Ecosystem Services Assessment of the Prins Hendrik Zanddijk – Dredging Today

The International Association of Dredging Companies (IADC) latest edition of their Terra et Aqua magazine featured a very interesting article named Ecosystem services assessment of the Prins Hendrik Zanddijk.

This study examines which and, if possible, how much more ecosystem services are provided by the most recent nature inspired coastal protection project Prins Hendrik Zanddijk, in comparison with a traditional concrete and asphalt construction.

During the last decade, reclamation of a sandbody as a coastal protection measure has evolved into a viable and attractive alternative to handbook-engineering using concrete and asphalt.

The latter, considered traditional coastal protection methods, offers the reassurance of multiple generations of engineering experience and reliability.

Nature based solutions (NBS) are defined as solutions that are inspired and supported by nature, which are cost-effective, simultaneously providing environmental, social and economic benefits and help build resilience (European Commission 2019).

NBS such as sandbody designs must cope with dynamic behaviour and variability of the building material as well as with uncertainty of maintenance costs. The quantification of the cost-effective part of this definition remains a difficult task.

Authors

Jan Fordeyn (Jan De Nul Group) | Katrien Van der Biest (University of Antwerp) | Emile Lemey (Jan De Nul Group) | Annelies Boerema (University of Antwerp) | Patrick Meire (University of Antwerp)

Posted on February 13, 2020 with tags IADC, Prins Hendrik, Terra et Aqua.

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Ecosystem Services Assessment of the Prins Hendrik Zanddijk - Dredging Today

JPMorgan Dipping its Toes into the Ethereum Ecosystem Could Be Bullish for ETH – newsBTC

Banking giant JPMorgan has offered mixed signals when it comes to their thoughts on cryptocurrencies, with the banks CEO frequently bashing Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies, despite offering their own intra-bank digital asset dubbed JPM Coin that is built upon the Ethereum (ETH) blockchain.

Now, it appears the JPMorgan could be dipping its toes into the Ethereum ecosystem, as news recently broke that the financial institution is looking to merge its blockchain unit with ConsenSys.

Analysts believe that this potential merger would be highly bullish for Ethereums price action.

The upcoming merger, which was announced in a recent report from Reuters, is expected to be formally announced in the next six months, and all the details surrounding this event still remain foggy.

It is important to note that JPMorgans blockchain unit called Quorum is built upon the Ethereum network, which makes ConsenSys which is led by Ethereum co-founder Joe Lubin an obvious merger target due to its heavy involvement within the Ethereum ecosystem.

Ethereum is currently trading up just under 2% at its current price of $226, although its intraday climb likely has less to do with investors excitement surrounding this possibility, and more to do with Bitcoins rise to $10,000.

If this partnership does materialize, however, it will likely generate some buzz surrounding Ethereum, and possibly lead retail investors to fomo into fresh positions.

Although it is unlikely that the cryptocurrencys current price action will be influenced by this news due to the lack of details surrounding it, analysts do believe it is firmly bullish for ETH in the long-term.

Satoshi Flipper, a prominent cryptocurrency analyst on Twitter, explained in a recent tweet that this merger could be JPMorgans attempt to increase its presence within the enterprise blockchain arena prior to the launch of ETH 2.0.

So why is this so bullish for #Ethereum? Because cash is king and JPMorgan has much of it. With the pending release of 2.0, JPMorgan could desire an increased presence in the enterprise blockchain arena. And #Ethereum is a quick ticket to get there, he explained while referencing the news report.

Because it could be another six months before theres a formal announcement regarding this partnership, there is still a lot of time for things to change, which is likely leading Ethereum investors to express some caution when it comes to trading this news.

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JPMorgan Dipping its Toes into the Ethereum Ecosystem Could Be Bullish for ETH - newsBTC

OIF Members to Showcase Innovation and Interoperability Solutions for the Industrys Most Critical Challenges at OFC 2020 – Yahoo Finance

Interoperability demos on 400ZR, CEI-112G, FlexE and IC-TROSA; OIF experts to lead panel discussions and OIF to Host "Cu (see you) Beyond 112 Gbps" Workshop

OIF will host one of the largest interoperability demos in its history reflecting the ongoing significance of OIFs work in addressing global network challenges. Twenty industry-leading system vendors, component vendors and test equipment vendors will demonstrate critical insight into how key technologies 400ZR, Common Electrical I/O (CEI)-112G, Flex Ethernet (FlexE) and Integrated Coherent Transmit-Receive Optical Sub Assembly (IC-TROSA) interoperate within the industrys ecosystem at OFC 2020 in San Diego, March 10-12, 2020 (booth #6221).

Participating companies include Acacia Communications, Amphenol, Arista Networks, Cadence Design Systems, Inc., Cisco Systems, Inc., Credo Semiconductor (HK) LTD, Fujitsu Optical Components, II-VI, Inphi Corporation, Juniper Networks, Keysight Technologies, Marvell, Microchip, Molex, NeoPhotonics, Samtec, Inc., Spirent Communications, TE Connectivity, VIAVI Solutions and Yamaichi Electronics.

"The participation level by 20 companies in this years interoperability demos for 400ZR, CEI-112G, FlexE and IC-TROSA, is a true reflection of our enduring leadership and evidence that these technologies continue to be the preeminent focus areas for our member companies," explained Steve Sekel of Keysight and OIFs Physical and Link Layer (PLL) Interoperability Working Group (WG) Chair. "We are eager to showcase the advancements that these technologies and our work have made over the past year."

400ZR Demo

OIF has defined the 400ZR interface that provides interoperability of coherent optical interfaces for data center interconnect applications. The demo will show first time ever operation of 400ZR equipment from multiple system and module vendors and in multiple pluggable form factors.

CEI-112G Demo

The CEI-112G demo will feature interoperating channels, components and silicon that demonstrate the CEI-112G-XSR, CEI-112G-VSR, CEI-112G-MR and CEI-112G-LR draft implementation agreements. Demonstrating interoperability for extra short reach channels is important to support the co-packaging developments that are expected to be discussed throughout the week at OFC. Interoperable very short reach, medium reach and long reach channels and silicon are also critical to support the developing 112 Gbps equipment that is expected to come to market soon. These updated demos surpass what OIF has demonstrated in the past with additional member contributions and continue to build on the developing ecosystem of products coming to market to support CEI-112G.

FlexE Demo

The FlexE demo that will be on display incorporates FlexE silicon operating with multiple test equipment and interoperating over a 400 Gbps fiber network that will be deployed on the show floor between the Ethernet Alliance booth and the OIF booth. This reflects further developments that are taking place in the FlexE market since the previous OIF FlexE demos.

IC-TROSA Demo

The IC-TROSA features all the optical building blocks for a coherent module in a single package. This demo will highlight important aspects of IC-TROSA integration as well as real-time EVM measurements with the updated script for 400ZR.

An additional point of interest will be a static display of coherent optical components which will emphasize the role of OIF in the coherent optical marketplace over the past 10 years.

OIF @ OFC 2020 Activities

OIF experts will participate in two panels at OFC 2020 that feature the latest updates on critical technologies that work to enable a more efficient and reliable network.

"400ZR Specification Update" Tuesday, 10 March, 13:30 14:30, Theater III

Moderator: Karl Gass, OIF PLL WG Vice Chair Optical

Speakers include: Josef Berger, Inphi Corporation; Masahiro Mogi, Fujitsu Optical Components; Gert Sarlet, II-VI; Marc Stiller, NeoPhotonics and Markus Weber, Acacia Communications

Industry experts from OIF will lead a panel discussion of representatives from the DSP, optics, equipment and end user communities on the conflicting demands for a near-term, high-volume, interoperable, moderate reach, coherent 400G optical link. The session will also include an update on OIFs project to define a 400ZR link specification.

Story continues

"112 Gbps Electrical Interfaces An OIF update on CEI-112G" Wednesday, 11 March, 16:15 17:00, Theater II

Moderator: Nathan Tracy, OIF President, TE Connectivity

Speakers include: Ed Frlan, OIF Technical Committee Chair, Semtech, Corp.; Mike Li, OIF Board, Intel; Cathy Liu, OIF Board, Broadcom, Inc.; Gary Nicholl, OIF Board, Cisco; Steve Sekel, OIF PLL Interoperability WG Chair, Keysight Technologies

OIF experts will lead a panel discussion on the ongoing CEI-112G electrical interface development projects, and the new architectures they will enable including chiplet packaging, co-packaged optics and internal cable-based solutions. The panel will provide an update on the multiple interfaces being defined by OIF including CEI-112G MCM, XSR, VSR, MR and LR for 112 Gbps applications of die-to-die, chip-to-module, chip-to-chip and long reach over backplane and cables.

"Cu (see you) Beyond 112 Gbps" Workshop Thursday, 12 March, 12:00-17:30, Hilton San Diego Gaslamp, 401 K St (across from the SD Convention Center), San Diego, Ca.

OIF will hold a half-day workshop "Cu (see you) Beyond 112 Gbps" featuring experts from Arista, Broadcom, Inc., Cisco, Facebook, Google, Innovium, Intel, MACOM and TE Connectivity discussing the needs and challenges for electrical interfaces beyond 112 Gbps. Registration required:

Check the status of OIFs current work here.

About OIF

OIF is where the optical networking industrys interoperability work gets done. Building on 20 years of effecting forward change in the industry, OIF represents the dynamic ecosystem of 100+ industry leading network operators, system vendors, component vendors and test equipment vendors collaborating to develop interoperable electrical, optical and control solutions that directly impact the industrys ecosystem and facilitate global connectivity in the open network world. Connect with OIF at @OIForum, on LinkedIn and at http://www.oiforum.com.

View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20200218005625/en/

Contacts

Leah WilkinsonWilkinson + Associates for OIFEmail: leah@wilkinson.associates Office: 703-907-0010

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OIF Members to Showcase Innovation and Interoperability Solutions for the Industrys Most Critical Challenges at OFC 2020 - Yahoo Finance

Regenerative farming: how farmers can make the transition – The Poultry Site

The FAI Farm Gate podcast is interviewing Claire Hill, farm manager at FAI Farms and Caroline Grindrod, regenerative farmer and consultant from Roots of Nature, to discuss their experiences with regenerative agriculture and its potential to make farming an environmental and economic boon in the coming decades.

Though FAI Farm in Oxford is already an organic livestock farm, they recently decided to transition their breeder/finisher operation to regenerative farming. Hill and her team made the decision after reviewing existing evidence on grazing practices and environmental sustainability. When thinking of her business strategy, She felt that developing the market and supply chain for regeneratively raised animals could counteract the current narrative of agricultures role in the climate crisis.

She began transitioning her ruminants off grain and onto FAIs pastureland to get more savvy with grazing and soil management. She also wanted to improve her water infrastructure to make it more sustainable. Hill refers to the moves as an, evolution. These changes, and the growing salience of climate change, led her to embrace regenerative farming instead of remaining an organic operation.

According to Grindrod, there isnt a single definition of regenerative farming. However, she stresses that the term shouldnt be diluted or green-washed as it gains traction. When explaining regenerative agriculture to Costain, she cited the summary published on Wikipedia. That definition lists the priorities of regenerative agriculture: increasing biodiversity, improving soil quality, restoring watersheds and enhancing the ecosystem of the farm.

When explaining how she advises her clients, she says that a healthy ecosystem will also be a productive one. Regenerative farming requires the farmer to completely rethink their role in the ecosystem. Instead of the farmer acting as a manager, she tells farmers that they are in the ecosystem with their animals. By viewing the farm and surrounding ecology holistically, farmers will be better placed to sequester carbon, replenish the watershed and foster biodiversity.

Regenerative farming also takes a different view of daily farming practices. Instead of focusing on inputs and extracting profitable outputs, regenerative agriculture is more focused on fostering complexity in the surrounding environment. It isnt about damaging things less while farming Grindrod wants her clients to be at the right end of ecosystem management.

Holistic management the framework Grindrod uses when transitioning farms to regenerative methods involves looking at the farm context and surrounding environment. The goal for the farmer is to do the best they can with the farm they have. To begin, Grindrod evaluates the physical landscape of the farm and the ecosystem processes. This includes the water and mineral cycles. It also focuses on more nuanced indicators like community dynamics and energy flow.

Community dynamics is a way of indicating the level of complexity in the farms ecosystem. After initially evaluating the surrounding environment, Grindrod might consider introducing functional species to counteract issues that are emerging on farm. This could mean introducing pest-eating insects to reduce a farms reliance on pesticides or adding methanotrophs to the farm system to ensure wastes are broken down quickly.

Energy flow focuses on ways farmers can create or store energy on-farm. Grindrod might think of ways for farmers to sequester carbon in plant biomass or where to place solar panels to capture the most energy.

The holistic framework means that any regenerative steps are highly individualised and focused on long-term farm goals like improving soil quality or eliminating pesticide use. Theres also an emphasis on identifying root causes for using conventional farm inputs that can harm the environment like fertiliser or medical treatments. The idea is that the decisions made within the framework will evaluate the welfare and health consequences of the animals, input costs, ecosystem costs and make sure solutions are economically feasible.

Both Grindrod and Hill concede that changing farmers mindsets was one of the biggest obstacles to implementing regenerative agriculture. Farmers tend to be risk-averse and know the land very well meaning that new methods can be met with resistance. Since regenerative solutions are farm-specific and not universal, Hill and Grindrod have had farmers immediately say, you cant do that on this farm to many of their proposals.

As Hill was explaining her own transition from organic production to regenerative agriculture, she said that it requires the mentality of, how can we do that on this farm? as opposed to, you cant do that on this farm.

Hill emphasised that her move wasnt a formula that could easily adopted by all farms the transition to regenerative agriculture is difficult to replicate on a wide scale. In addition, many of Hills steps didnt work immediately out of the gate. It took time and investment to see the solutions work.

Another component of farmers mindsets that had to change was the perception that adopting regenerative techniques would lead to drops in yield or profitability. In Hills experience, this perception isnt borne out by the facts. When discussing FAI Farms transition with Costain, she predicts that her profit margins will increase because she isnt spending as much money on inputs and is saving time on her daily tasks.

Since making the transition, Hill isnt spending as much on straw or silage and she doesnt have to do as much tractor work (so less is spent on diesel). She is also saving money on overall running costs since she is using fewer machines. Treatment costs for the animals are down as well meaning that fewer chemicals are being released in the ecosystem. For her farm, these benefits have made the regenerative investments worthwhile; shes hoping to make further investments in the future.

Though FAI Farm is early in their regenerative journey, Grindrod is confident that it will become more successful over time. Her consultancy, Roots of Nature, has shown that regenerative farms can have high productivity measures while regenerating soil quality and the ecosystem. In her view, regeneration could be the key strategy for the agricultural sector to remain sustainable and resilient for the future.

Listen to the full Farm Gate podcast here.

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Regenerative farming: how farmers can make the transition - The Poultry Site

Announced the Addition of New Statistical Data Titled as Embedded Computing Ecosystem Market 2020 by Growth, Demand & Opportunities & Forecast…

Global Embedded Computing Ecosystem market reports provide an in-depth and detailed analysis to thoroughly analyze the details you need. This report provides an extensive overview of market-based factors that are expected to have a substantial and decisive impact on the markets growth prospects over the forecast period.

Demand for the global Embedded Computing Ecosystem market is growing significantly, driving a larger market with a better-quality experience. The rapid increase in technological progress is expected to be practical in the next few years.

Avail Sample Report @https://www.researchnreports.com/request_sample.php?id=222794

Top Key players:

AMD, ANalog Devices, ARM, Apple, Broadcom, Cypress, Fujitsu, IBM, Infineon, Microchip/Atmel, Microsoft, Nvidia, Qualcomm, Renesas, STMicroelectronics, Samsung, Texas Instruments

Geographically, regions such as North America, Europe, Asia Pacific (APAC), the Middle East, and Africa and Latin America can be classified into the global Embedded Computing Ecosystem market. After four years, the presence of a large distribution network is dominant and is expected to reach the highest CAGR by the end of a given forecast period.

In summary, the report includes business and finance, company profile, and recent growth. The challenges faced by each company and the business strategy implemented by him in order to generate and generate high profits in the market were also presented.

The report can answer the following questions:

Objective of Studies:

Get maximum discount: https://www.researchnreports.com/ask_for_discount.php?id=222794

Table of Content:

Chapter 1 Global Embedded Computing Ecosystem Industry Overview

Chapter 2 Global Economic Impact on Industry

Chapter 3 Global Market Competition by Manufacturers

Chapter 4 Global Production, Revenue (Value) by Region (2014-2020)

Chapter 5 Global Supply (Production), Consumption, Export, Import by Regions (2014-2020)

Chapter 6 Global Production, Revenue (Value), Price Trend by Type

Chapter 7 Global Market Analysis by Application

Chapter 8 Manufacturing Cost Analysis

Chapter 9 Industrial Chain, Sourcing Strategy and Downstream Buyers

Continue for TOC

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Company Overview:

Research N Reports is a new age market research firm where we focus on providing information that can be effectively applied. Today being a consumer-driven market, companies require information to deal with the complex and dynamic world of choices, where relying on a soundboard firm for your decisions becomes crucial. Research N Reports specializes in industry analysis, market forecasts and as a result getting quality reports covering all verticals, whether be it gaining perspective on current market conditions or being ahead in the cutthroat global competition. Since we excel at business research to help businesses grow, we also offer to consult as an extended arm to our services which only helps us gain more insight into current trends and problems. Consequently, we keep evolving as an all-rounder provider of viable information under one roof.

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Announced the Addition of New Statistical Data Titled as Embedded Computing Ecosystem Market 2020 by Growth, Demand & Opportunities & Forecast...

Here’s how a visiting venture capitalist explores Houston’s startup ecosystem for the first time – InnovationMap

When Houston Exponential established the HX Venture Fund, the goal was to bring out-of-town capital and investors into the city of Houston. The fund of funds invests in a portfolio of venture capital funds with the hope that those funds find a way back into the Houston startup ecosystem.

After a little over a year, HXVF has invested in five funds: Boston-based .406 Ventures, Austin-based Next Coast Ventures, Boston-based OpenView Venture Partners, Washington D.C.-based Updata Partners, and Austin-based LiveOak Venture Partners.

The fund of funds is also regularly hosting those five funds as well as a mix of potential portfolio fund members in Houston for what the HXVF calls "immersion days" where the venture capitalists can meet local startups, innovation leaders, and even fellow investors that they could eventually co-invest with.

"The goals of these days are to have venture capitalists travel to Houston, meet with our entrepreneurs (and the startup development organizations like Station, Cannon and WeWork that support them), and provide both capital and expertise in company building to the tech companies," says Sandy Guitar Wallis, managing partner at HXVF. "The venture capitalists also meet with HX Venture Fund corporate LPs, who can be customers or acquirers of their portfolio companies."

Just this month alone, HXVF is hosting four funds two from their portfolio and two that they haven't yet invested in. San Antonio-based Active Capital, which has raised a $21 million fund, is among the visiting VCs this month. The fund's founder, Pat Matthews, an entrepreneur turned venture capitalist, has shared his busiest day February 5 as well as his perspective on Houston innovation with InnovationMap.

After waking up at the Hotel Derek, Matthews starts his second day in Houston by taking a Lyft to the Greater Houston Partnership for what he believes to be a breakfast meeting with Wallis and Guillermo Borda of HXVF, but the group has too much to discuss that a meal falls by the wayside.

Before this trip, Matthews hasn't visited Houston in a professional capacity. While Active Capital is based just down I10 in San Antonio, the firm's investments are split almost in half by deals done in Texas versus the rest of the world. Active Capital focuses on B2B SaaS investments usually leading in seed or series A rounds.

Matthews has called Texas home for around a decade. He founded an email marketing startup in Virginia, which was acquired by San Antonio-based Rackspace. He relocated to join Rackspace and worked on growing the organization for six years before creating Active Capital.

Following the meeting still unfed, Matthews meets up with Serafina Lalany from Houston Exponential to carpool to The Cannon on the west side of town.

Matthews forgoes his usual carb aversion to eat slices of Domino's pizza at The Cannon before beginning his first of three fireside chats with Houston innovators. Patrick Schneidau, CEO of Truss, leads the conversation at The Cannon. (Schneidau is a board member of InnovationMap's.) After the chat, Matthews has a meeting with a startup before heading back into town.

With one fireside chat down, Matthews heads into his second one of the day at Station Houston with Joe Alapat, founder of Liongard. Matthews observes that each of the entrepreneurs who interviewed him had great questions, and seemed to be far along with their companies. Meanwhile, any of the people he met before or after the chat seemed to be at a much earlier stage in their startup journey.

The last fireside chat was hosted by Rakesh Agrawal of Snapstream at WeWork's Jones Building location. Matthews and Agrawal attempted to set up a Facebook livestream for the conversation, but an issue with the technology wouldn't allow for the stream.

With meetings and fireside chats done, Matthews heads straight to a dinner with Blair Garrou, founder and managing director of Mercury Fund. The two venture capitalists dine at Eunice and split several appetizers and a bottle of wine while discussing their own recent investments and interests. Matthews, who met Garrou in 2014, thinks of him as a great mentor in venture capital.

Matthews headed back to the hotel after dinner and crashes hard after the long day. He would head back to San Antonio on a Vonlane bus he gets a lot of work done on his trips the next day.

Matthews says he left Houston with an overall positive opinion of the city, and says it's similar to other Texas cities, aside from Austin, in its startup presence and capacity. While he assumed he'd meet energy and space startups, he realized Houston had a lot more going on than that.

"It definitely seemed like there was a lot of passion and a lot of hustle," Matthews says. "And it seems like the city is really working to support and cultivate that and keep it in Houston. I was inspired."

Throughout the visit, Matthews handed out his business card and some conversations have developed from those connections, he says. Another representative from Active Capital who is focused on sourcing deals with startups will visit next, and Matthews says he also thinks that he'll return to Houston to continue conversations he's been having, including some with other investors.

"I could definitely see doing deals in Houston," Matthews tells InnovationMap.

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Here's how a visiting venture capitalist explores Houston's startup ecosystem for the first time - InnovationMap

On Apple’s revenue warningJim Cramer and others weigh in – CNBC

Here's what five experts say investors should watch regarding Apple's expectations of a financial hit because of the coronavirus outbreak in China.

A day after the announcement, Apple stock was down 3% at midday Tuesday.

Jim Cramer, host of CNBC's "Mad Money," says long-term believers of Apple's bull case should buy in here.

"I am surprised it's not down more because it's not just supply. It's demand. Demand has to come down because they don't do much shopping in China and with supply, it's not them. It's supply chain and some of the companies that need to give them the supplies, they can switch their six or seven plants in that Hubei area that are halted. I think there's just not a lot of people that want to sell anything. I think a lot of people thought this would happen and we're just waiting for that shoe to fall. I can't come up with a reason short term to buy it. I do think that if you believe the coronavirus is going to get better, you buy it right here."

Mike Volpi, general partner at Index Ventures, says a stock reaction is to be expected as Apple gets squeezed on the supply and demand side.

"Not entirely surprising. If you look at what's happening in China right now, there's over 150 million people that have some kind of a restriction can't leave their home, can't travel. That's over 10% of the population and Apple faces a bit of a double whammy in that when people can't travel and leave their homes, they can't buy phones, they can't buy iPads and so forth and at the same time, all of their production is in China, so you get hit on the supply side and on the demand side. So in some sense, not totally surprising."

Daniel Flax, senior research analyst at Neuberger Berman, says overall demand still remains healthy.

"I think what's important here is that people are demanding the devices which are innovative, the ecosystem remains healthy, newer growth drivers like wearables are doing very, very well for the company and so this is of course tragic for China and the people globally that are being impacted, but we see it largely as supply related and of course a little bit of demand impacted in China for the company."

William Power, senior research analyst at Robert W. Baird, says demand outside of China should offset the impact.

"This has been an ecosystem story for some time. We think that remains very much intact. You still got a services business that's growing mid-teens, you got a wearables business the grew north of 30%. I think one of the key comments out of the release last night was that they're still seeing very strong demand outside of China. Expectations are still in line on that front. So this really hasn't extended beyond China obviously a terrible human toll and we think ultimately is more of a temporary impact."

Gene Munster, founder of Loup Ventures, says this stock reaction is less than other warnings in the past.

"I think it's important to point out in the context this is the second time in six quarters that Apple's missed numbers. China was part of it back in December of 2018. At that point, if you look at the stock, that was a well-telegraphed miss but the trajectory downward was 35%. And so we're talking about one-10th of the reaction versus six quarters ago. I think that context is important because, on large, investors are viewing this as something that is transitional, this black swan type of event, and we'll move through it."

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On Apple's revenue warningJim Cramer and others weigh in - CNBC

Floating Farms May Help Reinvent the World’s Food Ecosystems – WIRED

Karma, Courage, and Sustainabetty are special heifers. They have uninterrupted views of Rotterdam harbor, poop on a poop deck, and walk that gangplank to a pasture. They and 31 other Meuse-Rhine-Issel cows clomped aboard the world's first floating dairy farm last May.

It's the best milk in the world, says Peter van Wingerden, founder of the Dutch property development company Beladon, which built the barge. In 2012, hearing that floods from Hurricane Sandy had crippled New York City's food distribution system, he imagined that waterborne urban farms could boost food security. Why Rotterdam? A quarter of the Netherlands is below sea level. Why 1,500-pound bovines? If we could put big animals inside the city on a floating barge, we could do anything.

Getting a green light required years of answering questions from local officials: Crucially, do cows get seasick? On a steady platform, their research concluded, heifers likely won't spew their cud. The 4,843-square-foot stable floats on concrete pontoons anchored by two steel beams driven 65 feet into the seabed. The structure rises and falls with the 8-foot tides and never tilts more than 11 inches, even in winds topping 70 mph or if the herd crowds the stern to watch passing crustaceans.

Each day aboard this largely self-sustaining ecosystem, cows eat potato peels and grass clippings, then set free 5,700-plus pounds of dung, which a Roomba-like robot sucks up and dumps down a shaft to a deck below. There it's turned into fertilizer for the soccer fields and parks that grow the grass feed. A milking robot pulls around 5 gallons from each heifer, which is bottled or made into yogurt and then trucked to local grocery stores.

Van Wingerden has talked to food companies and developers seeking to bring buoyant dairies to Singapore, Dubai, and New York. Alas, experts say large-scale floating farms would be prohibitively expensive and rely on too many resources to remain sustainable. But van Wingerden hopes the sight of cows grazing on a boat sparks creative thinking for future food production. Humans must produce 56 percent more food to feed a global population of 9.8 billion by 2050. Sure, seems like that'll happen when pigs fly. Or, when cows float.

Laura Mallonee (@LauraMallonee) writes about photography for WIRED.

This article appears in the March issue. Subscribe now.

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Floating Farms May Help Reinvent the World's Food Ecosystems - WIRED

Italian carmaker Maserati to invest USD 1.29 billion to build an electric ecosystem – The New Indian Express

By Express News Service

Italian luxury automaker Maserati has revealed details about its global product strategy. As part of the new plan, the company will shift focus on its electrification push with pure electric vehicles (EVs) and hybrid vehicles along with expanding its product line-up with an all-new SUV.

The company said its models will be 100 per cent developed, engineered and built in Italy. Its electrification programme starts this year, and the first hybrid car to be built will be the new Maserati Ghibli. Production of the new Maserati GranTurismo and GranCabrio, the brands first cars to adopt 100 per cent electric solutionsm, will commence in 2021, it said.

Maserati has also decided to build the GranTurismo and GranCabrio at the Mirafiori production hub, with an investment of 800 million Euros ($1.29 billion).The latest generation of the GranTurismo and GranCabrio, two iconic cars for the Trident Brand, have totalled more than 40,000 units sold from 2007 to 2019.

During 2020, Mirafiori will be strengthening its position as a world hub dedicated to the electrification and mobility of the future, with a large proportion of its capacity allocated to the production of the brands new electrified cars, Maserati said in a statement. It added that its heart is still in Modena (Italy), where it has its headquarters. In 2020, the first of the new Modena-built Maserati models will be the super sports car. The company informed that major modernisation work is in progress on the production line at the Modena plant, partly to accommodate the electric version of the new super sports car. The carmaker is also coming up with a utility vehicle, which will be built at Cassino and intended to play a leading role for the brand.

About 800 million Euros will be invested in construction of the new production line, scheduled to begin at the end of the first quarter of 2020. The first pre-production cars are expected to come off the line by 2021, the carmaker said. In concluding remark, Maserati said as one of the brands recent claims puts it, the music is changing, and this will be even more apparent in May this year, when past and future will meet to place Maserati firmly on the world stage for the future of mobility. In December, it launched the V6 petrol variants of Ghibli, Quattroporte and Levante for the very first time in the Indian market, as part of its 2020 range.

Maseratis 2020 planAs part of its 2020 range, Maserati had launched the V6 petrol variants of Ghibli, Quattroporte and Levante for the very first time in the Indian market in December. The petrol variants will be available with both the twin-turbo V6 engines, of 350 hp and 430 hp.

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Italian carmaker Maserati to invest USD 1.29 billion to build an electric ecosystem - The New Indian Express

BitCherry To Build a Trusted Distributed Business Ecosystem – Coinspeaker

Place/Date: - February 5th, 2020 at 6:52 pm UTC 3 min read Contact: BitCherry,Source: BitCherry

BitCherry is a blockchain infrastructure empowering commercial applications, which is to construct P2Plus point-to-point encrypting network protocol with the new thinking of physical structures and achieve highly extensible data architectures by hashing diagrams modified by relational graphs. BitCherry provides smart contract, cross-chain consensus and other operating mechanisms which can reduce the development cost and provide underlying public chain of high performance, high security and high availability for blockchain business applications.

As the first scalable infrastructure worldwide based on IPv8 technology in the service of commercial applications, BitCherry focuses on comprehensive and in-depth development in the industry. With strong ecological resources, BitCherry pays great attentions to business needs. By gathering research resources of global blockchain technology and industry, BitCherry will actively promote communication and collaboration, and accelerate the application of blockchain technology in various fields.

BitCherry, meanwhile, will realize value interaction with smart contract which will reflect the real business to the blockchain.

In addition, BitCherry will build a new business model and a highly trusted and trusted distributed business ecosystem by the cooperation crossing platforms, spaces and fields which achieves high-speed circulation of ecological value and expand the business closed loop.

In terms of technology, the BitCherry core data structure adopts Hash Relationship Spectrum, which makes the TPS of the public network as high as 100,000 +, far exceeding the industry level. At the same time, BitCherry also refers to the engineering experience of the Internet for many years, and builds its underlying encrypted communication architecture on the IPv8 protocol, so as to realize point-to-point encryption of information and guarantee the privacy and security of user data in the process of interaction.

In addition, BitCherry focuses on the consensus layer. Combining with its original P2Plus network protocol, BitCherry firstly proposed the aBFT+PoUc consensus, which can effectively prevent network attacks while ensuring full equity of BitCherry nodes. In terms of development, BitCherry has perfect development tools, friendly to developers, called with mainstream language programming and support resources, allows developers to reduce the development cost of also smooth the learning curve.

In terms of upper-class economy, BitCherry USES bit-u as the incentive mechanism to provide basic users with active and user resources for Dapp and business ecology, and fully guarantee the healthy and orderly development of business applications in the ecology.

Therefore, BitCherry is a mature public chain system with profound technical background, safe privacy and smooth user experience. Because of this, BitCherry payed a lot of technology cost for the security and enforceability of smart contracts to develop BitCherrys online technology and development platform.

Thanks to this, BitCherry can fully integrate the technical resources, human resources, business resources and various innovative resources of traditional enterprises, including blockchain technology coding and underlying architecture related to product traceability, supply chain finance, business consumption, asset digitalization, finance, e-commerce, cloud computing, etc.

In conclusion, BitCherrys P2Plus encryption network protocol will greatly promote the commercial value of society in the future, and any individual and organization can use the network to improve their products and services greatly.

Moreover, in Singapore, South Korea, Russia and other regions, BitCherry has a large number of communities. Relying on strong technical background and great support of the community at home and abroad, BitCherry achieved rapid growth. And BitCherry will continue to develop intently, explore in business cooperation, accelerate the maturity of underlying public chain and greatly empower 0 to 1 process of enterprise blockchain.

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BitCherry To Build a Trusted Distributed Business Ecosystem - Coinspeaker

Building a Worker Co-op Ecosystem: Lessons from the Big Apple – Nonprofit Quarterly

What if a nonprofit wrote a report and city policy actually changed as a result?

Truth is, reports by nonprofits that advocate policy changes are written all the time, but most, even when full of good policy ideas, gather electronic dust.

But in New York City, in January 2014, the Federation of Protestant Welfare Agencies (FPWA) published a report, authored by its executive director Jennifer Jones Austin, titled Worker Cooperatives for New York City: A Vision for Addressing Income Inequality. There have been a lot of reports written on worker cooperatives over the past decade, including many by national nonprofits and one published by the Surdna Foundation. But none have been as influential as that 40-page report published in New York City in 2014.

The report, in its executive summary, made the following top-line policy recommendations:

By June, less than six months after the report was published, New York City, which had never before spent a dime to support worker cooperatives, had launched its Worker Cooperative Business Development Initiative, seeded with $1.2 million in city funds. In so doing, New York became, as Jake Blumgart wrote in Next City at the time, the first city in the United States with a line item in its budget specifically for the development and cultivation of worker cooperatives.

It was a big step in an astonishingly short period of time, even if the $1.2 million was a drop in the bucket of the $75 billion budget the city approved that year. Fortunately for worker co-op advocates, the program has been largely successful. City spending accordingly has increased over time to Fiscal Year 2020s allocation of $3.6 million.

Of course, it wasnt simply the reports policy logic that led City Council to respond so promptly. The who behind the report mattereda lot. First, there was the FPWA itself, a large nonprofit which in 2014 had over $6 million in revenues. It mattered too that a leading city anti-poverty agency backed the campaign, rather than just worker co-ops themselves. Additionally, Jones Austin herself was an influential city political leader, who then-mayor-elect Bill de Blasio tapped to co-chair his 60-person transition team. And FPWA was backed by its many coalition partners, who mobilized to support the budget allocation, testifying at a city council committee hearing held a month after the report came out. For example, at the hearing, Elizabeth Mendoza, a worker-owner of the Beyond Care childcare co-op incubated by the nonprofit Center for Family Life, located in Brooklyns Sunset Park neighborhood, told the Council committee:

In 2008, I had the opportunity to begin working with the cooperative Beyond Care. My life changed completelypersonally, professionally, and economically. The beginning of the cooperative was not easy. No one knew about our co-op; we did volunteer work at organizations and universities and often gave childcare in exchange for opportunities to market our group in the places we volunteered. I had basic English then. I have learned so much more. I have also learned to use computers. My salary is better. I work the amount of time I want to work My first daughter will graduate from college in June. My youngest son is in third grade. The best benefit of all of this is giving my children the opportunity to have a better education.

Mendoza added that the co-op, which had begun with 25 members, had grown to 40 members, while wages had climbed from $10 an hour or less before the co-op formed to $16 an hour.

Beyond Care, of course, was one of a number of worker co-ops that had developed in New York City before 2014, even in the absence of policy support. Now that the city has supported worker co-op development for over five years, what can we say about the policys effectiveness?

The framework established largely followed the vision set forth in FPWAs report. The lead agency ended up being Small Business Services (SBS), one of the two city agencies named in the report. In its first-year report on what ended up being called the Worker Cooperative Business Development Initiative, SBS indicated that, the initiative, which disbursed funds to ten organizations, aimed to share information with prospective entrepreneurs, support existing worker cooperatives, spur the creation of new worker cooperatives, and help small businesses transition into the worker cooperative model.

The initial ten nonprofits involved in product delivery included a couple of national nonprofits that support worker cooperatives (Democracy at Work Institute (DAWI) and ICA Group), a couple of local co-op specific organizations (Bronx Cooperative Development Initiative and Green Worker Cooperatives), a worker co-op-focused loan fund (The Working World), the city co-op trade association (New York City Network of Worker Cooperatives), a nonprofit which had historically been the citys leading worker co-op developer (Center for Family Life), and three community-based nonprofits (FPWA, Make the Road New York, and Urban Justice Center).

Over time, the composition of the nonprofit partners has changed, Two of the three community-based nonprofits (FPWA and Make the Road New York) are no longer directly involved, and Urban Justice Centers role has been taken over by Takeroot Justice, which spun off from the organization. Meanwhile, five new nonprofits have been added to the mix, including two business-support nonprofits (CAMBA Small Business Services and Business Outreach Center Network), the City University of New Yorks community and economic development law clinic, and two anti-poverty nonprofits (Urban Upbound and Workers Justice Project)

Different nonprofits have played different roles. Some nonprofits focus on community outreach and education. For instance, over the past three years of the program, WCBDI-funded nonprofits have conducted educational workshops and trainings that have reached over 8,000 New Yorkers. On the WCBDI website, nonprofits roles are set forth in five distinct categories1) groups that help with worker co-op startups; 2) groups that provide one-on-one support services (business plan development, accounting, etc.); 3) groups that provide worker co-ops with legal support; 4) groups that focus on converting existing businesses into worker co-ops (which, as NPQ has detailed, is an essential strategy for maintaining existing businesses as Baby Boomer owners retire); and 5) one group (the Working World) that helps finance worker co-ops.

While most of the direct project work has been done by and through the nonprofit partners, SBS has played an essential role in helping legitimize worker cooperatives in New York City as a respectable way of operating a business. For instance, in the first year of the program, SBS created and offered a course called Ten Steps to Starting a Worker Cooperative, with sessions held at NYC Business Solutions Centers in Lower Manhattan, Harlem, and the Bronx. The agency also in the first year of the program created a two-page brochure on workers co-ops that remains available at the citys seven SBS offices and on its website.

The Big Apples approach of working with multiple nonprofits reflected the coalition that had testified at City Council back in 2014 and had made passage of a city worker co-op support policy possible. At the same time, it is important to understand how the approach differed from past efforts. When the New York City policy was adopted, the leading philanthropic-backed US worker co-op development approach was the one pursued by the Cleveland Foundation, which had backed the launch of the Evergreen Cooperative network, a centralized model that aimed to launch a group of cooperatives from a single, well-funded incubator nonprofit.

New York Cityperhaps by design, but more likely due to the momentum created by the organizing coalitiontook a different tack. Rather than make one big bet, it made a lot of small ones. This has led to far more rapid creation of cooperatives than what a centralized single incubator model has been able to produce. The diverse network of nonprofits involved also likely helps reach the immigrant workforce that to date has been at the heart of New York Citys worker co-op boom. According to the citys annual reports on the program, in the first year alone 21 new worker cooperatives were formed.

One challenge with the multiple nonprofit approach, though, is that the co-ops by and large formed in New York City have been much smaller than the co-ops created through a centralized single incubator model. While New York Citys program in Fiscal Year 2015 supported 21 co-ops, these co-ops had a total of 141 worker-owners, an average of less than seven worker-owners per co-op. (By contrast, Evergreen has formed three co-ops over the course of a decade, but those three co-ops as of 2018 employed 220 people.)

Despite their small size, however, the New York City co-ops have displayed considerable staying power. As the citys Fiscal Year 2019 report indicates, In its first year, the NYC Council distributed $1.2 million across 10 partner organizations who assisted in the creation of 21 worker-owned cooperatives. Fourteen (67 percent) of those businesses are still in operation surpassing the national five-year survival rate for small businesses (about 50 percent).

It is worth noting that New York Citys model has had broad influence outside the Big Apple. A number of cities have, with tweaks, adopted what Michelle Camou and others have labeled the ecosystem approach. Madison, Wisconsin is one of the more prominent, allocating $3 million over five years to support worker co-op development through a process managed by the Madison Cooperative Development Coalition. Minneapolis, albeit at a smaller scale, has implemented a similar approach. In California, a policy passed in Berkeley last year aligns in a similar direction.

Meanwhile, efforts to strengthen the worker co-op ecosystem continue. Even as the effort in New York City has added more than 100 new worker-owners a year, these are still small numbers in the context of a city population that is close to 8.4 million people. A few years ago, a report by DAWI and the Oakland, California-based Project Equity highlighted three challenges:

For its part, the citys most recent report noted that the worker co-ops that it had surveyed had reported problems, despite city efforts, in being successful in winning city procurement contracts. In response, the city recommends stepped-up efforts to assist co-ops with language translation, with assisting co-ops obtain certification as women and/or people-of-color-owned businesses, and with accessing city bond and financing programs.

In thinking about policy, it is also important to consider that it often helps to focus co-op development in industries where they have been most effective. Generally, as Melissa Hoover, who directs DAWI, pointed out last year, worker co-ops often do best in businesses that are value-driven and rely on teamwork. Co-ops in home healthcare and childcare are two prominent examples of this. As Hoover put it last year, If theres something that says we should do this in a humane or human-centered way, [people] often come to cooperatives because it enacts their values across-the-board and it dovetails with the work theyre trying to do.

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Building a Worker Co-op Ecosystem: Lessons from the Big Apple - Nonprofit Quarterly

Letters: Healthcare industry needs its own digital ecosystem – ModernHealthcare.com

The feature Start me uphighlighted the investments that health systems are making in digital startups and apps. As a chief innovation officer for a large integrated system, I experience the value that these tools bring to providers, patients and members every day.

Yet, I also experience the difficulties of contracting, security reviews and integration with every new app or tool added to our systems digital ecosystem. Our investments in the newest apps and tools has resulted in an increasing digital debt due to a fragmented and cumbersome digital ecosystem that often increases provider workloads, fragments the patient experience and adds IT expense.

Despite these hurdles, health systems must digitally transform by investing in apps to improve care delivery, access and engagement. However, we need a more sophisticated digital ecosystem where apps can live, similar to an Android or iOS of healthcare.

A standardized ecosystem would create common requirements around security, privacy, data-sharing and contracting which would dramatically alter the speed of integration and adoption of tools developed via venture investment. Simply put: Health systems essentially are buying todays apps and putting them on a flip phone.

No single health system can viably fund their own iOS operating system and app store. Thus, we have a digital transformation problem that exceeds the capacity of any single system. Its a problem that feels about as insurmountable as high pharmaceutical costs. Yet, Civica Rx shows us what can happen when health systems come together to address a problem. What Civica is doing for prescription costs and manufacturing, like-minded systems can do for digital transformation.

Dr. Ries RobinsonChief innovation officerPresbyterian Healthcare ServicesAlbuquerque

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Letters: Healthcare industry needs its own digital ecosystem - ModernHealthcare.com

The new financial ecosystem of big banks and big tech – ValueWalk

Banks will be competing for market share against big technology companies over time if they do not create a shared ecosystem by partnering with a big tech company. Banks see creating ecosystems and partnerships with big tech as a natural fit and key to their long-term strategy. While traditional big tech companies such as Apple, and previously Amazon, have been hesitant to get involved in the financial industry because of regulations, they are now partnering with banks like Goldman Sachs, on projects like the Apple card. Banks will look to open architectures and leverage big tech for Externalization and access to client market share.

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At a macro level, banks need to re-platform their businesses and be more digital. Banks are very much in product silos and wedded to legacy technology, especially on the back end. By partnering with big tech companies and leveraging new technologies, they can deliver a better customer experience. The more financial services institutions create platforms, the more they will break out of their silos. Much like Amazon does, banks will use their brand to be customer-facing, and then create platforms and eco-systems of augmented services that utilize their platform and enable them to also contribute to revenue. Big Tech will white-label financial services to expand.

Amazon created a business of third party providers that leverage Amazons scale and technology platform of analytics and data to broaden their reach and serve a broader eco-system under the Amazon brand. Amazon scaled by leveraging three things: User Experience, Data, and Technology. Instead of focusing on growth in adjacencies, Amazon grew by customer demand management and having a scalable platform which allowed them to bolt-on product and services which the customers demanded. These three foundational elements of the banking platform, User Experience, Data, and Technology, are all key to ensure that efforts to develop such an eco-system in financial services are sustainable.

Banks like Goldman have realized its smarter, and more cost-effective in terms of customer acquisition costs, to partner and leverage a customer platform like Amazon or Apple to sell financial services that their end clients will need like loans, credit cards, and financial advice. Its unsurprising to see a forward-thinking bank like Goldman betting big on banking as a service business strategy. These firms believe they can offer the best behind the scenes solution to many non-financial companies as they start offering financial services directly to their clients. Additionally appealing to Goldman, is the ability to can co-mingle its data, AI, and liquidity with a big tech platform like Amazon to drive scale and personalization for end users.

Another example is where banks can partner with a travel agency so the agency becomes part of the banks platform. This allows the bank to become more than a transaction facilitator and to have a personal interaction with the client when they are booking a trip.

Enabling banks to win in an open platform economy includes big data, APIs and business model inventions, organization reengineering and marketing automation. Banks need to get out of their swim lane, whether through open banking (a European phenomenon enabled by APIs) or through bringing other types of partnerships and experiences to the eco-system. Investing in ecosystem dynamics enables banks to play in the non-banking industry. A platform approach can enable new value and revenue streams through partnerships, and opening up the banks capabilities, driving real transformation.

About Publicis Sapient:

Publicis Sapient is a digital transformation partner helping established organizations get to their future, digitally-enabled states, both in the way they work and the way they serve their customers. Publicis Sapient is the digital business transformation hub of Publicis Groupe.

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The new financial ecosystem of big banks and big tech - ValueWalk

To protect ecosystem, improve balance on critical regulatory panel – theday.com

Connecticut law requires the state toreduce greenhouse gas emissions by 80 percentfrom 2001 levels by the year 2050 and to do itwithout discouraging industry or weakening the state's economy. Intermediate goals, including a 45 percent reduction in the next 10 years, are just as ambitious.

The state's Comprehensive Energy Strategy wisely recognizes, however,that in an ecosystem nothing stands alone.Carrying outthe mandaterequires a string of different public and private tactics that willuse energy more efficiently; generate it with fewergreenhouse gas emissions;andfoster elements that balance outemissions.

Energy and the environment are naturallycompeting interests, butone environmental solution can also be the bane ofanother. It is perilously easy to undercut the balance while attempting to make progress in cutting emissions.

To provide expertise on what could happen to an ecosystem is whythe Connecticut Siting Council is statutorily required to have two qualified ecologists on the board. The council's approval is needed for locating "siting" electric generating, transmissionand storage facilities.

Right now the board has two vacancies and one qualified ecologist. By law, the governor appoints five "public members" to the board, among them the two ecologists. Gov. Ned Lamont has yet to appoint at least one more. Energy production proposals are coming in thick and fast, however, and some may cause harm out of proportion to their benefits. The council needs all the expertise it can muster.

Solar panel field siting proposals, in particular,have become a significant subject for the council's agenda. The council has just received a request to reopen a proposal from Greenskies for solar paneling on Oil Mill Road in Waterford,which it denied in 2018.The citizen environmentalist group Save the River-Save the Hills, has fought the proposal, which would clear 75 acres of woodland for 45,976 panels under the latest version.

An East Lyme property ownersued a Greenskies subsidiary over "virtual clearcutting" and siltation of his property and local streams. A member of the Niantic River Watershed Committeetold TheDay last fall that expertise was lacking in the review. Two more eastern Connecticut proposals are coming up. Quinebaug Solar LLC has asked to reopen its application to build a massive 50-megawatt solar voltaic field on 561 acresof 29 privately owned properties in Canterbury and Brooklyn. A much smaller, 1.95-megawatt proposal for 13 acres offShort Hills Road in Old Lyme has caught the attention of environmentalists, who want the siting council and the state Department of Energy and Environmental Protection to hear their viewpoints.

Michael W. Klemens, a seven-year former member of the siting council board, has been sounding alarms about the environmental impact of solar fields when there is clear-cutting as in East Lyme and potentially in Old Lyme and Waterford but even when the site is largely open fields. He asks why the state does not seek to to put such developments along highways, for instance, or in other developed areas where the drainage and habitats are already artificial. It's a good question, and one that the siting council should be considering when asked for approvals.

When the council denied Greenskies'Waterford petition in 2018, it gave three reasons: impact on water quality, storm drainage and wildlife, including birds. What the council will decide about the Oil Mill Road site should dependnot only onwhat it can allow but also on what it should allow, in the big picture.And in a development as huge as the Quinebaug proposal, the effects would inevitably alter the ecology of a pristine part of Connecticut, a tiny state that can't afford to be giving pristineaway.

Above all, don't make things worse.Governor Lamont, appoint one if not two more ecologists to the siting council, and hear their expertise along with that of the engineers and developers.

The Day editorial board meets regularly with political, business and community leaders and convenes weekly to formulate editorial viewpoints. It is composed of President and Publisher Tim Dwyer, Editorial Page Editor Paul Choiniere, Managing Editor Tim Cotter, Staff Writer Julia Bergman and retired deputy managing editor Lisa McGinley. However, only the publisher and editorial page editor are responsible for developing the editorial opinions. The board operates independently from the Day newsroom.

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To protect ecosystem, improve balance on critical regulatory panel - theday.com

Artificial intelligence requires trusted data, and a healthy DataOps ecosystem – ZDNet

Lately, we've seen many "x-Ops" management practices appear on the scene, all derivatives from DevOps, which seeks to coordinate the output of developers and operations teams into a smooth, consistent and rapid flow of software releases. Another emerging practice, DataOps, seeks to achieve a similarly smooth, consistent and rapid flow of data through enterprises. Like many things these days, DataOps is spilling over from the large Internet companies, who process petabytes and exabytes of information on a daily basis.

Such an uninhibited data flow is increasingly vital to enterprises seeking to become more data-driven and scale artificial intelligence and machine learning to the point where these technologies can have strategic impact.

Awareness of DataOps is high. A recent survey of 300 companies by 451 Research finds 72 percent have active DataOps efforts underway, and the remaining 28 percent are planning to do so over the coming year. A majority, 86 percent, are increasing their spend on DataOps projects to over the next 12 months. Most of this spending will go to analytics, self-service data access, data virtualization, and data preparation efforts.

In the report, 451 Research analyst Matt Aslett defines DataOps as "The alignment of people, processes and technology to enable more agile and automated approaches to data management."

The catch is "most enterprises are unprepared, often because of behavioral norms -- like territorial data hoarding -- and because they lag in their technical capabilities -- often stuck with cumbersome extract, transform, and load (ETL) and master data management (MDM) systems," according to Andy Palmer and a team of co-authors in their latest report,Getting DataOps Right, published by O'Reilly. Across most enterprises, data is siloed, disconnected, and generally inaccessible. There is also an abundance of data that is completely undiscovered, of which decision-makers are not even aware.

Here are some of Palmer's recommendations for building and shaping a well-functioning DataOps ecosystem:

Keep it open: The ecosystem in DataOps should resemble DevOps ecosystems in which there are many best-of-breed free and open source software and proprietary tools that are expected to interoperate via APIs." This also includes carefully evaluating and selecting from the raft of tools that have been developed by the large internet companies.

Automate it all:The collection, ingestion, organizing, storage and surfacing of massive amounts of data at as close to a near-real-time pace as possible has become almost impossible for humans to manage. Let the machines do it, Palmer urges. Areas ripe for automaton include "operations, repeatability, automated testing, and release of data." Look to the ways DevOps is facilitating the automation of the software build, test, and release process, he points out.

Process data in both batch and streaming modes. While DataOps is about real-time delivery of data, there's still a place -- and reason -- for batch mode as well. "The success of Kafka and similar design patterns has validated that a healthy next-generation data ecosystem includes the ability to simultaneously process data from source to consumption in both batch and streaming modes," Palmer points out.

Track data lineage: Trust in the data is the single most important element in a data-driven enterprise, and it simply may cease to function without it. That's why well-thought-out data governance and a metadata (data about data) layer is important. "A focus on data lineage and processing tracking across the data ecosystem results in reproducibility going up and confidence in data increasing," says Palmer.

Have layered interfaces. Everyone touches data in different ways. "Some power users need to access data in its raw form, whereas others just want to get responses to inquiries that are well formulated," Palmer says. That's why a layered set of services and design patterns is required for the different personas of users. Palmer says there are three approaches to meeting these multilayered requirements:

Business leaders are increasingly leaning on their technology leaders and teams to transform their organizations into data-driven digital entities that can react to events and opportunities almost instantaneously. The best way to accomplish this -- especially with the meager budgets and limited support that gets thrown out with this mandate -- is to align the way data flows from source to storage.

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Artificial intelligence requires trusted data, and a healthy DataOps ecosystem - ZDNet

Preserve the Sacred Lands of the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem – CounterPunch

Storm over the Gallatins. Photo: Jeffrey St. Clair.

Wilderness designation preserves many values. Designated wilderness is a storehouse for carbon and insurance against climate change. Wilderness preserves critical wildlife habitat and wildlife corridors. Wilderness provides for clean water and clean air. And, of course, designated wilderness protects the scenery and ecosystem integrity that supports Montanas economy.

However, there is yet another value preserved and enhanced by wilderness designation. It demonstrates a commitment to the inherent reverence and spiritual significance of wildlands.

In every human culture, we find that wildlands are at the core of hallowed landscapes. Sacred lands are places where the usual activities of any society are limited, and people approach these places with respect, humility, and awe.

In every culture that I have reviewed, I have found that high mountains are revered terrain. Mount Olympus was the home of the gods to the ancient Greeks. The Zoroastrian culture revered Mount Damvand in Iran. Mount Fuji was venerated by the Shinto religion in Japan. Mount Sinai is central to Judaism traditions. The Incas of Peru thought mountains were portal to the Gods. Machapuchare was a sublime Nepalese mountain worthy of a long pilgrimage to visit. Mount Kilimanjaro in Tanzania was fundamental to African tribal religious beliefs. The ancient Celts of the British Isles honored the forces of nature, and among their sacred mountains was Croagh Patrick in Ireland. The San Francisco Peaks were divine in the natural world of the Navajo. Closer to home is the Crow tribes reverence for the Crazy Mountains by Livingston.

Every culture has a way of mountain worship. In American culture, we have hallowed landscapes as well. Designated wilderness, national parks, and such public spaces are our version of sacred lands.

A common denominator of these lands is that people generally did not live among the sacred lands, but they did visit. And when you visited sacred lands, you did so with respect.

In a sense, the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem is one of our Nations sacred places. The ecological integrity and the spiritual value of this ecosystem are still in jeopardy. As the population of Montana and the country continues to grow, these sacred places become even more critical to our society.

We have a chance to demonstrate our appreciation for sacred places of the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem by designating wild places like the Gallatin Range, Crazy Mountains, Pryor Mountains, Lionhead, and other roadless lands of the Custer Gallatin National Forest as designated wilderness.

Wilderness is our societys way of codifying self-restraint and humility and appreciation for natural processes and landscapes.

The Custer Gallatin National Forest wildlands are essential to our culture, but also vital to the others or the creatures that reside on these lands such as grizzly bear, bighorn sheep, wolverine, elk, trout, on down to butterflies and other insects.

The opportunity may not come again. We, as a society, have an obligation and responsibility to preserve the sacred lands of the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem. We can do this by supporting wilderness designation for the Custer Gallatin National Forest roadless lands.

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Preserve the Sacred Lands of the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem - CounterPunch

How to fall in love with the Apple ecosystem all over again — spend more money and buy new stuff – ZDNet

Regular readers will know that I am giving serious consideration to dumping the iPhone and making a switch to Android. Apple's ecosystem feels buggy and slow, and the Cupertino giant seems to be having trouble keeping up with the fixes. And then there's that constant fear that each update will bring some calamity related to performance or battery life or some other vital part of the system.

Apple AirPods Pro

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But I've discovered a way to fall in love with Apple again. It's easy. Get new hardware.

Must read:Apple's AirPods Pro are the best earbuds you can buy, but for all the wrong reasons

Over the past few weeks, I've been testing a lot of new Apple hardware -- the iPhone 11 Pro Max, the Apple Watch 5, and the AirPods Pro. And you know what, they're all good.

Really good.

So good that it feels like all my issues with the platform have evaporated.

Everything works, and everything feels tightly aligned, and like it was made to work together.

No, I'm not seriously suggesting that people do this, or that make sense to drop many dollars every year on hardware. Still, it's interesting to notice this side-effect of Apple's aggressive upgrade cycles.

But I do know people who do this, and it is interesting to observe that they are much happier with their tech.

But then, if you are willing to spend thousands a year upgrading tech, you've likely successfully convinced yourself that this is a good move.

Is this a deliberate scheme on Apple's part? Sell us new shiny stuff, then gradually, over months, give us reasons to feel distressed with our once-loved devices.

No idea (although I have a hard time believing that this has escaped Apple's notice), but I have no doubt that this, combined with the fact that shifting platforms is not an easy endeavor, helps drive bountiful quarterly sales.

Apple's problem seems to be that it can't keep older hardware feeling good for long. Batteries wear out, and the silicon starts to groan under the weight of operating system updates and newer apps.

But I also know that come iOS 13, watchOS 7, and the slew of firmware updates that the AirPods Pro will undoubtedly get over the coming months, this hardware too would start to feel old, slow, and buggy and the ecosystem would once again become fragmented and disjointed.

That would signal that it was, once again, time to get new hardware.

And so, the cycle of consumerism continues.

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How to fall in love with the Apple ecosystem all over again -- spend more money and buy new stuff - ZDNet

IBM: building a digital ecosystem to support the mine of the future – Mining Global – Mining News, Magazine and Website

By Daniel Brightmore . Feb 05, 2020, 6:46AM

Technology, in its various stages of evolution, is our business at IBM, reflects Manish Chawla, Global Managing Director for Energy & Natural Resources. We've been involved in mining for decades, and just like in any other industry weve re-invented our offerings to add services, software, data handling, cloud and AI capabilities. Our focus has progressed from IT and core functions to meet the needs of business transformation projects such as SAP implementations or process outsourcing, to support the mining industry in managing data as a strategic asset; helping the industry to capture, monetise and secure it.

IBMs portfolio features a set of offerings targeting enterprise & operations transformation, outsourcing, SAP implementations, and helping clients use their data to their specific strategic advantage. Look at technologies such as blockchain for traceability in the supply chain, Chawla adds. Today, we are a full-service partner focused on the employee experience, while using technology for transforming various functions across a mining organisation.

Chawla notes a recognition from the mining industry that technology can now solve specific problems from connectivity through to autonomous solutions. Now were able to harness the data, the C-suite can see the importance of digitisation and how it will drive the business in the future, he says. A technology-savvy and enabled mining enterprise is critical for attracting and supporting the workforce of the future. How do you get people out of the unsafe conditions of underground mines in remote areas and make the industry attractive to a new generation? Technology holds the key.

We believe industrial businesses are ready to move towards business reinvention: scaling digital and AI and embedding it in the business. It's about hybrid cloud, moving mission critical applications from experimentation to true end-to-end transformation. The key to winning is centred around what we at IBM call the Cognitive Enterprise. - Maxelino Nelson, Senior Executive for Industry Innovation, Global Solutions, & Business Strategy at IBM

A recent study by the World Economic Forum forecast that over the next decade the mining industry will create further value of $190bn from additional transformational measures. When these strategies are executed in a more integrated fashion, inside-out and outside-in transformation, we believe businesses will be at a great advantage from humans and machines working together, explains Maxelino Nelson, Senior Executive for Industry Innovation, Global Solutions, & Business Strategy at IBM. This will outperform humans or machines working on their own. Its a great opportunity for us and our mining clients to solve some of the societal challenges relating to sustainability while developing the mining sectors ecosystem to partner with IBM to truly transform the business in a more holistic way.

Nelson notes that over the past 5-10 years the digital transformation journeys IBMs clients have taken have been characterised by AI and experimentation with customer-facing apps; activities that have been driving the cloud during chapter one of a digital reinvention.

What will chapter two hold? We believe industrial businesses are ready to move towards business reinvention: scaling digital and AI and embedding it in the business. It's about hybrid cloud, moving mission critical applications from experimentation to true end-to-end transformation. The key to winning is centred around what we at IBM call the Cognitive Enterprise.

With the initial trends of the first chapter maturing, Nelson maintains were on the cusp of the next big shift in the business architecture. It will be driven by the pervasive application of AI and cognitive technologies, combined with data, to the core processes and workflows across mining organisations alongside important functional areas such as finance, procurement, talent and supply chain. The results of this revolutionary change will be defined as the Cognitive Enterprise.

Companies that get this journey right are on the way to being a Cognitive Enterprise, affirms Nelson. In our experience, critical areas for natural resources industries to get right on this journey are openness and collaboration, integration, intelligent workflows and cultural skills. In a time of continued volatility and disruption, open innovation and co-creation are vital to be able to partner across ecosystems and learn from other industries to achieve fundamental transformation as 90% of the jobs in mining are changed, not necessarily replaced, through technology.

How is IBM helping companies embrace Mining 4.0 and support the move towards the digital mine of the future? We've developed a data-driven productivity platform with Sandvik, a leading supplier of underground mining equipment. This partnership has seen us connect their assets, their equipment, to our cloud to be able to pull data off. The value proposition to a mining company is not only to get data from the Sandvik equipment, but also from other vendor feeds, explains Chawla. Interoperability as well as the open data standard is critical for a mine operator. They get visibility to production information, help with equipment, maintenance analytics and improved uptime.

Built on IBM technologies, Sandvik offers a platform for underground mine optimisation, both for production and data/maintenance related aspects. We're also the primary data analytics platform and AI software services partner for Vale for where they have an AI centre of competence, Chawla reveals. We're doing an extensive set of use cases with them, including route optimisation for trucks, testing safety use cases and optimisation of smelters. IBM is also working with Newmont Goldcorp to help them better understand their ore body, allowing them to reduce the time spent by geologists in analysis and data collection to determine where to guide the next drilling campaign. We've reduced inaccuracy by 95% with the geology data platform that we call cognitive ore body discovery, says Chawla.

IBM is committed to supporting the sustainability efforts of mining operations across the globe. By using intelligent workflows on the blockchain to address social sustainability in the context of the entire supply chain, miners can demonstrate social responsibility and also begin to build a culture of innovation, believes Chawla. The work we are doing on the Responsible Sourcing Blockchain Network (RSBN) with RCS Global allows businesses to track cobalt from industrial and mining companies to ensure that they are working responsibly, whether it's in the Congo or other parts of the world, across the supply chain from mine to smelter to battery manufacturers and to automotive OEMs.

IBM are seeing many automotive OEMs joining the platform along with key industrial scale miners operating cobalt mines in Congo who wish to augment their use of OECD (Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development) responsible supply chain guidelines. The company is looking to extend the network to other metals such as tin, tantalum, and gold, which are all important to the new economy emerging for minerals associated with electronics and EVs.

Chawla notes the demand, driven by the rise of EVs and electronic brands, for an active, working and open democratic network to ascertain responsible sourcing and support artisanal miners to be able to operate safely in a fair-trade manner.

IBM is also working with Minehub a mining and metals trading platform helping it streamline operations with various business partners across the mining ecosystem. The MineHub platform is not a market-maker; it allows buyers and sellers to agree on trade. It comes to play once the trade has been set and the terms have been agreed, explains Chawla. This helps to improve the operational efficiencies, logistics and financing, while concentrating the supply chain from the mine to the buyer.

MineHub has been working in collaboration with IBM and other industry participants across a value chain that includes the likes of ING Bank, leading precious metals firm Ocean Partners and Capstone Mining. Minehub also features clearing houses, refiners, smelters, financiers and other providers like Kimura joining along with royalty holders and streamers such as Lincoln. A tier one miner is also set to trial the platform. Chawla notes they are all benefiting from the efficiencies of the platform, all providing key pieces of information to these transactions.

When it comes to digital innovation across the mining panorama, Chawla says its still a challenge to ensure all parties are aligned so that everyone benefits. Its important to get centre-led IT and overall C-suite leadership both working towards the improvement of operating assets, he says. With much of the work we do, we also think hard about the experience of frontline employees and incorporate this into the design of the solutions to ease adoption. Weve taken this approach with Sandvik where weve done design sessions at the mine site with shift supervisors, truck drivers and mine managers.

A key obstacle to overcome in order to successfully integrate digital innovation is access from a network perspective and being able to capture the data. Many companies are upgrading their networks and 5G is exploding, notes Chawla. Allied to this he believes measured interoperability is vital. Mining companies operate differing fleets from a range of vendors with equipment right across the value chain. Each vendor is pitching their own solutions. Do they go with one of the vendors? Or do they go with developing their own platform? And then, will the vendors open up and share the data that the mine operators and ourselves can leverage in partnership? This complex ecosystem becomes a challenge. If it's approached in collaboration with interoperability in mind, then you can accelerate. But that is a continued two steps forward, three steps back kind of situation.

IBM is pushing forward in 2020 to meet its goals around driving innovative solutions for the energy and natural resources industries. We want to infuse more data and AI capabilities into their operations to take them live, pledges Chawla. We will be continuing our work on three specific new platforms to further enhance the idea of ecosystems coming together to drive tangible outcomes for our clients in all the vectors of mining. Chawlas team also plan to nurture and scale IBMs cybersecurity offering to secure operating technology and systems. As more plants, more mines, and more equipment get connected, the cyber threat increases, so were pleased with the tremendous progress were already making to secure operations as they grow.

Nelson confirms IBM is currently working with a large oil and gas super-major for potential partnership to co-create a digital mining services integrated platform. This platform is tendered around developing a different model for how mining companies consume digital solutions and services, and how mining providers and solutions developers can make them available to the industry. It is a game changer and it shows how upbeat and interesting the mining industry has become to wider industries."

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IBM: building a digital ecosystem to support the mine of the future - Mining Global - Mining News, Magazine and Website

Organizations only protect 60% of their business ecosystem, Accenture finds – CIO Dive

Dive Brief:

Data privacy regulators consider the health of business cybersecurity programs when calculating fines. Companies face fines even if they have extensive cyber hygiene.

Regulators also consider how long it takes companies to recover when calculating fines. More than half of leaders experienced a breach for more than 24 hours, whereas 97% of non-leaders said the same, according to Accenture.

Any lag time in remediation deepens a company's chance of fines under the General Data Protection Regulation or the California Consumer Privacy Act. While GDPR went into effect in 2018, most of its penalties finesare still in the "intent to fine" stage,leaving room for companies to negotiate with regulators.

Early detection is a company's best defense from a breach. However, less than one-fourth of non-leaders are able to detect a breach within a day, compared to 88% of leaders, according to Accenture.

Samantha Schwartz/CIO Dive, data from Accenture

Data lives in motion, flowing between business partners and security systems. Bad actors find holes in data aggregators, brokers, contractors, or other service providers that sit between customers and the companies they do business with.

Quest Diagnostics and LabCorp'sdata breach was caused by a weak link in their business ecosystem: their billing collector. The billing company was compromised for eight months and left the two companies answering to Congress. The companies' third-party risk management was in question, their internal security programs were not.

Only 15% of organizations have some degree of confidence in how they mitigate supply chain threats, according to Microsoft. Whitelisting, a mechanism for approving connections, is a solution for assessing third parties. With whitelisting, transactions are denied by default.

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Organizations only protect 60% of their business ecosystem, Accenture finds - CIO Dive

Structo Partners with Pro3dure to Extend applications in the Velox ecosystem – Manufactur3D

Above: The Structo Velox 3D Printer from Structo/Image Credit: Structo

Structo, a dental 3D printing solutions provider and the manufacturer behind Velox the worlds first all-in-one 3D printer announced a partnership with German 3D printing materials company, pro3dure. This partnership will see Velox users gain access to pro3dures range of dental 3D printing materials. Structo continues to collaborate with industry partners in various areas to build upon Veloxs in-office dental 3D printing ecosystem.

We are committed to continue developing the Velox ecosystem of hardware, software and materials to empower the delivery of same day dentistry explains Huub van Esbroeck, Founder at Structo. Todays announcement will see Velox users gain access to pro3dures range of industry-leading dental 3D printing materials which gives them a range of options for their in-office 3D printing needs.

This collaboration will see pro3dures 3D printing material for Splints, Surgical Guide, Indirect Bonding Trays, and Temporaries calibrated and made available to print on the Velox 3D printer in dental practices with more applications coming soon. On top of Structos proprietary dental model material (Structomer Model), this partnership opens a whole range of new applications for Velox users.

We strive to make our range of dental materials as widely available as possible, said Dr. Martin Klare, CEO of pro3dure. The Structo Velox is a revolutionary ecosystem that will change how 3D printing is adopted in the dental office and we are proud to introduce our range of 3D printing resins with the worlds largest spectrum of dental applications available on that platform.

Speaking about the partnership, Huub notes the importance of working with partners like pro3dure to continue pushing the envelope of chairside 3D printing in dentistry. This is another step for us to provide more options to all Velox users worldwide and we will continue working with industry leaders to add more value and streamline the chairside 3D printing workflow for our industry.

We started off with just the hardware that does the print, wash and cure cycle of a 3D printing workflow. With more partnerships like these, we are confident that the Velox ecosystem will be able to empower dentists to deliver better patient care with revolutionary new solutions, Huub concluded.

About Manufactur3D Magazine:Manufactur3D is an online magazine on 3D Printing. Visit ourGlobal Newspage for more updates on Global 3D Printing News. To stay up-to-date about the latest happenings in the 3D printing world,like usonFacebookor follow us onLinkedIn.

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Structo Partners with Pro3dure to Extend applications in the Velox ecosystem - Manufactur3D