Samsung publica “La apertura siempre gana“Un mensaje con un nuevo himno creado en colaboración con el famoso grupo de K-pop TXT. Se ha lanzado un videoclip del himno. Publicado en YouTube hoy, y puedes verlo a continuación.
Samsung colabora con la banda de K-pop TXT en la canción “Open Always Wins”
La compañía surcoreana lanzó una nueva canción titulada “La apertura siempre gana“difundir un mensaje”Esforzarse por alcanzar objetivos con una mente abierta, en línea con los valores fundamentales de apertura de Galaxy.“Es una canción de rock alternativo con letras escritas por los miembros de TXT SOOBIN, YEONJUN, TAEHYUN y HUENINGKAI y cantadas por todos los miembros de la banda.
Los informes indican que la letra de la canción incluye la experiencia personal de apertura de los miembros de TXT.
El video musical muestra a los miembros de TXT preparándose para actuar y capturando sus movimientos usando la cámara del Galaxy Z Flip 6. El nuevo teléfono plegable aparece de manera destacada en todo el video musical. También presenta apariciones de atletas del equipo Samsung Galaxy celebrando sus logros en diferentes deportes.
El vídeo musical del himno ya está disponible en Bugs, Flo, Genie, Spotify, Melon, Vibe y YouTube Music. Samsung también está abriendo el desafío de baile “Open Always Wins” para alentar a los fanáticos de todo el mundo a mostrar su apoyo a sus atletas favoritos antes de los Juegos Olímpicos de París 2024.
Jimmy Park, vicepresidente y director del grupo de marketing de experiencias de Samsung MX, dijo:Estamos orgullosos de colaborar con nuestros embajadores Galaxy, TOMORROW X TOGETHER, para crear un himno de marca que encarne auténticamente el espíritu de apertura. Esperamos que inspire a los oyentes a abrazar la apertura en sus propias vidas y las experiencias y oportunidades que conlleva.”
Con su mensaje “Lo abierto siempre gana”, promete Samsung Un intento de apuntar maliciosamente a ApplePor el contrario, el sistema Android que utiliza Samsung tiene un ecosistema relativamente abierto. Google y Samsung están intentando difundir el mensaje de que la apertura debería ser el camino a seguir.
Ambos teléfonos ya están disponibles para pedidos anticipados en la mayoría de los mercados del mundo y estarán disponibles en las tiendas a partir del 24 de julio de 2024.
Apple TV+ took four prizes in the TV craft awards, and may win more in the broader BAFTA Television Awards. Photo: Apple TV+
The BAFTA Television Craft Awards — a branch of the BAFTAs, often thought of as the British Oscars — awarded wins to Apple TV+ hit series Slow Horses and Silo, the iPhone giant said Sunday.
The acerbic espionage drama Slow Horses won for best editing and best sound. Sci-fi series Silo landed wins for best production design and best original music.
In addition, Apple TV+ received further nominations in the upcoming BAFTA Television Awards.
Apple TV+ wins BAFTA Television Craft awards for Slow Horses, Silo and more
Apple TV+ took two awards apiece in the 2024 BAFTA Television Craft Awards for its acclaimed espionage drama Slow Horses and its sci-fi hit Silo. Slow Horses landed Best Editing: Fiction and Best Sound: Fiction, while Silo won for Best Production Design and Best Original Music.
The BAFTA Television Awards recognize the best British programs, performances and productions each year. Outside of the craft awards subset, Apple TV+ got further nominations for the upcoming awards, below.
Apple landed four BAFTA Television Craft Award wins in total, including:
Slow Horses
Editing: Fiction — Sam Williams
Sound: Fiction
Silo
Production Design — Gavin Bocquet, Amanda Bernstein
Original Music: Fiction — Atli Örvarsson
Upcoming BAFTA Television Awards nominations
Apple TV+ also got nominated for four category awards at the 2024 BAFTA Television Awards that take place Sunday, May 12:
Slow Horses
Drama Series Supporting Actor — Jack Lowden
Hannah Waddingham: Home for Christmas
Entertainment
The Enfield Poltergeist
Specialist Factual
Previous BAFTA wins for Apple TV+
Apple TV+ has previously won BAFTA Television Awards:
Best Drama Series in 2023 for acclaimed hit Bad Sisters, along with the show’s awards for Best Supporting Actress (Anne-Marie Duff) and Best Titles & Graphic Identity for Peter Anderson Studio.
Apple’s limited series The Essex Serpent landed Best Costume Design for first-time BAFTA winner Jane Petrie in 2023.
In 2022, 9/11: Inside the President’s War Room won Editing: Factual, and 1971: The Year That Music Changed Everything earned Sound: Factual.
Who doesn’t love a good MacBook? Or maybe two MacBooks, like in today’s setup. The guy has his own M2 MacBook Air, a formidable machine. But he’s lucky enough to add to it an absolutely screaming M3 Max MacBook Pro courtesy of his employer. Nice perk, that.
He can also thank work for his second 4K display. But it doesn’t top his own.
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So now he runs two powerful Apple laptops. His personal one is a 15-inch M2 MacBook Air with 24GB of unified memory and a 1TB SSD. And his work provided him with a 16-inch M3 Max MacBook Pro with a whopping 95GB of memory and a 1TB SSD.
He uses the two slick laptops with two slick displays. First, his own is a big 40-inch Dell UltraSharp U4025QW curved 4K display he got after trying two other configurations. And second, his work provided him with a 27-inch LG UltraFine 4K monitor.
Then he rounds out his setup with a Logitech C920 webcam, a Keychron Q3 Pro custom mechanical keyboard, a Logitech MX Master 3S wireless mouse, a Blue Yeti USB microphone and an Elgato Stream Deck.
Powerful M3 Max MacBook Pro and M2 MacBook Air laptops
Anyway, I don’t know about you, but I wouldn’t mind if work handed me a nice laptop like an M3 Max MacBook Pro packed with memory and a nice 4K display. Not that Chris’ personal M2 MacBook Air is much of a slouch, but his work laptop must be blazing fast.
And with that much memory, it’s future-proofed for a good while. You can actually pack one with 128GB or memory to max it out.
A 16-inch M3 Max MacBook Pro hails from late 2023. Its M3 Max chip carries a 14-core CPU and a 30-core GPU. Loaded with 96GB of unified memory and a 1TB SSD for storage, Chris’ model goes for a little over $4,100. It comes with 6.56-foot USB-C to MagSafe 3 cable and a USB-C power adapter.
M3 Max MacBook Pro features:
M3 Max chip with up to 16-core CPU and up to 40-core GPU
Up to 128GB of unified memory
Up to 8TB of super-fast SSD storage
16.2-inch Liquid Retina XDR display with Extreme Dynamic Range, 1000 nits of sustained brightness (HDR content) and up to 600 nits of brightness for (SDR content)
Up to 22 hours of battery life
And if you like the desktop wallpaper showing on the big display, you can find it here.
Shop these items now:
Computers:
Displays and webcam:
Input devices:
Audio:
If you would like to see your setup featured on Cult of Mac, send some high-res pictures to [email protected]. Please provide a detailed list of your equipment. Tell us what you like or dislike about your setup, and fill us in on any special touches, challenges and plans for new additions.
This version of Apple’s professional laptop comes with a 16.2-inch Liquid Retina XDR display and an M3 Max Chip with 14-core CPU and 30-core GPU, plus 96GB of unified memory and 1TB SSD storage.
Avi Wigderson received the Turing Award for his foundational contributions to the theory of computation.Credit: Dan Komoda
A leader in the field of computational theory is the latest winner of the A. M. Turing Award, sometimes described as the ‘Nobel Prize’ of computer science.
Avi Wigderson at the Institute for Advanced Study (IAS) in Princeton, New Jersey, is known for work straddling several disciplines, and had already won a share of the Abel Prize, a top mathematics award, three years ago.
He receives the Turing Award “for foundational contributions to the theory of computation, including reshaping our understanding of the role of randomness in computation, and for his decades of intellectual leadership in theoretical computer science”, the Association for Computing Machinery (ACM) in New York City announced on 10 April.
“I was extremely happy, and I didn’t expect this at all,” Wigderson tells Nature. “I’m getting so much love and appreciation from my community that I don’t need prizes.”
‘A towering intellectual force’
Wigderson was born in Haifa, Israel, in 1956. He studied at Technion — Israel Institute of Technology in Haifa and later at Princeton University; he has been at the IAS since 1999. He is known for his work on computational complexity — which studies how certain problems are inherently slow to solve, even in principle — and on randomness in computation. Many practical algorithms make random choices to achieve their objectives more efficiently; in a series of groundbreaking studies in the 1990s, Wigderson and his collaborators showed that conventional, deterministic algorithms can, in principle, be roughly as efficient as ‘randomized’ ones1. The results helped to confirm that random algorithms can be as accurate as deterministic ones are.
“Wigderson is a towering intellectual force in theoretical computer science,” said ACM president Yannis Ioannidis in a statement. In addition to Wigderson’s academic achievements, the ACS cited his “friendliness, enthusiasm, and generosity”, which have led him to be a mentor to or collaborate with hundreds of researchers worldwide. Wigderson admits that he is a “big proselytizer” of the intellectual pleasures of his discipline — he wrote a popular book about it and made it freely available on his website. “I think this field is great, and I am happy to explain it to anybody.”
The Turing Award is named after the celebrated British mathematician and code-breaker Alan Turing (1912–54), who in the 1930s laid the conceptual foundations of modern computing. “I feel completely at home with mathematics,” says Wigderson, adding that as an intellectual endeavour, theoretical computer science is indistinguishable from maths. “We prove theorems, like mathematicians.”
Michel Talagrand studies stochastic processes, mathematical models of phenomena that are governed by randomness.Credit: Peter Bagde/Typos1/Abel Prize 2024
A mathematician who developed formulas to make random processes more predictable, and helped to solve an iconic model of complex phenomena, has won the 2024 Abel Prize, one of the field’s most coveted awards. Michel Talagrand received the prize for his “contributions to probability theory and functional analysis, with outstanding applications in mathematical physics and statistics”, the Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters in Oslo announced on 20 March.
Assaf Naor, a mathematician at Princeton University in New Jersey, says it is difficult to overestimate the impact of Talagrand’s work. “There are papers posted maybe on a daily basis where the punchline is ‘now we use Talagrand’s inequalities’,” he says.
Talagrand’s reaction on hearing the news was incredulity. “There was a total blank in my mind for at least four seconds,” he says. “If I had been told an alien ship had landed in front of the White House, I would not have been more surprised.”
The Abel Prize was modelled after the Nobel Prizes — which do not include mathematics — and was awarded for the first time in 2003. The recipient wins a sum of 7.5 million Norwegian kroner (US$700,000).
‘Like a piece of art’
Talagrand specializes in the theory of probability and stochastic processes, which are mathematical models of phenomena governed by randomness. A typical example is a river’s water level, which is highly variable and is affected by many independent factors, including rain, wind and temperature, Talagrand says. His proudest achievement was a set of formulas that poses limits to the swings in such a stochastic process. His formulas express how the contributions of many factors often cancel each other out — making the overall result less variable, not more.
“It’s like a piece of art,” says Abel-committee chair Helge Holden, a mathematician at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology in Trondheim. “The magic here is to find a good estimate, not just a rough estimate.”
Abel Prize: pioneer of ‘smooth’ physics wins top maths award
Thanks to Talagrand’s techniques, “many things that seem complicated and random turn out to be not so random”, says Naor. His estimates are extremely powerful, for example for studying problems such as optimizing the route of a delivery truck. Finding a perfect solution would require an exorbitant amount of computation, so computer scientists can instead calculate the lengths of a limited number of random candidate routes and then take the average — and Talegrand’s inequalities ensure that the result is close to optimal.
Talagrand also completed the solution to a problem posed by theoretical physicist Giorgio Parisi — work that ultimately helped Parisi to earn a Nobel Prize in Physics in 2001. In 1979, Parisi, now at the University of Rome, proposed a complete solution for the structure of a spin glass — a simple, abstracted model of a material in which the magnetization of each atom tends to flip up or down depending on those of its neighbours.
Parisi’s arguments were rooted in his powerful intuition in physics, and followed steps that “mathematicians would consider as sorcery”, Talagrand says, such as taking n copies of a system — with n being a negative number. Many researchers doubted that Parisi’s proof could be made mathematically rigorous. But in the early 2000s, the problem was completely solved in two separate works, one by Talagrand2 and an earlier one by Francesco Guerra3, a mathematical physicist also at the University of Rome.
Finding motivation
Talagrand’s journey to becoming a top researcher was unconventional. Born in Béziers, France, in 1952, at age five he lost vision in his right eye because of a genetic predisposition to detachment of the retina. Although while growing up in Lyon he was a voracious reader of popular science magazines, he struggled at school, particularly with the complex rules of French spelling. “I never really made peace with orthography,” he told an interviewer in 2019.
His turning point came at age 15, when he received emergency treatment for another retinal detachment, this time in his left eye. He had to miss almost an entire year of school. The terrifying experience of nearly losing his sight — and his father’s efforts to keep his mind busy while his eyes were bandaged — gave Talagrand a renewed focus. He became a highly motivated student after his recovery, and began to excel in national maths competitions.
Just 5 women have won a top maths prize in the past 90 years
Still, Talagrand did not follow the typical path of gifted French students, which includes two years of preparatory school, followed by a national selection for highly selective grandesécoles such as the École Normale Supérieure in Paris. Instead, he studied at the University of Lyon, France, and then went on to work as a full-time researcher at the national research agency CNRS, first in Lyon and later in Paris, where he spent more than a decade in an entry-level job. Apart from a brief stint in Canada, followed by a trip to the United States where he met his wife, he worked at CNRS until his retirement.
Talagrand loves to challenge other mathematicians to solve problems that he has come up with — offering cash to those who do — and he keeps a list of those problems on his website. Some have been solved, leading to publications in major maths journals. The prizes come with some conditions: “I will award the prizes below as long as I am not too senile to understand the proofs I receive. If I can’t understand them, I will not pay.”
Audi has revealed that its Audi RS Q e-tron EV has won the Dakar Rally, the car ended the 7,900 kilometres with a lead of 1 hour and 20 minutes ahead of the other competitors, this is the first time a low-emission EV has won the rally.
“Congratulations to Team Audi Sport on winning the Dakar Rally,” said Gernot Döllner, Chairman of the Board of Management of AUDI AG. “Audi has once again set a milestone in motorsport. Winning the world’s toughest desert rally with an electrified drive is a visible ‘Vorsprung durch Technik’ and points the way to our electric future.” The Audi RS Q e-tron has electric all-wheel drive. The energy supply is ensured by a high-voltage battery and an energy converter that runs on residual fuel-based reFuel, thus saving 60 per cent of CO2 emissions compared to conventional fuels.
“With our revolutionary electrified drive, we have overcome one of the biggest challenges in motorsport after just three years. We are thus continuing a long series of pioneering achievements that have always characterized Audi in four decades of motorsport. I would like to thank the entire team for this outstanding performance in a particularly tough edition of the Dakar Rally,” says Oliver Hoffmann, Member of the Board of Management of AUDI AG, Technical Development. At the Dakar Rally, Audi was up against the two brands Toyota and Ford as well as the experienced opponents from Prodrive, who proved to be tough challengers.
You can find out more details about Audi’s win at the Dakar Rally with their Audi RS Q e-tron EV over at the Audi website at the link below.
Source Audi
Filed Under: Auto News
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Peugeot has announced that their Peugeot Panoramic i-Cockpit has won the Connected Car Award 2023 for its use of the latest technology in the entertainment category, this new i-Cockpit is available in the Peugeot E-3008 electric vehicle.
The new Panoramic i-Cockpit® on the new E-3008 ensures instinctive, safe and comfortable driving. It features a 21-inch high-definition panoramic screen floating above the dashboard, a new compact steering wheel and individually configurable controls (i-Toggles) for quick access to the most frequently used functions.
The panoramic screen is installed above the dashboard with a mounting system that is invisible from the passenger compartment, which improves accessibility to the touchscreen and the visibility of the information displayed on the 21-inch high-definition panoramic screen. On the left-hand side of the panoramic screen, the instrument cluster above the steering wheel displays all driving-related information. On the right-hand side is the touchscreen, which can be used to control the heating/air conditioning, navigation,media and connectivity systems.
Jérome Micheron, PEUGEOT Products Director : “In a decade of successes and developments, with more than 10 millions satisfied customers, the PEUGEOT i-Cockpit® has never undergone such a metamorphosis, it really has been taken to the next level, to enjoy instinctive driving in complete safety and a spacious design for well-being on board.”.
You can find out more details about the Peugeot Panoramic i-Cockpit and the Peugeot E-3008 electric vehicle over at the Peugeot website at the link below.
Source Peugeot
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History was made in the FIFA Women’s World Cup 2023 as Spain won their first title after scoring 1-0 against England. With this victory, La Roja became the first team to simultaneously hold the senior, under-20, and under-17 world titles. Besides this, England’s defeat made the team the fifth winner in the nine editions of the Women’s World Cup.
For the Lionesses, this match marked the first attempt to bring the World Cup back to England since 1966. Unfortunately for them, Spain held the team back in front of over 75,000 spectators at the final in Stadium Australia. When asked what she thought about this, England Captain Millie Bright said though the final score was disappointing, she was proud the team got this far in the World Cup.
Before this game, the two nations had met 11 times. As a result, England had six wins while Spain only landed two, and the teams had three draws. So, it’s safe to say Spain’s victory at the Women’s World Cup was a huge surprise for fans everywhere. Below, we’ll review everything about this shocking turn of events, including the odds and predictions leading up to the match.
Odds and Predictions
From a sports betting perspective, the Women’s World Cup title has been a race between the two teams since the beginning of the knockout stage. As the quarterfinals approached, most sportsbooks listed England as the favourite, with the odds of around +240. That was before Spain beat the Netherlands during the quarters, catapulting its odds and making England the underdogs.
The odds didn’t remain like this for much longer, though. Once the Lionesses won against Colombia in the quarterfinals, they became the favourites again on most sports betting sites. The predictions kept going back and forth in favour of Spain and England, and by match time, La Roja was on top with odds of around +170 against England’s +175 in most sportsbooks.
How La Roja Won
In the intense game, La Roja’s Carmona scored the winning and only goal in the match in the 29th minute. In the semifinal between Spain and Sweden, she also scored in the 89th minute, earning the team a 2-1 win. These victories made her the first player to score in both the Women’s World Cup semifinal and final since Carli Lloyd achieved this in 2015.
Though England also had the winning potential, considering they had taken the European Championship title, they had a huge disadvantage. Three of the team’s best players, Beth Mead, Fran Kirdy, and captain Leah Williamson, had knee injuries, so they couldn’t join the World Cup squad. In celebration, Carmona raised her jersey to show the word “Merchi” written on her undershirt, a tribute to her previous school.
Spain Made History in the 2023 Women’s World Cup
Despite the controversy around La Roja last year, with fifteen players almost dropping out of the national team, the team took the World Cup home. The win marked their redemption after Spain went against England in the UEFA Euros quarter finals and lost by a 2-1 score. It also meant that the nation had joined Germany as the only two countries to win women’s and men’s titles in history.
To many fans, this was the definition of commitment and hard work. But this victory meant way more to the team, as was shown when the final whistle was blown, and the members danced behind their bench in front of thousands of flag-waving fans.