Temasek and Richard Li's Pacific Century may join a Franklin Templeton-led consortium that is in exclusive negotiations to buy AIG's asset-management business.
WSJ.com: US Business, Wall Street Journal: Business
Tue, 06/02/2009 - 8:18am
Temasek and Richard Li's Pacific Century may join a Franklin Templeton-led consortium that is in exclusive negotiations to buy AIG's asset-management business.
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To fill a car with gas, you generally just need a credit card or cash. To charge an EV at a DC fast charging station, you need any number of things to work—a credit card reader, an app for that charger's network, a touchscreen that's working—and they're all a little different. That situation could change next year if a new "universal Plug and Charge" initiative from SAE International, a group of EV carmakers and chargers, moves ahead and gains ground.
More | Talk | Read It Later | ShareBy some measures, AI systems are now competitive with traditional computing methods for generating weather forecasts. Because their training penalizes errors, however, the forecasts tend to get "blurry"—as you move further ahead in time, the models make fewer specific predictions since those are more likely to be wrong. As a result, you start to see things like storm tracks broadening and the storms themselves losing clearly defined edges. But using AI is still extremely tempting because the alternative is a computational atmospheric circulation model, which is extremely compute-intensive.
More | Talk | Read It Later | ShareFor most people, Windows 10 security updates are slated to stop on October 14, 2025, just over 10 months from today. That could end up being a serious security problem, given that Windows 10 is still the version used by a large majority of the world's PCs. Users will be able to buy a one-year reprieve for $30, and businesses and other organizations will have the option to pay for two more years after that.
More | Talk | Read It Later | ShareIn late September, seagrass ecologist Alyssa Novak pulled on her neoprene wetsuit, pressed her snorkel mask against her face, and jumped off an oyster farming boat into the shallow waters of Pleasant Bay, an estuary in the Cape Cod National Seashore in Massachusetts. Through her mask she gazed toward the sandy seabed, about 3 feet below the surface at low tide, where she was about to plant an experimental underwater garden of eelgrass. Naturally occurring meadows of eelgrass—the most common type of seagrass found along the East Coast of the United States—are vanishing.
More | Talk | Read It Later | ShareA system of non-competition clauses enforced by the European Space Agency’s (ESA) workforce suppliers is allegedly trapping aerospace professionals who work at ESA’s facilities across Europe in a professional dead-end street. Their contracts prevent job mobility and the possibility to earn better pay, a large number of contractors have alleged to Ars Technica.
More | Talk | Read It Later | ShareThe week before Thanksgiving, Marshall Brain sent a final email to his colleagues at North Carolina State University. "I have just been through one of the most demoralizing, depressing, humiliating, unjust processes possible with the university," wrote the founder of HowStuffWorks.com and director of NC State's Engineering Entrepreneurs Program. Hours later, campus police found that Brain had died by suicide. NC State police discovered Brain unresponsive in Engineering Building II on Centennial Campus around 7 am on November 20, following a welfare check request from his wife at 6:40 am, according to The Technician, NC State's student newspaper.
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