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Damage to the brainstem – the brain’s ‘control center’ – is behind long-lasting physical and psychiatric effects of severe Covid-19 infection, a study suggests.
Using ultra-high-resolution scanners that can see the living brain in…
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Leonardo staff in Unite union vote to go on strike
Staff at the defence firm Leonardo who are members of the Unite union have voted “overwhelmingly” in favour of strike action across its main UK sites, in a dispute over pay.
The Italian-owned company, which has the UK’s only helicopter factory in Yeovil, Somerset, had offered a two-year deal of 3.2%, describing it as fair with the potential through variable pay packages to increase to about 9.2%.
But Unite says the offer is actually a real-terms pay cut in light of inflation and the on going economic crisis. The union’s regional officer, Carrie Binnie, said: “This strike is entirely the making of Leonardo. It can fix it with the stroke of a pen.”
The BBC has approached Leonardo for a response.
The ballot saw all sites support strike action but, in an unusual move, Unite has not immediately announced a date for a walkout but has instead asked for a return to negotiations.
However, Unite says the walkout will happen this autumn if an improved offer is not made.
Unite general secretary, Sharon Graham, said: “Our members are highly skilled and work on critical defence and aerospace systems yet are being short-changed by a company making billions.
“Leonardo needs to do the right thing, return to the negotiating table and make an improved offer our members can accept.
“Otherwise, they will see their workers on the picket line and their factories shutdown.”
Leonardo has nine main sites across the UK in Edinburgh, Newcastle, Lincoln, Luton, London, Basildon, Southampton, Bristol and Yeovil.
It is not the only firm in the aerospace sector to face a staff walkout.
Last month, Airbus averted strike action by coming up with a new pay deal including enhancements to Unite members’ pensions.
While Colins Aerospace has agreed a 10% pay increase over 28 months, again avoiding a walkout.
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Zendesk says its new AI agent can solve 80% of support issues
Zendesk announced Wednesday at its AI summit a string of LLM-driven products meant to reshape the company’s reliance on human technicians.
The center of the new features is an autonomous support agent that Zendesk believes will solve 80% of…
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Salesforce to spend $1 billion in Mexico over next five years to drive AI adoption
The company, which began operating in Mexico in 2006, said the investment will fund a new Mexico City office and a Global Delivery Center to support customers across the Americas.
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“This $1 billion investment is a commitment to Mexico as a key market for AI-powered growth,” CEO Marc Benioff said.
Mexico is rapidly emerging as a tech services hub, drawing investments from technology companies, particularly in the AI domain due to the country’s proximity to the U.S. and growing talent base.
Salesforce said Mexico is a growth market for the company, with a customer base including organizations such as Xcaret, Grupo Bafar and FEMSA.
“This investment will not only create jobs and build AI skills within Mexico but will also position our country as a key consultancy hub for markets across Latin America on AI agents and more,” Mexico’s Economy Minister Marcelo Ebrard said.
Salesforce has rolled out AI across its cloud services at a rapid pace, culminating in the 2024 commercial launch of Agentforce — its AI agent platform designed to automate tasks, streamline operations and help lift margins.
Reporting by Jaspreet Singh in Bengaluru; Editing by Alan Barona
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