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Play continues or game concluded? A retrospective on 2025 for the gaming sector
Economy

Play continues or game concluded? A retrospective on 2025 for the gaming sector

by admin December 28, 2025
written by admin

This summer, the Switch 2 achieved the title of the quickest-selling console in Nintendo’s history, moving 10.36 million units during its initial four months.
Guillaume Payen | Sopa Images | Lightrocket | Getty Images

This year has been pivotal for the gaming industry, highlighted by innovative devices and multi-billion dollar agreements.

The sector witnessed further consolidation as a consortium spearheaded by the Public Investment Fund of Saudi Arabia, along with Jared Kushner’s Affinity Partners and Silver Lake, revealed intentions to privatize Electronic Arts. The $55 billion transaction, which encompasses $20 billion in debt financing, stands as the largest leveraged buyout in the history of Wall Street.

This development could significantly affect EA, according to analysts from Omdia. They stated that the immediate question is whether the PIF intends to manage EA as a “PR initiative” or “to maximize returns” from the enterprise.

The French game publisher Ubisoft aimed to improve its performance this year; however, it began 2025 with a second postponement of its prominent Assassin’s Creed entry, Shadows.

Ubisoft’s stock saw an uptick in March following the announcement of a new gaming subsidiary in collaboration with Chinese tech giant Tencent, named Vantage Studios. This new studio, partially owned by Tencent, will concentrate on Ubisoft’s major IPs — Far Cry, Assassin’s Creed, and Tom Clancy’s Rainbow Six.

Despite Ubisoft’s attempts, its shares have slumped by just over half this year, and the stock has fallen more than 90% from its peak in 2021.

Conversely, Take-Two Interactive saw its shares rise steadily through 2025 as excitement grew for the next Grand Theft Auto installment. It has been 12 years since the previous release, GTA 5, debuted on Xbox 360 and PS3.

However, with little information on GTA 6 for the majority of the year, fans speculated about a potential delay beyond the May 26, 2026, release date, despite Take-Two CEO Strauss Zelnick asserting to CNBC in May that he was “very, very confident” the target date was feasible. By November of this year, the game was rescheduled for release on Nov. 19, 2026, causing Take-Two’s shares to plummet following the announcement.

The game will launch during the transitional period for Sony’s PlayStation 5 and Microsoft‘s Xbox Series X and S—six years post their launch. As attention shifts to the next generation of consoles, there has been a strategic shift for both brands during this previous generation.

Shifts in console strategies

Xbox has shifted away from exclusive games, permitting titles like Indiana Jones and Forza Horizon to release on PS5, while PlayStation is expanding its experiment with launching titles on PC.

Take-Two’s Zelnick contended that these changing strategies will open the gaming industry further. When queried about the future of consoles in the next five to ten years, he expressed that consoles will remain, evolving towards a PC model as “business transitions to open instead of closed.”

“But if you define a console by the property rather than the system, then the concept of an extensive game that engages players for numerous hours on a large screen is here to stay,” he articulated to CNBC’s Andrew Ross Sorkin in November.

According to George Jijiashvili, senior principal analyst for Games at Omdia, consoles still maintain a vital presence in the marketplace. He mentioned in CNBC’s “Squawk Box Europe” that these devices continue to be “the go-to place for premium games.”

Data from Omdia indicates that consoles represent the second-largest category in total consumer expenditure, with mobile contributing 60%, consoles at 23%, and PCs accounting for 16%.

While many have largely moved away from exclusive titles, Nintendo continues to embrace this strategy, rolling out several exclusive games for its new Switch 2 console—including a reimagined open-world Mario Kart and a brand-new Donkey Kong title.

This summer, the Switch 2 set a record as the fastest-selling console ever, selling 10.36 million units within just the first four months.

However, not everyone is convinced by Nintendo’s approach. Christopher Dring, founder and editor-in-chief of The Game Business, told CNBC’s “Built for Billions” in November that Nintendo must overcome challenges in sustaining demand for its hardware.

“Unlike PlayStation and Xbox and other platforms, consumers purchasing Nintendo consoles primarily do so for Nintendo titles. This indicates that if they lack a game ready, they can’t depend on external developers to sustain them.”

December 28, 2025 0 comments
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Airlines call off 900 additional flights, but disturbances from the winter storm diminish. Here’s what to be aware of.
Economy

Airlines call off 900 additional flights, but disturbances from the winter storm diminish. Here’s what to be aware of.

by admin December 27, 2025
written by admin

Passengers at LaGuardia Airport (LGA) in the Queens district of New York, USA, on Friday, December 26, 2025.
Michael Nagle | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Over 900 flights across the U.S. were canceled, with nearly 8,000 delays reported on Saturday following a significant winter storm that impacted the Northeast U.S., challenging airlines during one of the peak travel times of the year.

Snow totals were lower than previously predicted in the region, though both New York’s John F. Kennedy International Airport and New Jersey’s Newark Liberty International Airport logged more than four inches of snowfall, as reported by the National Weather Service.

Over 136 flights, representing roughly a fifth of the planned departures from Kennedy Airport, were canceled according to FlightAware. Additionally, 87 flights were canceled from LaGuardia Airport, which is about 20% of that day’s planned departures, while 72 flights, or 12%, from Newark were also called off.

On Friday, airlines scrapped more than 1,700 flights, many ahead of the storm. Only 27 U.S. flights were reported as canceled for Sunday, according to FlightAware.

American Airlines, Delta Air Lines, United Airlines, Southwest Airlines, JetBlue Airways and other airlines eliminated change fees for restrictive basic economy fares. They announced that they would not impose fare differences for other travelers flying in and out of numerous airports in the Northeast U.S.

Passengers are required to complete their travel by the year’s end if they alter their flights, according to the airlines. Opting for early travel is likely the best option given the scarcity of available seats during the hectic Christmas week.

Airlines for America, the representing group for the industry, projects that airlines will accommodate a record 52.6 million individuals from December 19 to January 5, with this Friday and Sunday being some of the busiest days.

Generally, airlines preemptively cancel flights in anticipation of significant weather events such as blizzards or hurricanes to prevent aircraft, connecting travelers, and crews from being stranded, thus minimizing disruptions.

Discover more CNBC airline news

  • American Airlines has ceased allowing basic economy passengers to accumulate miles
  • Delta’s premium strategy architect to retire in February
  • Frontier Airlines appoints new president, replacing long-time CEO Barry Biffle
  • Southwest’s CEO states the airline is ‘actively pursuing’ a network of airport lounges
December 27, 2025 0 comments
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Assault on Kyiv demonstrates 'Russia has no desire for peace', states Zelensky
Global

Assault on Kyiv demonstrates ‘Russia has no desire for peace’, states Zelensky

by admin December 27, 2025
written by admin
8 hours ago

Rachel Muller-Heyndykand

Adam Goldsmith

A significant assault by Russian forces on Kyiv overnight indicates that Moscow “doesn’t desire peace,” as stated by Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky on Saturday while he readied for new peace negotiations.

Zelensky expressed these remarks while traveling to Florida, where he is set to meet US President Donald Trump on Sunday to review a recently established 20-point peace proposal agreed upon by American and Ukrainian representatives.

According to local officials, the 10-hour missile and drone assault aimed at Ukraine’s capital resulted in two fatalities and 32 injuries.

Consequent damage to energy systems left 40% of housing in Kyiv and surrounding areas without heating, per Oleksiy Kuleba, Ukraine’s development minister.

Russia’s defense ministry stated that long-range precision munitions were utilized to strike energy installations, which it claimed were being exploited “for the benefit of the Ukrainian Armed Forces and the Ukrainian military-industrial complex.”

In a Telegram post, Zelensky reported that nearly 500 drones and 40 missiles were aimed at Kyiv, hitting both energy and civilian facilities.

Images depicted severe damage to apartment buildings and homes engulfed in flames following the attacks.

The apartment complex of BBC journalist Anastasiya Gribanova was affected, resulting in fire on higher floors. Gribanova, who was in the building’s elevator at that moment, remained uninjured.

Reuters A firefighter works at a residential building that is ablazeReuters

Ukraine’s State Emergency Service reported that 68 individuals were evacuated from a senior living facility in the eastern district of Darnytskyi.

“Although Russian representatives engage in lengthy discussions, in fact, the Daggers [missiles] and Shaheds [drones] are talking for them,” Zelensky noted on Telegram, stating that Russian President Vladimir Putin is unwilling to conclude the conflict.

“This troubling conduct can only be addressed with genuinely robust actions. The United States has this capability, Europe possesses this ability, and numerous allies also have this potential,” he stated, calling on partners to demonstrate strength against Russian hostility.

The incident prompted Poland, sharing a 530km-long (320 miles) border with western Ukraine, to ready its fighter jets, ground-based air defense units, and radar systems.

Later on Saturday morning, Poland determined that its airspace had not been breached.

Russia’s Defense Ministry reported that its air defense forces intercepted and eliminated nearly 200 Ukrainian drones across multiple regions in Russia, including eight over Moscow.

Zelensky had a brief meeting with Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney on Saturday, just ahead of his scheduled discussion with Trump in Florida.

Speaking from Nova Scotia, Zelensky remarked that the latest shelling of Kyiv was “Russia’s reply [to] our peace initiatives and this truly illustrates that Putin is not interested in peace.”

Carney committed $2.5 billion CAD (£1.35 billion) in economic aid to Ukraine, acknowledging that “enduring peace” would necessitate “a cooperative Russia”.

Zelensky subsequently held a conversation with European leaders to address diplomatic “priorities” prior to his meeting with Trump, asserting that “firm positions are required” to advance the proposal.

Security assurances and territorial compromises for Ukraine are slated to return to discussions, concerns on which Russia has historically been hesitant to negotiate.

Additionally on Saturday, Russian President Vladimir Putin visited a command center supervising Moscow’s military actions, as reported by Russian news outlet TASS.

Dressed in military attire, Putin stated that if Kyiv is disinclined to settle the dispute peacefully, Russia would achieve its goals through military means, according to remarks in state media.

Reuters A pink apartment building with a huge hole in the side of it and a firefighter on a crane spraying water into it.Reuters

The newly established 20-point proposal is an amended version of a previous 28-point plan crafted by US special envoy Steve Witkoff, which was largely perceived as overly advantageous to Russia.

The president of Ukraine has expressed hope regarding the revised draft, labeling it as “a foundational text for resolving the conflict,” though Trump cautioned that Zelensky “doesn’t possess anything until I give my approval” in a conversation with Politico.

The draft is said to encompass security guarantees from the US, NATO, and European partners for a coordinated military reaction should Russia re-invade Ukraine.

Control over Ukraine’s eastern Donbas region has posed challenges in negotiations thus far; however, Zelensky has now suggested that a “free economic zone” might be considered.

Trump conveyed to Politico that he anticipates reviewing the fresh draft on Sunday.

“I believe it will go well with him. I think it will go well with [Vladimir] Putin,” Trump said during the interview, adding that he looks forward to a conversation with Russia’s president “soon”.

December 27, 2025 0 comments
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Ceasefire between Thailand and Cambodia initiates following weeks of lethal confrontations
Global

Ceasefire between Thailand and Cambodia initiates following weeks of lethal confrontations

by admin December 27, 2025
written by admin

A truce has been initiated between Thailand and Cambodia along their border, where nearly three weeks of violent confrontations have led to almost one million individuals being displaced from their homes.

In a unified statement, the defense ministers from both nations concurred to maintain the current front lines, prohibit reinforcements, and facilitate the return of civilians residing in the border zones at the earliest opportunity.

The truce became effective at noon local time (05:00 GMT) on Saturday. According to the statement, 18 Cambodian soldiers who have been in Thai custody since July will be freed once the ceasefire holds for 72 hours.

This significant development followed days of discussions between the two nations, bolstered by diplomatic support from China and the US.

The accord focuses on returning those displaced to their residences and also encompasses a commitment to eliminate landmines.

Thailand’s Defence Minister Natthaphon Narkphanit characterized the truce as a measure of the “other party’s sincerity”.

“If the ceasefire does not materialize or is breached, Thailand reserves its rightful entitlement to self-defense as per international law,” he informed reporters.

UN human rights chief Volker Türk expressed hope that the ceasefire would “clear the way” for peace, while a spokesperson for the EU urged “good faith” in its execution.

Thailand had hesitated to embrace the truce, citing the inadequate implementation of the previous one. They also expressed discontent over perceived attempts by Cambodia to internationalize the dispute.

In contrast to the previous truce in July, US President Donald Trump noticeably did not participate this time, though the US State Department was involved.

That ceasefire arrangement unraveled earlier this month, ensuing renewed conflicts. Both parties accused each other of causing the failure of the agreement.

The Thai military stated its personnel reacted to gunfire from Cambodian forces in Thailand’s Si Sa Ket province, which resulted in injuries to two Thai soldiers.

Cambodia’s defense ministry claimed it was the Thai forces who initiated the attack in Preah Vihear province and asserted that Cambodia did not respond.

Conflicts persisted throughout December. On Friday, Thailand executed additional air strikes within Cambodian territory.

The Thai Air Force reported it targeted a Cambodian “fortified military position” after civilians had vacated the area. Cambodia’s defense ministry described the strikes as “indiscriminate attacks” against civilian residences.

The durability of the ceasefire largely hinges on political will. Nationalist fervor has surged in both nations.

Cambodia, notably, has suffered significant losses in soldiers and military assets. It has been pushed back from positions it held at the border and has endured severe damage from Thai air strikes, grievances that could complicate the pathway to lasting peace.

Disputes concerning the border trace back over a century, but tensions escalated earlier this year when a group of Cambodian women performed patriotic songs at a contested temple.

A Cambodian soldier lost his life in a confrontation in May, and two months later, in July, there were five days of fierce combat along the border, resulting in numerous casualties among soldiers and civilians. Thousands more civilians were displaced.

After the intervention of Malaysia and President Trump, a delicate ceasefire was brokered between the two nations and ratified in late October.

Trump labeled the deal the “Kuala Lumpur Peace Accords”. It obliged both parties to withdraw heavy artillery from the disputed area and to set up a temporary observer team to monitor it.

However, the agreement was put on hold by Thailand in November after Thai soldiers suffered injuries due to landmines, with Thai Prime Minister Anutin Charnvirakul stating that the security threat had “not actually diminished”.

December 27, 2025 0 comments
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Europe at a 'crossroads' regarding AI rivalry and climate: investment managers
Economy

Europe at a ‘crossroads’ regarding AI rivalry and climate: investment managers

by admin December 27, 2025
written by admin


Europe finds itself at a pivotal moment: engage meaningfully in the AI competition or adhere to its leading climate objectives. 

“This is akin to a fork in the road for Europe,” remarked Wedbush Securities’ Dan Ives during a CNBC discussion. The union faces the choice of either “investing in the future” or risking the chance of “missing a significant aspect of this technology surge.”

The challenge is exacerbated by the region’s green energy mandates. 

Worldwide, energy represents the primary obstacle for developing AI-related data center initiatives. While the U.S. activates fossil fuel plants to support its expansion, Europe mandates that developers reveal how they manage energy and water efficiency, creating bureaucratic hurdles that may delay project implementations. 

The European Union is regularly praised for its proactive environmental policies and recent advancements such as the upcoming carbon border tax. However, critics claim it hinders business. The region has gained a reputation as “anti-entrepreneur,” according to Ives, prompting tech firms and startups from Europe to relocate to the U.S., Middle East, or Asia in search of more advantageous regulations. 

As Europe strives to accelerate its efforts in the AI sector, the necessity for power-intensive infrastructure grows, and the demand for electricity escalates — making this dilemma increasingly difficult to overlook. The additional renewable energy capacity was meant to substitute higher-emission sources, yet there are emerging worries that the reality may differ.

“You can observe in the U.K. that we are already retracting some of our commitments,” Paul Jackson, regional Global Market Strategist at Invesco, expressed to CNBC – and Europe is likely to follow a similar path. 

“This is a somewhat standard process that when conditions are favorable, it’s straightforward to convince individuals, companies, and governments to move in the right direction regarding issues like climate change and absorb some of the costs involved,” Jackson stated. Conversely, deprioritizing climate initiatives is one of the simplest actions legislators can take in challenging circumstances with conflicting interests, he added. 

The U.K.’s energy grid has no coal, which is much more polluting than gas — whereas Europe’s grid still includes it.

“I’m concerned that, at some point, the closure of coal power plants might actually be delayed,” Jags Walia, head of global listed infrastructure at Van Lanschot Kempen, told CNBC.

Made with Flourish

Transitioning away from fossil fuels as renewables become available is viable when energy demand remains stable, but that is no longer the situation, he noted. Data centers also necessitate continuous connection, which means the variability of wind and solar could present challenges.

“In terms of electricity, we may not have the capacity to shut down coal power plants, which could pose significant difficulties for the energy transition and energy security as well,” Walia mentioned.

Throughout the year, Europe has reversed several environmental commitments. 

On December 16, the EU diluted its effective ban on new combustion-engine vehicles set for 2035. On December 9, it allowed a one-year delay in the rollout of a new EU emissions trading system for buildings, road transportation, and small industries — while simultaneously vowing to reduce emissions by 90% by 2040. 

Earlier this year, the Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence (CSDDD) and Corporate Sustainability Reporting (CSRD) directives were also limited and postponed.

A ‘pragmatic’ strategy

Some view these adjustments as necessary pragmatism rather than a withdrawal. 

“We constantly find ourselves at the brink of reaching a point where it becomes so unappealing to operate in Europe that it is no longer justifiable. On the flip side, much of the regulation is critically needed,” stated Nick de la Forge, a general partner at the venture capital firm Planet A Ventures, which supports climate-focused technology startups, during a CNBC’s “Europe Early Edition” on December 11. 

“Fortunately, what we observe is a fairly substantial revamping.” 

The reform of directives, including the Sustainable Finance Disclosure Regulation (SFDR), which is currently under review, is remarkable, and we view this as a positive change,” De la Forge commented. 

Proponents of AI advocate for the technology’s potential to enhance energy efficiency and promote sustainability, portraying it as both a challenge and a solution to the rising demands on the grid, and potentially justifying the investment. 

“As AI evolves swiftly, its capacity to bolster Europe’s energy resilience and hasten the clean transition becomes increasingly evident. Concurrently, the escalating electricity requirements of AI technologies necessitate strategic, future-oriented planning,” stated a European Commission spokesperson to CNBC.

They indicated that the economic bloc “is fully poised to capitalize on these prospects while ensuring the stability and reliability of Europe’s energy framework.”

The Commission did not specifically respond to inquiries posed by CNBC regarding a rollback of sustainability legislation due to its AI initiatives or how it plans to achieve the new legally binding target. 

Instead, a spokesperson for the bloc made reference to the region’s preparations for a roadmap for employing AI in the energy sector, in sync with its broader Apply AI Strategy, which aims to expedite the technology’s deployment. 

‘We’re somewhat in trouble’

If policymakers maintain stringent sustainability standards, AI infrastructure developers may instead counterbalance their emissions with carbon credits or renewable energy certificates. One credit signifies the removal of one metric ton of carbon dioxide or the prevention of one metric ton from entering the atmosphere.

AI hyperscalers “do still have their primary decarbonization objectives” but are reverting to measures such as these to reach them, noted Jim Wright, manager of the Premier Miton Global Infrastructure Income Fund. “Because, in reality, they will utilize certain gas, and may even rely on some coal,” he stated, referring to variations in energy grid compositions.

Read more

Europe agrees to cut emissions 90% by 2040
Climate threat to U.S. infrastructure is accelerating. Here’s what’s most at risk
Fossil fuel leaders herald the energy addition era: ‘Music to my ears’

This reality was acknowledged in the EU’s December 9 agreement, which included the provision for carbon removal credits to achieve the new reduction goal. Overall, it has ushered in a phase of energy enhancement rather than transition – a trend welcomed by oil CEOs – as AI-driven electricity demand outstrips the supply from renewable sources. 

Moreover, it raises concerns about energy security, not merely availability. The race for data centers and AI “puts a significantly greater burden on our energy infrastructure, and as we’ve witnessed in recent years, our resilience in this area has not been particularly strong,” said Jackson. It necessitates the addition of almost a baseline demand for energy to existing grids, potentially leading to increased price volatility and even energy rationing, he warned.

Climate change poses a threat to infrastructure and business continuity — which is an ongoing concern, experts have informed CNBC.

For Kokou Agbo Bloua, global head of research at Société Générale, it’s “a significant issue that cannot be ignored” and one of his primary concerns for the future. 

In a conversation with CNBC’s “Squawk Box Europe” on Monday, he stated: “We’re sort of in trouble … pun intended because we’re heading towards two-and-a-half to three degrees [of warming beyond pre-industrial levels]. If you analyze green technologies, they are being utilized for data centers rather than as replacements for fossil fuels.”

However, it may take years before a formal abandonment of Europe’s environmental ambitions occurs. “Often, when it comes to sustainability objectives, if countries are planning to abandon a goal, they tend to delay it until the very last moment,” Walia remarked.

December 27, 2025 0 comments
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Economy

One year later from the UK’s ambitious AI strategy: has its infrastructure development been a triumph?

by admin December 27, 2025
written by admin

QTS’s data hub situated in Cambois, North East England

In January, when the U.K. revealed its AI Opportunities Action Plan — an ambitious framework to integrate the technology throughout society — Prime Minister Keir Starmer asserted that the strategy aims to transform the nation into an “AI superpower.”

A significant element of this initiative was the swift establishment of data centers equipped to handle the extensive computational demands associated with AI deployment. This would be facilitated by “AI growth zones” — specified areas where planning permissions are eased and power access is enhanced.

Almost a year later, Nvidia, Microsoft, and Google have pledged billions toward AI infrastructure in the nation. Four AI growth zones have been announced, and local startups like Nscale are rising as important figures in the field.

However, detractors highlight heavily restricted energy access through the national grid and sluggish development as indicators that the country may fall behind its global competitors in the AI competition.

“There’s a disconnect between aspiration and execution,” remarked Ben Pritchard, CEO of data center power provider AVK, in an interview with CNBC.

“Expansion has been stunted mainly due to limitations on power accessibility. Grid congestion, in particular, has decelerated development and means the U.K. isn’t rolling out infrastructure swiftly enough to match global contenders.”

Delays in grid connections

The journey of developing AI infrastructure in the U.K. is still in its early stages, as AI growth zones are presently in initial development stages.

A location in Oxfordshire, the first to be disclosed in February, has not yet commenced construction and is still evaluating proposals from delivery partners. Preliminary site preparation has started in one area in the North East of England, revealed in September, with formal construction expected to kick off in early 2026.

Two additional sites in North and South Wales were introduced in November. The North Wales site is in search of an investment partner, which the Department of Science, Technology and Innovation (DSIT) indicated to CNBC is anticipated to be confirmed in the coming months. The South Wales site consists of several locations, some operational while others are slated for further development, according to DSIT.

The U.K. government stated in July that it aimed to establish a core set of AI growth zones catering to a minimum demand of 500 megawatts by 2030, with at least one growing to over one gigawatt during that period.

Yet the most significant obstacle in achieving those goals is the U.K.’s constrained grid capacity, Pritchard asserted.

“Developers anticipate grid connection delays between eight to ten years, and the number of pending connection applications, particularly around London, is unprecedented,” he informed CNBC.

AI workloads are also “significantly escalating energy requirements” as businesses and consumers increasingly utilize the technology, adding further strain to an already stretched energy framework, Pritchard noted. “These are no longer isolated threats; they are actively hindering or obstructing developments nationwide.”

The outreach for applications for the AI growth zone initiative created a scenario where landowners with transmission lines or power cables running through their properties sought designation, commented Spencer Lamb from Kao Data.

“This led to the national grid being overwhelmed by power grid applications from speculative entities,” with little chance of actual success, he stated to CNBC.

Establishing the foundation

The National Energy System Operator (Neso) — the U.K.’s agency in charge of overseeing the national grid — has taken steps to address the issue.

This month, it disclosed intentions to fast-track numerous projects to gain quicker access to the grid. Neso refrained from commenting on whether AI infrastructure projects are included in those prioritized when questioned by CNBC but stated a significant portion involved data centers.

Considerable financial commitments have also come from technology giants, many of which were highlighted by the U.K. government in September.

Microsoft, Nvidia, Google, OpenAI, CoreWeave, and others proclaimed multi-billion dollar investments in AI during U.S. President Donald Trump’s state visit, including plans to deploy the newest chips in the nation and set up new data centers.

The homegrown startup Nscale, which facilitates access to AI computing and is constructing data centers, also revealed agreements to implement tens of thousands of Nvidia chips at an AI facility just outside London by early 2027.

Nvidia GB10 Grace Blackwell Superchip showcased at the company’s GTC conference in San Jose, California, on March 19, 2025.
Max A. Cherney | Reuters

“Investment from leading private entities has established crucial groundwork,” stated Puneet Gupta, general manager for the U.K. and Ireland at data infrastructure firm NetApp, in an interview with CNBC. “There is also growing momentum regarding national research supercomputers and plans for additional computing capacity, with pledges to create AI ‘gigafactories’ in the U.K.”

However, the “real challenge” will be the speed at which these plans convert into usable computing resources for U.K. businesses, Gupta remarked.

Avoiding an AI infrastructure ‘sugar rush’

The long-term success of the nation’s AI infrastructure development will necessitate investing in the “full stack,” encompassing data pipelines, storage, energy procurement, security, talent, and skills, according to Stuart Abbott, U.K. and Ireland’s managing director at AI infrastructure company VAST Data, in his comments to CNBC.

“If the UK desires this to be sustainable rather than a temporary surge, it needs to manage AI infrastructure as economic infrastructure.”
Stuart Abbott
U.K. and Ireland’s managing director at AI infrastructure company VAST Data

This requires “creating an operational network that allows genuine institutions to implement AI securely on a large scale,” he continued. “If the UK aspires for sustainability over a fleeting surge, it must regard AI infrastructure as akin to economic infrastructure.”

The hurdles are considerable. The financial figures for data center deals in Europe pale in contrast to the amounts funneled into U.S. initiatives. The U.K. also currently endures the highest energy costs in Europe, which are approximately 75% higher than pre-Russia invasion of Ukraine levels, alongside an aging grid infrastructure that may take many years to connect to new sites.

A potential answer for projects unable to secure access to the national grid involves microgrids, according to AVK’s Pritchard. Microgrids are self-sufficient power networks drawing energy from sources such as engines, renewables, and batteries.

AVK is in the process of designing two microgrids for collaborators constructing cloud computing facilities, although not for AI, within the U.K. These can take around three years to establish and typically cost about 10% more than energy supplied from the grid at this point, Pritchard explained.

Locating computing resources where power is already available, instead of “relying solely on undeveloped sites,” is another method to expedite the establishment of AI infrastructure, remarked VAST Data’s Abbott.

The speed of execution will be essential, Lamb from Kao Data warned CNBC. “Unless fundamental issues around energy accessibility and pricing, AI copyright, and funding for AI initiatives are addressed swiftly, the U.K. will forfeit one of the most extraordinary economic chances of our era and ultimately risk becoming a global AI backwater.”

December 27, 2025 0 comments
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Tech/AI

Trump’s battle against offshore wind encounters yet another legal challenge

by admin December 26, 2025
written by admin

A developer focused on offshore wind energy claims that the Trump administration is restricting future energy supply as AI consumes more electricity.

A developer focused on offshore wind energy claims that the Trump administration is restricting future energy supply as AI consumes more electricity.

Dec 26, 2025, 10:14 PM UTC
257747_trump_wind_power_CVirginia2 (1)
257747_trump_wind_power_CVirginia2 (1)
Justine Calma
Justine Calma serves as a senior reporter focused on science, covering energy and environmental issues, bringing over ten years of experience to her role. She also hosts Hell or High Water: When Disaster Hits Home, a podcast presented by Vox Media and Audible Originals.

Dominion Energy, a developer of offshore wind projects and a utility provider for Virginia’s “data center corridor,” has initiated legal action against the Trump administration this week concerning its decision to suspend federal leasing for large-scale offshore wind initiatives. This development abruptly halts five wind farms that are currently under construction, including Dominion’s Coastal Virginia Offshore Wind project.

The lawsuit lodged by Dominion on Tuesday claims that a halt order issued on Monday by the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM) is unlawful, “arbitrary and capricious,” and “violates constitutional principles that limit Executive Branch actions.” Dominion is seeking a federal court’s intervention to block BOEM from enforcing this halt order.

The lawsuit further contends that the “unexpected and unfounded withdrawal of regulatory approvals by governmental officials” jeopardizes the capacity of developers to construct essential large-scale infrastructure necessary to accommodate increasing energy demands in the U.S.

“Virginia requires every electron available as our electricity demand doubles. These electrons will energize the data centers that will excel in the AI competition,” Dominion stated in a press release on December 22 released to the media. According to the company, Virginia hosts the highest density of data centers globally.

The surge in building new data centers for AI—coupled with the increasing energy requirements from manufacturing and the electrification of residences and vehicles—has placed additional strain on power grids that are already under pressure. Escalating electricity rates have emerged as a point of contention in Virginia elections, and within communities adjacent to data center developments throughout the U.S.. Delays in the construction of the Coastal Virginia Offshore Wind project are expected to raise costs that ultimately burden customers, according to Dominion.

Doug Burgum, the Secretary of the Interior named as one of the defendants in the lawsuit, stated that the 90-day suspension of offshore wind leases will enable the agency to evaluate national security threats, which have apparently been identified in recent classified reports. The U.S. Department of the Interior also raised concerns about radar interference caused by turbines.

“I want clarity on what has changed?” national security specialist and former USS Cole Commander Kirk Lippold remarked to the Associated Press. “As far as I know, there has been no change in the threat landscape that would necessitate halting any offshore wind initiatives.”

Previously, the Trump administration had frozen construction on the Revolution Wind farm off the Rhode Island coast and the Empire Wind project near New York before a federal judge and BOEM lifted stop work orders. Those projects have since been suspended again. Upon assuming office, President Donald Trump issued a presidential memo that withdrew areas on the outer continental shelf from offshore wind leases, which a federal court deemed earlier this month as “arbitrary and capricious.”

Dominion Energy asserts that it had already acquired all necessary federal, state, and local permits for the Coastal Virginia Offshore Wind farm, which commenced construction in 2024. The company has invested $8.9 billion thus far in the $11.2 billion project anticipated to start generating energy next year. Once operational, the offshore wind facility is expected to generate 9.5 million megawatt-hours of emissions-free electricity annually, enough to power approximately 660,000 homes in the U.S.

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  • Justine Calma
  • Environment

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Rodeo is an application designed for organizing events with friends you already know
Tech/AI

Rodeo is an application designed for organizing events with friends you already know

by admin December 26, 2025
written by admin

Since you can’t be relied upon to recall which group chat someone posted a happy hour invitation in.

Since you can’t be relied upon to recall which group chat someone posted a happy hour invitation in.

Dec 26, 2025, 6:53 PM UTC
Rodeo landing page
Rodeo landing page
Terrence O'Brien
Terrence O’Brien is the weekend editor at the Verge. He brings over 18 years of experience, including a decade as managing editor at Engadget.

Numerous dating applications exist alongside tools that transform your work commitments into straightforward to-do lists. An increasing number of applications are emerging to assist you in making new friendships. The concept behind Rodeo is unique in that it employs AI to aid in scheduling activities with your current friends.

The startup was founded by two former Hinge executives who found it increasingly challenging to coordinate plans with friends. Parenting, job commitments, and numerous group chats can contribute to the difficulty of keeping friendships strong.

Rodeo can process social media posts concerning events or restaurants, or even just images from group chats, and simplify the process of converting these into definite plans with friends. For example, if you upload a snapshot of an Instagram promotion for a movie, it will gather information on theaters where it is screening, display showtimes, and facilitate ticket purchases. Additionally, there’s an option to send an invitation to a friend you’d like to “recruit” into your plans.

Activities can be categorized into lists for things you’d like to save for future reference, such as excellent date night venues, or activities to enjoy with your former college friends, like a nearby paintball arena. These lists can also be collaborative, enabling you to invite all your former fraternity brothers to contribute suggestions to a specific list.

Interestingly, founders Sam Levy and Tim MacGougan aren’t aggressively promoting the AI aspect of their application. While language models and other AI-related technologies are trending in Silicon Valley, it appears these two realized that Americans prefer AI to stay out of their personal affairs. Nonetheless, it is the AI functionality that differentiates Rodeo. Sharing collective lists, saving favorite dining options, and sending calendar invitations for events to friends are actions everyone can perform with just a Gmail account. Rodeo alleviates the need to manually gather all the information for events or venues and converting them into invitations and tasks.

The company isn’t entirely shunning popular terminology. As reported by Business Insider, Levy refers to the application as a “‘second brain’ for organizing activities with friends and family.” Hence, Rodeo clearly aims to leverage the fervor for organization that has fueled the success of applications like Notion, Obsidian, and My Mind for its emerging social platform.

Currently, Rodeo is accessible as an invite-only beta, but you can download the iOS app to join the waiting list.

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  • Terrence O’Brien

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Set off on a visual journey of art inspired by black holes
Tech/AI

Set off on a visual journey of art inspired by black holes

by admin December 26, 2025
written by admin

Gamwell detects resonances of Mitchell’s dark stars, for example, in Edgar Allan Poe’s short tale, “A Descent Into the Maelstrom,” especially the striking 1919 illustration by Harry Clarke. “For many people when the idea first appeared, this seemed to act as an early analogy for a black hole,” Gamwell said. “At that stage it was a mathematical concept and difficult to picture concretely. Poe in fact imagined a dark star [elsewhere in his writings].”

The works on display cover almost every medium: charcoal and pen-and-ink studies, oil and acrylic paintings, murals, sculptures, both traditional and digital photography, and immersive, room-scale multimedia pieces, including a 2021–2022 installation titled Gravitational Arena by Chinese artist Xu Bing. “Xu Bing’s practice largely revolves around language,” Gamwell noted. For Gravitational Arena, “He takes a Wittgenstein quotation about language and renders it in his own script, shaping the English alphabet to resemble Chinese characters. Then he subjects that text to gravity to form a singularity. [The installation] rises several stories and he covered the gallery floor with a mirror. So when you walk up you get the sense of a wormhole, which he uses as an analogy for translation.”

“Anything near a black hole is violently ripped apart because of its immense gravity—the strongest in the universe,” Gamwell writes about the lasting fascination with black holes in art. “That violence appears in works by artists such as Cai Guo-Qiang and Takashi Murakami, who have used black holes to represent the savagery unleashed by the atomic bomb. The unavoidable pull of a black hole also serves as a ready metaphor for depression in the work of artists like Moonassi. Thus, on one hand, the black hole gives artists a device to express the devastations and anxieties of the modern era. On the other hand, a black hole’s extreme gravity is a source of tremendous energy, and artists such as Yambe Tam invite viewers to accept darkness as a path toward transformation, awe, and wonder.”


Scientific drawing of a black hole by Jean-Pierre Luminet. Ink on paper, reversed photographically

Among the earliest scientific depictions of a black hole, 1979. Ink on paper, photographically reversed.

Jean-Pierre Luminet/Astronomy and Astrophysics 1979

Among the earliest scientific depictions of a black hole, 1979. Ink on paper, photographically reversed.

Jean-Pierre Luminet/Astronomy and Astrophysics 1979


Fabian Oefner (Swiss, born 1984), Black Hole, no. 2, 2014. Inkjet print

Fabian Oefner, Black Hole, no. 2, 2014. Inkjet print

Courtesy of Fabian Oefner

Fabian Oefner, Black Hole, no. 2, 2014. Inkjet print

Courtesy of Fabian Oefner


Sangho Bang (Korean, born 1991), Spaceship, 2018. Digital print

Sangho Bang, Spaceship, 2018. Digital print

Courtesy of Sangho Bang

Sangho Bang, Spaceship, 2018. Digital print

Courtesy of Sangho Bang

Fabian Oefner, Black Hole, no. 2, 2014. Inkjet print

Courtesy of Fabian Oefner

Sangho Bang, Spaceship, 2018. Digital print

Courtesy of Sangho Bang


Eric Heller (America, born 1946), Black Holes Merging, 2020. Digital image

Eric Heller, Black Holes Merging, 2020. Digital image

Courtesy of Eric Heller


Yambe Tam (American, born 1989), Wormhole Bell, 2018. Cast bronze

Yambe Tam, Wormhole Bell, 2018. Cast bronze

Private collection. Photo: Albert Barbu


Rudolf Sikora (Slovak, born 1946), Black Hole II, 1976–1978, from the series Concentration of Energy. Photograph

Rudolf Sikora, Black Hole II, 1976–1978, from the series Concentration of Energy. Photograph.

Slovak National Gallery, Bratislava, Slovakia


Yuxi Cao (James Cao; Chinese, born 1990), Oriens: Immersive Black Hole, 2017. Sound and video installation. Installation view at Today Art Museum, Beijing

Yuxi Cao, Oriens: Immersive Black Hole, 2017. Sound and video installation at Today Art Museum, Beijing

Courtesy of Yuxi Cao


John White (English, born 1978), Black Echo, 2023. Digital photograph

John White, Black Echo, 2023. Digital photograph

Courtesy of John White

December 26, 2025 0 comments
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Explosion at Syrian mosque during Friday prayers results in a minimum of eight fatalities
Global

Explosion at Syrian mosque during Friday prayers results in a minimum of eight fatalities

by admin December 26, 2025
written by admin

A blast has resulted in the deaths of at least eight individuals and injuries to 18 more during Friday prayers at a mosque in Homs, Syria, according to the health ministry.

Images from the state-run news agency, Sana, depict the interior of the Imam Ali ibn Abi Talib Mosque, featuring charred black walls, shattered windows, and blood stains on the carpet.

Authorities suspect an explosive device was detonated within the mosque, reports Sana, referencing a security official. While the hunt for those responsible continues, the jihadist outfit Saraya Ansar al-Sunnah has claimed responsibility for the blast.

This mosque is situated in the Wadi al-Dhahab neighborhood, predominantly inhabited by the Alawite ethnoreligious community.

Syria’s Foreign Ministry denounced the “terrorist act,” stating in a statement on X that the “despicable act is a striking violation of human and moral principles” aimed at “destabilizing the security and tranquility” of the nation.

Saraya Ansar al-Sunnah, a Sunni extremist faction, has alleged that it executed the attack in concert with another unnamed group, utilizing explosives placed at the location.

The group’s unclear origins and ambiguous connections, which gained attention in June when it took credit for a fatal bombing at a church in Damascus, have led to inquiries regarding its true affiliations and legitimacy.

Some analysts have speculated that it may serve as a cover for the Islamic State group (IS) based on the similarities in their rhetoric and choice of targets.

This new claim comes after a period of several months with little to no reported attacks from Saraya Ansar al-Sunnah, which mostly involved alleged targeted assassinations of minorities and what the group refers to as “remnants” of the previous administration of Bashar al-Assad.

The detonation occurs one year following the ousting of Assad by Syrian rebel forces, who belong to the Alawite sect. This sect is a branch of Shia Islam, with its members constituting one of the largest religious minorities in the nation.

Since that time, Syria has experienced multiple episodes of sectarian strife, with Alawites fearing acts of revenge and facing repressive actions. Assad has sought refuge in Russia, an ally of his administration, where he and his family have received asylum.

In March, it was reported that security forces killed numerous Alawites in the coastal region of Latakia, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR).

Additional reporting by BBC Monitoring

December 26, 2025 0 comments
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