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  • Support students’ mental health with bespoke workshops

    Support students’ mental health with bespoke workshops

    Mental health concerns and suicide prevention in UK universities are major issues. In 2023, almost 30,000 students reported problems with their mental health, according to the Office for Students. The number of students with a mental health

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  • Microsoft shares once again surpass $4 trillion valuation, joining Nvidia

    Microsoft shares once again surpass $4 trillion valuation, joining Nvidia

    Microsoft Corp. once again surpassed $4 trillion in valuation, joining artificial intelligence chipmaker Nvidia in the exclusive club that also briefly included Apple on Tuesday. The sky-high valuations highlight the investor frenzy around artificial intelligence.

    Earlier in the day, OpenAI said it has reorganized its ownership structure and converted its business into a public benefit corporation after two crucial regulators, the Delaware and California attorneys general, said they would not oppose the plan. It also said has signed a new agreement with its longtime backer Microsoft that gives the software giant a roughly 27% stake in OpenAI’s new for-profit corporation.

    The news gave Microsoft’s shares a boost as the stock closed up 2% at $542.07, valuing the technology giant at $4.04 trillion. Microsoft’s valuation previously passed $4 trillion in July, making it the second company after Nvidia to reach the milestone.

    Apple’s shares, meanwhile, crossed the $4 trillion line earlier Tuesday before closing up slightly at $269 and a total valuation of $3.99 trillion. Thanks to the iPhone’s success, Apple was the the first publicly traded company to valued at $1 trillion, $2 trillion and eventually, $3 trillion.

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  • Solar boom eases Pak energy crisis

    Solar boom eases Pak energy crisis

    Solar panel. Photo: ANADOLU AGENCY


    KARACHI:

    The roof of a sprawling rice mill in the eastern district of Pakistan’s commercial capital Karachi is covered with sky blue solar panels soaking rays under the broiling midday sun.

    The mill is one of thousands of industrial units across Pakistan that have shifted to solar energy to counter rising electricity tariffs and frequent power outages in recent years.

    The South Asian country of around 255 million people has witnessed a solar uptake, particularly over the past two years, after an International Monetary Fund (IMF) bailout forced Pakistan to sharply raise power and gas tariffs to support struggling suppliers in the heavily indebted energy sector.

    From pharmaceuticals to cement manufacturers in Karachi, to textile units in Faisalabad, and from supermarkets to mosques in Lahore, solar panels paired with lithium batteries have been adopted as an alternative to electricity from the national grid.

    “We were left with no other choice but to go for solar energy, as the power bills had literally become unpayable for industrialists,” Rafique Suleman, the owner of the mill, told Anadolu.

    Suleman said that turning to solar has “really” helped him mitigate the tariff challenge, saving up to 50% of his monthly power-related expenses.

    “The current power tariffs and Pakistan’s industry cannot survive together. Solar energy is the only viable option that local industrialists have to run their businesses,” added Suleman, a former chairman of the country’s rice exporters association.

    Mehwish Salman Ali, chief executive officer of Data Vault Pakistan, a leading data provider and management solutions company, views solar solutions as a “game-changer” that helps the country tackle chronic energy deficits by providing affordable and reliable power to homes and businesses.

    “From crippling blackouts and insane sky-high bills, we’ve seen solar’s share in electricity generation triple to 14% by 2025, with rural areas hitting 25% in the early months alone, filling the gaps where the grid fails us,” Ali told Anadolu.

    Pakistan’s solar penetration ranks it among Asia’s leaders for solar-only share, surpassing nations like China (9%) and India (6%), according to Ember, a UK-based energy think tank.

    Environmental challenges

    Although solar solutions have contributed significantly to reducing energy gaps, environmentalists warn that electronic waste is adding to a long list of environmental challenges already plaguing the country.

    Pakistan ranks among the top 10 countries most affected by climate change.

    The country’s solar adoption has accelerated rapidly since 2015 due to rising electricity tariffs, frequent power shortages, falling panel prices, and net-metering incentives.

    Currently, Pakistan is estimated to have around 3 million consumers using solar systems, including off-grid, according to the Seventh Population & Housing Census 2023. China exported 16.6 gigawatts of solar capacity to Pakistan in 2024, about five times higher than in 2022.

    “While solar energy is a clean and renewable power source, the electronic waste (e-waste) generated from its components – particularly solar panels, inverters and batteries – is an emerging environmental challenge in Pakistan and worldwide,” Rafiul Haq, a Karachi-based environmentalist, told Anadolu.

    Most systems use lead-acid, lithium-ion, or gel batteries and panels with lifespans between 10 and 25 years. When these reach the end of their life, they become electronic waste, often unmanaged, Haq added.

    Endorsing the view, Ali said that without affordable solar options, the energy gap widens, increasing dependence on fossil fuels, which harms the environment and hinders progress toward sustainable development. A 2023 United Nations Development Program (UNDP) report estimated that over 80% of Pakistan’s lead-acid battery recycling is unregulated, exposing workers and nearby communities to neurotoxic lead.

    Pakistan currently has no dedicated solar or battery recycling facility, according to Haq.

    He said the first wave of solar panels installed between 2010 and 2015 is now approaching end-of-life. Without a recycling system, millions of panels could generate thousands of tons of e-waste annually over the next decade.

    “The solution lies in strong recycling legislation, formal waste collection systems, and producer responsibility frameworks – turning clean energy into a truly sustainable system,” Haq maintained, calling for the establishment of a “National Solar E-Waste Management Framework.”

    Mustafa Amjad, an Islamabad-based energy expert, said the existing power system “isn’t really ready for all of that solar. It does not mean it does not have to be ready. It will still have to make that journey, a bit earlier than initially thought out,” he told Anadolu.

    “And it would need new regulatory structures.”

    Social division

    Waqar Phulpoto, director general of the Sindh Environment Protection Authority (SEPA), contended that the electronic waste issue is not alarming for now.

    “This is a reality, and it is for sure going to be an environmental challenge. But at the moment, its extent is not huge, as Pakistan has logged a boom in solar adoption over the past five years,” Phulpoto told Anadolu.

    SEPA is considering introducing legislation and guidelines “soon” to tackle the electronic waste issue, he said, adding: “It will be done well before this issue (electronic waste) becomes an actual challenge,” Phulpoto said.

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  • NAB has recovered $30b since 2023

    NAB has recovered $30b since 2023

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    ISLAMABAD:

    National Accountability Bureau (NAB) Chairman Lt Gen (retd)…

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  • “Rival” Neutrino Experiments NOvA and T2K Publish First Joint Analysis

    “Rival” Neutrino Experiments NOvA and T2K Publish First Joint Analysis

    Two international teams that are each conducting experiments on mysterious particles called neutrinos, which some physicists believe could help explain the unlikely existence of our universe, have for the first time published…

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  • HackingTeam successor linked to recent Chrome zero-days

    HackingTeam successor linked to recent Chrome zero-days

    This newsletter is brought to you by Knocknoc. You can subscribe to an audio version of this newsletter as a podcast by searching for “Risky Business” in your podcatcher or subscribing via this RSS feed.


    The company that formed…

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  • Apple’s Next Big Move: iPhone 20 Could Reportedly Ditch Every Physical Button

    Apple’s Next Big Move: iPhone 20 Could Reportedly Ditch Every Physical Button

    Future iPhones may not have physical buttons, according to an unconfirmed report from a leaker who goes by Instant Digital, and who shared the information on the Chinese social media platform Weibo.

    Tech news site 9to5Mac translated the post…

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  • Nikkei 225, Nifty 50, CSI 300

    Nikkei 225, Nifty 50, CSI 300

    Mount Fuji and the Shinjuku skyline in Tokyo, Japan, on Friday, Feb. 14, 2025. Photographer: Kiyoshi Ota/Bloomberg via Getty Images

    Bloomberg | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    Asia-Pacific markets were set for a higher open Wednesday as investors awaited the Federal Reserve’s interest rate decision, widely believed to bring a second straight 25 basis point cut.

    Markets are assigning a nearly 100% probability that another quarter-point reduction, on the heels of September’s cut, would bring the federal funds rate to a range between 3.75%-4.00%.

    “If [Fed chair Jerome Powell] comes off dovish, bets for future Fed cuts will increase and provide more fuel to market momentum,” veteran investor Louis Navellier wrote in a daily note.

    The federal funds rate, set by the Federal Open Market Committee, is the interest rate banks charge each other for overnight loans. While it doesn’t directly affect consumers, the Fed’s moves often influence borrowing costs for mortgages, credit cards and other loans.

    Japan’s Nikkei 225 futures pointed to a stronger open, with the contract in Chicago at 50,745 and its counterpart in Osaka at 50,660, compared to the previous close of 50,219.18.

    Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 started the day flat.

    Hong Kong markets are closed for the holidays.

    Overnight in the U.S., all three major averages closed higher. The S&P 500 rose 0.23% to close at 6,890.89. It had surpassed the 6,900 level for the first time on an intraday basis earlier in the day.

    The Nasdaq Composite advanced 0.80% to finish at 23,827.49, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 161.78 points, or 0.34%, to settle at 47,706.37. In addition to their closing highs, the tech-heavy Nasdaq and 30-stock Dow scored new all-time intraday highs alongside the broad market S&P 500.

    —CNBC’s Jeff Cox, Sean Conlon and Pia Singh contributed to this report.

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  • Are Europe’s migrants acquiring HIV after arrival?

    Are Europe’s migrants acquiring HIV after arrival?

    PARIS, October 27, 2025 — More than 60% of HIV diagnoses among migrants in Switzerland occur after arrival, with some groups waiting up to 6 years before detection; findings that expose significant gaps in the country’s prevention and…

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