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  • Drake appeals defamation loss against UMG over Lamar's 'Not Like Us' – Reuters

    1. Drake appeals defamation loss against UMG over Lamar’s ‘Not Like Us’  Reuters
    2. Drake Files Notice of Appeal in Defamation Case Over Kendrick Lamar’s ‘Not Like Us’  variety.com
    3. Joe Budden Calls Drake a ‘Bi—‘ Following Universal Music…

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  • Guardiola delighted with Marmoush contribution – Manchester City FC

    1. Guardiola delighted with Marmoush contribution  Manchester City FC
    2. Pep Guardiola explains thought process behind Omar Marmoush and Manchester City starting place  OneFootball
    3. ‘Need both’ – Pep Guardiola gives Omar Marmoush verdict after Man City…

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  • Sadequain’s ‘The Stranger’ unveiled at PNCA

    Sadequain’s ‘The Stranger’ unveiled at PNCA

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    Ambassador of France to Pakistan Nicolas Galey receives a framed lithograph of The Stranger by Sadequain during the exhibition’s opening at the Pakistan National Council of the Arts, Islamabad. Photo: EXPRESS

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  • “Natural Experiment” Reveals Lifelong Cardiac Benefits of Early Sugar Limits – SciTechDaily

    1. “Natural Experiment” Reveals Lifelong Cardiac Benefits of Early Sugar Limits  SciTechDaily
    2. What Britain’s post-war sugar rationing teaches us about long-term heart health  News-Medical
    3. Reducing Sugar Intake in Childhood May Reduce…

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  • Tech giants are spending big on AI in a bid to dominate the boom

    Tech giants are spending big on AI in a bid to dominate the boom

    The titans of the technology sector are ramping up their spending on artificial intelligence, as they rush to reap the benefits of an AI boom that has pushed stocks to record highs.

    Earnings reports from Meta, Alphabet and Microsoft on Wednesday reaffirmed the colossal amounts of money these firms are shelling out for everything from data centres to chips, even as questions swirl about returns on the investments.

    Meta said its capital expenditures for 2025 will be between $70bn (£53bn) to $72bn, up from an earlier estimate of $66bn to $72bn.

    Its spending growth in 2026 is poised to be “notably larger” than this year, the company said. Meta is seeking to compete with companies like OpenAI.

    On a call with analysts, Meta boss Mark Zuckerberg defended the firm’s investments, saying he saw big opportunities ahead driven by AI, both in terms of new products and for honing its current business selling ads and feeding people content.

    “The right thing to do is accelerate this,” he said, adding later: “We are sort of perennially operating the family of apps and ads business in a compute-starved state at this point.”

    Google and YouTube owner Alphabet similarly raised its forecast for this year to $91bn to $93bn, up from an earlier outlook of $85bn in the summer, in the latest sign of its increasingly lofty spending goals,

    That estimate is nearly double the capital expenditures that the company reported for 2024.

    Microsoft’s capital expenditures in the quarter through to 30 September, including on data centres, totalled $34.9bn, the company reported on Wednesday – a larger spending figure than analysts had expected, and up from $24 billion in the previous quarter.

    “We continue to increase our investments in AI across both capital and talent to meet the massive opportunity ahead,” Satya Nadella, Microsoft’s chief executive, said.

    Azure, the firm’s cloud computing unit, and Microsoft’s other AI products have a “real-world impact”, Mr Nadella said.

    Exuberance among investors about massive AI spending has helped all three tech firms outperform the broader S&P 500 index.

    But Wall Street is also focused on whether these firms’ investments are starting to yield tangible returns.

    The two things holding up the US economy in the last several months have been consumers and AI-related business investments, said Aditya Bhave, senior US economist at Bank of America.

    “To the extent that the latter remains strong, it’s a bullish signal for GDP growth,” he said.

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  • MPs raise concerns over Prince Andrew’s Royal Lodge lease

    MPs raise concerns over Prince Andrew’s Royal Lodge lease

    Shutterstock An aerial photograph of Royal Lodge, Prince Andrew's residence in Windsor, shows a large white building with green fields and trees surrounding it and a variety of cars parked outside it. File photoShutterstock

    Prince Andrew has lived at Royal Lodge since 2004 and has a 75-year lease

    Parliament’s spending watchdog has raised concerns over whether Prince Andrew’s lease arrangements are “achieving the best value for money”, amid increased…

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  • ‘Unprecedented’ view of the sun reveals elusive coronal waves after 85-year search

    ‘Unprecedented’ view of the sun reveals elusive coronal waves after 85-year search

    A hot mystery on the sun may be close to being solved.

    For decades, scientists have been trying to understand why the sun‘s outer atmosphere is so much hotter than its surface, despite being farther from the core. Whereas the surface, or…

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  • Secondary Infections and Long COVID in Kids: What Pediatricians Need to Know | The Transmission

    Secondary Infections and Long COVID in Kids: What Pediatricians Need to Know | The Transmission

    Medscape When Lucas Denault was first infected with COVID in January 2021 at the age of 15, his symptoms were relatively mild. A high school athlete at the time, the Pennsylvania resident experienced a brief bout of cold-like symptoms,…

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  • Trump Says US-South Korea Trade Deal Reached, But No Details Provided

    Trump Says US-South Korea Trade Deal Reached, But No Details Provided

    US President Donald Trump and South Korean President Lee Jae Myung finalized a trade deal Wednesday, capping months of negotiation over implementation of a framework agreement struck in July.

    The deal will see Seoul make $150 billion in…

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  • RuneScape Dev Really, Really Wants Its Players to Vote in Favor of Removing the Game’s Least Popular Microtransactions

    RuneScape Dev Really, Really Wants Its Players to Vote in Favor of Removing the Game’s Least Popular Microtransactions

    RuneScape developer Jagex is considering removing one of the game’s least popular, yet most pervasive, layers of microtransactions. But instead of just making the decision itself, it’s letting its entire playerbase vote on whether or not to ditch…

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