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The world approved a bitterly negotiated climate deal Sunday but poorer nations most at the mercy of worsening disasters dismissed a $300 billion a year pledge from wealthy historic polluters as insultingly low. After two exhausting weeks of chaotic bargaining and sleepless nights, nearly 200 nations banged through the contentious finance pact in the early hours in a sports stadium in Azerbaijan. But the applause had barely subsided in Baku when India delivered a full-throated rejection of the dollar-figure just agreed. "The amount that is proposed to be mobilised is abysmally poor. It's a paltry sum," said Indian delegate Chandni Raina. "This document is little more than an optical illusion. This, in our opinion, will not address the enormity of the challenge we all face." Nations had struggled to reconcile long-standing divisions over how much rich nations most accountable for historic climate change should provide to poorer countries least responsible but most impacted by Earth's rapid warming. EU climate envoy Wopke Hoekstra said COP29 would be remembered as "the start of a new era for climate finance". Sleep-deprived diplomats, huddled in anxious groups, were still revising the final phrasing on the plenary floor hours before the deal passed. At points, the talks appeared on the brink of collapse, with developing nations storming out of meetings and threatening to walk away should rich nations not cough up more cash. In the end -- despite repeating that no deal is better than a bad deal -- they did not stand in the way of an agreement, despite it falling well short of what they wanted. The final deal commits developed nations to pay at least $300 billion a year by 2035 to help developed countries green their economies and prepare for worse disasters. That is up from $100 billion under an existing pledge but was slammed as offensively low by developing nations who had demanded much more. "This COP has been a disaster for the developing world," said Mohamed Adow, the Kenyan director of Power Shift Africa, a think tank. "It's a betrayal of both people and planet, by wealthy countries who claim to take climate change seriously." A group of 134 developing countries had pushed for at least $500 billion from rich governments to build resilience against climate change and cut emissions of planet-warming greenhouse gases. UN climate chief Simon Stiell acknowledged the deal was imperfect. "No country got everything they wanted, and we leave Baku with a mountain of work still to do. So this is no time for victory laps," he said in a statement. The United States and EU have wanted newly wealthy emerging economies like China -- the world's largest emitter -- to chip in. The final deal "encourages" developing countries to make contributions on a voluntary basis, reflecting no change for China which already provides climate finance on its own terms. Wealthy nations said it was politically unrealistic to expect more in direct government funding. Donald Trump, a sceptic of both climate change and foreign assistance, returns to the White House in January and a number of other Western countries have seen right-wing backlashes against the green agenda. The deal posits a larger overall target of $1.3 trillion per year to cope with rising temperatures and disasters, but most would come from private sources. Wealthy countries and small island nations were also concerned by efforts led by Saudi Arabia to water down calls from last year's summit in Dubai to phase out fossil fuels. The main texts proposed in Baku lacked any explicit mention of the Dubai commitment to "transitioning away from fossil fuels". A number of countries had accused Azerbaijan, an authoritarian oil and gas exporter, of lacking the experience and will to meet the moment, as the planet again sets temperature records and faces rising deadly disasters. bur-np-sct/lth/tymWith its latest lifestyle sneaker, PUMA is embarking on a new experimental path informed by its archival designs. The new PUMA Inverse was conceived with the aid of generative artificial intelligence (AI) and refined with human-made finishing touches. The design began with the Y2K-era PUMA Inhale , originally introduced in 2000 and recently revived under the brand’s collaborative line with rapper A$AP Rocky . From there, generative AI tools were used to reinterpret and iterate on the design with new features. Compared to the archival reference, the Inverse boasts a much sleeker profile and a mesh-forward materiality. Curvilinear overlays enhance the model with an aerodynamic look and the midsole cage provides a technical sensibility to the visual character. The inaugural colorway delivers the heat with a firey red mesh upper, along with black and amethyst purple accents throughout. Lead Product Line Manager Scottie Gurwitz shared, “Inverse is a deep dive into a new design mindset. Our goal was to bridge the human experience with experimental technology. AI doesn’t abide by the same rules as human designers, and that can help us see things in new ways and be a good experimental tool for us as we move through the design process.” The PUMA Inverse launches today from the brand’s official web store , PUMA flagship stores and selected retailers.
Panaji : The Social Welfare Department’s website in Goa has been ‘out of service’ for the last five years, causing much inconvenience to the citizens seeking to get information on various schemes of the government and apply for the same. The website, which was created in 2013, was supposed to help people access important social welfare schemes, apply for financial aid, and stay updated about government programmes. However, since 2019, the website has not been working properly, leaving many without a vital tool they once relied on. Before the website stopped working, it allowed people to apply online for various types of assistance like financial support for the elderly, scholarships for students from poor families, and grants for people with disabilities. The website made it easier for people to apply for these benefits without having to wait in long lines or visit government offices. But for the past five years, citizens have been left without an easy way to access these services. According to sources, Terasoft Technology was in charge of maintaining the website until 2020, but after a year of free service, the contract was not renewed due to poor performance. Since then, the website has not been updated or maintained, causing it to break down completely. A citizen, whose family depends on social welfare programmes, said that “the website was an important tool for people needing help. Whether it was financial aid for the elderly, scholarships for students, or grants for people with disabilities, it was the easiest way to apply for these benefits. Now that it’s not working, it’s causing a lot of problems. The government needs to fix it as soon as possible.” One student who had been waiting for an update on their application said, “It’s about time the government fixed this problem. The internet makes it easier to reach people quickly, and the website could be used to share important information about new schemes, deadlines, and how to apply for help.” One resident said, “I know many elderly people and families who are stuck because they can’t apply for any help. There’s no way to stay informed or know what’s going on with government programmes. It’s causing a lot of confusion and stress. Without the website, people who rely on government help are struggling to know how to access the aid they need.”
In Syria , the fall of the regime of Bashar al-Asad brought joy to many people who had lived through 13 years of intermittent civil war and decades of dictatorship . PUBLICIDAD However, it also fragmented Syrian territory. Several armed factions now compete for control and legitimacy, and external actors are eager to preserve their regional interests in the midst of chaos. PUBLICIDAD The fall of the regime of took place so quickly that it not only caught the Syrians by surprise, but also the international community. This was the case for the geopolitical analyst Aboud Barsekh-Onji , 37 years old, who has been living in Mexico since 2013. In an interview with Metro World News , he shared a bit of his life in Aleppo and how he perceives the events that changed the landscape and destiny of the country where he was born and raised. MWN: When did you leave Syria and have you returned since then? ABO: I left Aleppo on June 1, 2012, when the situation in different parts of the country was beginning to deteriorate. I have not returned to Syria since then. As a context, popular discontent with the government of Bashar al-Assad triggered pro-democracy protests and demonstrations in March 2011. After months of state repression, several armed extremist groups began to form throughout the country. By mid-2012, the conflict had escalated and talks of a revolution or civil war were already underway . First, I spent some time in Lebanon because my maternal family is Lebanese. I truly thought that things would improve and that I would soon be able to return. When I realized that the conflict would be prolonged, I decided to emigrate to Mexico in the spring of 2013. MWN: Nearly three weeks after Bashar Assad's fall, why did it happen so quickly and unexpectedly? ABO: The Middle East is not a region that, in general terms, reflects stability, neither in recent years nor in recent decades or centuries, amidst dictatorships, monarchies, wars, sectarian conflicts , etc. We saw it with the invasion of Iraq in 2003, and later with the fall of the leaders of Libya and Egypt in 2011. Now we see it in Syria. It is regrettable that the region has been suffering for many years due to these types of conflicts. Beyond military conflicts, I am talking about conflicts based on ideological and religious beliefs that prevent countries from moving towards a public administration where there is a real separation between religion and the state. I think their biggest mistake was governing like a dictator . If they had managed the country with that secular vision they had, but in an institutional way, allowing other people and ethnic groups to come to power, history would be different. However, I also consider that he did good things for the country . MWN: Could you share more details? ABO: Syria was one of the countries in the world where you could sleep with the doors of your house open and no one would enter. I am talking about how things were before 2010. Some things, such as quality education and healthcare, were better than in many countries , including Mexico. Bashar, like his father, was part of the Arab Socialist Ba'ath Party . When they came to power over 50 or 60 years ago, they had a vision of a social structure for the region, separating religion from the state. People were truly seeking to break free from the bubble of religion and move towards a more modern environment. The problem was that, as happened in other parts of the world with other countries with socialist governments, they began to move away from the principles of socialism and democracy . MWN: What was it like to live in a country ruled by the Assads? ABO: Hafez al-Assad , father of Bashar al-Assad , who ruled for three decades, began to favor his religious group, the Alawites , an ethno-religious group that separated from Shia Islam during the 9th century. Their government, as well as Bashar's, were characterized by protecting the country's minorities, such as Catholics, Armenians, Kurds, Druze, etc., as they themselves were part of a minority in a country where the majority of the population are Sunni Muslims. It may sound harsh, but I don't believe that democracy is necessarily synonymous with well-being . Would you prefer a country ruled by a dictator, but where you have everything you need to live well, or a country where there is a certain degree of democracy, but the country is not doing well socially or economically? The Asads ruled like kings but, to a certain extent, continued with the discourse that they were leading a republic. It was their big mistake to keep insisting that they were at the head of a republic without making institutional changes . MWN: If things were relatively good in Syria, why did they experience the so-called Arab Spring? ABO: At that time, there was opposition in Syria represented by different parties, made up of groups and individuals from different ethnicities and religions, but they never sought a change through weapons . In fact, there was a certain fear in the country even to speak ill of the government. The State's intelligence apparatus was very strong and people did not think or imagine that one day it would be possible to overthrow the government or that the Arab Spring would reach Syria. However, people from other countries with extremist ideas started to arrive, with military and financial support from extremist groups and even individuals from different countries, Arabs, non-Arabs, Westerners, etc. And that's when things started to spiral out of control. Some of these extremist or terrorist groups openly talked about creating an Islamic state in Syria , or returning the region to the era of Muslim caliphates. Many centuries ago, Syrians were not Muslims; Islam came to Syria through the expansion of these caliphates, which imposed their religion, language, and many of their customs. So in a way, what happened and what is happening in Syria is something that the region has experienced before . MWN: Many people celebrated the fall of Bashar al-Asad, or at least those were the images that circulated around the world... After the fall of the regime, we saw scenes of partying and celebration, even in the historic Umayyad Mosque in Damascus, by some groups. Now the Sunnis have the control that was taken from the Alawites. But as I was saying before, it's a struggle that has lasted for centuries, and among the different factions vying for power in Syria, there are some that want, or at least a few years ago they claimed to want, to create an Islamic state in the country. In other words, a state governed by Sharia law or Islamic law. I believe that what happened in Syria was the reincarnation of conflicts that have been going on for centuries, beyond just wanting to overthrow a dictator . It has mostly religious connotations. This explains how extremist groups, some officially classified as terrorists, got involved and received large amounts of weapons and money to enter the country and overthrow a regime that represented the Shia presence in Damascus , which was the capital of the Umayyad Empire. It cannot be said that the entire Syrian population took to the streets to celebrate Bashar's fall. Many people have taken a neutral or cautious stance, as uncertainty now reigns. If we only rely on what we see in the media, the scenes in Syria have already been witnessed and experienced in Iraq and Libya. And the changes were not necessarily for the better. Why should we believe that Syria will be better now? MWN: What's next for Syria? ABO: There is a lot of uncertainty . People don't know what's coming next, after the fall of a government that was in power for over 50 years. While the new authorities say they are progressive and want a united and inclusive Syria, people are not entirely sure that this is what will come. In fact, different parts of Syria are under the control of different groups and individuals , so there will undoubtedly be a stage of instability and transition that could last for decades, in an environment of different geopolitical interests that directly affect the country. The only solution would be to establish a pragmatic technocratic state, and sadly what "the rebels" started to do does not seem to be heading in that direction . Unfortunately, I believe it will take 20 years before Syria returns to the stability it experienced under Assad's rule . In the end, it could be a negotiation, a planned handover... trading one thing for another. That would explain the speed at which things unfolded a few weeks ago. * Aboud Barsekh-Onji is a Mexican researcher, communicator, and engineer of Syrian origin, specializing in geopolitics, technological innovation, and energy management.
Lufthansa Group Enhances Passenger Comfort with New Airbus A350-1000 AircraftBerry's 27 lead Charleston Southern past Columbia International 95-89Missing girl, 14, left in the woods by a man she met online: sheriffArgos customers can grab discounts on a wide selection of video games, consoles and accessories as part of the retailer's New Year sale. This includes a fantastic deal for the PS5 Pro , which has been given a pretty sizeable discount despite only launching in November. Sony's ultra-powerful new PlayStation console is down from £699.99 to £659.99 as part of the current sale. According to the Argos website, the PS5 Pro is "in-demand" and "selling fast", so you might need to hurry if you want to take advantage of the deal. If you do decide to make the purchase, Argos offers various payment schemes, including the ability to spread payments via Klarna and PayPal. A big upgrade over the original PS5 , the PS5 Pro makes a variety of improvements to visuals and performance. The PS5 Pro console comes with Sony's excellent DualSense controller, as well as a copy of Astro's Playroom built-in to the device. While the improvements to visuals and performance are the headline features, it's worth remembering that the PS5 Pro also comes with a 2TB solid-state drive, which is twice the storage of the original PS5 at launch. With games like Call of Duty potentially taking up a few hundred gigabytes of storage space, the bigger SSD is arguably worth the price alone. Of course, it's the improved specs that really makes the PS5 Pro worth purchasing, especially if you're sick of choosing between graphics and performance. Compared to the original PlayStation 5, the PS5 Pro contains a bigger GPU, features Advanced Ray-Tracing and utilises AI-driven upscaling. The GPU will provide rendering that's up to 45% faster thanks to 67% more Compute Units and 28% faster memory. This should lead to a better balance between visuals and performance. Advanced Ray Tracing will provide "more dynamic reflection and refraction of light", which allows rays to be cast at double and sometimes even triple the speeds of the current PS5. Then there's the AI Driven Upscaling, which is said to use "machine learning-based technology to provide super sharp image clarity by adding an extraordinary amount of detail". Elsewhere, PS5 Pro Game Boost will give older PS4 and PS5 games an upgrade in the visual and performance department.
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Shareholders Foundation mail@shareholdersfoundation.com (8585)779-1554 (PRNewsfoto/Shareholders Foundation, Inc.) SAN DIEGO , Dec. 7, 2024 /PRNewswire/ -- The Shareholders Foundation, Inc. announced that a lawsuit was filed for certain investors in DMC Global Inc. ( NASDAQ : BOOM) shares Investors who purchased more than $100,000 in shares of DMC Global Inc. (NASDAQ: BOOM) between May and November 2024 have certain options and there are short and strict deadlines running. Deadline: February 04, 2025 . Those DMC Global Inc. (NASDAQ: BOOM investors should contact the Shareholders Foundation at mail@shareholdersfoundation.com or call +1(858) 779 - 1554. On October 21, 2024 , DMC Global Inc. disclosed that it was "revising its guidance" for the quarter ended September 30, 2024 , stating that the Company's adjusted EBITDA is now expected to be approximately $5 million , down from prior guidance for $15 -18 million, and that the third quarter financial results "will include inventory and bad debt charges at DynaEnergetics totaling approximately $5 million , as well as lower fixed overhead absorption on reduced sales at both Arcadia and DynaEnergetics." The Company also revealed that the financial results will include an approximate $142 million non-cash goodwill impairment charge "associated with DMC's December 2021 acquisition of a controlling interest in Arcadia ." On November 4, 2024 , DMC Global Inc released its third-quarter financial results for the period ending September 30, 2024 . Among other results, the Company reported third quarter sales of $152.4 million , down 11% sequentially and year-over-year, as well as the previously disclosed non-cash goodwill impairment charge. Shares of DMC Global Inc. (NASDAQ: BOOM) declined from $15.98 per share on May 3, 2024 , to as low as $7.16 per share on November 21 , 2024. On December 06, 2024 , an investor in NASDAQ: BOOM shares filed a lawsuit against DMC Global Inc. The plaintiff alleges that between May 3, 2024 and November 4, 2024 , the defendants made materially false and misleading statements and failed to disclose the following adverse facts about DMC Global's business, operations, and prospects which were known to defendants or recklessly disregarded by them: (i) the goodwill associated with the company's principal business segment, Acadia Products, was overstated due to the adverse events and circumstances affecting that reporting segment; (ii) DMC Global's materially inadequate internal systems and processes were adversely affecting its operations; (iii) the company's inadequate systems and processes prevented it from ensuring reasonably accurate guidance and that its public disclosures were timely, accurate, and complete; (iv) as a result, defendants misrepresented DMC Global's operations and financial results; and/or (v) as a result, the company's public statements were materially false, misleading, or lacked a reasonable basis when made. Those who purchased shares of DMC Global Inc. (NASDAQ: BOOM) should contact the Shareholders Foundation, Inc. CONTACT: Shareholders Foundation, Inc. Michael Daniels +1 (858) 779-1554 mail@shareholdersfoundation.com 3111 Camino Del Rio North Suite 423 San Diego, CA 92108 The Shareholders Foundation, Inc. is a professional portfolio legal monitoring and a settlement claim filing service, which does research related to shareholder issues and informs investors of securities class actions, settlements, judgments, and other legal related news to the stock/financial market. The Shareholders Foundation, Inc. is not a law firm. Any referenced cases, investigations, and/or settlements are not filed/initiated/reached and/or are not related to Shareholders Foundation. The information is only provided as a public service. It is not intended as legal advice and should not be relied upon. View original content to download multimedia: https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/lawsuit-for-investors-who-lost-over-100-000-in-shares-of-dmc-global-inc-nasdaq-boom-between-may-and-nov-2024-announced-by-shareholders-foundation-302325435.html SOURCE Shareholders Foundation, Inc.In 2024, city moved ahead with Metro; IIT-K shone with record placements & innovations
Tech News Today Live Updates: In an era dominated by rapid technological evolution, staying informed with the latest technology news is essential. This segment offers a comprehensive look at the newest advancements and breakthroughs shaping our world. From cutting-edge developments in artificial intelligence and quantum computing to updates on consumer electronics and cybersecurity, our coverage spans a broad spectrum of tech-related topics. Whether you're a tech enthusiast, a professional in the field, or simply curious about how technological changes affect your daily life, our updates are designed to keep you informed and ahead in the ever-changing world of technology. Tech Reviews Today Live: DOR TV 43-inch review: Ambitious Subscription model with a few rough edges
In a cavernous warehouse north of New York City, a 16-foot robot outfitted with a cutting tool etched intricate grooves into a faceless marble head atop an alien-like torso. Water sprayed into the air as an image created with artificial intelligence entered the physical world. In February, during a three-month stint as OpenAI’s first artist in residence, Alexander Reben gained early access to the startup’s Sora text-to-video tool, which instantly generates videos up to a minute in length from written or spoken prompts. Reben, a technologist trained at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, used Nvidia’s neural radiance field technology to turn Sora’s AI-generated imagery into 3D models. The cutting tool, run by a small company called Monumental Labs, turned one of those into a 4-foot-tall sculpture carved from white Italian marble veined with black and gray. While many artists view AI as a threat to their livelihoods, Reben, whose residency ended in April, embraces it as a collaborator. “I got a closer view of how innovation happens within an AI company, and got a better idea of why it’s important to push the edges and try new things,” Reben, 39, said. Toward the end of the residency, he focused on a prototype system that turned photos of real objects into AI-generated images, poems and even short, satirical blurbs. His setup consisted of his phone, a Fujifilm Instax photo printer and another printer that spit out receipts and labels. A web browser-based system combined Reben’s code with a version of the large language model that powers ChatGPT. The “conceptual camera,” whose interface appeared on Reben’s phone screen, had 15 “modes.” One of them, which Reben calls “Silly AI Label Maker,” assigns a name to any item pictured. When he snapped an image of a yellow zinnia, for example, out popped a label designating the flower a “sunny puffball.” The vase containing the flower got a new name, too: “sunflower sipper.” Sunglasses became “shady peepers.” To demonstrate his conceptual camera, Reben held his phone above a rudimentary sketch of a face, a lone tear falling from each eye, alongside a shape that passed for a tree. Almost as quickly as he took the photo, an image sprang from a hand-held printer. The setup turned the drawing into a bizarre, AI-generated picture that blended the face and the tree into a tearful, ghoulish man with a neck and shoulders that looked like they had been carved from wood. OpenAI, which is based in San Francisco, says artists like Reben help it understand the potential of its AI tools. His projects “showed our technology in a new light, inspiring our teams to see the creative possibilities of what we’re building,” a spokesperson for the company said in an email. But Hugh Leeman, an art lecturer at universities such as Duke, Colorado State and Johns Hopkins, wonders if the residency is just a marketing move to appease artists who worry their work is being used to train AI systems without permission, payment or credit. Some are concerned that AI could alter the very nature of creativity. “From a company standpoint, they’re getting out ahead of the curve here,” Leeman said. “This is a mechanism of saying: ‘Look, we’ve always loved artists. In fact, we’ve worked with artists.’” But he is a fan of Reben. Leeman started researching his work after seeing it last year at the Crocker Art Museum in Sacramento, California. Leeman was most struck by the cheeky mischief — like the AI-generated snubs of the artist’s show that rotated on a wall display, declaring it, among other insults, a “masterstroke of blandness.” “It was both criticizing AI and criticizing him for using it,” Leeman said. “I thought, what a beautiful sense of humor and self-awareness on this that is very needed in the art world.” That humor comes through in Reben’s camera. One of its modes takes images and gives them an absurd twist: Imagine a battalion of tiny toy soldiers climbing a scone as if it were a hilly battlefield. Reben took a photo of sunglasses sitting on a table at his home in Berkeley, California. (He had set out those and other random objects for his demonstration.) The camera produced eight paragraphs under the headline “Local Sunglasses File Restraining Order Against Unrelenting Sun.” The overworked glasses, according to the text, are simply asking for more temperate working conditions: “a few clouds” now and then, or an “occasional overcast day.” “The sun has yet to respond to the allegations,” the passage continues. “Legal experts speculate that the solar defendant might struggle to appear in court given its 93-million-mile commute and busy schedule keeping the solar system in order.” Reben’s works, including some created during the OpenAI residency, are on view at the Charlie James Gallery in Los Angeles. In December, they will appear as part of an exhibit by the Bitforms Gallery at Untitled Art, a contemporary art fair in Miami Beach. Reben said that he understood and empathized with the concerns roiling the artist community as AI evolved, but that new technologies always face growing pains. “There are different types of art,” he said, “and different reasons that art exists.” This article originally appeared in .
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