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  • Dubai Police Introduces 12 AI Projects

    Dubai Police Introduces 12 AI Projects

    Dubai Police wrapped up its participation at Gitex Global 2025 with the launch of 12 cutting-edge innovations driven by artificial intelligence, robotics, and digital automation — reinforcing its leadership in smart policing and…

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  • Vampire The Masquerade Bloodlines 2 Review

    Vampire The Masquerade Bloodlines 2 Review

    Vampire: The Masquerade — Bloodlines was a first-person action roleplaying game that came out in 2004 in the heyday of the FPS RPG boom, when titles like Deus Ex and The Elder Scrolls 3: Morrowind were flying off the shelves. The franchise went…

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  • Zelensky to make case for long-range missiles at White House meeting with Trump – live updates

    Zelensky to make case for long-range missiles at White House meeting with Trump – live updates

    Hungary still obligated to arrest people under ICC warrant – including Putinpublished at 14:32 BST

    Anna Holligan
    Reporting from The Hague

    close up of Vladimir Putin in a black suit and white shirt, looking slightly to the left, Behind him, a Russian flag with the blue and white parts visibleImage source, Getty Images

    Hungary’s withdrawal from the International Criminal Court (ICC)…

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  • Stratifying cardiovascular benefits from GLP-1RA: a multisource analysis of patient-level CVOT and real-world data using AI-driven methods | Cardiovascular Diabetology

    Stratifying cardiovascular benefits from GLP-1RA: a multisource analysis of patient-level CVOT and real-world data using AI-driven methods | Cardiovascular Diabetology

    Study design

    We collected individual patient-level data from the LEADER [7] and SUSTAIN-6 [8] CVOTs as well as from the DARWIN-T2D real world study (RWS) [9]. As summarized in Fig. S1A, after excluding patients with missing data for covariates in…

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  • New female health developments to provide lasting change for women and girls in football

    New female health developments to provide lasting change for women and girls in football

    “Findings from both research projects showed that levels of education and knowledge across performance support staff, coaches, parents and players themselves around how to manage, support and optimise female athlete health were really…

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  • Using captives to unlock value in affinity insurance programs

    Using captives to unlock value in affinity insurance programs

    In today’s competitive business landscape, affinity insurance programs that overlook captive solutions risk falling behind.

    Our new report, Using captives to unlock value in affinity insurance programs, in partnership with the Open & Embedded Insurance Observatory, reveals how forward-thinking organizations harness captives to enhance risk management, reduce costs, and boost customer loyalty. Learn how a captive interacts with the insurance market to align with your business goals and deliver long-term stability for your affinity insurance program.

    Our report will help you:

    • Understand how captive insurance functions are structured.
    • Identify the key benefits of transferring the risk from an affinity insurance program to a captive.
    • Navigate the process of establishing an affinity insurance program in a captive solution.

    Don’t let traditional insurance models hold your organization back. Discover proven strategies to manage risk transfer while you unlock value, improve operational efficiency, and build a resilient, customer-centric insurance approach.

    Act now to stay ahead of industry shifts and position your organization for sustainable success.

    Download the full report today and start transforming your affinity insurance programs with captive solutions.

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  • Wakefield mining museum workers reject latest pay offer

    Wakefield mining museum workers reject latest pay offer

    Nicola Rees/BBC Striking workers at the museum stand in a line outside the site, holding up placards saying "official picket" and holding banners with the Unison logoNicola Rees/BBC

    Members of Unison at the National Coal Mining Museum have been out on strike since August

    Workers at the National Coal Mining Museum for England have rejected the latest pay offer in their ongoing dispute over wages, a union has said.

    At least 40 members of Unison at the site in Wakefield have been on continuous strike since mid-August calling for higher pay.

    Unison said members had rejected a new pay offer which a spokesperson said would have left many staff worse off than a previous proposal which was thrown out.

    A spokesperson for the National Coal Mining Museum for England said it was “disappointed” the pay offer has been rejected.

    Unison said representatives had met the museum’s chief executive Lynn Dunning and local Labour MP Jade Botterill last week with the aim of finding a resolution.

    During the meeting, museum managers had suggested a £1 an hour rise for fitters and electricians and a 5% pay rise for other staff, a union spokesperson said.

    For many workers that would work out lower than the 80p an hour increase previously suggested by museum management, the union said.

    Meanwhile, according to Unison, the chief executive “continued to refuse to disclose” financial documents which could help to work out an “affordable and acceptable” offer.

    National Coal Mining Museum A general view of buildings at the National Coal Mining Museum in Wakefield. The building in the foreground has beige coloured bricks with a green door. Several red brick buildings stand in the background, with green doors and railings, with the Museum's red pit wheel at the top of the tallest building.National Coal Mining Museum

    Museum bosses said the site faced the same “increasing financial pressures” as other similar charities

    Christina McAnea, Unison general secretary, said: “This dispute has already gone on for far too long.

    “Museum bosses have spent more on continuing the strike than it would have cost them to give staff a reasonable pay rise.

    “Senior managers should stop playing games, do the right thing and come up with a fair deal.”

    Rianne Hooley, Unison Yorkshire and Humberside regional organiser, said: “If managers genuinely want to resolve this dispute, they should be transparent with Unison over what is and isn’t affordable.

    “Otherwise, it looks like they have something to hide.”

    Unison said its initial pay claim was for a £2.50 rise, meanwhile, in June, it had suggested a 5% pay rise, or £1 per hour – whichever was greater – for all staff.

    That was in response to an offer from the museum of a £1 per hour increase for mine guides and 5% for everyone else, which Unison said would have given a bigger pay rise to male mine guides than the women employed elsewhere in the museum. 

    Museum managers were going to put their pay offer to the board of trustees but then withdrew it, the union said.

    LDRS Mining equipment - including the pit head wheel - at the National Coal Mining Museum in Wakefield with picnic benches to the sides and grass in front.LDRS

    Visitors to the museum can learn about the UK’s mining history

    In a statement, a museum spokesperson said: “We are disappointed our recent pay offer has been rejected. This included a £1 per hour increase for museum guides with specialist skills, such as electricians and fitters, and a 5% uplift for the wider team.

    “After much discussion with Unison, this offer brought the museum’s pay structure in line with, and in some instances over, similar organisations’ structures.”

    The museum remained “committed to recognising expertise and rewarding the valuable contributions of all team members”, the statement said.

    “The board continues to make decisions guided by principles of fairness and affordability,” it added.

    “We have reviewed arrangements at similar organisations to use as a comparator and will consider this model going forward as we implement our Succession Plan.”

    A museum spokesperson said that like many charities it was facing “increasing financial pressures” and any offer “must protect the museum’s future”.

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  • ‘The Diplomat’ boss previews Season 4, talks nuclear cliffhanger

    ‘The Diplomat’ boss previews Season 4, talks nuclear cliffhanger

    Spoiler alert! The following contains spoilers for the Season 3 finale of “The Diplomat.”

    World domination? Hal Wyler would like that, please.

    That’s what Kate (Keri Russell) learns about her husband (Rufus Sewell) in the Season 3 finale of “The…

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  • Does fluralaner (Exzolt® 5%) affect the enzootic stability of tick fever in beef calves subjected to strategic tick control in a tropical region? | Parasites & Vectors

    Does fluralaner (Exzolt® 5%) affect the enzootic stability of tick fever in beef calves subjected to strategic tick control in a tropical region? | Parasites & Vectors

    Experimental location

    This experiment was carried out from October 2023 to May 2024 in a commercial cattle farm located in the municipality of Rio Verde, Goiás, Brazil. This is a tropical region where there are two well-defined seasons per year:…

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  • Advanced Technology Converts Donor Kidneys to Universal Blood Type O

    Advanced Technology Converts Donor Kidneys to Universal Blood Type O

    For thousands of patients waiting for a kidney transplant, a new medical breakthrough could mean more matches, shorter waitlist times, and more lives saved.

    In a landmark study published in Nature Biomedical Engineering, researchers in China…

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