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  • Cambridgeshire firefighter’s fundraiser aims to buy cancer vaccine

    Cambridgeshire firefighter’s fundraiser aims to buy cancer vaccine

    Harriet HeywoodCambridgeshire

    Cambridgeshire Fire and Rescue Service Paul Whitaker is in his uniform, standing in front of a red and yellow fire engine, facing the camera with a composed expression. The word 'FIRE' is partially visible on the vehicle behind, emphasizing the emergency services setting. The firefighter’s dark uniform, detailed with light stitching, reflects the seriousness and dedication of the profession."Cambridgeshire Fire and Rescue Service

    Paul Whitaker joined the Cambridgeshire Fire and Rescue Service in 2008, and has most recently being promoted to Watch Commander

    A firefighter diagnosed with an aggressive brain…

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  • Jabil (JBL) Margin Drops on $300M Loss, Pressures Bullish Growth Outlook

    Jabil (JBL) Margin Drops on $300M Loss, Pressures Bullish Growth Outlook

    Jabil (JBL) posted net profit margins of 2.2%, a notable drop from last year’s 4.8%, following a one-off, non-recurring loss of $300 million that affected results through August 2025. However, the company’s EPS and top line are forecast to rebound, with earnings expected to grow at a robust 20.3% per year, which outpaces the US market’s 15.6% estimate. This dynamic has investors weighing a strong growth outlook against recent profit margin compression and episodic losses.

    See our full analysis for Jabil.

    Next, we will compare these fresh numbers with the most widely watched narratives in the market, examining which perspectives are supported and where assumptions might be tested.

    See what the community is saying about Jabil

    NYSE:JBL Revenue & Expenses Breakdown as at Oct 2025
    • Jabil expects its AI-related markets to deliver 40% year-on-year revenue growth, making this the fastest-growing segment highlighted in recent filings.

    • Analysts’ consensus view notes that diversification into high-growth AI and technology sectors is central to Jabil’s long-term upside, especially as these areas are projected to expand margin and revenue potential.

      • Consensus highlights robust expansion into India, boosting photonics capacity for next-generation tech demand.

      • Analysts also flag the $20 billion pharmaceutical solutions market, entered via acquisition, as another driver that could contribute to improved future margins and scale.

    • Latest results demonstrate real traction in AI and pharma, two catalysts for revenue momentum that the balanced narrative says could define Jabil’s next phase of growth. 📊 Read the full Jabil Consensus Narrative.

    • The Regulated Industries segment reported an 8% year-on-year revenue decline, while inventory days have inched above the company’s target range, placing added pressure on short-term margin recovery.

    • Consensus narrative flags that persistent weakness in regulated and renewables-facing businesses stands out as the sharpest risk to profitability, particularly given recent episodic cash flow pressures.

      • Analysts point to elevated inventory levels as an immediate challenge that could squeeze net margins if left unchecked going forward.

      • Persistent softness in consumer-driven segments, especially following the Mobility divestiture, presents further obstacles to regaining margin levels seen in prior years.

    • Jabil’s current price-to-earnings ratio stands at 34.2x, lower than the peer average of 35.5x but notably higher than the US electronic industry’s 26.2x. The stock trades 19.4% below its DCF fair value estimate of $259.90 per share.

    • According to the analysts’ consensus view, this mix of valuation signals prompts debate. While the discount versus DCF fair value and peer PE offers upside for buyers, the premium versus the broader industry and slower projected revenue growth (5.8% for Jabil versus 10.1% for the US market) keeps expectations in check.

      • Consensus commentary treats the 8% gap between the current share price ($209.34) and the latest analyst price target as a sign the market sees Jabil as fairly valued for now.

      • With only a modest gap to the analyst target, upside likely depends on the company proving that AI and pharma expansion can restore margins and achieve more aggressive profit targets than peers anticipate.

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  • Weekly poll: will the vivo X300 or X300 Pro be your next phone?

    Weekly poll: will the vivo X300 or X300 Pro be your next phone?

    Vivo introduced the X300 series this week and this year the family is smaller – there’s no mid-sized vanilla model and no “Pro mini”, just the small X300 and the big X300 Pro. Okay, there is likely an Ultra model and an FE model in…

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  • An Unusual Vascular Catastrophe: Atheromatous Aortic Dissection With Renal Artery Thrombosis and Cortical Laminar Necrosis Post Cerebral Ischemia

    An Unusual Vascular Catastrophe: Atheromatous Aortic Dissection With Renal Artery Thrombosis and Cortical Laminar Necrosis Post Cerebral Ischemia

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  • The Sneakiest Little Design Trick in Gaming Mice | by Alex Rowe | Oct, 2025

    The Sneakiest Little Design Trick in Gaming Mice | by Alex Rowe | Oct, 2025

    Press enter or click to view image in full size

    Two black mice with white accents and Logitech logos sit on a black desk mat. The left model is a first gen Superlight, and the right model is the brand new Superlight 2C or “Compact.”
    The older Logitech Superlight mouse (left) is clearly sad and lame, while the newer slightly smaller Superlight 2C (right) is compact and sleek and cool, right?

    The endless march of computer game…

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  • Even “diet” soda may be quietly damaging your liver, scientists warn

    Even “diet” soda may be quietly damaging your liver, scientists warn

    A large-scale investigation has found that people who regularly consume both sugar-sweetened beverages (SSBs) and low- or no-sugar-sweetened beverages (LNSSBs) face a significantly greater likelihood of developing metabolic dysfunction-associated…

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  • Even “diet” soda may be quietly damaging your liver, scientists warn

    Even “diet” soda may be quietly damaging your liver, scientists warn

    A large-scale investigation has found that people who regularly consume both sugar-sweetened beverages (SSBs) and low- or no-sugar-sweetened beverages (LNSSBs) face a significantly greater likelihood of developing metabolic dysfunction-associated…

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  • A mushroom farm in Kenya and fungi-based panels give hope for sustainable building

    A mushroom farm in Kenya and fungi-based panels give hope for sustainable building

    NAIROBI, Kenya — NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) — A large mushroom farm near the Kenyan capital of Nairobi is one of a kind: It grows fungi on an industrial scale — not as food for restaurants but as a building material that some Kenyans say could make more people homeowners.

    The farm produces mycelium, the root structure of mushrooms that a local company then uses to make building materials it says are more sustainable than regular brick and mortar.

    The company, MycoTile, combines the roots with natural fibers and agents to make panels that can be used for everything from roof and wall insulation to interior decor, at a fraction of the cost of building with standard clay bricks. It currently produces about 3,000 square meters (yards) of such materials every month.

    Street vendor Jedidah Murugi, whose house was made with fungi-based construction materials, said she believes “there is no huge difference in the quality of the houses made from brick and these boards.”

    “The only difference,” she said, is in the cost. Her house, she added, “is not cold at night and neither is it hot during the day.”

    MycoTile’s work could be a boon for Nairobi, where local leaders cite a housing crisis that has left many homeless or living in informal settlements and dwelling enclaves, prone to fires and sanitary issues. Official figures say there is a housing deficit of at least 2 million units in this metropolis of over 5 million people.

    Most Kenyans are renters and those who are homeowners build from the ground up over many years instead of hiring contractors. It is common to find people living in badly finished or incomplete homes to avoid paying rent elsewhere.

    “Introducing affordable materials like ours taps into an existing huge market and contributes to providing affordable housing solutions,” said Mtamu Kililo, MycoTile’s founder.

    Kililo said his company’s insulation products cost roughly two-thirds of the price of standard materials.

    Building a one-bedroom unit in Nairobi using materials such as brick, timber and tin sheets typically costs up to 150,000 Kenyan shillings (about $1,000), for a simple structure, and the figure can double depending on the quality of finishes, according to estimates from builders.

    Using mushroom-root panels could shave off a third of the cost of building a house with bricks and mortar. Murugi, the street vendor, spent about 26,880 Kenyan shillings ($208) on the panels for her 15 square meter (161 square feet) home.

    Kenyan authorities have recently started working on a national plan for decarbonizing construction and building, with local-led innovation at its center.

    As part of the plan, the government allows MycoTile to use facilities at the Kenya Industrial Research and Development Institute in Nairobi, where it has access to machinery.

    MycoTile’s fungi-based construction panels are more sustainable than traditional ones because they are biodegradable and harmless to the environment, Kililo told The Associated Press.

    His idea was not novel — others elsewhere have experimented with mycelium. The first mycelium house in the southern African nation of Namibia was built by the nonprofit group MycoHAB in May 2024, using technology developed for NASA.

    In the Netherlands, one inventor makes mushroom coffins by binding mycelium with hemp fiber in a special mold that ends up resembling an unpainted sarcophagus from ancient Egypt.

    Sustainable products from biogenic materials are desirable because they have a low carbon footprint and potentially contribute no emissions, Nickson Otieno, an architect and sustainability expert in Nairobi, said.

    Construction “is one of the major emitters,” he added.

    The Global Buildings Performance Network, a think tank, earlier this year warned that Kenya “risks locking in decades of carbon-intensive construction” without targeted intervention.

    Kililo said his company also uses agricultural waste in its production process, reducing potential pollutants and easing pressure on waste disposal systems.

    “We go to western Kenya where there are many sugar manufacturing factories and collect the waste matter,” he said.

    The pasteurized agricultural waste is introduced to the mycelium composite from the farmed mushrooms, binding it into dense panels. MycoTile uses up around 250 tons of agricultural waste annually, Kililo said.

    For Kililo, the idea came during a research fellowship in the Rwandan capital of Kigali, home to one of the largest mushroom farms in east Africa. Kililo said he learned the process of mushroom farming there.

    “The used substrates looked like brick and I thought I could use those in the building industry,” he said.

    Returning to Kenya, he decided to create small blocks in his kitchen as part of his research into the fungal basis of sustainable building — never imagining it could someday become commercial.

    “I started doing a similar process, growing them in my pantry, baking them in my oven,” he said. “Initially it was purely research.”

    ___

    The Associated Press’ climate and environmental coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP’s standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at AP.org.

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  • MIT scientists uncover traces of Earth’s lost ancestor deep beneath surface

    MIT scientists uncover traces of Earth’s lost ancestor deep beneath surface

    They offer a glimpse into the material that predated the massive impact that shaped our modern world.

    The findings were published Tuesday in Nature Geosciences, according to ScienceDaily.

    “This is maybe the first direct…

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  • Heath Thorpe finds peace beyond the Olympic dream

    Heath Thorpe finds peace beyond the Olympic dream

    That clarity – and perspective – has allowed him to flourish this year. No longer competing on all six events has allowed Thorpe to both polish his routines on the floor exercise and horizontal bar, the only apparatus he’s competing on in…

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