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After '100s of DMs', Shelton pairs with Kovacevic for Dallas doubles win – ATP Tour
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Check out every angle of Aston Martin’s 2026 livery
Aston Martin have showcased their 2026 livery to the world, having unveiled the design that will adorn the squad’s AMR26 car.
After several other teams hosted their own launches across January and February, Aston Martin became the final outfit…
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Top Pilates Reformer Manufacturers Driving Innovation in Fitness Equipment
JINHUA CITY, ZHEJIANG PROVINCE, CHINA, February 10, 2026 /EINPresswire.com/ — The global fitness equipment industry has witnessed remarkable growth in Pilates reformer manufacturing over the past five years. As consumer interest in…
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An agency subscription model takes shape at S4 Capital
Subscriptions were supposed to save publishers. Now, they’re becoming part of the survival logic for agencies too.
At agency holdco S4 Capital, the pivot is already taking shape.
By the end of the year, about a quarter of revenue at its Monks arm is expected to come from what it calls subscriptions — not in the Netflix sense but as a commercial model where, instead of selling hours, the agency sells ongoing access to a bundle that combines senior talent, AI workflows, agents and institutional knowledge for a steady, recurring fee.
Those agreements typically run for at least a year, with the heavy early lift of setting it all up folded into the subscription rather than billed as a one-off project, even as the tools and systems behind the work continue to improve over time.
From there, the deal works less like a fixed checklist of tasks and more like a service that gets better over time. As the AI system improves, the agency can produce more work or do it faster without having to rewrite the contract. Those efficiency gains don’t show up as fewer hours billed, they show up as more output inside the same fee.
As Monks’ co-founder and chief AI officer Wesley ter Haar put it, something that once delivered “50 of these [outputs] a month” might reach 70 as models get better and pipelines get smarter, creating ongoing value within the same commercial contract.
“With the hunger for compute about to explode do we then have to add pass through [costs], which in an ideal world, as an agency, you don’t want to do because it complicates the ability for a client to sign off on a contract if you have every variable as a pass through cost. Procurement teams hate that. So we try and wrap that up into our subscription model,” said ter Haar.
Clearly this stops well short of the outcome-based structure agency CEOs describe as the endgame. At most, subscriptions are a waypoint. The pressure behind them is more concrete. AI now handles work that used to take junior staff hours, while also introducing new, less visible costs in the form of model usage and compute. In that environment, charging by the hour fits the work less and less, pushing agencies toward models that reflect systems rather than time.
“Just like software, the subscription gets upgrades, which is why we say it’s ongoing,” said ter Haar.
Those upgrades play out across two interlocking tiers within the bundle.
On the human side, AI is absorbing more junior-heavy production, giving clients greater access to senior operators with more flexibility in how time is deployed. Hours allocated for one quarter can roll into the next, allowing the work to follow momentum rather than the calendar.
Alongside that sits the machine layer: repeatable marketing workflows powered by LLM-driven agents handling both standardized and bespoke tasks, supported by tiered knowledge bases that combine task logic, client data and broader industry intelligence. Together, these systems compress research and production time, even as most work remains under a people-in-the model rather than fully autonomous execution.
“The billable hour does not allow for any meaningful innovation, which clients understand,” said ter Haar. “They’re open to new models.”
So far one client has brought into it since last fall, and two more are expected to follow before the quarter closes.
“My goal for this year is to have about 25% of our revenue running in this model, and that is based on hopefully having three quite sizable clients signed up at the end of Q1 and then having a decent amount of new business that starts in that space,” said ter Haar.
What happens after that depends less on vision than mechanics. AI usage must remain economically manageable as tokens and inference costs fluctuate. Agencies have to decide whether to absorb or expose those tech expenses. Clients and procurement teams must accept a model that behaves differently from traditional scopes. At the same time, large legacy contracts inside organizations still built around billable hours have to unwind slowly enough for both sides to adjust. There’s also the structural risk in tying pricing too closely to raw AI consumption. The very technology meant to make work more efficiently can introduce volatility that neither side fully controls, complicating efforts to make the model feel predictable.
“Token costs are falling while usage is exploding — it’s an unstable foundation,” said Robert Webster, founder of AI marketing consultancy TAU Marketing Solutions. “It would be wrong for an agency to try to arbitrate that situation. Yes, AI usage is going to be really important as are the subsequent inference costs that it generates but I fear getting stuck in a world where large parts of the industry charge an arbitrage on tokens.”
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Digiday ranks the best and worst Super Bowl 2026 ads
Now that the dust has settled around the 60-plus Super Bowl ad spots rolled out this year, it’s time to reflect on the best and worst commercials from Super Bowl 2026.
Anthropic took a jab at OpenAI’s ad product launch and T-Mobile and…
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Aging neurons outsource garbage disposal, clog microglia
Synaptic proteins degrade more slowly in aged mice than in younger mice, a new study finds. Microglia appear to unburden the neurons of the excess proteins, but that accumulation may turn toxic, the findings suggest.
To function…
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Pedestrian Trajectory Dataset of Public European Squares
Gehl, J. Life between Buildings (Van Nostrand Reinhold, 1987).
Whyte, W. H. The Social Life of Small Urban Spaces (Project for Public Spaces, 1980).
Hou, J., Chen, L., Zhang, E., Jia, H. & Long, Y. Quantifying the usage of small public spaces using…
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NASA Curiosity rover detected the largest organic molecules ever found on Mars, revealing ancient life clues
The Curiosity rover, along the lower slopes of Mount Sharp inside Gale Crater, has reportedly uncovered the largest organic molecules ever found on the Red Planet. Decane, undecane, and dodecane are the mid-sized hydrocarbons that look a lot…
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NTT DATA Acquires Zero&One to Accelerate Cloud Growth across the Middle East
February 10, 2026
NTT DATA, Inc.
DUBAI – 10 February 2026 – NTT DATA, a global leader in AI, digital business and technology services, has acquired Zero&One, the first homegrown Amazon Web Services (AWS) Premier Tier Services Partner in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA). The acquisition significantly strengthens NTT DATA’s cloud capabilities and positions it to tap into the rapidly expanding Middle East cloud services market.
Founded in 2017 and headquartered in Dubai, Zero&One is a leading regional cloud consultancy. The company holds nine AWS competencies and was the first in the MENA to achieve AWS Generative AI Competency. In 2025, Zero&One was named AWS’s MENA Consulting Partner of the Year and received the Rising Star Partner of the Year and Design Partner of the Year awards at the EMEA level.
The acquisition supports NTT DATA’s regional growth ambitions as the Middle East cloud market enters a period of significant growth, e.g. Saudi Arabia’s cloud services market was valued at $4.77 billion last year and is expected to more than double by the early 2030s, with AWS set to open its first data center there in 2026.
“This acquisition enables us to deliver high-impact solutions and enhance the value we bring to organizations in the Middle East. Zero&One’s expertise strengthens our ability to deliver the speed, scale and technical depth clients need in today’s cloud-first environment,” said Burcak Soydan, Managing Director for the Middle East at NTT DATA.
“Joining NTT DATA is the natural next step in our growth journey,” said Ali El Kontar, CEO of Zero&One. “We’ve built our reputation on delivering world-class cloud expertise to organizations across the Middle East. As part of NTT DATA, we can now combine our regional knowledge and AWS specialization with global resources, expanded service offerings and the ability to support clients on an even larger scale. Our teams share a commitment to innovation and client success, making this an ideal partnership”
The acquisition enables NTT DATA to offer comprehensive cloud services to Middle East and African clients, including cloud migration, application modernization, cloud-native development, data analytics and AI solutions.
About NTT DATA
NTT DATA is a $30+ billion business and technology services leader, serving 75% of the Fortune Global 100. We are committed to accelerating client success and positively impacting society through responsible innovation. We are one of the world’s leading AI and digital infrastructure providers, with unmatched capabilities in enterprise-scale AI, cloud, security, connectivity, data centers and application services. Our consulting and industry solutions help organizations and society move confidently and sustainably into the digital future. As a Global Top Employer, we have experts in more than 70 countries. We also offer clients access to a robust ecosystem of innovation centers as well as established and start-up partners. NTT DATA is part of NTT Group, which invests over $3 billion each year in R&D.
Visit us at nttdata.comAbout Zero&One
Zero&One is the first homegrown AWS Premier Tier Services Partner in the MENA region, specializing in cloud-native services and solutions including application modernization, cloud operations, AI and machine learning and data analytics. Founded in 2017 and headquartered in Dubai, the company serves clients across multiple industries including financial services, retail, media and entertainment, healthcare and government. Zero&One holds nine AWS competencies and was the first in MENA to achieve AWS Generative AI Competency. For more information, visit www.zeroandone.me
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Tencent Cloud expands partnership with Blooming Talk to power global artist-fan messaging
Hong Kong – Blooming Talk, the mobile fan communication platform, has deepened its partnership with Tencent Cloud to transform global artist-fan interactions, enabling real-time engagement across markets.
With fans increasingly expecting…
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