All posts tagged: create

Bally’s Intralot agrees 7M evoke deal to create major European gaming group

Bally’s Intralot agrees $327M evoke deal to create major European gaming group

Bally’s Intralot has reached an agreement to acquire betting and gaming operator evoke in a recommended all-share deal worth roughly £243.1 million ($327 million), bringing together brands such as William Hill and 888 with its expanding lottery and online gaming business. The deal follows a lengthy process that began with a strategic review launched by evoke in December 2025. This was prompted by UK gambling tax increases that raised concerns about earnings, debt levels and the company’s financial flexibility. Earlier this year, evoke confirmed takeover discussions after market speculation and disclosed an initial approach that valued the company at 50 pence per share. #EVOK – Takeover All share takeover agreed with Bally's with each #EVOK share worth 0.537 new #BYLOT share. Cash option also available at 52p against a closing SP of 40p last night. Both highly indebted companies with unexciting recent performances imo. pic.twitter.com/xgZ3sMiRVu — James (@1James1n1) June 5, 2026 Under the agreed terms announced Friday (June 5), evoke investors will receive 0.537 new Intralot shares for each evoke share. Based on Intralot’s market …

Singapore musicians helped create the song behind Chongqing’s viral motorbike trend

Singapore musicians helped create the song behind Chongqing’s viral motorbike trend

Speaking to 8days.sg, the 32-year-old musician admitted he only discovered the trend completely by accident. “I was shocked! I didn’t even know it was a thing until a friend and I were chatting on the MRT about Chengdu and Chongqing,” he said. “He showed me the video, and I was like, ‘I played on that!’” Pan added. According to Pan, the arrangement was completed in November 2023, before he heard Wang perform it a month later. “There are too many [songs], and studio sessions are our full-time gigs, so, we don’t really keep track of what blows up. But this is one song that really took off,” he says. So, we had to ask if he would consider hopping over to Chongqing to do the trend. Surely, he has earned it, and can easily claim credit for the song, right? Pan, who is currently on tour with Singapore singer Kit Chan, revealed he will be in Chengdu when she performs there this month. Source link

How one decision can create “a new self”

How one decision can create “a new self”

Some life choices cannot be understood from the outside. Yale philosopher L.A. Paul argues that transformative experiences — parenthood, divorce, war, and other identity-defining decisions — can change the person who makes them. Data and testimony may show what happened to others, but they cannot fully reveal what a new life will mean to you. Paul compares this shift to Flatland, where a two-dimensional being discovers a third dimension, and to Copernicus, whose model replaced one entire way of understanding our universe. Personal transformation, she argues, can work the same way: a revolution of one that reconfigures how we think, value, and understand who we are. This video How one decision can create “a new self” is featured on Big Think. Source link

ETH Zurich scientists create perfect randomness for the first time

ETH Zurich scientists create perfect randomness for the first time

Perfect randomness sounds simple, until you try to make it. A die can be polished, balanced and rolled thousands of times. Yet, one face may still land up a little more often than the others. In daily life, that slight tilt hardly matters. However, in cryptography, it can become a serious weakness. A barely detectable pattern in a stream of random numbers can make private keys easier to predict. That can open the door to broken encryption. That problem is what drove a team at ETH Zurich to a result that sounds almost paradoxical: using flawed randomness to create perfect randomness. In a study published in Nature, researchers led by Renato Renner and Andreas Wallraff showed that quantum physics can amplify weak random input into a string of bits that is fully unbiased. Moreover, they argue, the output is certifiably unpredictable. The advance centers on a simple but stubborn truth. Random-looking numbers are not always truly random. Some generators produce outputs that pass statistical tests but still carry hidden structure. That matters because, as the …

Does gravity create reality? A shocking path to a theory of everything

Does gravity create reality? A shocking path to a theory of everything

Sometimes, you work tirelessly on a problem, only to realise you have been going about it all backwards. Imagine trying to fit a massive antique piano through a tiny doorway. You have tried everything – rotating it, removing the legs, forceful shoving – but you just can’t get it to fit. Eventually, you realise it is easier to construct a room to house the piano where it already sits. Now, some physicists are grappling with a similar rethink. For decades, the accepted route to an ultimate theory of everything has involved taking our best theory of gravity and squeezing it into the frame of quantum mechanics. Given that quantum theory is wildly successful in describing the other three of the four fundamental forces of nature, it is an understandable approach. Yet, almost a century later, scientists still haven’t managed to make gravity fit. That’s why a few mavericks have championed an alternative strategy. They suggest that tweaking the equations of quantum mechanics – constructing a new room for gravity – helps explain how the strange world of particles gives rise to our everyday reality. Various experimental avenues are opening up to probe this approach, involving everything from levitating diamonds and glowing metals to swinging pendulums and ticking clocks. The tests promise to shine a light on how the quantum world operates and …

Ferrari is using IBM’s AI to create F1 superfans

Ferrari is using IBM’s AI to create F1 superfans

Two years ago, IBM realized there was one glaring omission in its roster of sports partnerships: Formula One.  Formula One has become one of the world’s most popular sports, especially in the U.S., where Netflix’s “Drive to Survive” documented the working lives of F1 drivers and turned them into mainstream celebrities. The tech-centric sport has also become a hot ticket for tech companies like AWS, Oracle, and Anthropic, which partner with teams for sponsorship visibility and to provide data analytics and AI tools that can deliver a competitive edge. So when IBM went looking for its next major sports partnership, it’s no wonder the company picked F1 and one of its most iconic teams, Scuderia Ferrari HP. “They’re the winningest team in history,” Kameryn Stanhouse, IBM’s Vice President of Sports and Entertainment Partnerships, told TechCrunch.   At the heart of this partnership, however, is what has led other teams to start working with tech giants: access to more sophisticated tech solutions that can help them make the most of, especially, artificial intelligence. In fact, one of …

‘You can’t control everything’: the rise in plastic surgeons asked to create ‘AI face’ | AI (artificial intelligence)

‘You can’t control everything’: the rise in plastic surgeons asked to create ‘AI face’ | AI (artificial intelligence)

Plastic surgeons are increasingly concerned about the rise of “AI face”, as more and more clients arrive in their offices with unrealistic AI-generated visions of what they want to look like. Dr Nora Nugent, a cosmetic surgeon from Tunbridge Wells, has seen this first hand. Clients have started coming to her office with photos of themselves beautified by AI and a false expectation that those results are achievable with surgery. She is also the president of the British Association of Aesthetic Plastic Surgeons, and says many colleagues are having similar experiences. “I can only predict an increase, given the rate AI has been incorporated into every aspect of life,” she said. People using AI chatbots to generate their ideal faces are increasingly arriving at surgeons’ offices with briefs demanding flawless skin, sharply sculpted cheekbones, refined noses and near-perfect symmetry – standards that are too time consuming, prohibitively expensive and, in many cases, physically unattainable. While AI can control every single pixel, “surgery certainly doesn’t work on that microscopic detailed level”, according Dr Alex Karidis, a …

Fans create AI-generated team songs ahead of World Cup | World Cup 2026 News

Fans create AI-generated team songs ahead of World Cup | World Cup 2026 News

Published On 21 May 202621 May 2026 World Cup fans are wielding artificial intelligence to mass-produce viral songs supporting their teams ahead of next month’s tournament. As the fan-made football anthems are raking in millions of plays across YouTube, TikTok and Instagram, experts say that the viral tunes raise questions about song ownership, artist compensation and the valuation of human creativity. Recommended Stories list of 4 itemsend of list But many users do not appear to mind, with some even showing a preference for the AI-generated songs over an official anthem that football’s world governing body FIFA commissioned from musicians Jelly Roll and Carin Leon. A highly-anticipated World Cup track from Shakira was also released last week, but the fad of AI fan songs was still drumming up excitement on social media for the tournament taking place in cities across the United States, Canada and Mexico in June and July. The trend appears to have started with a song dedicated to the French team, “Imbattables”, released in February by artist Crystalo, who is listed on …

Can virality create revival? Gen Z evangelist Bryce Crawford has faith

Can virality create revival? Gen Z evangelist Bryce Crawford has faith

(RNS) — On the penultimate night of his I Love Jesus tour in late March, 22-year-old evangelist Bryce Crawford stepped onstage wearing wide-legged sweatpants, a cross-themed vintage tee and Lightning McQueen-shaped Crocs.  “Who has their physical Bibles in the room?” he asked with a slight Georgia drawl. Throughout the 975-seat Crest Theatre in Sacramento, hands gripping Bibles sprang up. “Wow, amazing!” he said, before joking, “You know, for everyone who doesn’t have their Bibles … God’s gonna judge the earth.”  In a few short years, Crawford has become one of the most popular evangelical voices of his generation. He has a combined total of 7 million followers on TikTok and Instagram and a hefty YouTube catalog of sermons and street-preaching videos. His podcast, which sits at third on Spotify’s Religion and Spirituality charts, has hosted influential and contentious figures, including far-right pundit Tucker Carlson and 89-year-old prosperity gospel televangelist Kenneth Copeland. Crawford has also, of late, aligned himself with MAGA platforms such as Turning Point USA.  His manager, Divij Vaswani, claims his client reached “a …

Can we harness quantum effects to create a new kind of healthcare?

Can we harness quantum effects to create a new kind of healthcare?

If you have even a passing interest in your health, you can’t spend long on social media before the algorithm brings you into contact with the infamous Q-word. Are you in touch with your quantum energy fields? Could you benefit from a consultation with a quantum dietician? A dismissive snort is fully justified. But all the woo around “quantum therapies” can make it hard to talk about science that is much more serious. In recent years, clinical research has suggested that exposure to light, as well as electric and magnetic fields, could help to treat everything from acne and hair loss to wounds and cancer. These therapies don’t necessarily involve quantum mechanics in any meaningful way. Still, there are hints from parallel experiments in test tubes that life might respond to electricity and magnetism via quantum effects – at least on some level. “We have something that works; we don’t really know why,” says Margaret Ahmad, a photobiologist at Sorbonne University in France who studies how electromagnetic fields affect living organisms. All this ties into …