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  • Google’s Gemini 3.0 reportedly due to be released in December – Sherwood News

    Google’s Gemini 3.0 reportedly due to be released in December – Sherwood News

    1. Google’s Gemini 3.0 reportedly due to be released in December  Sherwood News
    2. Sundar Pichai: “Gemini 3.0 will release this year”  Techzine Global
    3. Google AI Studio Rolls Out Rate Limit Dashboard as Gemini 3.0 Remains in Development  The Tradable

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  • Planet Labs wins $12.8 million NGA contract for maritime intelligence in Asia-Pacific

    Planet Labs wins $12.8 million NGA contract for maritime intelligence in Asia-Pacific

    WASHINGTON — Planet Labs received a $12.8 million contract from the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency (NGA) to deliver maritime data and analytics for regions across the Asia-Pacific.

    The award, announced Oct. 16, is part of the agency’s Luno program. Planet is tasked to provide advanced analytics for maritime operations and reconnaissance, including vessel detections and monitoring. Under the deal, Planet will partner with SynMax Intelligence, a Houston-based geospatial analytics firm, to fuse Planet’s near-daily imaging data with SynMax’s Theia analytics platform — an AI-driven tool that detects and classifies maritime events.

    “These insights are crucial for revealing illegal, unreported, and unregulated fishing, illicit ship-to-ship transfers and vessel spoofing,” Planet said in a statement.

    NGA’s Luno program

    The contract falls under Luno B, one of two components of NGA’s broader Luno program — a five-year, $490 million ceiling indefinite delivery/indefinite quantity (IDIQ) vehicle designed to accelerate the agency’s adoption of commercial satellite imagery, artificial intelligence and advanced analytics.

    Luno is split into Luno A, focused on commercial analytic services powered by machine learning and computer vision, and Luno B, which integrates commercial AI tools directly into NGA’s analytic workflows.

    Planet is part of a roster of commercial intelligence vendors competing for Luno task orders. Recent winners also include Maxar Intelligence (renamed Vantor), BlackSky, Electromagnetic Systems, Ursa Space and NV5 Geospatial.

    “This is our first win under this program as a prime,” said Charlie Candy, Planet’s chief revenue officer, during an Oct. 16 appearance at the company’s investor conference.

    Maritime domain awareness

    Candy said the NGA award underscores Planet’s growing push into maritime domain awareness, a segment increasingly driven by national security demand.

    “Our satellites capture over 25 million square kilometers of ocean imagery every day, and we’re expanding this capability,” he said. “A projected growth in demand is primarily driven by national security needs.”

    Planet’s constellation — currently about 140 imaging satellites — maps the entire Earth daily, generating an unparalleled archive of data. “We image over 200 million square kilometers of land, coastline, open water every day,” Candy said, noting that the company now holds a catalog of more than 3,000 images for every location on land.

    That trove of imagery feeds Planet’s AI training models, enabling the company to automate detection and monitoring tasks at global scale. Candy said Planet operates over 50 ground stations and fully automated mission control centers to downlink and process satellite data in near real time.

    Partnership with SynMax

    For this Luno B task order, Planet is leveraging SynMax’s AI analytics to enhance situational awareness at sea. SynMax specializes in fusing satellite imagery with artificial intelligence and other multi-source data for the energy and maritime industries.

    Theia, SynMax’s proprietary analytics platform, classifies vessel movements and detects “dark” ships that operate without broadcasting location signals — a growing concern for defense, trade security and environmental regulators.

    Planet and SynMax have a history of collaboration. The companies first partnered in 2022 to deliver energy intelligence and dark vessel monitoring for the energy and commodities sectors, using PlanetScope imagery to track hydraulic fracturing and offshore operations. The alliance deepened in March 2024 into a formal strategic partnership, allowing Planet to market SynMax’s Theia tool for vessel monitoring and spoofing detection as part of its commercial offerings.

    Focus on government customers

    Candy said Planet’s sales teams are now primarily focused on government customers, while the company continues to work with analytics partners like SynMax to serve commercial sectors such as insurance, energy, finance and supply chain.

    The NGA contract signals a deeper alignment between commercial space data providers and U.S. intelligence agencies, which are increasingly leaning on private-sector capabilities to maintain global situational awareness.

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  • United Rugby Championship: Edinburgh cruise to dominant win over Benetton

    United Rugby Championship: Edinburgh cruise to dominant win over Benetton

    Edinburgh: Goosen; Graham, O’Conor, Lang, Van der Merwe; Scott, Shiel; Schoeman, Ashman, Rae, Skinner, Gilchrist, McConnell, Richardson, Bradbury.

    Replacements: Harrison, Whitcombe, Hill, Young, Douglas, Vellacott, Thompson, McCann.

    Benetton:…

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  • Rady Alumnus’ Startup Vikk AI Selected for Prestigious Amazon and Meta Program

    Rady Alumnus’ Startup Vikk AI Selected for Prestigious Amazon and Meta Program

    “I’m especially excited about this partnership with AWS and Meta because it gives Vikk AI access to world-class technology, mentorship, and resources that will help us scale faster and smarter,” said Allos. “Beyond the technical advantages, it’s an opportunity to showcase the entrepreneurial drive fostered by our Rady School, and to turn cutting-edge AI into real solutions that empower consumers and transform industries.”

    He added that the Rady ecosystem continues to contribute to the company’s growth. Vikk AI and Rady School of Management collaborated in the Spring quarter of 2025 through a capstone course.  

    A total of five MBA students were enrolled as part of the engagement, contributing over 200 hours of research and strategic analysis.  Rady School students worked closely with the Vikk team on product analytics, market positioning, and early-stage AI feature validation, helping them refine the business model and align the company’s technology roadmap with customer needs.

     “I’m very grateful for the Rady students who participated in our capstone project—their fresh perspectives and contributions added real value and reflect the collaborative, entrepreneurial spirit that Rady instills,” Allos said.

    Through the partnership, Vikk AI will receive $200,000 in AWS cloud credits, direct mentorship from Meta and AWS engineers, and access to an elite network of AI founders—further solidifying its place at the forefront of legal technology innovation.

    Learn more about Rady’s Captsone Projects by visiting the MBA Capstone Project: Rady Action Project webpage. 

    Learn more about research and education at UC San Diego in:


    Artificial Intelligence

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  • Bessent to meet China’s vice-premier in bid to solve rare earths spat

    Bessent to meet China’s vice-premier in bid to solve rare earths spat

    Unlock the White House Watch newsletter for free

    US Treasury secretary Scott Bessent will meet his Chinese counterpart next week in a gathering that could…

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  • Intense mental exercise may be able to offset the effects of aging, research finds : NPR

    Intense mental exercise may be able to offset the effects of aging, research finds : NPR



    MARY LOUISE KELLY, HOST:

    Scientists have produced the first compelling evidence that mental exercise can cause biological changes in a human brain. NPR’s Jon Hamilton reports on a new study showing that intensive…

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  • “It’s Going to Be a Hell of a Tour” » allblacks.com

    “It’s Going to Be a Hell of a Tour” » allblacks.com

    Memories of campaigns past and the clashes that laid the foundations for what is now being called Rugby’s Greatest Rivalry will be the prelude for both the All Blacks and Springboks ahead of their return to touring schedules, first next year in…

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  • FAA raises Boeing 737 Max production cap to 42 a month

    FAA raises Boeing 737 Max production cap to 42 a month

    Boeing 737 Max aircraft are assembled at the company’s plant in Renton, Washington, U.S. June 25, 2024.

    Jennifer Buchanan | Via Reuters

    Boeing has won regulator approval to ramp up production of its best-selling 737 Max jetliners to 42 a month, a milestone for the manufacturer nearly two years after the Federal Aviation Administration capped its output after a midair near-catastrophe.

    In January 2024, the FAA restricted Boeing to building the planes at a rate of no more than 38 a month — though it had been below that level at the time — after a door plug from a nearly new 737 Max 9 blew off from an Alaska Airlines flight as it climbed out of Portland, Oregon.

    Boeing failed to reinstall key bolts on the door plug before it left the factory, a National Transportation Safety Board report found. The 737 Max returned and landed safely, but it put the company back into crisis mode just as leaders were expecting a turnaround year.

    The FAA said Friday that it would still oversee Boeing’s production. “FAA safety inspectors conducted extensive reviews of Boeing’s production lines to ensure that this small production rate increase will be done safely,” the agency said in a statement.

    Boeing said it would work with its suppliers to increase production.

    “We appreciate the work by our team, our suppliers and the FAA to ensure we are prepared to increase production with safety and quality at the forefront,” Boeing said Friday in a statement.

    Read more CNBC airline news

    An increase in output is key to the company’s turnaround after years of problems, since airlines and other customers pay for the bulk of an aircraft when they receive it. CEO Kelly Ortberg, named last year to stabilize the top U.S. manufacturer, said last month he expected to soon win FAA approval to raise output to 42, with other increases planned for down the line.

    “We’ll go from 42 and then we’ll go up another five, and we’ll go up another five,” Ortberg told a Morgan Stanley investor conference in September. “We’ll get to where that inventory is more balanced with the supply chain, probably around the 47 a month production rate.”

    The change shows the FAA’s softening tone and increased confidence in Boeing after years of restrictions. Last month, the agency said it would allow Boeing to again sign off on some of its aircraft itself before they’re handed over to customers, instead of that responsibility falling solely with the FAA.

    The Max program was crippled following two crashes of the planes in 2018 and 2019, which killed all 346 people on the two flights. The aircraft was grounded for nearly two years. Covid also hurt production, followed by supply chain problems and, last year, a labor strike at Boeing’s main factories in the Seattle area.

    Boeing hasn’t posted an annual profit since 2018. But it has increased output, and its deliveries of new planes are on track to hit the highest rate since that year.

    Boeing is scheduled to release quarterly results on Oct. 29.

    — CNBC’s Phil LeBeau and Meghan Reeder contributed to this report.

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  • Mysterious Blob of Darkness Found Lurking Deep in Distant Galaxy : ScienceAlert

    Mysterious Blob of Darkness Found Lurking Deep in Distant Galaxy : ScienceAlert

    In an astonishing feat of gravitational sleuthing, astronomers have found a mysterious, dense blob of invisible matter embedded in a galaxy whose light took 7.3 billion years to reach us.

    Exactly what this blob might be is currently an open…

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  • If life on Mars exists, it may be preserved in a frozen time capsule

    If life on Mars exists, it may be preserved in a frozen time capsule

    When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission.

    Subsurface ice on Mars, shown here, was first revealed and imaged in 2008 by NASA’s Phoenix mission. | Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/University of…

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