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  • Foxit Redefines Web-Based Document Workflows with PDF SDK for Web v11

    Foxit Redefines Web-Based Document Workflows with PDF SDK for Web v11

    New Release Sets Industry Benchmark with Modular Architecture, AI-Ready Performance, and Browser-Native Approach — Signaling Major Shift Away from Legacy PDF Solutions

    FREMONT, Calif., Aug. 12, 2025 /PRNewswire/ — Foxit, a leading provider of innovative PDF and eSignature products and services, helping knowledge workers to increase productivity and do more with documents, today announced the general availability (GA) launch of Foxit PDF SDK for Web v11, an enhanced version of its developer toolkit, delivering significant performance, security, and user experience improvements for web-based PDF applications.

    Until now, developers building browser-based PDF applications have traditionally faced challenges related to performance bottlenecks, limited form handling, cumbersome signing workflows, and inconsistent cross-browser experiences. Foxit PDF SDK for Web v11 is the first to fully overcome these limitations. With its WebAssembly-powered rendering engine, modular architecture, and deeply refactored core components, it eliminates longstanding friction points, empowering developers to build more responsive, secure, and modern document experiences.

    “This release is more than just a feature update. It’s a signal that the future of document technology is modular, browser-native, and built for intelligent automation,” said Evan Reiss, VP, Head of Marketing, Foxit. “As organizations move away from legacy systems and toward AI-enabled, cloud-first architectures, developers need toolkits that are fast, flexible, and built for the way we work today. With PDF SDK for Web v11, Foxit is leading that shift — and raising the bar for what’s expected from online PDF experiences.”

    Foxit PDF SDK for Web v11 Features/Benefits:

    • Refactored Form Module and New Unified APIs – Developers will experience increased efficiency and flexibility, leading to faster development cycles and more robust, scalable applications. This translates to a more reliable and streamlined experience for all users interacting with forms.
    • Redesigned Signature Workflow and Modular Architecture – Users can expect a more secure, intuitive, and reliable signing experience, bolstering compliance and significantly reducing friction in critical document workflows.
    • PDF JavaScript Execution Migrated to Web Workers and Rebuilt in C++/WebAssembly – This foundational upgrade delivers significantly improved performance and responsiveness (up to 50%) when handling PDFs, ensuring a fluid and stable user interface even with complex documents.
    • Enhanced UI Components and Compatibility – The platform now offers a superior and more consistent user experience across all devices and browsers, driven by modern, accessible, and intuitive interface components.

    The launch of PDF SDK for Web v11 reflects a bigger shift happening across the industry — developers are looking for faster, smarter, and more flexible tools that are ready for AI and built for real-time web experiences. As companies move away from clunky legacy systems, Foxit is raising the bar for what web-based PDF technology can do. This release gives developers a way to build modern, cloud-first applications without being tied to desktop software. And as expectations grow, other providers still relying on outdated, heavyweight solutions will need to catch up — or risk falling behind.

    Foxit PDF SDK for Web v11 is available now. To learn more, request a 30-day trial, and/or watch a demo, please visit: https://developers.foxit.com. To speak with a specialist and request a quote, please visit: https://developers.foxit.com/contact/.

    About Foxit
    Foxit is a leading provider of innovative PDF and eSignature products and services, helping knowledge workers to increase their productivity and do more with documents. Foxit delivers easy-to-use desktop software, mobile apps, and cloud services that allow users to create, edit, fill, and sign documents through its integrated PDF Editor and eSign offerings. Foxit enables software developers to incorporate innovative PDF technology into their applications via powerful, multi-platform Software Developer Kits (SDK).

    Foxit has sold to over 640,000 customers, ranging from SMBs to global enterprises, located in more than 200 countries. The company has offices worldwide, including locations in the U.S., Europe, Australia, and Asia. For more information, please visit https://foxit.com.

    SOURCE Foxit

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  • My research team used 18 years of sea wave records to learn how destructive ‘rogue waves’ form – here’s what we found

    My research team used 18 years of sea wave records to learn how destructive ‘rogue waves’ form – here’s what we found

    Rogue waves have captivated the attention of both seafarers and scientists for decades. These are giant, isolated waves that appear suddenly in the open ocean.

    These puzzling giants are brief, typically lasting less than a minute before disappearing. They can reach heights of 65 feet (20 meters) or greater and often more than twice the height of surrounding waves. Once a nautical myth, rogue waves have now been observed around the world. Because they’re so tall and powerful, they can pose a danger to ships and offshore structures.

    To rethink what rogue waves are and what causes them, I gathered an international team of researchers. Our study, published in Nature Scientific Reports, sheds light on these oceanic giants using the most comprehensive dataset of its kind.

    By analyzing 18 years of high-frequency laser measurements from the Ekofisk oil platform in the central North Sea, we reached the surprising conclusion that rogue waves aren’t just freak occurrences. They arise under the natural laws of the sea. They are not mysterious, but somewhat simple.

    27,500 sea states

    We analyzed nearly 27,500 half-hour wave records, or sea states, collected between 2003 and 2020 in the central North Sea. These records, taken every 30 minutes, describe how elevated the sea surface was compared to the average sea level. They include major storms, such as the Andrea wave event in 2007.

    A complex of platforms on the Ekofisk oil field in the North Sea.
    BoH/Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA

    Under normal conditions, waves arise from wind blowing over the sea surface. It’s like when you blow over your cup of coffee and form small ripples on the surface. At sea, with enough time and space, those ripples can turn into large waves.

    We focused on understanding what causes waves to suddenly go rogue and rise far above their neighboring waves. One proposed theory is based on modulational instability, a phenomenon described by complex mathematical models. I’ve revised these models in the past, as my work suggests that this theory doesn’t fully explain what causes rogue waves in the open ocean.

    A diagram showing the height of waves in different sea states, with the tallest reaching about half the height of a large commercial boat.
    Sea states record the height of waves and show when some waves rise high above sea level.
    U.S. Government Accountability Office

    When waves are trapped within a narrow channel, the modulational instability theory describes their rippling movement well. However, it starts to fall apart when you look at the real ocean. In open environments such as the North Sea, waves are free to propagate from multiple directions.

    To understand the difference, imagine a crowd of spectators leaving a stadium after a football game. If the exit is a long, narrow hallway with tall walls, people are forced to move in a single direction. Those at the back push forward, and some may even climb over others, piling up between the confining walls. This catastrophic pileup would resemble a rogue wave, caused by their confinement.

    In contrast, if the stadium’s exit opens onto a wide field, spectators can disperse freely in all directions. They don’t push on each other, and they avoid pileups.

    Similarly, researchers can generate rogue waves in a confined channel in the lab, where they obey modulational instability. But without the confinement of a channel, rogue waves usually won’t follow those physics or form the same way in the open sea.

    Our team knew we had to study the open sea directly to figure out what was really going on. The real-world data my team examined from the North Sea doesn’t line up with modulational instability – it tells a different story.

    A sailboat caught in the swell of a tall wave, under a cloudy sky
    Rogue waves are much taller than the others around them.
    John Lund/Stone via Getty Images

    It’s just a bad day at sea

    We analyzed the sea state records using statistical techniques to uncover patterns behind these rare events. Our findings show that instead of modulational instability, the extreme waves observed more likely formed through a process called constructive interference.

    Constructive interference happens when two or more waves line up and combine into one big wave. This effect is amplified by the natural asymmetry of sea waves – their crests are typically sharper and steeper than their flatter troughs.

    Rogue waves form when lots of smaller waves line up and their steeper crests begin to stack, building up into a single, massive wave that briefly rises far above its surroundings. All it takes for a peaceful boat ride to turn into a bad day at sea is a moment when many ordinary waves converge and stack.

    These rogue waves rise and fall in less than a minute, following what’s called a quasi-deterministic pattern in space and time. This type of pattern is recognizable and repeatable, but with touches of randomness. In an idealized ocean, that randomness would almost vanish, allowing rogue waves to grow to nearly infinite heights. But it would also take an eternity to witness one of these waves, since so many would have to line up perfectly. Like waiting for Fortuna, the goddess of chance, to roll a trillion dice and have nearly all of them land on the same number.

    In the real ocean, nature limits how large a rogue wave can grow thanks to wave breaking. As the wave rises in height and energy, it can’t hold itself beyond a certain point of no return. The tip of the wave spills over and breaks into foam, or whitecap, releasing the excess energy.

    The quasi-deterministic pattern behind rogue waves

    Rogue waves aren’t limited to the sea. Constructive interference can happen to many types of waves. A general theory called the quasi-determinism of waves, developed by oceanographer Paolo Boccotti, explains how rogue waves form, both in the ocean and in other wave systems.

    For example, for turbulent water flowing through a confined channel, a rogue wave manifests in the form of an intense, short-lived spike in vortices – patterns of spinning swirls in the water that momentarily grow larger as they move downstream.

    While ocean waves seem unpredictable, Boccotti’s theory shows that extreme waves are not completely random. When a really big wave forms, the waves in the sea around it follow a recognizable pattern formed through constructive interference.

    We applied Boccotti’s theory to identify and characterize these patterns in the measured North Sea wave records.

    The giant waves observed in these records carry a kind of signature or fingerprint, in the form of a wave group, which can reveal how the rogue wave came to life. Think of a wave group like a small package of waves moving together. They rise, peak and then fade away through constructive interference. Tracking these wave groups allows researchers to understand the bigger picture of a rogue event as it unfolds.

    As one example, a powerful storm hit the North Sea on Nov. 24, 2023. A camera at the Ekofisk platform captured a massive 55 foot (17 meter) rogue wave. I applied the theory of quasi-determinism and an AI model to investigate the origin of this extreme wave. My analysis revealed that the rogue event followed these theories – quasi-determinism and constructive interference – and came from multiple smaller waves repeatedly stacking together.

    Left: Stereo video footage of a powerful storm in the North Sea on Nov. 24, 2023, recorded at the Ekofisk platform.
    Right: The wave group signature of the recorded rogue wave.

    Recognizing how rogue waves form can help engineers and designers build safer ships and offshore platforms – and better predict risks.

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  • Advances in Data-Driven Early Warning Systems for Sepsis Recognition and Intervention in Emergency Care: A Systematic Review of Diagnostic Performance and Clinical Outcomes

    Advances in Data-Driven Early Warning Systems for Sepsis Recognition and Intervention in Emergency Care: A Systematic Review of Diagnostic Performance and Clinical Outcomes


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  • New film’s release date delayed for second time

    New film’s release date delayed for second time

    The much-anticipated release of Shrek 5 has been delayed for a second time.

    DreamWorks Animation originally scheduled the sequel for next summer, but pushed it back to December 2026.

    It has now shifted the release back further to June 2027, according to US website Deadline.

    BBC Newsbeat has approached DreamWorks Animation and Universal for comment.

    Although the report didn’t give a reason, fans and news outlets have speculated that the delay was to avoid competing with Avengers: Doomsday, Dune: Part III, and Ice Age 6, which are all set to hit cinemas in December 2026.

    Fans have expressed disappointment at the delay, with one writing on X: “Another delay? At this point my kids will be showing Shrek 5 to their kids.”

    The first film, released in 2001, followed the story of an ogre who wants nothing more than to be left alone, but ends up on a quest to rescue a princess trapped in a tower.

    Along the way, he gets help from a ragtag bunch of misfits, including a chatty donkey and, later, a boot-wearing cat.

    It was a huge hit for DreamWorks, making $487m (£362m) worldwide at the box office.

    The studio then went on to bring back the characters again and again for three more movies.

    Number five will actually be the seventh film in the wider franchise, which includes two spin-off films – Puss In Boots and Puss In Boots: The Last Wish.

    It has been confirmed that Shrek (voiced by Mike Myers), Princess Fiona (voiced by Cameron Diaz) and Donkey (voiced by Eddie Murphy) are all returning for the new movie.

    The movie’s trailer also revealed a new addition to the cast – Fiona and Shrek’s teenage daughter Felicia, voiced by actress Zendaya.

    However, the reaction to the clip was mixed, with some fans taking to X to say they didn’t like the new style of animation and it was ugly.

    Some have compared the reaction to the original movie version of Sonic the Hedgehog, which Paramount Pictures changed in response to a backlash in 2019.

    Others couldn’t be more excited about a return to the kingdom of Far Far Away.

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  • Are You Considering Chinese AI In Your Strategy?

    Are You Considering Chinese AI In Your Strategy?

    ADI IGNATIUS: I am Adi Ignatius.

    ALISON BEARD: I’m Alison Beard, and this is the HBR IdeaCast.

    ADI IGNATIUS: All right, so Alison, today we have a topic that’s really interesting to me and that is the parallel development of AI ecosystems in the West and in China. So you think of how the two pursued divergent strategies with the internet, that really is a separate Chinese internet. The question is whether that’s going to happen with AI and the likelihood at this point is that there isn’t. That can exist multiple ecosystems and that companies can tap into them.

    ALISON BEARD: This sounds very interesting. I know that you spent a great deal of time in China earlier in your career, but I imagine it’s changed dramatically because of the advance in the internet and now AI. So what’d you learn?

    ADI IGNATIUS: Well, when OpenAI debuted in 2022 with generative AI, and we all suddenly had that at our fingertips. China was way behind. They’re not now. So they’ve caught up and they have competitive advantage in some really clear areas.

    So my guest today is Amit Joshi, who is a professor at IMD, and he’s suggesting that rather than this being a winner-take-all, or you have to go with one or the other of these ecosystems that global companies can really work with both that there are advantages to Western AI, to Chinese AI, and if you run a complex business, you might want to be engaging with both.

    ALISON BEARD: I imagine though that a lot of companies are maybe hesitant because of concerns about data privacy, security that government policy might change and prevent them from continuing that strategy.

    ADI IGNATIUS: Absolutely. Look, I mean, we have these concerns when we deal with any AI company, what are the biases, etc. I think with Western companies dealing with China, absolutely there’s a whole new level of security concern, but there are ways to protect your data, and again, Chinese AI companies are doing some things really well. So at the very least, it’s worth educating yourself. So here’s my conversation with IMD, professor Amit Joshi, co-author of the HBR article, How Savvy Companies Are Using Chinese AI.

    One of the big questions for global business obviously is the technological race between China and the US, particularly in the development of AI. There are questions of course, about who’s winning, but also whether the two countries will end up pursuing separate parallel paths. So I want to set some context though. So let’s go back to 2022 when most of us first became aware of generative AI’s remarkable capabilities, OpenAI, an American company suddenly makes ChatGPT available to everyone. It’s an unforgettable moment for many of us. What is happening in the field at that time in China?

    AMIT JOSHI: So in 2022, when the US market suddenly pivoted to generative AI, China was still all in on traditional AI, machine learning as we call it, right? I mean, at that time, the real war, it seemed at least on the surface was between American machine learning and Chinese machine learning. And then we had the huge Chinese giants, the Alibabas, the Huaweis of the world, JD.com, Tencent obviously, investing massively in traditional machine learning, getting more data sets, putting in more infrastructure for that, and they were completely almost oblivious to this huge development in the GenAI space.

    ADI IGNATIUS: Ok so, fast-forward a couple of years and now it’s turn to shake up the world with the emergence suddenly of DeepSeek, at least to those of us who didn’t know. So people in the West are amazed, they’re skeptical even about some of DeepSeek’s claims. Talk about what happened in those intervening years and the significance of DeepSeek’s emergence.

    AMIT JOSHI: So the first thing that happened as soon as OpenAI launched ChatGPT, was shock and awe in China. They were completely taken aback. This was a race where they were supposed to be equal partners, if not winning it on some aspects. And now all of a sudden they seem to be laggers, they’re nowhere in the race, they have nothing that looks like it even on the horizons.

    However, credit to them, and this is something they’re amazing at, they pivoted very, very quickly. So if you fast-forward just a couple of years from there onwards, which is January of this year, I believe it was, is when DeepSeek actually launched, DeepSeek was launched, and in the interim, they managed to do this faster than what OpenAI had done. They managed to do it for cheaper than what OpenAI had done, and at least at the time it launched, it rocketed right up on the AI leaderboard. They evidently managed to do it better than what OpenAI had at that time.

    ADI IGNATIUS: That’s great context. So now we have two essentially parallel but distinct AI ecosystems, and I want to talk about how they differ in terms that are understandable to people like myself, both in terms of how they’re configured and how they perform. So let’s start with how Chinese AI companies are, how they’ve developed the product and how they’re taking AI solutions to the market.

    AMIT JOSHI: So if you will, I’d just like to rewind to how the U.S. systems were built. I mean when the U.S. systems were built, remember OpenAI was this tiny little startup with a couple of hundred people in San Francisco. They essentially used the infrastructure, the chips, the storage, the data that was already available at the time. So they used Azure platform, they use the NVIDIA chips obviously, which were not, let’s face it, they were not designed specifically for generative AI. They were designed for other purposes, well, originally for graphics, but then eventually for traditional machine learning. And they built it off of that.

    The first things the Chinese did is they said, “Hey, since we know what we are doing now, how about we actually create the infrastructure that’s kind of designed to do these kinds of things? So let’s take something that kind of vertically integrates this infrastructure, let’s put it all together and then make sure that the stack that we are building is meant for this.” So the customization and infrastructure that they did, it was not about saying, “Let me try and build the best general purpose AI tool that I can get away with.” What they said is, “Can I customize my storage, my chips, my data, my training for this one particular purpose?” So this was one of the first things that the Chinese did very successfully obviously.

    ADI IGNATIUS: I think this probably points to a comparison maybe more generally between Western approach to business and a Chinese approach to business where one, as you say, is maybe leading the technology wave and at a certain altitude and where the Chinese maybe are super focused on consumer segments and application. So talk more about that and maybe even examples of what Chinese companies are doing with their AI products.

    AMIT JOSHI: So again, the contrast between what’s happening in the West versus what’s happening in China is pretty amazing in this sense. I mean, let’s take the usual Western models, whether it’s ChatGPT, whether it’s Gemini or even open source models like Llama. What we’re trying to do is we’re trying to build the best model that we can do using the highest of the best quality chips, the best storage, the best data or the most amount of data that we have. Contrast that with what the Ant Group did. The Ant Group, they said, “We want to build an AI medical app that’s going to be available to people who have the Alipay app. So it’s an AI doctor that’s available in Alipay. I could use a general purpose GenAI tool, but what if I create a healthcare specific model that uses data specifically from hospitals, that uses infrastructure, that allows this model to make quick inferences faster than a general purpose model and then put that on the app.” Nothing contrasts what we are trying to do in the West versus what they’re trying to do better than this example, in my opinion.

    ADI IGNATIUS: So the American president, Donald Trump, his AI plan, at least to the extent that he’s laid it out, is set at trying to achieve U.S. dominance in the field. And I’m interested in your view, is this a winner take all as sort of Sony versus Betamax or can more than one of these ecosystems survive?

    AMIT JOSHI: I do not think this is a winner-takes-all battle. I think if we fight it as a winner-takes-all battle, we are completely missing the point. I have a feeling that this is a space where we will have multiple foundation models that will probably be focused on certain areas that’ll be better for one versus the other. But I do think this is something where multiple different models, multiple different technologies will coexist. So in that sense, this is less like social media where we have one dominant social media platform and one chat platform and one search, etc. But this is more akin to mass production where we’ve got about a dozen or more car companies in the world, all of them more or less successful, all of them differentiated in some way.

    ADI IGNATIUS: So let me just push on that a little bit because we do sort of have separate and distinct internets. I think in the early days of the internet we didn’t even imagine that was possible, but there really is a distinct Chinese internet and it is almost a parallel and unbridgeable kind of system. But you think AI is different. Explain why.

    AMIT JOSHI: First of all, specifically if you stick to social media, a lot of the power for social media comes from network effects. The facts that the value that one person gets from using, for example Facebook or WhatsApp, is heavily dependent on how many total users there are on this. This is not easily transferable. This concept to OpenAI mean as long as OpenAI is providing me with quality answers, I don’t really care if a billion other people are using it. Now there are some technical things, reinforcement learning with human feedback that’s happening in the back end that might marginally make OpenAI’s answers better than, for example, Llama, which is lesser users, but the quality difference is going to be relatively minor.

    So because this is not driven primarily by network effects, at least as of now, my sense is that this is going to be akin to an economies of scale kind of a business rather than a network effects business. Now, a network effects business, we know it’s winner takes most if not winner takes all, but in the economies of scale business, we know for the last 80 years that multiple businesses can survive in parallel, they can coexist.

    ADI IGNATIUS: So this starts to get to the crux of the HBR article that you co-wrote and that is that global companies have to figure out how to navigate these two very important parallel AI universes. So let’s start with a basic question. Can global companies engage in both of these?

    AMIT JOSHI: I think they can. We’ve already started seeing a few examples of companies that have started exploring both ecosystems and figuring out which can work for both. So let us remember one thing. The leading Chinese model that’s out there right now, which is DeepSeek is an open source model, which basically means I can take it, I can modify the weights and I can put it on my servers with minimal cybersecurity risks or with minimal privacy risks, et cetera. It’ll never be zero, but they are minimal. Knowing this, it then becomes imperative for Western companies to try and understand saying, “Okay, I have access obviously to the Western models, but I also potentially have this Chinese model.” And by the way, we were discussing previously, the Chinese models have been trained on the Chinese internet. In addition to the internet, which the Western models are trained on, they can do different things.

    They do specialize in different aspects. So is it possible that moving forward, Nestle or Airbnb or Siemens or GE, they discover that if I really want to do high-end innovation, if I really want to do cutting-edge stuff, if I want to do new drug discovery if I’m Pfizer, then it’s much better for me to use some of the cutting-edge Western models. On the other hand, if I want to do customer service, if I want to do supply chain optimization, maybe the Chinese models are better and then I set up my system in a way that depending on the problem, the AI can triage what’s happening,

    ADI IGNATIUS: Talk in more detail about one or two of these companies and how they’re engaging with Chinese AI.

    AMIT JOSHI: One is BMW. What BMW is planning to do is, especially for cars that are for the Chinese market, but in general cars in the Asian market, it’s integrating DeepSeek, which is obviously the Chinese large language model into its vehicles. So a lot of the AI in BMW vehicles is going to be done by DeepSeek, staying still in the automotive field. Bosch, which is obviously a massive tier one supplier to automotive companies, they’ve just finalized a high-performance computer for AI-enabled vehicles. So they’re going to make massive amounts of these based on the Chinese AI.

    And then of course in the other space, in the consumer packaged goods space, we’ve got folks like Procter & Gamble. And what P&G is doing is it’s using Chinese AI along with Western AI to hyper-personalize the messages that is going out. So it’s partnering with Douyin in China to do what’s known as interest-based e-commerce. And what this essentially does is it combines short videos. The short video e-commerce is huge in China. It’s not huge outside of China, but combine that with discovery and understanding which products to recommend in an e-commerce purchase. So really, really we’ve got companies all the way from consumer packaged goods to durables like automotive to industrial goods like Bosch that are kind of already stepping into this dual paradigm.

    ADI IGNATIUS: Are the Chinese better at, let’s call it, hyper-personalization with AI? Are they more advanced or more focused on that than Western counterparts?

    AMIT JOSHI: So what the Chinese are better at is industry-specific hyperpersonalization. So if you just take general hyperpersonalization, I don’t know if they’re better, but if you ask me, are the Chinese better at hyperpersonalizing in healthcare? My answer to that would be probably yes. Are the Chinese better at hyperpersonalizing in B2B marketing? My answer to that will probably be yes. So I had a conversation with Chris Tung who’s the CMO of Alibaba, and what he said is what they’re using their AI for is to allow the vendors on Alibaba. So they’ve got a couple of hundred million vendors on Alibaba, which is basically the most dominant B2B wending site essentially in Asia.

    And what they essentially do is, I mean the classic thing, I mean if I’m a vendor and I’m selling 50 different types of mugs to buyers, to retailers all over the world, I will never ever have the resources to do the marketing materials, to do all the kinds of pictures, the descriptions, etc. For all the 50 types of mugs that I’m selling, I’ll probably go to an agency and have it made for the five best-selling mugs that I have on my portfolio. What I can now do is I can use Alibaba’s AI to create marketing material, images, descriptions, etc., for the remaining 45. And now all of a sudden I have this scaled up amazing personalization that’s possible, which still yesterday was simply not doable.

    ADI IGNATIUS: Then what about the opposite? To what extent are Chinese companies operating in the US AI ecosystem?

    AMIT JOSHI: I think that to the best of my knowledge is extremely limited so far, primarily driven by restrictions, but also because I think that they are currently more focused on their own internal market. Their own internal market is growing so rapidly, including the government sector. By the way, the government sector has now turned into a massive user of the Chinese ecosystem of the Chinese AI ecosystem for everything from governance to city management to taxes, to you name it. So I think the growth in the pie that they’re seeing in their own backyard is just incredible. They’re not currently actively pursuing the US market to the best of my knowledge, but I bet that’s going to change soon enough.

    ADI IGNATIUS: So now let’s talk super practically. All right, so if people are listening to this and thinking, okay, that’s interesting. I need to think about if I’m a global company, I need to think about whether and how I want to be in the Chinese AI ecosystem in addition to the Western ecosystem, where do you start mean? How do leaders, what exactly should they be thinking about or looking at if they’re trying to answer that question?

    AMIT JOSHI: There’s a few things I would recommend. I mean, if you are an executive, if you’re an executive listening to this, go play with DeepSeek right now, right? Figure out a way, a safe way, a sandbox, download DeepSeek, make sure it’s cut off from any private secure data if that’s a problem with you, but play with it. Understand how it is similar, but also how it is different than the Western models, for example. What works better on DeepSeek versus what works worse? How does it do on hallucinations? How does it do on answering factual questions, et cetera? Because it’s not a level playing field. It’s better at some worse for some.

    Secondly, and more importantly in my opinion, keep a broader eye on what’s happening in China, not just in the LLM market, but also in the larger business models market. To me, the largest story that will probably come out of China eventually, I think two years from now, we won’t be talking so much about how the Chinese models might be better or worse than the Western models.

    I think what we might be talking about two years from now is look at this cool business model that they have built based on AI, because this is exactly what we saw with the mobile revolution, right? Were there mobile phones better than ours? I don’t know, maybe it depends who you ask. Did they have significantly different business models that were based on them? 100% yes. So I think this is something executives at businesses need to keep a very close eye on, which is what kind of different business models, what kind of different use cases are the Chinese building based on this technology that they now have?

    If you are an American company that’s based in America and using American models so far, I think it’s in your best interests to actually look at these models. It’s quite likely that these models are not only going to be better, but they’re going to be cheaper to do some of your tasks. Why would you want to cede that advantage to competition? Simply because competition did the due diligence and looked at the Chinese models.

    ADI IGNATIUS: So China is a particular challenge for Western businesses. My wife is in the academic world with China. When she visits China, like everyone else in her world, she gets a burner phone, she gets a burner laptop, she doesn’t risk her data. I don’t know if that’s excessive paranoia or if it’s proper paranoia. So now we’re suggesting that Western companies engage in China’s AI ecosystem won’t some of those same concerns about data privacy, data integrity – how do we think about that?

    AMIT JOSHI: And as if that was not enough to think about already, let us also throw in regulations because the regulations are probably going to be significantly different across these geographies and how western companies need to handle that. I do not want to underplay the security, privacy and even ethical issues that come with using these systems. They exist. Okay? For now, DeepSeek is open source, so you can actually take it and you can put it on your own servers with reasonable amount of safety, a reasonable amount of confidence that nothing crazy is happening in the back end. Not a hundred percent, obviously nothing is a hundred percent on this planet, but reasonable.

    But moving forward, there are going to be probably different models that are not open source that will need to be based off of their complete infrastructure stacks. And in that case, Western companies will need to make an informed decision on whether or not they want to play in that ecosystem. Absolutely, yes. Both from a privacy security perspective, but also from a regulations. And then finally from an ethics perspective.

    ADI IGNATIUS: And then you’ve got just the uncertainty about relations between Washington and Beijing. As we record this, they’re better in some ways and they have been. Donald Trump is probably going to meet with Xi Jinping before the end of 2025, and that could improve relations. But you don’t know. I mean the latest headline is that President Trump is going after Intel because its CEO has had ties with “Chinese communists.” Well, anybody in authority in China as a communist.

    There can be problems in that area. This is not necessarily one that Intel has already said that this is ridiculous, but it is a volatile relationship and I wonder if politics could force companies to choose at some point, and is it responsible to do scenario planning? As you’re thinking about engagement in the ecosystem, I guess to what degree do companies need to think about these kind of worst case scenarios?

    AMIT JOSHI: They have to absolutely factor that in irrespective of what’s happening currently politically in the United States. I think we can all agree that we’ve generally across the world, entered an era of more uncertainty of greater volatility for a variety of reasons, whether it’s political, whether it’s environmental, whether it’s around regulations or whatever that is, this is just more volatility. Companies will need to hedge their bets. I mean, it’s not going to happen that just because a couple of presidents don’t like each other or putting tariffs on different parts of the world that you’re going to stop doing business in that part of the world.

    And if you then want to continue doing business in that part of the world, you need to be integrated into that ecosystem, into that particular technological stack. So if nothing else, from a pure scenario planning perspective, from a pure hedging perspective, organizations do need to look at this and relate it aside. You know what tool is really great for doing scenario planning? It’s actually DeepSeek and you know why? Funnily enough, it’s because you can actually drill down and see its chain of thought. So there’s a little button that you click and then it actually shows you how it thought about the answer that it actually gave you on scenario planning, which can be tremendously useful for executives. So for folks listening, I encourage you to try it out.

    ADI IGNATIUS: Let’s say that some of these risks are manageable and get back to where we were and not worst case. So again, there’s this idea that companies may be running parallel GenAI models and applications. I just want to understand in really practical terms, what does that look like? What does that mean? To what extent is that simple and everyone’s already doing it, or to what extent is that going to force people to change how they think about business?

    AMIT JOSHI: I think at some level, most savvy organizations already doing it, but they could be doing it between Gemini and ChatGPT. So most organizations that have thought this through and have a reasonable technological architecture, what they’re doing is if a query goes into the company GPT, for example, they’ve got a little engine in there that says, “Hey, for this particular query, going to Llama might actually be cheaper, faster, use less tokens and give a more accurate answer than going to ChatGPT.” So just as an example, there’s a bank that I’m working with in Asia that has had the system in place pretty much since the early days of ChatGPT, and then they keep adding the different LLMs that come in and they keep optimizing their triage engine that does this. So at some level, savvy organizations already working on this. Having said that, adding Chinese large language models, it’s not just about adding one more LLM to this. They will have to think this through a little bit deeper because of the reasons that we spoke about previously, which was around cybersecurity, privacy, ethics as well as regulations.

    ADI IGNATIUS: Well and bias. We certainly know the Chinese internet is scrubbed of or the censors certainly try to successfully scrub the internet of things that the Chinese ruling Communist party thinks are damaging to their image or to China’s image. I assume we would have to have the same concerns about Chinese trained large language models that they may be scrubbed of certain pertinent relevant material. That would be a bias that could be tricky for Western companies.

    AMIT JOSHI: Without a question. And obviously, again, I encourage listeners to try this out for themselves. I mean, if you are going to use DeepSeek, go ask it what happened in Tienanmen Square and see what answer you get.

    ADI IGNATIUS: What do you get? Have you done that?

    AMIT JOSHI: I have, multiple. This is the first thing I did when I went to DeepSeek and it says basically, I mean I’m paraphrasing here, but it said nothing happened. It was a nice sunny day and you can go on and on about controversial topics and it’ll essentially just back out, right? It’ll essentially say, “Hey, look, I don’t have the answer to this question,” or “I’m sorry, I cannot provide an answer to this question,” which is fine. I mean this is something, but you’re absolutely right. I mean there are some aspects, I mean especially for organizations that are going to be dealing with things like this that are going to be dealing with kind of ethical outcomes. These are things that they will need to consider, which is not to say that the Western models are completely free and clear and completely above board. They have their own sets of scrubbing that goes on, which also we have to account for.

    ADI IGNATIUS: Okay, so we’ve talked about some of the risks, so I want to throw it back to you. Your research has suggested that what Chinese AI companies are doing in some ways is so extraordinary that Western companies would be foolish not to at least experiment with them. So make the case – what is it that the Chinese companies do so well that western companies really need to see if there’s a place for them in that ecosystem?

    AMIT JOSHI: So what the Chinese have done really well, and which in our paper we call the three Cs, but which in simple words is they have created an ecosystem that from the ground up is customized for GenAI. They have taken that in a low-cost model, and then finally they have built it such that all their applications are calibrated for the real world. They’re not calibrated to win competitions. That’s an aside, but they’re calibrated for healthcare, they’re calibrated for pharma, they’re calibrated for supply chain, they’re calibrated for CPG. This is something that western companies should not ignore.

    I’m not saying that we cannot do it in the West. I’m not saying that the Western models are not capable of that, but this is something that the Chinese are trying differently. They’ve been very, very successful. There’s a lot that we can learn just as they learned from looking at our models. There’s a lot that we can learn from looking at theirs, and it would be silly of us not to do that. And then of course, the big one, in my opinion, what business models these folks build based on these tools, that’s going to be the real kicker.

    ADI IGNATIUS: Yeah. This will be fascinating to watch how this unfolds and there’s an option for Western companies to form, not just to plug into a DeepSeek or another LLM, but to actually form deeper partnerships. What’s your advice in terms of how Western companies might think about that?

    AMIT JOSHI: Most Western companies, most companies around the world are now looking at agents and agentic AI, et cetera. Agentic AI is in many ways ripe for these kinds of partnerships. So please do a look at how some of these tools can fit in to your overall AI portfolio, overall AI strategy. It’s unlikely, almost impossible that you’re going to be sticking to just one tool, one type of AI or one infrastructure. You will be using a variety of these anyway, inside, most medium to large organizations look at these, look at tools like Manus, which was a Chinese company which recently moved to Singapore, which is building agents on top of these tools, and it’s using a combination of Western models and Chinese models already. This is what I would advise executives, please don’t miss out on this opportunity.

    ADI IGNATIUS: Yeah, so this is fascinating. I mean, this is the market to watch, and I think you’ve put your finger on the fact that there really has been this sense of distinctive and parallel development, and now we’ll kind of watch how it evolves and it seems really smart to say companies need to look at all of this that’s out there and figure out the best solutions for themselves. So why don’t we end what’s something listeners could do right now to kind of educate themselves better about these possible opportunities?

    AMIT JOSHI: Figure out your favorite or go online, go to Google, go to your favorite search engine, find out a few sources of information, a newsletter from China that you would want to subscribe to, get more information about what’s happening in their ecosystem. Then go ahead and play with a couple of these things. I’m a huge believer in the fact that these tools are not something that you can learn from watching a YouTube video. This is so that you really need to get your hands dirty with, so create a sandbox for yourself. Don’t put anything private or confidential in there for obvious reasons, but then fool around with it. Ask it nasty questions, ask it politically incorrect questions and ask it normal questions and see what kind of output it gets and compare.

    ADI IGNATIUS: All right, Amit, thank you for the article that you co-wrote for HBR and thank you for being on IdeaCast today.

    AMIT JOSHI: It was my pleasure. Thank you so much for having me.

    ADI IGNATIUS: That’s IMD professor Amit Joshi, who co-authored the HBR article, How Savvy Companies are Using Chinese AI.

    Next week, Alison will speak with futurist Nick Foster on how to reframe your future planning.

    If you found this episode helpful, share it with a colleague and be sure to subscribe and rate idea cast in Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you listen. If you want to help leaders move the world forward, please consider subscribing to Harvard Business Review. You’ll get access to the HBR mobile app, the weekly exclusive Insider newsletter, and unlimited access to HBR online. Just head to hbr.org/subscribe.

    And thanks to our team, senior producer Mary Dooe, audio product manager Ian Fox and senior production specialist Rob Eckhardt. And thanks to you for listening to the HBR IdeaCast. We’ll be back with a new episode on Tuesday. I’m Adi Ignatius.

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  • Marvel Rivals Queen’s Codex Event: Release Date, All Rewards, and More

    Marvel Rivals Queen’s Codex Event: Release Date, All Rewards, and More

    Marvel Rivals Season 3.5 has introduced a brand-new event named the Queen’s Codex. The limited-time campaign stars Hela in a Symbiote-themed avatar and features a plethora of rewards ranging from sprays and emoji to skins and MVP animations. As always, the event comes with a free rewards track and a Premium pass for players who want to receive everything on offer. So, if you’re interested in learning about the rewards, here’s everything to know about the Marvel Rivals Queen’s Codex event.

    Marvel Rivals Queen’s Codex Event Release Date and Time

    Image Credit: Netease Games
    • Marvel Rivals Summer Special event kicked off on August 8 at 2:00 AM PT (5:00 AM ET/9:00 AM UTC).
    • Marvel Rivals Summer Special event ends on September 5 at 2:00 AM PT (5:00 AM ET/9:00 AM UTC).

    The Queen’s Codex will remain active for nearly a month, giving players enough time to grab all the rewards on offer. Of course, the rewards track will be permanently active for players who purchase the premium event pass.

    Marvel Rivals Queen’s Codex Event: Free Skins and Rewards

    Marvel Rivals Queen's Codex Event Rewards Track
    Image Credit: Netease Games

    The Queen’s Codex rewards track in Marvel Rivals is essentially a mini-battlepass, meaning you’ll need to collect specified amounts of XP to earn the cosmetic items. Here’s an overview of all 24 rewards available as part of the event:

    Level Reward Reward Type
    1 ‘Shark Cited’ Spray Premium
    2 ‘School of Equilibrium’ Gallery Card Free
    3 ‘Fiery Judgement’ Emote (Black Widow) Free
    4 Dynamic Mood Bundle A Premium
    5 ‘Phoenix Widow’ Spray Free
    6 Black Widow ‘Phoenix Widow’ Costume Premium
    7 ‘Symbiote Thing’ Spray Free
    8 ‘Phoenix Widow’ Nameplate Premium
    9 ‘King in Black’ Gallery Card Free
    10 Hela Bundle Emoji 1 Premium
    11 ‘Phoenix Song’ Gallery Card Free
    12 The Thing ‘Rock Splitting Terror’ MVP Animation Free
    13 Dynamic Mood Bundle B Premium
    14 ‘Nowhere to Run’ Gallery Card Free
    15 ‘Symbiote Thing’ Nameplate Free
    16 Hela Emoji Bundle 2 Premium
    17 ‘Dominance Unleashed’ Emote (The Thing) Free
    18 The Thing ‘Symbiote Thing’ Costume Free
    19 ‘Spiral Into Darkness’ Emote (Hela) Free
    20 ‘Queen in Black’ Spray Free
    21 ‘Queen in Black’ Nameplate Premium
    22 ‘Cutting Through the Waves’ Nameplate Free
    23 Hela ‘Crow’s Call’ MVP Animation Premium
    24 Hela ‘Queen in Black’ Costume Premium

    How to Get Queen’s Codex Premium Pass

    With three incredible costumes on offer, some players will certainly be tempted to pick up the Premium event pass. To do so, simply open up the event page and select the ‘Purchase Premium‘ option placed above the rewards track. The Queen’s Codex event pass will set you back 690 Lattice, which amounts to around $7.

    That wraps up our guide on the Queen’s Codex Event in Marvel Rivals. Will you be purchasing the event pass? Be sure to let us know in the comments.

    Aryan Singh

    A massive gaming nerd who’s been writing stuff on the internet since 2021, Aryan covers single-player games, RPGs, and live-service titles such as Marvel Rivals and Call of Duty: Warzone. When he isn’t clacking away at his keyboard, you’ll find him firing up another playthrough of Fallout: New Vegas.


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  • An AI Replay of the Browser Wars, Bankrolled by Google – Advisor Perspectives

    1. An AI Replay of the Browser Wars, Bankrolled by Google  Advisor Perspectives
    2. Microsoft’s new Edge Copilot mode beats Perplexity at its own game  xda-developers.com
    3. 5 facts about AI browsers that brands need to know  Ad Age
    4. Bing’s latest ‘just doing Bing things’: Searching for certain AI models in Microsoft’s Edge browser earns you a plea to use Copilot  PC Gamer
    5. Release notes: August 7, 2025  Microsoft

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  • Susi Sánchez To Star In ‘El Mal Hijo’ 

    Susi Sánchez To Star In ‘El Mal Hijo’ 

    EXCLUSIVE: Susi Sánchez, a veteran actress of Spanish-language cinema with credits like Pedro Almodóvar’s The Skin I Live In, has signed on to star in El Mal Hijo, the debut feature directed by actor Jaime Lorente. 

    The film is based on the novel of the same name by Salvador S. Molina, who also penned the screenplay, and is produced by AF, which presented the project to buyers in Cannes. 

    The project is scheduled to begin shooting this year. The story tells the story of a grandmother (Sánchez) and her eleven-year-old grandson, Rubén, (Abel de la Fuente). The plot opens as the pair begin a journey through an endless field of lemon trees and cochineal-infested prickly pears. There, the grandmother wants to show him something no one else has seen: inside an old farm shed, Pascuala appears to have her own son held captive.

    The synopsis reads: The victim of a family torn apart by hatred, and a tangle of problems and resentment, Rubén is simply trying to understand where he comes from as he leaves behind the last days of his childhood.

    Christian Checa (On the Fringe) will portray the adult Rubén, ten years later, as he faces the return of a father who arrives at the worst possible moment, trying to fix the unfixable.

    Sánchez is a two-time Goya award winner. Her most notable roles include Queen Isabella the Catholic in Mad Love (Juana la Loca). She has starred in several Pedro Almodóvar films (The Skin I Live In, I’m So Excited!, Julieta, Pain and Glory), as well as in the Baztán Trilogy adaptations (The Invisible Guardian, The Legacy of the Bones, Offering to the Storm). 

    She won the Best Actress Goya in 2019 for Sunday’s Illness and the Goya for Best Supporting Actress in 2023 for Lullaby.

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  • Naseem Shah Continues His Partnership with TECNO for Its Upcoming Spark 40 Series

    Naseem Shah Continues His Partnership with TECNO for Its Upcoming Spark 40 Series

    TECNO has officially announced that Pakistan’s star fast bowler Naseem Shah will continue as the brand ambassador for its popular Spark 40 Series.

    Known for his passion, determination, and youthful energy, Naseem Shah perfectly reflects the spirit of TECNO’s Spark series – bold, inspiring, and committed to excellence. Just as cricket fans admire Naseem for his dedication and fearless performances, young Pakistani consumers have embraced the Spark series for its innovative features, stylish designs, and exceptional value for money.

    Carefully designed for the youth of Pakistan who seek both innovation and style, the Spark 40 Series features an ultra-slim and lightweight design for all-day comfort. The addition of 30W Magnetic Wireless Charging introduces a new level of convenience, offering fast, cable-free charging that fits seamlessly into modern lifestyles.

    At its core is the world’s first MediaTek Helio G200 processor, delivering outstanding speed, efficiency, and smooth multitasking for gaming, streaming, and productivity. This performance is complemented by a 144Hz Ultra Bright 3D AMOLED Display with an impressive 4500-nit Peak Brightness, ensuring vibrant colors and fluid visuals even under direct sunlight.

    Over the years, the Spark series has become one of the most loved smartphone ranges among Pakistan’s youth by offering advanced technology at accessible prices. With the upcoming Spark 40 Series, TECNO continues its mission to empower young users with smartphones that enhance productivity, inspire creativity, and elevate everyday life.

    The official launch of the TECNO Spark 40 Series will take place on 15th August 2025. Stay tuned for more details on how TECNO is set to redefine the mid-range smartphone experience.


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  • Filipino Filmmaker Pedring Lopez Will Direct UK-Set Horror ‘The Ascendants’

    Filipino Filmmaker Pedring Lopez Will Direct UK-Set Horror ‘The Ascendants’

    EXCLUSIVE: Filipino filmmaker Pedring Lopez (Netflix’s Maria, Nilalang) is set to direct The Ascendants, a psychological horror feature from Silent D Pictures.

    The film will begin production in early 2026 in the UK, and stars Australian actors Cristian Lavin and John Jarratt and US-born Indonesian actress Chelsea Islan.

    Lavin also penned the film’s screenplay. Additional casting for The Ascendants will be announced in the coming weeks.

    The film follows a journalist who returns to her childhood mining town in search of her missing brother — only to uncover a cult, sacred rites, and a blood-soaked ancestral legacy.

    Lopez is currently shooting his English-language debut feature, Shadow Transit, which stars UK-based singer-songwriter Qymira and Indonesian actor Yoshi Sudarso.

    Principal photography is taking place in Manila, with several scenes shot in Hong Kong. The film will be presented to buyers at the American Film Market.

    After The Ascendants, Lopez will direct and line produce action-horror Blood Passage, produced by GFM Film Sales and Evolution Pictures (UK), VeryTay Media (Singapore), Shaw Organisation (Singapore) and BlackOps Studios Asia (Philippines).

    Blood Passage will be shot entirely in the Philippines, primarily on the remote islands of Camarines Sur.

    Lopez was also showrunner and director of Filipino prison crime series Sellblock, executive produced and distributed globally by LA-based Blue Fox Entertainment.

    “As a Filipino filmmaker making my crossover into international cinema, I’ve always been drawn to stories that wrestle with faith, trauma, and inherited myth,” said Lopez. “With The Ascendants, I’m bringing my Southeast Asian roots and cinematic language to a Western storyworld — one grounded in atmosphere, tension, and emotional truth. This is the kind of film that lets me explore universal fears through a very personal lens.”

    Lavin added: “Pedring brings a rare mix of emotional insight and genre precision. He knows how to shape horror through performance, atmosphere, and meaning — not just effects.”

    Djonny Chen, founder of Silent D Pictures, said: “We’re thrilled to collaborate with Pedring. His work consistently blends bold vision with grounded humanity. The Ascendants is the kind of project that demands that — and he’s the right voice to deliver it.”

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