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Ronaldskk.

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  1. This post cannot be displayed because it is in a password protected forum. Enter Password
  2. I don't know if it will be accepted but I'm going to make it known anyway, it's something a bit simple but I think it could be a great incentive for administrators from administrator to owner, they should implement a points system. where if an admin logs in for 1 full week during the night to do an activity, they would be rewarded with 500 points, so admins would be more interested in logging in during the night since during these hours there are not many admins and Players can do whatever without supervision, it's a bit simple but I think that would make a difference.
  3. https://www.lexhaminsurance.co.uk/blog/top-10-new-motorcycles/ Next, we have the Moto Guzzi Stelvio, the ‘new’ adventure bike from the Eagle brand which reignites the iconic Stelvio name of old, using the new liquid-cooled 1042cc transverse-twin as used in the V100 Mandello engine – providing you with 113.4 bhp and 105 Nm of torque. The Stelvio made a debut appearance at EICMA, but unfortunately it didn’t make an appearance at Motorcycle Live… it’s due to land in the UK ready for a 2024 launch. What makes this new bike intriguing is its application of engine and electronic gadgetry (including newly added PFF radar), providing state-of-the-art tourability with the added possibility of jaunts off-road. Though it is 246 kg wet, and by all means a big bike (so smaller riders beware). As of writing, the price of the Stelvio isn’t confirmed for the UK market, though it appears to be set at $16,390 in the US. We’d guess the price may start at around £15,000. Want a video? Here's 7 things you need to know about the Moto Guzzi Stelvio! Power: 113.4 BHP Weight: 246 kg (wet) Seat Height: 830mm Tank Size: 21 L Price: £15,000 (Guess) Pros: ‎ Unique engine character Can be equipped with radar assistance gadgetry Stunning! Cons: ‎ Tall and heavy, not for the faint-hearted Perhaps not the ideal adventure motorcycle No price announced (as of writing)
  4. https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c78dyryreyxo Chioma is adamant that Hope, the baby boy she is holding in her arms, is her son.  After eight years of failed attempts to conceive, she sees him as her miracle baby. “I’m the owner of my baby,” she says defiantly. She’s sitting next to her husband, Ike, in the office of a Nigerian state official who spends the best part of an hour interrogating the couple. As the commissioner for women affairs and social welfare in Anambra state, Ify Obinabo has plenty of experience in resolving family disputes - but this is no ordinary disagreement. Five members of Ike’s family, who are also present in the room, do not believe Hope is the couple’s biological child, as Chioma and Ike claim. Chioma claims to have “carried” the child for about 15 months. The commissioner and Ike’s family are in disbelief at the absurdity of the claim. Chioma says she faced pressure from Ike’s family to conceive. They even asked him to marry another woman. In her desperation, she visited a “clinic” offering an unconventional “treatment” - an outlandish and disturbing scam preying on women desperate to become mothers that involves the trafficking of babies. The BBC was allowed by authorities to sit in on the commissioner's discussion with Chioma as part of our investigation into the cryptic pregnancy scam. We have changed the names of Chioma, Ike and others in this article to protect them from reprisal in their communities. State commissioner Ify Obinabo, wearing a brown dress with gold embroidery, listens to Chioma give her account of what happened. Chioma's back is in the foreground, out of focus. State commissioner Ify Obinabo is trying to crack down on the scam Nigeria has one of the highest birth rates in the world, with women often facing social pressure to conceive and even ostracisation or abuse if they cannot. Under this pressure, some women go to extremes to realise their dream of motherhood. For over a year, BBC Africa Eye has been investigating the “cryptic pregnancy” scam. Scammers posing as doctors or nurses convince women that they have a “miracle fertility treatment” guaranteed to get them pregnant. The initial “treatment” usually costs hundreds of dollars and consists of an injection, a drink, or a substance inserted into the vagina. None of the women or officials we spoke to during our investigation know for sure what is in these drugs. But some women have told us they led to changes in their bodies - such as swollen stomachs - which further convinced them they were pregnant. Women given the “treatment” are warned not to visit any conventional doctors or hospitals, as no scan or pregnancy test would detect “the baby”, which the scammers claim is growing outside the womb. When it’s time to “deliver” the baby, women are told labour will only begin once they are induced with a “rare and expensive drug”, requiring further payment. Accounts of how the “delivery” happens vary, but all are disturbing. Some are sedated only to wake up with a Caesarean-like incision mark. Others say they are given an injection that causes a drowsy, hallucinatory state in which they believe they’re giving birth. Either way, the women end up with babies they are supposed to have given birth to. Chioma tells commissioner Obinabo that when her time to “deliver” came, the so-called doctor injected her in the waist and told her to push. She does not spell out how she ended up with Hope, but says the delivery was “painful”. "Dr Ruth" sits in the dark, lit by torchlight, wearing a white trouser suit "Dr Ruth" runs a fake pregnancy clinic in the state of Anambra Our team manages to infiltrate one of these secretive “clinics” - connecting with a woman known as “Dr Ruth” to her clients - by posing as a couple who have been trying to conceive for eight years. This so-called "Dr Ruth" runs her clinic every second Saturday of the month in a dilapidated hotel in the town of Ihiala, in the south-eastern Anambra state. Outside her room, dozens of women wait for her in the hotel corridors, some with visibly protruding stomachs. The whole atmosphere is buzzing with positivity. At one point, huge celebrations erupt inside the room after a woman is told she is pregnant. When it’s our undercover reporters’ turn to see her, "Dr Ruth" tells them the treatment is guaranteed to work. She offers the woman an injection, claiming it will enable the couple to “select” the sex of their future baby - a medical impossibility. After they turn down the injection, "Dr Ruth" hands them a sachet of crushed pills as well as some more pills for them to take at home, along with instructions on when to have intercourse. This initial treatment costs 350,000 naira ($205; £165). Our undercover reporter neither takes the drugs nor follows any of "Dr Ruth’s" instructions and returns to see her four weeks later. After running a device that looks like an ultrasound scanner across our reporter’s stomach, a sound like a heartbeat is heard and "Dr Ruth" congratulates her on being pregnant. They both cheer with joy. After delivering the good news, "Dr Ruth" explains how they’ll need to pay for a “scarce” and expensive drug needed for the baby to be born, costing somewhere between 1.5 and two million naira ($1,180; £945). Without this drug, the pregnancy could extend beyond nine months, "Dr Ruth" claims with disregard for scientific fact, adding: “The baby will become malnourished - we’d need to build it up again.” "Dr Ruth" has not responded to allegations the BBC has put to her. Women in brightly coloured, ornate dresses are stood waiting in a corridor Dozens of women were waiting to see "Dr Ruth" The extent to which the women involved genuinely believe the claims is unclear. But clues as to why they would be susceptible to such brazen lies can, in part, be found in online groups where disinformation around pregnancy is widespread. A network of disinformation Cryptic pregnancy is a recognised medical phenomenon, in which a woman is unaware of her pregnancy until the late stages. But during our investigation, the BBC found widespread misinformation in Facebook groups and pages about this type of pregnancy. One woman from the US, who dedicates her entire page to her “cryptic pregnancy", claims to have been pregnant “for years” and that her journey cannot be explained by science. In closed groups on Facebook, many posts use religious terminology to hail the bogus “treatment” as a “miracle” for those who’ve been unable to conceive. All of this misinformation helps solidify women’s belief in the scam. Members of these groups are not only from Nigeria, but also from South Africa, the Caribbean, and the US. The scammers also sometimes manage, and post in, these groups, enabling them to reach out to women expressing an interest in the "treatment". Once someone expresses readiness to start the scam process, they are invited into more secure WhatsApp groups. There, admins share information about “cryptic clinics” and what the process involves. ‘I’m still confused’ Authorities tell us that to complete the “treatment”, the scammers need new-born babies and to do that they seek out women who are desperate and vulnerable, many of them young and pregnant, in a country where abortion is illegal. In February 2024, the Anambra state health ministry raided the facility where Chioma “delivered” Hope. The BBC obtained footage of the raid, which showed a huge complex made up of two buildings. In one were rooms containing medical equipment - apparently for clients - while in the other were several pregnant women being kept against their will. Some were as young as 17. Some tell us they were tricked into going there, unaware their babies would be sold to the scammer’s clients. Others, like Uju, which is not her real name, felt too scared to tell their family they were pregnant and sought a way out. She said she was offered 800,000 naira ($470; £380) for the baby. Asked if she regrets her decision to sell her baby, she says: “I’m still confused.” Commissioner Obinabo, who has been part of efforts in her state to crack down on the scam, says scammers prey on vulnerable women like Uju to source the babies. A baby boy is cradled in his mother's arms Uju would have sold her baby, had authorities not rescued her At the end of a tense interrogation, commissioner Obinabo threatens to take away baby Hope from Chioma. But Chioma pleads her case, and the commissioner eventually accepts her explanation that she is a victim herself and that she hadn’t realised what was going on. On this basis she allows Chioma and Ike to keep the baby - unless the biological parents come forward to claim him. But unless attitudes towards women, infertility, reproductive rights and adoption change, scams like this will continue to thrive, experts warn.
  5. https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c98dzyg8y3ro Downing Street has denied allegations that a British diplomat expelled from Russia was a spy. Russian state-run news agencies reported that the country's security service FSB accused the diplomat - whose photo was shared on Russian TV bulletins - of providing false information on his documents and carrying out espionage activities. When asked if a tit-for-tat expulsion would occur, a No 10 spokesman said they were "considering" their response. "To be clear, we refute these allegations" he said, calling them "baseless." Russian foreign ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said the ministry had also summoned the British ambassador, Tass news agency reported. Footage shows the British ambassador's car pulling up to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Moscow. According to Tass, the FSB says that the diplomat was a replacement for one of six UK diplomats expelled in August, also on espionage charges. "This is not the first time that [Vladimir] Putin's government has made malicious, baseless accusations against our staff," Downing Street said. "The UK government is unapologetic about protecting our national interests and will now respond in due course, and our embassy in Moscow will continue its important work in Russia to support UK interests." It comes amid worsening relations between the UK and Russia since the latter's full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022. Last week it emerged the UK lifted restrictions on Ukraine using British-supplied Storm Shadow missiles on targets inside Russia for the first time. President Vladimir Putin cited the move, alongside the launching of US-supplied longer-range missiles at Russian territory, as being behind Russia's decision to launch a new hypersonic missile at the Ukrainian city of Dnipro on Thursday. Expulsions of diplomats have become increasingly common since the war began. Earlier this year, British diplomat Capt Adrian Coghill was given a week to leave Russia, days after the Russian defence attaché was expelled from London for alleged espionage as an "undeclared military intelligence officer". More British politicians and press have also been barred from entering the country. On Tuesday, Russia added 30 more to their "stop list" for what it called "hostile actions". Included in the list are: Deputy Prime Minister Angela Rayner, Home Secretary Yvette Cooper, Chancellor Rachel Reeves, and Justice Secretary Shabana Mahmood. Russia has previously banned British politicians and journalists, including from the BBC, Sky News and Channel 4. In 2022, it banned now Prime Minister Keir Starmer and Foreign Minister David Lammy, among other senior government officials. Leader of the Conservative party Kemi Badenoch was also banned in the same year.
  6. https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/ckgr0v8rdpeo Owners of a wildlife park have said they are "devastated" after the death of po[CENSORED]r Bengal tiger Dehra. The 16-year-old died earlier after she was discovered to be suffering from kidney failure. Along with her three cubs, she was the first tiger to arrive at Lincolnshire Wildlife Park near Boston, Lincolnshire, in 2014, after being rehomed from a private collection. Park manager Steve Nichols said she was the "happiest tiger we've ever had" and added the park had gone into mourning following her death. Mr Nichols said her arrival 10 years ago was a "huge thing for the park". He said: "It was probably the most frightening thing we ever did, at the same time the most satisfying to offer these cats a long-term home here." By 2016, the park became home to 12 tigers, which was believed to be the largest collection in the UK at the time but the park is now home to just three of the big cats. Lincolnshire Wildlife Park Steve with a tattoo on his arm poking his fingers through a tiger cage with a tiger dangerously close on the other side of the fence. Steve has short grey hair and is wearing a black t-shirt.Lincolnshire Wildlife Park Steve Nichols has been caring for tigers at Lincolnshire Wildlife Park for a decade After a routine check sparked by a cut on her paw, Dehra was found to have "total kidney failure" and, to avoid her experiencing any pain, vets put her down. "Even if it's my best mate we won't keep an animal alive for one day suffering," Mr Nichols added. "We knew what we had to do. "It's like a member of staff rather than an animal here. She's been the best thing that's ever happened to the park, without a doubt."
  7. https://www.bbc.com/sport/football/articles/cy7dlg400j6o Real Madrid's Jude Bellingham says he has got his smile back after "feeling a bit like the scapegoat" for England's failure to win Euro 2024 in the summer. Bellingham scored England's first goal of the tournament in a 1-0 victory against Serbia, before scoring a 95th-minute overhead-kick equaliser against Slovakia to save Gareth Southgate's side from elimination in the last 16. England were eventually defeated 2-1 by Spain as they lost their second European Championship final in three years. Critics accused England of playing too conservatively in Germany, with Bellingham in particular the target of what he described as a "pile on" from critics. "I lost my smile a lot playing for England after the Euros as I felt I was a little mistreated compared to what I contributed," Bellingham said before Real Madrid's Champions League meeting with Liverpool. "[The] smile is back [now]. "I think it was a bit harsh on me. I felt a bit like the scapegoat. Maybe I felt a bit sorry for myself. "I felt I contributed some pretty big moments, but it felt like the whole world was crumbling down on me, especially in the three days after the final. It wasn't a nice feeling." 'My nan didn't want to leave the house' Bellingham addressed reports that he refused to speak to the media during the tournament. "That was reported in a way that made it sound like I think I'm above it, but it's not that at all," he said. "I had some personal things going on where journalists had gone to see members of my family while I was at the tournament, my grandparents. "I don't think that's fair, it crosses the line of respect. That's where I took it a little bit personally and decided I would just focus on the football and let that do the talking, instead of talking in the press to people that seemingly don't respect me. "My family comes first - my nan didn't want to leave her house for the whole summer. "Maybe I should have communicated that so people understood my situation, but that was a little bit more personal to me so that's why I decided to keep my mouth shut."
  8. https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c0k808xdp18o Trump vows tariffs on Mexico, Canada and China on day one Would Donald Trump’s tariffs hurt US consumers? The cost of washing machines in the US rose 12% or by about $86, after Trump hit foreign-made machines with a 50% tariff during his first term. Such increases, no matter how modest, run counter to Trump's promises during the campaign to bring down the cost of living. But though Americans might be more sensitive to price rises now than they were in 2018, the political appetite for tariffs should not be underestimated. Joe Biden criticised the tariffs Trump put in place on Chinese imports during his first term. But once in office himself, President Biden left the measures in place, even expanding them in targeted ways. What is also clear is that Trump's selection of Bessent as Treasury Secretary will not temper the tariff push. Amid the battle for his nomination he went out of his way to acknowledge the power of tariffs as a tool that had been pioneered by Alexander Hamilton himself, the first ever US Treasury Secretary. But earlier this year he had also suggested that while tariffs might be used tactically, the main tool for the US rejuvenation of manufacturing would be a cheaper dollar. Europe and the UK have been spared for now. But it is important to reiterate that these moves are not even the real bulk of the tariff policy outlined by Trump. He wants to fundamentally change the global economic map, and reduce China and Europe’s trade surplus with the US, which he views as “ripping off America”. The world is far more complicated now, however, than these binary economic relationships. The US is undoubtedly powerful enough to start rebalancing world trade. Push things too far though, especially with G7 and G20 allies, and the US might find itself rather too isolated.
  9. https://www.gadgets360.com/science/news/brazilian-flowers-hummingbird-pollen-catapults-to-outcompete-rivals-in-pollination-7109460 Flowers of Hypenia macrantha, a species native to Brazil, have been observed using unique mechanisms to outcompete rivals during pollination. According to research, these blooms utilise a pollen "catapult" system to increase the chances of successful pollination. The strategy involves launching their pollen in a burst to displace rival pollen from the beaks of visiting hummingbirds, enhancing their reproductive success. Pollination Strategy Observed in Brazilian Flowers The flowers exhibit both male and female reproductive stages, switching roles to avoid self-pollination. During their male phase, pollen is produced and stored under petal-covered compartments. When a hummingbird probes the flower for nectar, a trigger mechanism is activated, launching the stored pollen forcefully. This process was studied using hummingbird skulls coated with fluorescent particles to simulate natural conditions, as per a ScienceNewsExplores report. High-speed footage of the experiment demonstrated that the pollen launch effectively removed rival pollen from the simulated beak, replacing it with the flower's own. Researchers found that beaks lost significantly more pollen when entering flowers still in their male phase compared to those that had already discharged their pollen. Bruce Anderson, an evolutionary ecologist at Stellenbosch University in South Africa, told Science News that this mechanism appears to allocate pollen for two distinct purposes: reproduction and competitive displacement. A Mechanism of Floral Competition Rebecca Burch, an evolutionary biologist at the State University of New York at Oswego, has noted parallels between plant and animal reproductive competition. In comments reported by the research team on the Science News, she highlighted that plants exhibit dynamic behaviours often underestimated in ecological studies. Further research is planned to examine whether this explosive pollen delivery translates into increased seed production. As reported, these findings contribute to understanding how plants evolve strategies to enhance reproductive success in competitive environments.
  10. https://techxplore.com/news/2024-11-gm-lab-software-bugs-vehicles.html#google_vignette General Motors Co. has developed a software-testing lab inside its Global Technical Center that it's replicating elsewhere, including in GM's Silicon Valley office, to prevent bugs from entering new vehicles and affecting customers. The lab was born out of GM's software struggles, which included a stop sale on the Chevrolet Blazer EV for intermittent issues with in-vehicle screens and DC fast charging at certain public stations. It's one of the new software testing "innovations" at GM "that's rapidly increased the efficiency and rigor of software testing, catching 10 times the number of defects in development, and doing it earlier in the process," Dave Richardson, GM's senior vice president of software and services engineering, told investors and analysts at the automaker's early October Investor Day event. GM isn't alone in the battle to keep software glitches out of vehicles. Automakers from Tesla Inc. to GM's crosstown rival Stellantis NV and Volkswagen AG have all dealt with software woes, with some leading to recalls. In fact, more than 41.6% of all vehicles recalled so far in 2024 involved software issues, up from 14.9% in 2023, according to Envorso, a Detroit-based software consulting firm that tracks software recalls. This year's software recalls were driven by two each from Tesla and Stellantis. Automakers have historically handled software in ways that doesn't mesh with what's needed for today's vehicles, experts say. "It's kind of the difference between (Apple co-founder) Steve Jobs and Henry Ford. Henry Ford thought about how you did an assembly line and how you put all the pieces together on the assembly line. Jobs would think about it from the experience and how the software integrates with the hardware and working that experience through before you do manufacturing," said Todd Warren, a senior adviser at Envorso who specializes in software strategy for the automotive industry. Part of the issue is that legacy automakers assemble parts that they get from suppliers—and those parts include software. "Quite literally, they put all those pieces together on a table and wire them together and then wonder why the software doesn't work," Warren said. "You can't do it that way. ... The further you get from when the software developer types in the code to when you find the bug, the more expensive and slow it is to fix that bug." That's why automakers like GM are rethinking their software strategies by shifting the software testing "left," as Richardson talked about during Investor Day, because "if you're finding those bugs when you're driving the car, it's way too late. It's hard to track down, it's slow to fix." Following its series of software woes with the Blazer and other new EV products, GM's software team is focused on that "shift to the left" and has moved software testing and validation "as early in the development process as possible before all software components are integrated into the final product," Richardson explained at the Investor Day event. To facilitate the shift, GM integrated tech-industry standard tooling and processes for developers to write better code, tracked oversight of quality, introduced testing automation, began testing systems in the cloud and "built a global network of software quality labs, where we have hardware benches accessible by developers anywhere in the world running suites of automated tests," said Richardson, who joined GM in September 2023 and was promoted to his current position in June. GM is replicating the Warren lab at its technical center in Canada and at its recently opened Mountain View Technical Center in California. Some of the changes have led to difficult decisions. In August, GM said it had laid off more than 1,000 salaried employees in its software and services organization globally—including more than 600 employees working at the Global Technical Center in Warren—in an effort to streamline the division's operations under new leadership. Richardson told investors the workforce reduction "was absolutely critical to GM's future in software, and we will continue to make bold choices to move faster, to pivot when needed, and prioritize investing in what will have the greatest impact. We have simplified our team structures, to remove unnecessary layers, avoid duplication and enable speed." In GM's software quality lab, which opened one year ago, there are "benches" or cockpits for every vehicle the company produces. Software is tested on one module, then graduates to a bench before it's put into a full-vehicle integrated bench. "You're checking the code at each section, which ensures better quality over the testing," said Amy Talerico, director of test infrastructure, software labs, vehicle fleets at GM. "Any software for these modules comes here to be tested, regardless of recall. Certainly, if there's a recall remedy in play, it'll come here to be checked to make sure it's confirmation of good quality before it ships out." Before the lab, developers maintained their own benches, Talerico explained, but that could lead to confusion about who tested which software set. "We did an organizational change because really, our organizations were too siloed, individuals working on individual things, including on benches, right?" Talerico said. "So software developers kind of work in their own little lane and not understand how they interact with one another when they come into a vehicle platform." At the lab, which can be accessed remotely, the team collects data on the assets there and in other labs to track progress. The real evidence of the lab's effects is evident to Talerico in GM's recent launches of the Chevrolet Silverado EV, Chevrolet Equinox EV and GMC Sierra EV. "The feedback from the customers is really the proof point that what we're doing here matters and is making a difference," she said. "Especially with respect to the Blazer. That's something we're not proud of, but we really doubled down our efforts and got serious about our organization, about how we test software." Software in vehicles isn't new, but the industry has faced challenges in developing software with modern methods. In the past, the approach was to use "deeply embedded software," so vehicle functions like anti-lock brakes or sequential turn signals had individual electronic control units, or ECUs, with software for each, explained Sam Abuelsamid, principal e-mobility analyst at market research firm Guidehouse Inc. "All of those things had been traditionally developed independently of each other. They don't talk to each other," he said. "The software is tied, typically, directly to that hardware, that ECU, that it's running on. "What we're seeing now is a transition to a different kind of electronic architecture, away from having these distributed ECUs around the car, so where you've got 100 or more computers installed somewhere in the car, to getting down to a small handful of computers, usually with one or two large centralized computers," Abuelsamid said. "... and then maybe some zone controllers, and then having a common software platform, and all of the software from all those individual ECUs is being brought into that central compute." Embedded software wasn't designed to be updated. With the transition to software-defined vehicles, there's an expectation that the software will be updated to provide new features and functions over time. "You have to look at how you develop the software in a whole different way," Abuelsamid said. "You need different kinds of processes. You need a different kind of organization to develop and test and maintain that software and update it over the life of the car." Now automakers have to transition from having small teams work on specific functions to a larger organization responsible for the software platform, which can be challenging, especially when adding new tech hires who aren't used to some of the limitations in the auto industry, Abuelsamid said. "One of the challenges is bringing in software developers from these other industries to the auto industry. In those other industries, developers have more freedom to make changes ... on a more frequent basis, without having to worry so much about the consequences if something broke," Abuelsamid said. "But when that happens in a car, the consequences of that kind of failure are much more severe." The changes GM is making appear to be steps in the right direction for Abuelsamid, but "whether it actually is successful remains to be seen." Like GM, other automakers have made changes to address the software woes they've experienced. Volkswagen, for example, is partnering with EV startup Rivian Automotive Inc. In June, the companies announced a joint venture, which they launched Tuesday, to create next-generation software-defined vehicle platforms to be used in both automakers' future EVs. "Increasingly, automakers that were counting on doing this on their own are now recognizing, 'OK, this is a lot harder than we thought,'" Abuelsamid said. "And they're working with partners that have more expertise in that kind of software development."
  11. https://www.tomshardware.com/pc-components/cpus/x86-reigns-supreme-as-snapdragon-x-elite-chips-captured-just-0-8-percent-of-the-market-with-720-000-units-sold-in-q3-2024-qualcomm-misses-out-on-rising-ai-pc-sales-with-intel-and-amd-taking-charge Despite Qualcomm's ambitions and high hopes to control over 50% of the Windows market in the next five years, recent statistics show that its first-gen X Elite offerings are failing to gain consumer traction. TechRadar reports that of all PCs sold in Q3 24, Qualcomm's chips powered 720,000 units - capturing just 0.8% of the entire market. In other words, one out of every 125 devices sold in the last quarter featured an X Elite processor, which pales in contrast to Intel, AMD, and even Apple on the Arm front. Undoubtedly, AI PCs are on the rise, primarily because virtually every new processor comes equipped with a Copilot PC+ compliant NPU. Per the report, 13.3 million AI PCs were shipped in Q3 this year - a 20% increase compared to last quarter. For the uninitiated, this stat refers to PCs featuring an NPU-equipped processor, like Intel's Meteor Lake and Lunar Lake offerings, AMD's Phoenix, Hawk Point, and Strix Point series, and Qualcomm's X Elite SoCs. Despite a 180% surge in X Elite sales from Q2 24 to Q3, Qualcomm's chips power less than 1.5% of Windows PCs. This lackluster reception is primarily due to unoptimized software or the lack thereof. For example, Microsoft's tardy release of an official Windows 11 ISO for Arm devices left early X Elite adopters in the cold for months. Additionally, Linux support isn't as robust as existing x86 alternatives; longer battery life isn't sufficient or incentivizing enough to drive adoption. Una inversión en IA podría generar ingresos adicionales para ti. trco Qualcomm is preparing to launch budget X Elite laptops next year to somewhat alleviate this situation. On that note, the fruits of Qualcomm's acquisition of Nuvia are materializing—both in terms of high-stakes litigation and powerful mobile SoCs, namely, the Snapdragon 8 Elite designed using the Oryon 2 architecture. Rumors suggest that the X Elite's successor will jump directly to Oryon 3, aiming for a 2025 reveal/launch. In any case, compatibility will always be an issue with these Arm SoCs (in Windows) - be it any chip maker. Apple's sheer market share and dominance compelled developers to write and optimize software for its silicon. Collaborating with Microsoft is vital for Qualcomm in this regard, however, it'd still have to compete with other x86 players in the Windows space; Intel and AMD.
  12. Nick movie: GTMax Time: 2024 Netflix / Amazon / HBO: Netflix Duration of the movie: 1h 40m Trailer:
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