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Alphabet -owned Waymo announced Monday that it will start testing its autonomous vehicles in Tokyo in early 2025, the company's first step toward international expansion. > Philadelphia news 24/7: Watch NBC10 free wherever you are Waymo hasn't committed to start commercial service in Tokyo yet, but the robotaxi developer will partner with Japan's largest taxi operator, Nihon Kotsu, and taxi app GO to start testing its Jaguar I-PACE vehicles in Tokyo's streets. To start, Nihon Kotsu drivers will manually operate the Waymo vehicles to map key areas of the Japanese capital, including Minato, Shinjuku, Shibuya, Chiyoda, Chūō, Shinagawa, and Kōtō. Data from the manned test drives will help train the company's AI systems. Waymo will also test its robotaxis on a closed course in the U.S. built to mimic driving conditions in Japan. This is the first phase of the partnerships, which will last several quarters, Waymo told CNBC, adding that it expects to remain in Japan for an extended period. "Our upcoming road trip to Tokyo gives us the chance to work alongside local partners, government officials, and community groups to understand the new landscape," Waymo said in a statement. "We'll learn how Waymo can serve Tokyo's residents and become a beneficial part of the city's transportation ecosystem." Nihon Kotsu will oversee the management and servicing of Waymo's vehicles in Japan, the companies said. Waymo announced a series of expansions across the U.S. in 2024. Earlier this month, the company announced new testing in Miami in 2025, it made its driverless ride hail service available across Los Angeles in November, and in September, it announced planned expansions into Austin and Atlanta in partnership with Uber . The move into Japan marks the company's first in a left-hand traffic market. Both the Japanese national government and Tokyo Metropolitan government see driverless technology as a potential boon to the country's aging population, according to research by the World Economic Forum . Tokyo has designated certain areas as "test zones" for self-driving cars hoping to hasten the arrival of safe driverless transportation systems there. Several developers are working on autonomous vehicles in Japan, including local startup Tier IV and ZMP, a robotics company that is testing delivery vehicles and buses in Tokyo. Monet Technologies, which is partly owned by Toyota , announced plans to test a self-driving taxi service in Tokyo's Odaiba district earlier this year. Waymo's Japan expansion announcement comes a week after General Motors announced it was abandoning its Cruise robotaxi division . Honda, an outside investor in Cruise, told CNBC that it aimed to launch a driverless ride-hail service in Japan in early 2026 but would re-assess those plans and make adjustments if needed. Prior to GM's retreat from robotaxis, Cruise had been one of Waymo's primary domestic competitors. WATCH: GM pulls the plug on robotaxi plan
McGregor must pay $250K to woman who says he raped her, civil jury rulesDell expands its range of PowerEdge servers to help with AI workloads Integrating AMD processors, some of the solutions offer big boosts to efficiency New servers will be available for purchase soon Dell is looking to address the growing need for scalable, flexible and high performance infrastructure with a new PowerEdge server portfolio. By integrating the latest AMD 5th Generation EPYC processors and advanced cooling systems, Dell is equipping enterprises with the tools needed to stay competitive. The PowerEdge XE7745 server will be released in January 2025, while the PowerEdge R6715, R7715, R6725, and R7725 servers will be available as early as November 2024. PowerEdge servers for enterprise AI workloads One of the new offerings is the Dell PowerEdge XE7745 which is designed to support up to eight double-width or 16 single-width PCIe GPUs, utilizing AMD's 5th Generation EPYC processors . It comes in a 4U air-cooled chassis and is engineered specifically for AI inferencing, model fine-tuning, and high-performance computing (HPC). The server also features eight additional Gen 5.0 PCIe slots for network connectivity. In addition, the PowerEdge R6725 and R7725 servers also use AMD 5th Generation EPYC processors and offer greater scalability for enterprises. Ptomized to handle high-demand workloads, Dell claims the R7725 server can deliver up to a 66% performance increase and a 33% boost in efficiency at the higher end of the performance spectrum. All three of these platforms are capable of supporting up to 50% more cores, with a reported 37% improvement in performance per core. These performance upgrades offer enterprises the potential to consolidate older infrastructure, reducing the need for multiple servers and cutting CPU power consumption by up to 65%. Dell has also introduced the PowerEdge R6715 and R7715 servers, both powered by AMD’s 5th Generation EPYC processors. These servers bring further efficiency gains and offer up to 37% more drive capacity, increasing storage density. These single-socket servers support various configurations, with up to 24 DIMMs (Dual In-line Memory Modules) to maximize performance. Are you a pro? Subscribe to our newsletter Sign up to the TechRadar Pro newsletter to get all the top news, opinion, features and guidance your business needs to succeed! Dell Technologies will continue supporting the latest AMD Instinct accelerators and IT teams will also benefit from the updated Integrated Dell Remote Access Controller (iDRAC). One key addition is Dell Generative AI Solutions with AMD, which integrates the PowerEdge XE9680 server and AMD Instinct MI300X accelerators, which aim to accelerate AI inferencing and customization, particularly in areas such as retrieval augmented generation (RAG), with these systems reducing time-to-value by up to 86%. Also, the Dell Enterprise Hub on Hugging Face now supports the PowerEdge XE9680 server, allowing for easier deployment of models such as Llama and Mixtral. These models are optimized to enhance AI inferencing performance and leverage Hugging Face's Text Generation Inference (TGI) back-end. “By integrating AMD technology into the latest Dell servers, AI solutions and services through the Dell AI Factory, we’re providing the performance and efficiencies enterprises need today and in the future,” said Arthur Lewis, president, Infrastructure Solutions Group, Dell Technologies. “Together with AMD, we are setting new standards in AI performance, giving enterprises powerful and cost-effective solutions essential for modern data-driven environments," Lewis concluded. Via HPCwire Take a look at the best virtual machine software Dell hacker says they can directly attack company servers These are the best virtual desktop services
Stock market today: Wall Street hits records despite tariff talk
Susy Diaz He is one of the best-known people in Peruvian entertainment, standing out for his participation in television programs, his musical career and his time in politics as a congressman. For years, he has been in the public eye for his outgoing personality. However, in a recent Mundo Latino podcast in the United States, she shared a painful revelation about a confession from her father, which moved her deeply. Susy Díaz reveals that her ‘father’ is not her biological father In an emotional interview, Díaz revealed the following: “My daddy, before he died, told me, ‘daughter, I’m not your dad, tell your mom.’ And I said, ‘Really, Dad, you’re not lying to me?'” The former congresswoman assured that, although her father’s words surprised her deeply, she did not believe him at the time, because he always treated her like his daughter, and according to her words, he conceited her and loved her more than everyone. However, the anguish came when, when she told what happened to her mother, the response was completely different from what she expected. “My mother yelled at me and said, ‘How can you give her money if you’re her daughter? She threw me out. That’s something I have here. And it hurts,’ she said with tears and a broken voice. Susy Díaz asks her real father to look for her The confession left the Peruvian woman with a deep emotional void, an unanswered question that still torments her. In the podcast, he shared how he sometimes feels the need to find his real father. “Sometimes I see white men, older than me, and I wonder, is it my dad?” he said. The search for his identity has been a constant in his life, and although he has managed to build a career and a public life full of brilliant moments, the lack of answers about his origin remains an open wound. “Sometimes I ask God, I say, that my dad looked for me . (...) And that’s life, life, not everything is happiness,” he concluded. Susy Díaz is currently 61 years old. Photo: El Popular How did Susy Díaz begin her artistic career on Peruvian television? In 1984, Susy Díaz began her career as a secretary at Panamericana Televisión. It was in this environment where she took her first steps on television, participating in the comedy program ‘Risas y Salsa’, where her charismatic personality quickly made her stand out. During the second half of the eighties, he established himself as a regular figure in several comedy programs on Peruvian television, collaborating on channels such as Frecuencia Latina and América Televisión. In the nineties, she took a turn in her career and assumed the role of host of the musical program ‘Ritmo Tropical’ on Channel 7. During that same time, she began a romantic relationship with the renowned musician and composer Augusto Polo Campos. From that relationship, their daughter was born, Flor de María de los Milagros Polo Díaz, known in the public sphere as Flor Polo Díaz. Susy Díaz was a congresswoman in 1995. Photo: Exitosa When was Susy Díaz’s autobiographical film trained? The film ‘Susy, a vedette in Congress’ premiered on Thursday, October 26, 2023. The story of Susy Díaz was produced by SYN Entertainment and Star Films. Join our entertainment channel
Stock market today: Wall Street rises with Nvidia as bitcoin bursts above $99,000What Snoop wants: Arizona Bowl gives NIL opportunities to players for Colorado State, Miami (Ohio)NEW YORK (AP) — U.S. stocks rose to records Tuesday after Donald Trump’s latest talk about tariffs created only some ripples on Wall Street, even if they could roil the global economy were they to take effect. The S&P 500 climbed 0.6% to top the all-time high it set a couple weeks ago. The Dow Jones Industrial Average added 123 points, or 0.3%, to its own record set the day before, while the Nasdaq composite gained 0.6% as Microsoft and Big Tech led the way. Stock markets abroad mostly fell after President-elect Trump said he plans to impose sweeping new tariffs on Mexico, Canada and China once he takes office. But the movements were mostly modest. Stock indexes were down 0.1% in Shanghai and nearly flat in Hong Kong, while Canada’s main index edged down by less than 0.1%. Trump has often praised the use of tariffs , but investors are weighing whether his latest threat will actually become policy or is just an opening point for negotiations. For now, the market seems to be taking it more as the latter. The consequences otherwise for markets and the global economy could be painful. Unless the United States can prepare alternatives for the autos, energy products and other goods that come from Mexico, Canada and China, such tariffs would raise the price of imported items all at once and make households poorer, according to Carl Weinberg and Rubeela Farooqi, economists at High Frequency Economics. They would also hurt profit margins for U.S. companies, while raising the threat of retaliatory tariffs by other countries. And unlike tariffs in Trump’s first term, his latest proposal would affect products across the board. General Motors sank 9%, and Ford Motor fell 2.6% because both import automobiles from Mexico. Constellation Brands, which sells Modelo and other Mexican beer brands in the United States, dropped 3.3%. The value of the Mexican peso fell 1.8% against the U.S. dollar. Beyond the pain such tariffs would cause U.S. households and businesses, they could also push the Federal Reserve to slow or even halt its cuts to interest rates. The Fed had just begun easing its main interest rate from a two-decade high a couple months ago to offer support for the job market . While lower interest rates can boost the economy, they can also offer more fuel for inflation. “Many” officials at the Fed’s last meeting earlier this month said they should lower rates gradually, according to minutes of the meeting released Tuesday afternoon. The talk about tariffs overshadowed another mixed set of profit reports from U.S. retailers that answered few questions about how much more shoppers can keep spending. They’ll need to stay resilient after helping the economy avoid a recession, despite the high interest rates imposed by the Fed to get inflation under control. A report on Tuesday from the Conference Board said confidence among U.S. consumers improved in November, but not by as much as economists expected. Kohl’s tumbled 17% after its results for the latest quarter fell short of analysts’ expectations. CEO Tom Kingsbury said sales remain soft for apparel and footwear. A day earlier, Kingsbury said he plans to step down as CEO in January. Ashley Buchanan, CEO of Michaels and a retail veteran, will replace him. Best Buy fell 4.9% after likewise falling short of analysts’ expectations. Dick’s Sporting Goods topped forecasts for the latest quarter thanks to a strong back-to-school season, but its stock lost an early gain to fall 1.4%. Still, more stocks rose in the S&P 500 than fell. J.M. Smucker had one of the biggest gains and climbed 5.7% after topping analysts’ expectations for the latest quarter. CEO Mark Smucker credited strength for its Uncrustables, Meow Mix, Café Bustelo and Jif brands. Big Tech stocks also helped prop up U.S. indexes. Gains of 3.2% for Amazon and 2.2% for Microsoft were the two strongest forces lifting the S&P 500. All told, the S&P 500 rose 34.26 points to 6,021.63. The Dow gained 123.74 to 44,860.31, and the Nasdaq composite climbed 119.46 to 19,174.30. In the bond market, Treasury yields held relatively steady following their big drop from a day before driven by relief following Trump’s pick for Treasury secretary. The yield on the 10-year Treasury inched up to 4.29% from 4.28% late Monday, but it’s still well below the 4.41% level where it ended last week. In the crypto market, bitcoin continued to pull back after topping $99,000 for the first time late last week. It’s since dipped back toward $91,000, according to CoinDesk. It’s a sharp turnaround from the bonanza that initially took over the crypto market following Trump’s election. That boom had also appeared to have spilled into some corners of the stock market. Strategists at Barclays Capital pointed to stocks of unprofitable companies, along with other areas that can be caught up in bursts of optimism by smaller-pocketed “retail” investors. AP Business Writer Elaine Kurtenbach contributed. Copyright 2024 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission. Get the latest local business news delivered FREE to your inbox weekly.
Etsy CTO Kumar Rachana sells $60,000 in stock
Osisko Metals Acquires Additional Claims Near Gaspé CopperConservative Party of B.C. Leader John Rustad faces a test after 13 members of his caucus have asked him to essentially discipline Conservative MLA Elenore Sturko for comments that she made about a former Vancouver Police Board member. The signed letter published by radio host Jas Johal on X Thursday (Dec. 5) calls on Rustad to "invite" Sturko to "offer" Comfort Sakoma-Fadugba a written apology after Sturko had criticized her, following Sakoma-Fadugba's controversial remarks about the nature of Canadian society. Sakoma-Fadugba left her position Nov. 22 after several social media posts linked to her became public. Screenshots of the Instagram stories linked to Sakoma-Fadugba show posts lamenting the loss of Christian values in the face of immigration and criticized "woke culture" as well gender transitions. The alleged statements cost Sakoma-Fadugba her job on the police board and drew criticism from various corners of the political spectrum, including Sturko, a former RCMP officer and member of the LGBTQ2S+ community. “When we have statements being made that erode the public’s trust, or their comfort with their police service, it makes it that much harder on the front-line officers," Sturko told the CBC in November. But this statement did not sit well with her 13 colleagues, calling on Rustad to ask Sturko for the apology "and to encourage the Vancouver Police Board to advance conciliatory discussions with (Sakoma-Fadugba)." But that is not their only demand. "If Ms. Sturko declines your invitation, we ask that you offer this apology and encouragement on behalf of the Conservative caucus," they write. This double-demand appears to put Rustad in a double-bind. He either follows the demands from this part of his caucus ostensibly aimed at one of their own or he undermines the position of Sturko by issuing an apology on her behalf. "The way he responds will tell us something about where his own loyalties lie," UBC political scientist Stewart Prest said. "We do know that he is quite supportive of articulations of these kinds of more critical views of modernity ... so it may be that he has a certain amount of sympathy with the letter writers and his response will tell us whether that's the case. At the same time, a leader has another responsibility to the larger caucus as well. It may be that there are other members of the caucus who feel (Sturko) was quite correct in offering that assessment, and then has nothing to apologize for." Found within the letter is also a larger expression of sympathy for Sakoma-Fadugba's statements and a request to Rustad to give those views room by reminding him of what the signatories consider Rustad's own views to be. "The posts express views many Conservatives (including Conservative MLAs and staff) hold in support for parental rights, religious faith, and the pursuit of shared Canadian values," it reads. "Under your leadership, the Conservative Party of BC has consistently denounced 'cancel culture' and stood for the Charter rights British Columbians enjoy to free expression and freedom of religion," it reads. "The very first question you raised in the (legislature) as leader was in defence of parental rights." “Will the minister admit this SOGI 123 has been divisive and an assault on parents’ rights and a distraction to student education?” Rustad asked on Oct. 3, 2023. That question drew a rebuke from Premier David Eby, who called the question "outrageous" in accusing Rustad of leveraging children for culture-war purposes. “Shame on him," Eby said. "Choose another question." Prest called the letter a "deliberately provocative approach" that speaks to the ideological divisions within the party now for everyone to see. "It's putting right out in the open something we knew was going to be part of this, this challenging political coalition bringing together more populist-style conservatives with more, if you like, centrist or politically moderate types such as (Sturko)." None of the 13 signatories once sat with Sturko when she was part of BC United and all were elected on Oct. 19 as first time Conservative candidates. Of note, is also the geographical representation of the MLAs. Eleven signatories represent ridings outside of Metro Vancouver and Greater Victoria including areas in the Fraser Valley and the Okanagan. Three signatories – Dallas Brodie (Vancouver-Quilchena), Brent Chapman (Surrey-South) and Anna Kindy (North Island) – have also found their names in the news over comments that they had made before or during the election campaign, with Chapman being perhaps the most widely reported one following his comments about Palestinian children made in 2015. "I would suggest that we are seeing to emerge, perhaps the makings of which you could almost call a Freedom Caucus in the (Conservative Party of B.C.), the sense that there's a group within a group that looks at the world quite differently than other members of that caucus," Prest said. This is not the first time that Sturko has been the object of criticism from within the Conservative Party of B.C. While still with B.C. United, Conservative candidate Paul Ratchford had called her a "woke, lesbian, social justice warrior." At the same time, Sturko had also been critical of the Conservatives, while still with B.C. United. In early October 2023, Sturko called on Rustad to apologize after appearing to draw a comparison with harms caused by residential schools and parental concerns about SOGI 123. Rustad denied making such a comparison. Sturko also called on Rustad to apologize after he had referred to being LGBTQ2S+ as a "lifestyle" in a media interview. When asked to comment on the letter from her colleagues, Sturko deferred to Rustad. "This letter was addressed to John," she said. "I'm going to allow him the opportunity to speak to it at this time." Black Press Media has reached out to the Conservative Party of B.C., including Rustad's spokesperson and Rustad himself for comment.Commanders place kicker Austin Seibert on injured reserveExciting Times for EV Lovers! Xpeng Debuts in Australia with a Grand Opening.
Scorpio Daily Horoscope Today, November 27, 2024 predicts new business dealsDoughty scores 17 in Indiana State's 83-80 win against Iona
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