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CIA operatives dodge danger, confront terrorist attacks and face inside-corruption in action-packed spy series

GREENWICH, Conn. — In the real world, “espionage is not a tuxedo and a martini,” quipped prolific author Jeffrey S. Stephens, who has written extensively about missions involving CIA operatives and national security.

 

“They work in the shadows. They’re in danger,” he added. “There’s so much that goes on that we don’t know about — so many near misses that we can never hear about for obvious security reasons.”

 

In his two-book Nick Reagan Thriller Series, Stephens blurs the lines between fact and fiction with detailed descriptions of real places, looming threats from very real terrorist cells and a realistic portrayal of the networks of people required to pull off large acts of terrorism.

 

In The Handler, the first book in the series, Nick Reagan and his partner, Carol Gellos, are drawn into an international hunt to locate the anonymous terrorist determined to unleash a series of unholy attacks on America.

 

Readers first meet Reagan as he traces a trail of clues to China in search of the Ghost Chip — a new technology that turns cell phones into detonators and renders them untraceable. In the hands of terrorists, the Ghost Chip would be catastrophic.

 

An Authors.com reviewer called The Handler “a heart-pounding ride with great narratives … It’s got it all — spies, assassins, guns and terrorist cells … If you liked Vince Flynn novels, you would love Stephens’ super-cool CIA operative Nick Reagan.”

 

The second book in the series takes all that to another level. While the good actors are easily identified in The Handler, it is a bit more difficult to tell the heroes from the villains in Enemies Among Us. A thriller where some of the “bad guys” are U.S. government figures, including some in our own Central Intelligence Agency, the story is as current as today’s headlines. An award-winning author, Stephens says the saga intends to throw light on some real-life transgressions happening all around the globe, including in our own country.

 

“The highest praise I can offer,” said Chris Beakey, author of the Amazon bestseller Fatal Option, “is that I devoured the entire novel in two sittings and continue to be fascinated by its large, suspenseful spell.”

 

Throughout the Nick Reagan Thriller Series, the author toggles between perspectives, giving readers a chilling look inside the minds of Islamic terrorists hellbent on carrying out heinous acts, while simultaneously, CIA operatives risk their lives to thwart the awful carnage.

 

“Many may have thought the continuing threat from terrorists was over,” Stephens said, “but as we have recently seen, it remains incredibly current and violent … while few would believe that corruption within our own intelligence services and the highest levels of corporate power are something we are dealing with in real time.”

 

About the Author

A native of New York City, Jeffrey S. Stephens is a successful attorney in private practice, admitted in both New York and Connecticut. Stephens has lived for more than 30 years in Greenwich, which is where he and his wife, Nancy, raised their two sons, Graham and Trevor. Stephens is the author of the Jordan Sandor thrillers, Targets Of Deception, Targets Of Opportunity, Targets Of Revenge and Rogue Mission, as well as the Anthony Walker murder mystery Crimes And Passion and the Pencraft First Place Award-winning novel, Fool’s Errand.

 

For more information, please visit www.jeffreystephens.com, or follow the author on Facebook (Author Jeffrey Stephens), Instagram (jss50) and Twitter (@j_stephensbooks).

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‘Nocturnes’ review: A hypnotic documentary about moths unfolds to also reveal climate change concerns

Co-directors Anirban Dutta and Anupama Srinivasan craft an observational Indian nature doc that makes its case poetically and powerfully.

 

 

The nature documentary is inherently preservationist, but Anirban Dutta and Anupama Srinivasan’s “Nocturnes” offers environmental persuasions not through verbal arguments, or even an aesthetic appreciation.

 

Rather, its meditative, hyper-fixated approach to process — as seen through the eyes of seasoned lepidopterists — proves so hypnotic that any appeals or augments the movie makes are deeply felt before they’re intellectually understood. The pieces snap into place eventually (which is to say, the “why” of studying moths and their patterns), but the “how” is foregrounded so forcefully and poetically throughout that viewers will likely come to care about these creatures, and this field of study, well before they understand the very real and pressing reasons they should.

 

In northeastern India, bordering Bhutan, scientist Mansi and her indigenous assistant Bicki (belonging to the local Bugun tribe) partake in the nightly ritual of suspending a cloth sheet and illuminating it with bright lights in the middle of the forest. Slowly, but surely, hundreds of moths flock to this makeshift station, resting along the sheet’s checkered grid pattern so Mansi can observe, photograph, and eventually measure them.

 

Between her frequent voiceover and her instructions to Bicki, the audience learns a great deal about Mansi’s practice. We even meet an elderly man who appears to be her mentor, hinting at the depth of this scientific tradition, though there’s something intentionally stilted about her delivery. Mansi is not an actor, after all, but she’s given the role of one, both in her narrations, as well as in some of these interpersonal conversations. These appear to be staged for the camera, but contain thoughtful discussions and nuggets of truth, despite this docu-fictional appearance, and with the help of Nainita Desai’s heavy, wistful score, they become, in their own way, melodic.

 

However, more than via any of Mansi’s words, the movie’s arguments are made through images, silences and the sounds of nature. Fluttering wings and the echoes of trilling insects make up much of the serene soundscape, whether during close-ups of the moths — their texture, their patterns, their vibrating movements when they sit still are all intriguing to observe — or during wide shots of the scientists’ setup glowing in the darkened forest, drawing us toward it, not unlike the moths themselves.

 

These nighttime scenes are provided with ingenious contrast during intervening mornings, made up largely of establishing shots of green mountainsides and nearby communities, captured from afar. Cinematographer Satya Rai Nagpaul films these clarifying scenes through morning fog, giving them an ethereal quality as morning prayers ring out like harmonized insect hums, but the camera rarely approaches human beings or settlements.

 

Instead, it observes from a distance, as though it were performing an anthropological study too, and in the process, it creates intrinsic aesthetic connections between the lives of people and the lives of moths, hidden away from us, in ways we need to lean forward to observe and understand. Long before Mansi delivers a lecture on the specifics of her studies and their overlap with global climate change, the moths feel monumentally important, and deeply connected to us.

 

Dutta and Srinivasan have effectively reverse-engineered an aesthetic approach from the basic concept at the heart of these entomologic studies, with sheets painted in light as the central object of allure for the moths, and for the audience. Humans have been around a mere fraction of the time that moths have — despite their individual life spans of less than a week — and for an even smaller portion of our existence, light projected onto fabric at 24 frames per second has monopolized our collective attention. “Nocturnes” takes full advantage of this for an altruistic cause, resulting in a documentary that is immediately, powerfully, and above all cinematically convincing.

 

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— Variety

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‘Fixer Upper’ turns 10: Chip and Joanna Gaines celebrate with new season of ‘The Lakehouse’ on HGTV, Magnolia Network

“Fixer Upper” stars Chip and Joanna Gaines will mark the 10-year anniversary of the HGTV show that rocketed them to home-reno fame with the debut of a new season, “Fixer Upper: The Lakehouse,” in June.

 

Per its official description, this new edition of “Fixer Upper” follows Chip and Joanna as they take on a unique mid-century modern lake house flip near Lake Waco, a new neighborhood for the home renovation duo based in Waco, Texas. From demo to design, viewers will follow the full transformation of the property throughout the season as Chip and Joanna go above and beyond with surprising interior designs and unique outdoor installations never before seen on “Fixer Upper.”

 

Produced by the Gaineses’ production company Blind Nil, “Fixer Upper: The Lakehouse” will air its six episodes on both Chip and Joanna Gaines’ Magnolia Network (part owned by Warner Bros. Discovery) and HGTV, the original home of “Fixer Upper” franchise, across three weeks of double premieres beginning June 2. The show will be available to stream same day on Max and Discovery+.

 

The original “Fixer Upper” debuted on HGTV in 2014 and ran for five seasons, becoming the top unscripted show on cable, before airing its final episode in 2018. During its initial run, “Fixer Upper” was the top unscripted show on cable. The show was rebooted as “Fixer Upper: Welcome Home” for the launch of the Gaineses’ Magnolia Network in 2021 and later two new seasons: “Fixer Upper: The Castle” in 2022 and “Fixer Upper: The Hotel” in 2023.

 

“When ‘Fixer Upper’ premiered 10 years ago, we couldn’t have imagined the journey we had ahead of us,” the Gaineses said. “Though a lot has changed and evolved in the decade between then and now, our love for home is still at the heart of everything we do. We feel honored that we get to continue pouring into the stories of these homes across Waco, and we’re excited to share our latest project with you this summer with ‘Fixer Upper: The Lakehouse.’”

 

Magnolia Network president Allison Page added: “We’re so excited to see how Chip and Jo will tackle this lakehouse in Waco and flex their renovation and design muscles in ways our viewers have never seen before. Since the premiere of ‘Fixer Upper’ in 2014, they have amassed a huge global fanbase and grown a beloved lifestyle brand from the ground up, and we’re thrilled to celebrate this milestone alongside them this year.”

 

 

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— Variety

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Microsoft announces AI Generative Erase for users to remove objects, people from images in its Photos app on Windows 10 and higher

Sean Hollister / The Verge:

 

 

This good dog is about to go off-leash. GIF: Microsoft

— Google and Samsung aren’t the only ones baking magical AI selective photo erasers into their devices — they’re about to become table stakes for Windows PCs too.

 

Microsoft has just announced Generative erase, a feature that lets you do similar things in the Photos app that comes bundled with Windows.

 

Above and below, you can see how Microsoft disappears a dog’s leash and some unintentional photobombers using the power of generative AI:

 

While that may not be quite as nifty a party trick as other AI fakery you’ve seen, you won’t need to buy a new Pixel or Galaxy to integrate this into your life, either. Microsoft says it’s not only rolling this out to Windows 11, but also backporting all of the Photos’ AI edit features to Windows 10, in addition to Windows 11 for Arm64 devices. Those include a background removal feature as well.

 

These tools are for Windows Insiders for now, though. Says Microsoft: “This update is beginning to roll out to Windows Insiders in all channels today (including Windows Insiders on Windows 10 in the Release Preview Channel). Make sure to update your app to version number 2024.11020.21001.0 or higher.”

 

The company’s blog post doesn’t say whether AI-edited photos will come with metadata or watermarks so you can distinguish them from unedited ones.

 

 

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— Techmeme

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AT&T and L&T Technology Services collaborate to accelerate solutions to address climate change

Pioneering solutions that pair connectivity with engineering expertise to reduce emissions

 

EDISON, N.J. — (BUSINESS WIRE) — $LTTS #ConnectedClimateInitiative — L&T Technology Services Limited (BSE: 540115, NSE: LTTS), a prominent global digital engineering and R&D services company, and AT&T, one of the largest telecommunications companies worldwide, Friday announced a strategic alliance aimed at curbing global emissions.

 

This groundbreaking collaboration will utilize the combined resources and expertise of both companies to develop advanced solutions that can significantly reduce environmental impact.

As part of this collaboration, LTTS will participate in AT&T’s Connected Climate Initiative (CCI), a collaborative effort that works on connectivity-based solutions to reduce greenhouse emissions by 1 gigaton by 2035. The effort brings together a diverse group of organizations to unleash the power of connectivity solutions, including the Internet of Things (IoT), fiber, 5G, and edge computing, to reach this goal. As a participant in the CCI, LTTS will collaborate with AT&T to work toward the collective emissions reduction commitment and help enable companies to make sustainable business decisions.

 

“Armed with AT&T’s formidable telecommunications infrastructure and our own deep-seated expertise in engineering DNA, we are poised to make substantial strides towards a future less dependent on carbon,” said Alind Saxena, President, Sales and Executive Director at L&T Technology Services (LTTS).

 

“This collaboration is a pledge to the planet. We’re not just developing technologies – we’re crafting a sustainable legacy, one that significantly reduces our environmental footprint.”

 

For L&T Technology Services (LTTS), sustainability transcends the realm of mere commitment; it forms an integral part of the organizational ethos, deeply embedded in all their actions. The company offers an extensive suite of sustainability services that encompasses a wide range of solutions, all meticulously designed to mitigate environmental impact and drive positive change.

 

LTTS’ offerings span from green engineering solutions and energy management strategies to waste reduction initiatives and community engagement programs. These solutions empower organizations to integrate sustainability into every facet of their operations. With a keen focus on innovation and collaboration, LTTS guides its global customers through the complexities of sustainability, equipping them to attain their environmental and social objectives while ensuring business success.

 

LTTS will work with AT&T to deliver a suite of cutting-edge services designed to leverage AT&T connectivity to help companies achieve emissions reduction targets. Examples of this collaboration include:

  • Developing engineering and connectivity solutions that are geared towards driving digital transformation for a greener future across various industries
  • gEdge, a scalable, ready-for-implementation immersive data center-in-a-box solution
  • i-BEMS, an energy-efficient building automation framework
  • Design and engineering for renewable energy utilizing connectivity to enhance reliability and efficiency of energy supply to the network grid
  • Engineering and connectivity solutions focused on accelerating cleaner, sustainable energy such as green hydrogen
  • Carbon sequestration technology and connectivity-enabled measurement and verification platforms

 

“As we work towards achieving the Gigaton goal, we know that it’s collaborations like this one, combining our respective resources and expertise, that will help us get there,” said Shannon Carroll, AVP of Global Environmental Sustainability at AT&T. “Together with LTTS, we’re committed to create a more sustainable tomorrow.”

 

About AT&T

We help more than 100 million U.S. families, friends and neighbors, plus nearly 2.5 million businesses, connect to greater possibility. From the first phone call 140+ years ago to our 5G wireless and multi-gig internet offerings today, we @ATT innovate to improve lives. For more information about AT&T Inc. (NYSE:T), please visit us at about.att.com. Investors can learn more at investors.att.com.

 

About L&T Technology Services Ltd

L&T Technology Services Limited (LTTS) is a listed subsidiary of Larsen & Toubro Limited focused on Engineering and R&D (ER&D) services. We offer consultancy, design, development and testing services across the product and process development life cycle. We also have more than 100 labs dedicated to R&D and Engineering, 20 + labs specifically for Sustainability and Innovation. Our customer base includes 69 Fortune 500 companies and 57 of the world’s top ER&D companies, across industrial products, medical devices, transportation, telecom & hi-tech, and the process industries. Headquartered in India, we have over 23,200 employees spread across 22 global design centers, 28 global sales offices and 105 innovation labs as of Dec. 31, 2023.

 

For more information, please visit https://www.LTTS.com/

Contacts

Media Contact:
Aniruddha Basu

L&T Technology Services Limited

E: Aniruddha.Basu@Ltts.com

Anindita Sarkar

L&T Technology Services Limited

E: Anindita.Sarkar@Ltts.com

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Luxurious new Savannah Sunset Resort and Spa to welcome guests this spring

The new luxury safari overnight experience at Six Flags Great Adventure Resort is now accepting reservations

 

JACKSON, N.J. — (BUSINESS WIRE) — Six Flags Great Adventure Resort is thrilled to announce the grand opening of Savannah Sunset Resort and Spa, welcoming guests beginning June 14.

 

Reservations are now being accepted for the new luxury glamping experience nestled in the heart of the 350-acre Six Flags Wild Safari, home to over 1,200 animals. The exclusive resort promises an unforgettable, first-class experience for those seeking an indulgent retreat.

 

Guests will be immersed in a one-of-a-kind resort destination where every detail has been meticulously crafted to create a haven of serenity and adventure. From the moment guests arrive, they will be greeted with warm hospitality and personalized care, with no detail overlooked.

 

Key Features of the Savannah Sunset Resort and Spa:

  1. Luxurious accommodations: The resort offers 20 glamping suites that vary in size, sleeping two to six guests. Each suite is thoughtfully designed to provide the utmost comfort and style with world-class amenities.
  2. Unmatched views and VIP experiences: During their stay, guests can choose their own adventure. Whether relaxing with sweeping views from their suite, participating in close-up animal encounters or exploring the local watering holes of the Six Flags Great Adventure theme park or Hurricane Harbor water park, guests will have opportunities to create memories to last a lifetime.
  3. Included benefits: With a two-night minimum stay, guests will enjoy a giraffe feeding, daily breakfast, multi-park passes giving access to all 3 Six Flags Great Adventure Resort parks, and more.
  4. VIP dining: Guests will embark on an indulgent culinary journey with featured items curated to enhance the glamping experience.
  5. Spa services: Guests can rejuvenate their senses at the Savannah Sunset Spa which features holistic treatments with expert therapists to promote relaxation and wellness.
  6. Event spaces: Ideal for small gatherings from weddings to corporate retreats, Savannah Sunset Resort and Spa offers a versatile event space with stunning views and top-notch service to make every celebration unforgettable.

 

“We are excited to welcome guests this spring to the Savannah Sunset Resort and Spa, where opulence meets the open savannah in the heart of New Jersey,” said Park President Brian Bacica. “Our team is planning every detail to create a luxury experience welcoming guests to enjoy the beauty and uniqueness of our resort. Whether you seek relaxation, a family adventure, or a romantic getaway, Savannah Sunset Resort and Spa promises to exceed your expectations.”

 

Savannah Sunset Resort and Spa is part of one of the largest investments at Six Flags Great Adventure Resort in nearly two decades. In celebration of the destination’s 50-year history, Six Flags Great Adventure Resort is also debuting its 15th roller coaster this summer. THE FLASH: Vertical Velocity, the first coaster of its kind in North America, joins the highly-anticipated return of the Safari Off Road Adventure, and modern updates to the nostalgic Log Flume and Big Wheel rides. In addition, Six Flags Hurricane Harbor will open Splash Island, a new family-centric area giving guests of all ages an opportunity for some interactive fun in the sun.

 

Visit https://www.sixflags.com/savannahsunset to reserve your spot for this one-of-kind luxurious safari overnight experience right here in the United States.

 

Six Flags Great Adventure will open for the 2024 season on March 16. Enjoy all season long with a Season Pass starting as low as $13/month after initial payment. In preparation for their 50th anniversary season, the destination is hiring for a variety of positions with great hourly pay, exciting perks and valuable benefits. Apply today at sixflagsjobs.com or text FUN to 732-307-6688 to begin the hiring process.

 

About Six Flags Great Adventure Resort

Six Flags Great Adventure Resort boasts 4 world-class attractions including, Six Flags Great Adventure theme park, Hurricane Harbor water park, the Wild Safari, and new, luxury Savanah Sunset Resort and Spa. The resort destination is home to the World’s Ultimate Thrill Park with award-winning rides like Kingda Ka, Nitro, El Toro and Jersey Devil Coaster. The theme park offers two areas created just for young guests, family rides the whole family can enjoy together, live entertainment, shopping and a wide variety of dining options. Six Flags Hurricane Harbor is one of the Northeast’s largest water parks with more than 25 refreshing attractions for the whole family. The Wild Safari is one of the largest safaris outside of Africa where guests get up-close experiences with more than 1,200 animals from around the globe. www.sixflags.com/greatadventure

 

About Six Flags Entertainment Corporation

Six Flags Entertainment Corporation (NYSE: SIX) is the world’s largest regional theme park company with 27 parks across the United States, Mexico and Canada. For 63 years, Six Flags has entertained hundreds of millions of guests with world-class coasters, themed rides, thrilling water parks and unique attractions. Six Flags is committed to creating an inclusive environment that fully embraces the diversity of our team members and guests. For more information, visit www.sixflags.com.

 

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American Water ranks no. 1 in utilities industry on Forbes America’s Best Large Employers 2024 list

CAMDEN, N.J. — (BUSINESS WIRE) — American Water (NYSE: AWK), the largest regulated water and wastewater utility company in the U.S., announced today that it has been ranked number 1 in the utilities industry on Forbes America’s Best Large Employers 2024 list. The ranking is based on an independent survey of employees.

 

“American Water is honored to receive recognition on Forbes America’s Best Large Employers 2024 list,” said M. Susan Hardwick, President and Chief Executive Officer, American Water. “We are extremely fortunate to have such an engaged, talented and diverse workforce, focused on building a better workplace where our people can thrive.”

 

Forbes partnered with market research firm Statista to survey more than 170,000 U.S.-based employees at companies with at least 1,000 employees. Companies with more than 5,000 employees were eligible for the category of large employers. Survey respondents were asked if they would recommend their employer to others and given the chance to rate other employers in their respective industries. All survey responses were tallied and weighted to produce a score for each company.

 

View the full list of Forbes America’s Best Large Employers 2024 here.

 

About American Water

American Water (NYSE: AWK) is the largest regulated water and wastewater utility company in the United States. With a history dating back to 1886, We Keep Life Flowing® by providing safe, clean, reliable and affordable drinking water and wastewater services to more than 14 million people with regulated operations in 14 states and on 18 military installations. American Water’s 6,500 talented professionals leverage their significant expertise and the company’s national size and scale to achieve excellent outcomes for the benefit of customers, employees, investors and other stakeholders.

 

For more information, visit amwater.com and join American Water on LinkedIn, Facebook, X and Instagram.

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Media Contact:

Alicia Barbieri

Director, Communications and External Affairs

American Water

(856) 676-8103

alicia.barbieri@amwater.com

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South Korea’s leading display makers LG and Samsung close ranks as they cede ground to Chinese TV and smartphone screen manufacturers and face OLED competition

—  After taking over mass-market LCDs, Chinese manufacturers are threatening to undercut South Korean makers on premium OLED technology

 

Financial Times:

 

South Korea’s leading display makers LG and Samsung are closing ranks as they cede more ground to Chinese manufacturers of TV and smartphone screens and face being undercut on their leading-edge OLED technology.

 

In what has become a battle for survival for the once-dominant companies in the sector, Samsung closed its last liquid crystal display factory in China in 2021 and is set to rely this year on its domestic rival to produce more of its panels there. The unusual level of co-operation comes as LG seeks to sell its remaining LCD plant in the country, according to reports, after a slump in global IT sales following the lifting of pandemic-era lockdowns in China.

 

Having conquered the market for cheaper mass-market LCD technology, Chinese display manufacturers are now making inroads on the last bastion of South Korean technological superiority, with their leader — state-owned BOE Technology — building a $9bn plant to produce cutting-edge organic light-emitting diode panels in the southwestern Chinese city of Chengdu.

 

South Korea’s display industry is facing the same fate as Japan’s in the $160bn global market, analysts said, citing the worst-case scenario of JOLED, a Japanese joint venture between Panasonic and Sony’s advanced display businesses, which went bankrupt last year with $250mn in liabilities after struggling to match South Korean investments in the sector.

“Just as Korea overtook Japan as the display industry leader, China is likely to outsmart us on the back of its huge domestic market, abundant capital and technological development,” said Park Chong-hoon, head of research at Standard Chartered in Seoul.

 

Park added that the display battle was indicative of the wider struggle for South Korea to preserve its technological edge over China in industries ranging from chips and batteries to smartphones and shipbuilding.

 

“This phenomenon will not be confined to just the display market. China is catching up fast in other capital-intensive industries and will soon overtake Korea in most key manufacturing industries,” he said.

 

Samsung and LG rose to pre-eminence in the global display market in the 2000s, following a series of aggressive investments that helped them overthrow the Japanese incumbents. They relied on their in-house display businesses to supply panels to their TV and smartphone divisions, but that model was disrupted by the rise of Chinese alternatives supported by generous government subsidies and a giant domestic market, as well as by Taiwanese competitors.

 

“The massive expansion of Chinese panel production capacity and the resulting price competitiveness led Korean panel makers to exit the LCD supply chain under loss pressures,” said Iris Yu, an analyst at Taiwanese consultancy TrendForce.

 

The two South Korean companies have focused their investments instead on OLED displays for high-end TVs, smartphones and tablets, as well as next-generation micro OLED displays for virtual and augmented reality devices such as Apple’s Vision Pro headset. LG Display is the world’s only mass producer of large OLED panels, although OLED TVs only make up 3 per cent of the global TV market. Now the two are finding themselves under pressure in the OLED segment as well.

BOE’s new Chengdu plant will produce OLED substrates using the latest 8.6-generation technology — setting up a head-to-head battle with Samsung to supply OLED panels to Apple for next-generation iPads and MacBooks.

 

“Korea is far advanced in terms of OLED quality, but China’s OLED panels are much cheaper than Korea’s,” said Yi Choong-hoon, a display expert and head of Seoul-based UBI Research.

 

“China suffers huge losses, but it still supplies OLED panels at cheap prices to increase its market share, meaning it will kill off competitors as it has done in the LCD market,” he added.

 

“China will overtake Korea in the OLED market, too, if things are left as they are.”

 

The South Korean companies must also contend with an intensifying Chinese campaign to acquire their display-making expertise.

 

According to South Korean government figures, between 2016 and 2023, Chinese entities were able to steal more technology from the country’s display sector than from any other industry apart from the chip sector. Last year Samsung Display filed a complaint against BOE with the US International Trade Commission aimed at stopping the Chinese company from selling displays in the US using tech that was allegedly stolen, according to the South Korean company.

 

BOE, which denies the allegations, has responded with a barrage of lawsuits against several Samsung subsidiaries in China. Having cut ties with BOE, Samsung is now getting more LCD panels from LG Display’s Chinese plant in the southern city of Guangzhou. Yu of TrendForce predicts that Samsung “will significantly reduce its dependency on Chinese panel makers in 2024, dropping its procurement share from 55 per cent to 38 per cent.”

The new partnership between the South Korean companies also constitutes a lifeline for LG, which suffered seven straight quarters of losses before finally reporting an operating profit in the final quarter of 2023.

“Samsung and LG need each other because the all-out display war between Korea and China has spread to the premium market,” said Nam Sang-uk, a researcher at the Korea Institute for Industrial Economics & Trade.

 

Samsung and LG declined to comment on their co-operation. Yi of UBI Research said Washington should consider intervening on South Korea’s behalf, arguing that a Chinese takeover of the sector would complicate US-led efforts to enlist Seoul’s assistance in reducing China’s access to more sensitive technologies such as semiconductors.

 

“China dominating the display sector will undermine US chip strategy because it gives Beijing such leverage over Seoul,” said Yi.

 

“If Korea reduces its chip supply to China, then China can reduce its display supply to Korea. The more dependent Korean IT companies become on Chinese suppliers, the more this kind of retaliation will hurt.”

 

 

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— Techmeme

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Why ‘From Hilde, With Love’ director made Nazi-era Berlin seem almost ‘Normal:’ ‘I wanted to bring it closer to our reality’

When Laila Stieler’s script for “From Hilde, With Love,” which world premiered Saturday in competition at the Berlinale, first came to director Andreas Dresen he was a little reluctant to take the project on.

 

The issue was not the script but the subject-matter: set in Nazi-era Berlin, “From Hilde, With Love” is a love story about two real life members of the pro-Communist, German resistance movement known as the Red Orchestra, Hilde and Hans Coppi.

 

More than 50 members of the group were guillotined in Berlin’s Plötzensee Prison between 1942 and 1943, including the Coppis. Hilde gave birth to her son in prison. He is alive today and was consulted about the production.

 

“I was a little bit afraid of doing these films about Nazi times, because it’s always in sepia colors, you know, very historical, very artificial always, and this is not the style of cinema I like,” he tells Variety.

 

“But when I read [the script], with that wonderful character [Hilde], I immediately fell in love with that woman because she’s so humble, so shy, and she would never have called herself a resistance fighter. It just would not have been possible for her. She just followed her heart, and that’s what I really liked about [the story].”

 

The film, which is being sold by Beta Cinema and is produced by Claudia Steffen and Christoph Friedel for Pandora Film, stars “Babylon Berlin” breakout Liv Lisa Fries and Johannes Hegemann.

 

One aspect of the production is the absence of the usual cliches of the Nazi period: There are no swastikas, the Gestapo officers wear suits, not black leather coats, and nobody has a dueling scar.

 

All of this was intentional. “I was bit afraid of these iconic statements about those times. The intention was to not give that story a kind of historical ambience. I wanted to free it from history and to bring it closer to our reality,” Dresen says.

 

The intention, he says, was to make everything seem almost “normal.” Before they are caught, life for Hans, Hilde and their friends seems light-hearted and almost fun: they drink, they picnic, they dance, they swim and make love.

 

One reason for this was that Dresen grew up in Communist East Germany where the Coppis and other members of the resistance were depicted as larger-than-life heroes. “They were so brave, everything they did was so fine, and so I found myself feeling so small in front of them, and I always thought: ‘Oh, I could never be so brave as they were and I’m such a small person,’ and I think behind that is a kind of political intention. And that was that if you don’t compare yourself to people like that, then you don’t allow yourself to step into any kind of resistance. And in East Germany, of course, it was the intention to prevent us from doing anything against the system.”

 

“And, so, my intention when we started production was to bring these people as close as possible to us, so we could feel that they could be our partners, they could be our friends. These are young people: they fall in love; they go swimming; they have sad times. Sometimes it looks like they are on their holidays. These are not 24/7 resistance fighters. Most of them are young people who have their own dreams. They want to have families. Hilda becomes a mother. That was important for me: to show these people as normal as possible.”

 

The legal process is depicted as being almost as you’d see in a democratic state. There is almost no violence shown during the interrogation, the prison guard and nurses are depicted as being as humane as they could be in the circumstances, there is little histrionics at the trial, evidence is presented calmly, a defense attorney is present, and the judge gives Hilde an opportunity to exonerate herself by accusing others, but when asked why she conspired against the state, she simply replies: “Because I loved my husband.”

 

“Even the Nazi part in the film, they are in a way normal people. They don’t shout, they don’t hit, except one moment. We don’t have these marching soldiers. I think the system could look friendly, but at the end it’s as dangerous as it was, even if the people are friendly, because they are opportunists. It’s not necessary to be very loud. ‘We are following the rules of the system. We do everything we can to be friendly.’ But at the end is the guillotine.”

 

“And, so, I wanted to show this part of history as close as possible to our reality and that we can compare ourselves to people like Hilde and Hans, on the one side, and on the other side, to the Nazis. So you can choose: On which side would I have been if I had lived there? And I think maybe even in our times, it is important to decide.”

 

 

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— Variety

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‘Celebrate the Green’ with D&R Greenway Land Trust and Voices Chorale NJ

In celebration of D&R Greenway Land Trust’s work to preserve the green in our local communities – back by popular demand – Voices Chorale N.J. is bringing Irish music and dancing to a benefit for both organizations just in time for St. Patrick’s Day on Friday, March 15, from 6 to 9 p.m. at D&R Greenway’s Johnson Education Center, 1 Preservation Place, Princeton.

Guests enjoying an Irish dance with friends at the ‘Celebrate the Green’ event last March. — Photo by Mary M. Michaels
A rainbow encompasses the carriage barn at the Johnson Education Center.

 

The Parnell Irish Band will entertain with guitar, drums and fiddle, providing lots of Irish music with vocals to engage the crowd in group singing.  Irish jokes and stories will add to the fun as well as a unique opportunity to kick up your heels and learn the art of Irish Country Dancing.

 

Guests are encouraged to wear green and experience a pub-style setting while enjoying beer, wine and a light pub supper.  The festivities will include a Silent Auction of unique items to support Voices Chorale N.J.  Weather permitting, guests will be invited to gather outside on the patio for an Irish singalong by the firepit.

Gathering around the fire pit last year for an Irish singalong. — Photo by Philip S. Getty

 

“It’s easy to be green at this special event!  D&R Greenway’s protection of over 22,000 acres of land keeps 40 shades of green in our Garden State.  I can’t think of anything more fitting than to celebrate that bounty with an Irish festival of singing and camaraderie!” says D&R Greenway President & CEO, Linda Mead.  Only 75 seats are available. By the “luck ‘o the Irish” be among the first come, first served and reserve your party’s seats now.

 

Imagine yourself regaled by music and laughter throughout the evening, capped by a procession to a bluestone terrace where a firepit will light the night as you join in lyrical celebration.  According to past participants, this will be a magical moment to remember.

 

Voices Board of Directors President and choir member Jane Read says “Voices is excited to continue our partnership with D&R Greenway with this event. We look forward to sharing our music and enjoying the evening with friends old and new.”

 

Voices Chorale NJ is a non-profit, member-run, auditioned chorus based in Hopewell, NJ, which includes singers from central New Jersey and southeastern Pennsylvania under the direction of Dr. David A. McConnell. The mission of Voices Chorale NJ is to bring outstanding music to the public, inspire audiences, and provide performance opportunities for singers and local musicians. Voices sponsors a Young Composers Project for children from ages 5 – 12. https://www.voiceschoralenj.org.  Follow Voices on Facebook and Instagram.

 

D&R Greenway Land Trust is an accredited nonprofit that has reached a milestone of over 22,000 acres of land preserved throughout central New Jersey since 1989. By protecting land in perpetuity and creating public trails, it gives everyone the opportunity to enjoy the great outdoors. The Land Trust’s preserved farms and community gardens provide local organic food for residents of the region—including those most in need. Through strategic land conservation and stewardship, D&R Greenway combats climate change, protects birds and wildlife, and ensures clean drinking water for future generations. D&R Greenway’s mission is centered on connecting land with people from all walks of life.https://www.drgreenway.org; info@drgreenway.org. Follow the organization on Facebook and Instagram.

 

Tickets for this festive event and benefit are $65 per person. Space is limited. To reserve your seat, visithttps://www.drgreenway.org;  or  https://www.voiceschoralenj.org or call 609-924-4646.