paint
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  • A short history of the conservatory
    www.architectural-review.com
    The outdated British conservatorycould be part of a post-carbon thermal revolutionAround one in five homes in England has a conservatory, promising domestic bliss bathed in the sun. More light. More space. More living, reads the front cover of a recent catalogue of manufacturer Conservatory Land. Customers can choose between the Victorian, Edwardian or Orangery models, complete with injectionmoulded ridge details referencing those once cast in iron.The orangery, in its original form, was infact the precursor to the conservatory. Thesemasonry structures, with a predominantly glazed southfacing wall, emerged in 17thcentury central Europe to facilitate thebourgeoisies desire to cultivate citrus plants. They were often used to host guests and sited near, or appended to, living spaces, designed in the same material and language of their domestic host architecture. They largely predate greenhouses, which only began to proliferate in the early 18th century. These lighter weight, initially timber frame, buildings distanced themselves from domestic space as purposebuilt structures for the cultivation of plants.The conservatory has itsroots in the orangeries of Europe, providing the conditions for growing citrus fruits, as shown in this Dutch engraving from 1676. The contemporary British conservatory is far less exotic, epitomised in Martin Parrs photograph from 1988 (lead image)In the 18th and 19th centuries, the growing of exotic plants, sourced through colonial endeavours, proliferated; the botanist and designer John Claudius Loudon refined the design of a pinery, for the growing of pineapplesCredit:Wellcome CollectionIn the 19th century, glazed buildings ballooned in scale in Britain with the growing importation of nonnative plant species to the temperate northern European climate, intertwined with and driven by thecolonial project; this new glasshouse typology was conceived to simulate the plants original climate. The glasshouse became the architectural icon of the industrial revolution, used as the test bedfor fabrication techniques and heating technologies, creating ever larger and more thermally controlled spaces in iron and glass.The industry boomed towards the turn ofthe millennium, with conservatories ofteninstalled with little or no regard toorientationIn parallel, this period also saw the proliferation of glazed architecture at adomestic scale. John Claudius Loudon wasinterested in the technical, aesthetic and formal challenges posed by the integration of iron and glass structures into the classical language of Georgian domestic architecture. In 1825, he designed and built his own home on Porchester Terrace in London, identified by Stefan Koppelkamm inGlasshouses and Wintergardens of the Nineteenth Century (1981) as probably the first example ofadomestic conservatory. This early semidetached suburban dwelling was arranged around a domed conservatory on the front facade, looked onto and accessible from both homes. Lined with bedsfor thecultivation and display of plants, theconservatory was also designed to be frequented by the inhabitants and their guests. The dome was clad in glass scales and formed from curvilinear wroughtiron glazing bars that would go on to inform themuch larger structural systems of Joseph Paxtons Great Conservatory ontheChatsworth Estate in 1840 and theCrystal Palace for the 1851 Great Exhibition. Duringthe second half of the 19th century, conservatories became the musthave house extension for those without an estate on which to site a freestanding glasshouse. Companies such as Messenger &Co formed to serve this market, often producing the structures as well as the heating infrastructure for them.Conservatories dwindled in popularity during the interwar period; the intensive heating required to service these spaces suddenly seemed frivolous at a time of energy scarcity. Although early20thcentury modernists referenced the largescale iconic buildings of the 19th century, the domestic conservatory was largely forgotten. But withthe proliferation of highperformance, lowcost uPVC double glazing in the 1980s,the domestic conservatory made atriumphant return. Conservatories were rebranded as fully habitable rooms rather than spaces with a specific atmosphere inwhich to cohabit with plants. Technical advances and abundant cheap energy made domestic life in a glass room viable again. The conservatory became a costeffective house extension, developed to fall within householder permitted development an aspect of UK law that grants homeowners rights to extend and alter their home without submitting a formal planning application, subject to the development falling within certain parameters relating tosize, material and position.Loudon would go on todesign one of the first examples of a domestic conservatory as part of his own home, Porchester Terrace, in 1825The domed conservatory on the front of the home was shared by both halves of the early semidetached house. The Victorian conservatory was a space both for the cultivation ofplants and socialising, captured in this 1892 painting by Henry Edward John BrowneCredit:Russell-Cotes Art Gallery & Museum, BournemouthThe industry boomed towards the turn ofthe millennium, with conservatories ofteninstalled with little or no regard toorientation, many destined never to receive any direct sunlight. Conservatories are exempt from Part L, the section of the UK Building Regulations which defines thermal performance requirements. There are afewcaveats to this exemption, with conservatories needing to be heated onaseparate system to the rest of the house and requiring a door dividing them from themain dwelling. Conservatory advertising, however, would suggest otherwise, with illustrations showing kitchens, living rooms or openplan dining rooms in conservatories that often appear to be hooked up to the central heating. As a result of this misselling of the conservatory dream, these extensions are often poorly sited and lacking in sufficient devices for shading and ventilation. This has resulted in conservatories being largely viewed as poorly performing spaces and an energy drain too hot in summer and too cold in winter.Elsewhere in Europe, heating northfacing extensions of glass on suburban homes is farless common. A conservatory, more commonly styled as a winter garden in Europe, is instead seen as a passive solar device. This alternative understanding of the glazed extension is apparent today in the work of contemporary architecture offices such as Lacaton & Vassal, whose work builds on this tradition. Winter gardens have played a key role within Lacaton & Vassals oeuvre, from their early projects, which added offtheshelf agricultural greenhouses to single family homes more similar to the traditional suburban conservatory common in the UK through to their retrofit projects, which added stacked winter garden extensions to existing 1960s housing blocks.The glazed extension must be recontextualised as a solar device that has the potential to empower users to passively heat their homesAcross Lacaton & Vassals projects, the winter garden is never assigned a specific programme and is instead seen as an additional room onto which the programmed spaces of the home open. The winter gardens are conceived as a series of controllable layers external glazing, solar curtain, double glazing, thermal curtain expanding the thermal line of the building into a spatial device that can be opened and closed in reaction to the climate. The external glazing of the winter garden is purposely singleglazed or made from polycarbonate sheets, allowing high air infiltration and ensuring that the winter garden is not promoted as a heatable room. The postoccupancy analysis and environmental performance of their Cit du Grand Parc project in Bordeaux, designed with Frdric Druot and documented in their recent publication Its Nice Today: On Climate, Comfort and Pleasure, suggests that the renovation has reduced the energy use ofthebuilding nine times, three times moreeffective than what would have been achieved within a standard renovation without winter gardens.Though less common, winter gardens appended to apartments have a precedent inthe UK. Housing designed by ZEDfactory in the early 2000s, including BedZED (ARNovember 2003 and AR April 2023), often incorporated winter gardens designed to passively heat the adjacent spaces. Morerecently, Henley Halebrowns KingsCrescent Estate redevelopment for HackneyCouncil, completed in 2017, added southfacing winter gardens to existing housing blocks. Echoing the intentions ofthe Lacaton & Vassal projects, the renovation illustrates the relevance ofglazedextensions within the context ofclimate reliance and improving existing living standards.Loughboroughbased company Messenger & Co produced all the components for sometimes very elaborate conservatories, such as this one from 1880Credit:RIBA CollectionsMore than 200 years later, conservatories can still be ordered off-the-shelf, like this model from DIY shop B&QCredit:Justin Kase Z12Z / AlamyCapturing the thermal potential ofconservatories in singlefamily homes islesswidely explored but not a completely foreign concept within the UK. Simos Yannass 1994 publication Solar Energy andHousing Design includes analysis of several British late20thcentury examples of passive solar conservatories, such as theFuture Home 2000, part of Milton Keynes HomeWorld 81 expo, which incorporated asouthfacing glazed atrium todecrease theenergy load ofthe home.Research I undertook as part of the Design Museums design researcher in residence programme, with Atmos Lab (theenvironmental designers who have collaborated with Lacaton & Vassal since 2018) sought to rediscover the solar potential of the suburban conservatory extension. Thermodynamic analysis of our case study design proved that an adaptable and wellsited solarheated conservatory could reduce the annual energy load required to heat adjacent spaces by approximately half, while adding space andimproving natural light and ventilation. With around 20 per cent of UK households in fuel poverty and the urgent need to decarbonise our existing housing stock, theconservatory could form part of holistic retrofit strategies that not only improve thermal efficiency but also living standards.Asouthfacing conservatory helped topassively heat the Future Home 2000, built as part of Milton Keynes HomeWorld 81 exhibition. The expo included 36 show homesthat explored energyconservationCredit:Heritage Image Partnership Ltd / AlamyMore recently, Henley Halebrown added two-storey winter gardensto an existing postwar block at Kings Crescent Estate in Stoke Newington, as part of anestate regeneration scheme in 2017Credit:Jim StephensonHowever, attitudes towards control over the climate remain a critical challenge within the current paradigm. Expectations of the constant usability of conservatory extensions can be traced back to the 19thcentury glasshouses promise of constructing an artificial environment through the use of technology and abundant energy resources. Promoting more nuanced requirements for adaptability, orientation and flexible inhabitation make for a harder sell, but if the conservatory is to make a comeback, then it will need to be reimagined as part of integrated environmental strategies rather than a nostalgic interpretation of a 19thcentury ideal.The conservatory, orwinter garden, hasamore illustrious reputation elsewhere in Europe, in particular in the work of Lacaton &Vassal. Large winter gardens, enclosed inpolycarbonate, characterise the housing which they designed for older people in Rixheim in 2021Credit:Philippe RuaultAdjustment to the expectations around usability must also come hand in hand with the provision of generous space standards that allow for expansion and contraction through the seasons. It is criticalthat theconservatory is not given anassigned programme of the conventional family home. Instead, the glazed extension must be recontextualised as a solar device that has the potential to empower users to passively heat their homes. Through the thermal delight of sitting in the sun, the conservatory could be well placed to encourage a more dynamic relationship with the exterior environment and an openness toestablish broader definitions of thermal comfort above 21C and below 18C. The conservatory must therefore be considered as an additional space that the thermally controlled programmed spaces of the home can open onto, but can also retreat from, enriching rather than compromising space standards. In the reorientation of the conservatory extension towards the sun comes an opportunity to combine the tradition of home improvement with an increase in the resilience of our existing housing stock to adapt to the changing climate. More space, more light, more living, forever.2025-02-13Owen HatherleyShare AR February 2025ExtensionsBuy Now
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  • Lisbon's Letreiro Galeria Glows in a Beautiful Short Film
    bl.ag
    FilmsLisbon's Letreiro Galeria Glows in a Beautiful Short FilmDocumenting Rita Mrias and Paulo Barata's tireless work to preserve a city's graphic heritage.Better LettersFeb 13, 2025 2 min readLetreiro Galeria houses over 400 salvaged signs from the Portuguese capital. Photo: Adriano Fagundes.At the 2019 Letterheads meet in Porto, I was approached by a woman holding a book in her hand that she wanted to show me. I started flicking through it, and was instantly blown away by its contents: meticulous research into signs from Lisbon, Portugal, including archival photographs, blueprints, and, in the front section, pictures of their removal from buildings.Cidade Grfica: Letreiros e Reclames, Lisboa no Sculos XX, available from Bibliotecas de Lisboa.That woman was Rita Mrias, and the book, Cidade Grfica (Graphic City), was a gift for me. (Thank you again Rita!) It was produced to coincide with an exhibition from Letreiro Galeria, a small collective of volunteers led by Rita and her husband Paulo Barata. They work tirelessly to preserve the graphic heritage of the Portuguese capital, which is being eroded as global brands replace local business, and their distinctive signs, on its high streets.Spreads from the 272 packed pages of Cidade Grfica.The book documents the group's research and conservation activities, which extend to salvaging signs threatened with destruction. Over 400 of these are now housed in a storage facility, with about half of these lovingly restored, and, in the case of the many neon signs, plugged in. However, their warehouse is soon to be demolished, and so they are seeking a new space, as documented in this beautiful short film by Irish director Gar O'Rourke.PORTICO_#07 - ON & OFF on Vimeo.The film is accompanied by an online article by Sandra Nobre, with photography from Adriano Fagundes, that can also be read in magazine format.More FilmsMore Books
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  • Baltic skills programme to help reduce European skills gap via Africa
    www.computerweekly.com
    Dilok - stock.adobe.comNewsBaltic skills programme to help reduce European skills gap via AfricaLithuanian project sets out to connect professionals in Africa with European businesses in need of skillsByKarl Flinders,Chief reporter and senior editor EMEAPublished: 13 Feb 2025 12:41 IT professionals in Africa are being connected to tech businesses in the Baltic region as part of a European Commission-funded project.Through a focus on people with skills, the Digital Explorers programme aims to address skills shortages in the Baltic tech sector and increase more business and government engagement between the Baltic nations and African countries.At the Turing College data science school in Lithuanias capital Vilnius, the programme has already remotely trained 90 junior to mid-level data analysts from Africa. These trainees will then travel to and work within the Baltic region, particularly within its rich tech startup sector. It is hoped the project will create a model for the wider EU region to follow.ilvinas vedkauskas, managing director at Lithuanian think tank OSMOS, which is behind the project, said it creates unexpected country partnerships such as between Lithuania and Nigeria countries that are very different.We built the project around people, digital explorers and their digital journeys. We create connections that set the path for more business to business and government to government type of engagement between countries, vedkauskas told Computer Weekly.Digital Explorers began in Lithuania and has since been expanded into all three Baltic countries to also include Estonia and Latvia. In Africa, Nigeria and Kenya are part of the project, which also includes Armenia.We are piloting first and foremost, seeing how these sort of arrangements could work on a global scale, said vedkauskas.He added that the training, which is initially remote, exposes the talent in Africa to the practices and modern interaction in the Baltics: All the mentors are industry professionals, the learning environment very much resembles the way teamwork is organised in tech companies here. We connect talent with the businesses that are looking to find new employees and explore new markets as well as diversify their teams.For the junior to mid-level data analysts, the programme is offering internships with participants relocated to the Baltic countries for six months. Digital Explorers subsidises the scholarships and pays the travel costs. Then its up to the company to mentor the intern to provide the working environment, said vedkauskas.After the six-month internship, trainees either return home and get support from Digital Explorers to help them reintegrate or they may remain in the Baltics and get support integrating for the long term. Since 2019, 53 trainees have relocated to the Baltics.vedkauskas said the project faces challenges, which need to be overcome through advocacy and informed persuasion, adding: The picture is not all rosy. Immigration regulations are becoming increasingly strict, making relocations and people-to-people exchange challenging, to say the least.Mercy Kimalat, CEO of the association of startup and SME enablers of Kenya (ASSEK), a visiting ambassador in the Digital Explorers programme, said: The startup ecosystem in the Baltics is impressively mature and stable, but it still needs to continue to grow and innovate. This is where global partnerships and fresh talent and ideas could really benefit us all, offering a chance to have honest discussions about resiliency.Kimalat said that accomplishing the initiatives goals is not without its difficulties: The entrepreneurial environments in both Kenya and the Baltics have faced many challenges over the past couple of years, from rising inflation to regional political perturbations, so it is inspiring to learn how different startup ecosystems continue to thrive and encourage growth.Read more about tech hiringMostbusinesses now have a CISO, but perceptions of what CISOs are supposed to do, and confusion over the value they offer, may be holding back harmonious relations.Women make up a small proportion of the tech sector despite accounting for almost half of the UK workforce but areefforts to attract more women into the sectora distraction from trying to keep the women the sector already has?Job postings for several IT roles returned to pre-pandemic levels last year, dropping when compared with 2023.In The Current Issue:Digging into the CMAs provisional take on AWS and Microsofts hold on UK cloud marketInterview: Digital tech fuels AutoTraders drive into the futureDownload Current IssueSLM series - Cotera: 10 key SLM facts for software engineers(and businesses) CW Developer NetworkWhat to expect from F5 AppWorld 2025 CW Developer NetworkView All Blogs
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  • I did not expect these cheap earbuds to feel this comfortable - and they sound great
    www.zdnet.com
    Baseus' MC1 open-ear earbuds are an excellent pick for active users who value comfort and stability above everything else.
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  • Apple finally lets you migrate purchases between two accounts - here's how
    www.zdnet.com
    Just a heads up: The migration process can be a bit of a headache, with a long checklist -- but the option is finally here for those who've been waiting forever.
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  • HBOs Harry Potter Show Is About To Cast A Huge Role, With One Big Problem
    www.forbes.com
    Harry PotterWBThere have been essentially no confirmed castings for HBO Maxs upcoming, hugely ambitious Harry Potter series, despite lots of rumors about who is circling which roles. Now, we have another one, but a deal appears to be almost done this time, say new reports.The role is Dumbledore, the most central figure to the series other than the trio of Harry, Ron and Hermione. And the actor that is near a deal to play him, according to Deadline, is none other than John Lithgow.You will of course recognize Lithgow from well, everything. He has 137 TV and film credits, most recently in the Oscar-nominated Conclave, he was in Scorseses Killers of the Flower Moon, HBOs Perry Mason. Hes played Winston Churchill. My first real introduction to him was as the Trinity Killer in Dexter, as long ago as that may be.WB has of course not commented on the report that hes almost signed a deal, but this one seems closer than most. Is Lithgow a good pick? He would be an American actor playing a British part, though again, hes done that before, specifically as Churchill, for one.NEW YORK, NEW YORK - JUNE 14: John Lithgow attends The Old Man" Season 1 NYC Tastemaker Event at ... [+] MOMA on June 14, 2022 in New York City. (Photo by Jamie McCarthy/Getty Images)Getty ImagesMORE FOR YOUThere is a big issue with Lithgows casting, however, and its no fault of his own. Its his age. While Lithgow is still an excellent actor, hes 79 years old. Reportedly the show will not air until 2026 or 2027. Then, it seems unlikely that HBO Max could get through all seven books in anything less than 10 years, and even that seems ambitious, with 1.5-2 years between most high profile shows in the streaming era. So at the tail end of this Lithgow would be what, 90? 92? 95? That doesnt seem like it would work, talented as he may be.This is not a done deal, and joins a number of other reports of who is being considered for various roles, where sometimes the opposite is true and some actors feel too young for the parts. So far, weve hard:Paapa Essiedu for SnapSharon Horgan or Lesley Manville for McGonagallBrett Goldstein for HagridCillian Murphy, at least as endorsed by Ralph Fiennes for VoldemortLONDON, ENGLAND - NOVEMBER 05: Paapa Essiedu attends the 2024 Harper's Bazaar Women of the Year ... [+] Awards, held in partnership with The Platinum Card by American Express, at Claridge's Hotel on November 5, 2024 in London, England. (Photo by Dave Benett/Getty Images for Harper's Bazaar UK)Dave Benett/Getty Images for Harper's Bazaar UKThe most perplexing pick on the list is Paapa Essiedu for Snape, not because of a racial change, but because Snape is supposed to be sort of awkward and odd-looking and menacing and Paapa Essiedu isa very handsome 34 year old, no offense to the late Alan Rickman. Again, none of these are confirmed yet, but that one is odd.I can see Lithgow donning a fake beard for Dumbledore, but given the timespan this show is going to run, Im just not sure if you can cast an actor thats going to be 80+ before the first season of the show even airs.Follow me , and .Pick up my sci-fi novels the and
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