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  • Spotify and FC Barcelona Extend Partnership Through 2030 — Spotify

    Spotify and FC Barcelona Extend Partnership Through 2030 — Spotify

    Spotify and FC Barcelona are extending our partnership through 2030, continuing a collaboration that’s redefining how fans, players, and artists connect. The agreement spans the…

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  • BCI Board Nominee Spotlight: Desmond O’Callanghan FBCI

    BCI Board Nominee Spotlight: Desmond O’Callanghan FBCI

    Full name: Desmond O’Callanghan
    Membership grade: FBCI
    Country of residence: Canada
    Professional role: Retired. Past Corporate Program Leader / Consultant / Educator

    About the nominee

    I am a retired BCM expert professional. I have held positions in organizations of all sizes, from 500 to 40,000. Prior to entering the BCM profession at a Canadian bank in 1989, I held positions in Accounting, Administration, Internal Audit and Operations.

    My BCM career has spanned 36 years in leadership roles. Much of my employment was in finance, but I also had 13 years of salaried and independent consulting across all sectors. My last full-time job was Director of Global Continuity Services for a major insurance company.  Since 2011, I have contributed to the BCI on the Global Membership Council, 11 years on the Canadian Chapter Board, 4 as Leader; a member of the Americas Next Practice Group for 4 years, 2 as Leader.

    Now in the Op Res SIG. I have judged awards for 11 years, this year, honorary. I have been a Lead Assessor for the past 6 years. I have contributed to the last 3 GPG updates. I advised Central Office staff in developing the Competency Framework. I have contributed to many education initiatives, including course and exam creation, development and review. I wish to bring all my experience and dedication to the board.

    Any prior board governance experience?

    I have been involved in BCI governance for over 11 years. As a member of the Canadian Chapter Board, I was the Canadian representative on the Global Management Council until it was phased out.

    Subsequently, I was Chapter Vice-President, managing dissolution of the legal entity in 2020; then Group Leader for 4 years in the new structure. I was the Leader of the Americas Next Practice Group and remain active with its successor, the Operational Resilience SIG. Outside the BCI, I have been an active member of the Resilience Information Exchange (RIE) for 36 years, serving on the board and several sub-committees of its Toronto Chapter Board for many years, principally Communications and Program Planning.

    I have been a career-long leader/contributor to numerous planning committees for BCM conferences, including BCI World. Besides working life, I have served pro bono on a church finance committee, the board of a not-for-profit seniors’ residence, responsible for operations and strategic planning.

    Why serve on the BCI Board?

    I would like to serve as a BCI Board Director because the combination of my knowledge and extensive experience within the BCM profession is suited to the role. My passion for business continuity and my extensive involvement in BCI operations and governance would provide a mature and meaningful contribution to its evolution.

    Being now retired from remunerative employment will allow me the time and energy to devote to the role. I love being an Ambassador for the BCI and an advocate for the profession and all BCI volunteers.

     I see board membership as a valuable, culminating contribution at this stage of my career. I believe strongly in the core principles and practices that were and still are the foundation the BCI is built on. I am committed to knowledge transfer between generations as we go through a demographic shift, embracing new thinking and methodology.

    I want to do everything I can to “pay it forward.” I have benefited greatly from the profession and the BCI, and I am keen to contribute what I can in return and promote volunteering as its lifeblood.

    What skills and experience do you bring to the board?

    In my 36-year BCM career working for companies from 500 to 40,000 employees, my foremost skills have been strategic analysis, communications and leadership.

    Most roles I have held have required interpersonal skills in matrix management structures, promoting collaborative behaviours and negotiation. I have experience in co-managing initiatives involving multiple organizations, in both the public and private sectors.

    Previous work experience included Finance, Administration, Operations and Risk Management. Having held leadership roles in my BCI volunteer work (Canadian Chapter, Americas Next Practice Group), I have demonstrated a philosophy of success through teamwork.

    More on

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    Reference…

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  • Deadly flooding squeezed agricultural sector: Aurangzeb – RADIO PAKISTAN

    1. Deadly flooding squeezed agricultural sector: Aurangzeb  RADIO PAKISTAN
    2. Pakistan – Situation Report 1: Monsoon Floods, Intersector Coordination Group – 10 October 2025  OCHA
    3. Finance Minister projects 3.5–4pc GDP growth despite flood damages  

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  • COVID-19 and smell loss: Brain region changes revealed

    COVID-19 and smell loss: Brain region changes revealed

    MRI scans reveal that people who lose their sense of smell after COVID-19 show measurable changes in brain regions tied to emotion and sensory processing, offering new clues to the lingering effects of long COVID.

    Study: Alterations…

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  • Baek Se-hee, author of bestselling memoir ‘I Want To Die But I Want To Eat Tteokbokki,’ dead at 35

    Baek Se-hee, author of bestselling memoir ‘I Want To Die But I Want To Eat Tteokbokki,’ dead at 35

    Editor’s note:  If you or someone you know is struggling with mental health, help is available. Dial or text 988 or visit 988lifeline.org for free and confidential support.

    South Korean author Baek…

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  • Micron to exit server chips business in China after ban: report

    Micron to exit server chips business in China after ban: report

    Micron offices in San Jose, California, on Nov. 30, 2023.

    David Paul Morris | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    Micron plans to stop supplying server chips to data centers in China after the business failed to recover from a 2023 government ban on its products in critical Chinese infrastructure, two people briefed on the decision said.

    Micron was the first U.S. chipmaker to be targeted by Beijing – a move that was seen as retaliatory for a series of curbs by Washington aimed at impeding tech progress by China’s semiconductor industry.

    Since then, both Nvidia and Intel chips have similarly fielded accusations from Chinese authorities and an industry group of posing security risks, though there has not been any regulatory action.

    Lenovo to remain a customer

    Micron will continue to sell to two Chinese customers that have significant data center operations outside China, one of which is laptop maker Lenovo, the people said.

    The U.S. company, which made $3.4 billion or 12% of its total revenue from mainland China in its last business year, will also continue to sell chips to auto and mobile phone sector customers in the world’s second-largest economy, one person said.

    Asked about the exit from its China data center business, Micron said in a statement to Reuters that the division had been impacted by the ban, and it abides by applicable regulations where it does business.

    Lenovo did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

    U.S.-Sino trade tensions and tech rivalry have only escalated since 2018, when U.S. President Donald Trump began imposing tariffs on Chinese goods during his first term. That same year, Washington ramped up accusations against Chinese tech giant Huawei, accusing it of representing a national security risk, imposing sanctions a year later.

    Huawei has denied those charges. Nvidia and Intel have also denied charges that their products pose risks to Chinese national security. Micron also said in 2023, before the conclusion of China’s probe, that it stood by the security of its products.

    Currently, the U.S. has sanctioned hundreds of Chinese entities. China, which is more reliant on imported tech, has taken far fewer regulatory actions.

    Losing out on China’s AI boom

    The ban on Micron products in critical infrastructure by China – the world’s second-largest market for server memory – has meant the company has missed out on the country’s data center expansion boom.

    That’s benefited rivals Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix, as well as Chinese companies YMTC and CXMT, which have been aggressively expanding with the support of the Chinese government.

    Investment by data centers used in computing in China surged ninefold to 24.7 billion yuan ($3.4 billion) last year, according to a Reuters review of government procurement documents.

    That said, Micron’s challenges in China have been offset by huge demand for data centers and related tools elsewhere, thanks to the global adoption of artificial intelligence. That’s helped the company report record quarterly revenue.

    According to a third source, Micron’s data center team in China employs over 300 people. Reuters was not able to immediately establish how many jobs may be affected.

    Micron has been downsizing in other areas in China. In August, it laid off a few hundred people in its universal flash storage program after deciding to cease development of future mobile NAND products globally, according to the South China Morning Post.

    Areas where it has continued to expand in China include its chip packaging facility in the city of Xian.

    “We have a strong operating and customer presence in China, and China remains an important market for Micron and the semiconductor industry in general,” Micron said in its statement to Reuters.

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  • Medvedev finds his spark in Almaty, Turin trail tightens… – ATP Tour

    1. Medvedev finds his spark in Almaty, Turin trail tightens…  ATP Tour
    2. ATP Almaty Day 4 Predictions Including Daniil Medvedev vs Adam Walton  Last Word On Sports
    3. 2025 Almaty Open: Schoolkate [96th] vs. Walton [77th] Prediction, Odds and Match…

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  • Tell us your experiences of private ADHD assessments in England | Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder

    Tell us your experiences of private ADHD assessments in England | Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder

    ADHD diagnoses have increased significantly in recent years: in England, prescription rates have risen about 18% annually since the pandemic, reflecting greater demand for assessment and treatment.

    If you’ve had a private ADHD assessment in…

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  • Horses became gentle and easy to ride thanks to two gene mutations

    Horses became gentle and easy to ride thanks to two gene mutations

    align: (noun: alignment) To place or organize things in a patterned order, following an apparent line.

    anxiety: A nervous reaction to events causing excessive uneasiness and apprehension. People with anxiety may even develop panic…

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