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Why Owning the Learning Loop Matters More Than Owning the Lab – LifeSciVC
platodata67d ago

Why Owning the Learning Loop Matters More Than Owning the Lab – LifeSciVC

By Abbas Kazimi, CEO of Nimbus Therapeutics, as part of the From The Trenches feature of LifeSciVC In early 2009, when global markets were bottoming out, you can imagine what it felt like walking the halls of the JPM Healthcare Conference. Biotech felt fragile. Capital was scarce, pipelines were thin, and more than a few [...]

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Open Banking Technology Market Is Going to Boom |• Plaid • Yodlee
openpr67d ago

Open Banking Technology Market Is Going to Boom |• Plaid • Yodlee

The worldwide "Open Banking Technology Market" 2026 Research Report presents a professional and complete analysis of the Global Open Banking Technology Market in the current situation. This report includes development plans and policies along with Open Banking Technology manufacturing processes

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The Wait is Almost Over: Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra Launch Date Finally Leaked
geeky_gadgets67d ago

The Wait is Almost Over: Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra Launch Date Finally Leaked

Samsung is gearing up to introduce its latest flagship smartphone series, the Galaxy S26, through a carefully planned global launch. This process will unfold across several key phases, beginning with the highly anticipated Samsung Unpacked event and culminating in the device’s official market release. Each stage of this rollout is designed to build excitement, provide [...]The post The Wait is Almost Over: Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra Launch Date Finally Leaked appeared first on Geeky Gadgets.

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From Davos to Dispur: Assam’s Rs 1 Lakh Crore Push Signals a New Economic Confidence
organiser67d ago

From Davos to Dispur: Assam’s Rs 1 Lakh Crore Push Signals a New Economic Confidence

With green energy, skill development and Act East ambitions at the core, Assam’s global outreach under Himanta Biswa Sarma marks a decisive shift from the margins to the mainstream of India’s growth story. When Assam aims to sign Memorandums of Understanding (MoUs) worth ₹1 lakh crore at the World Economic Forum (WEF) annual meeting in Davos, it is not merely a headline-grabbing number. It is a statement of intent. It signals a state that is no longer content with being described as “potential-rich but underdeveloped”, but one that is actively negotiating its place in India’s and the world’s economic future. Coming on the heels of the Advantage Assam 2.0 Investment Summit, where MoUs worth an impressive ₹5 lakh crore were already signed, the Davos outreach reinforces a larger narrative: Assam is transitioning from a peripheral economy to a strategic growth hub. For decades, the Northeast was spoken of largely in terms of insurgency, remoteness and logistical challenges. Today, the conversation has shifted decisively towards investment, innovation and integration with global value chains. The Chief Minister’s Office has made it clear that the additional agreements expected at Davos will play a significant role in economic growth, employment generation and allied sectors. This is crucial, because Assam’s challenge has never been just attracting capital, but converting investment into jobs, skills and sustainable livelihoods. The emphasis on green energy and new energy sectors during Chief Minister Himanta Biswa Sarma’s engagements at WEF suggests a forward-looking strategy rather than a short-term, extractive model of development. This focus is not accidental. As the world rethinks growth in the context of climate change, Assam’s abundant natural resources, hydropower potential and strategic location give it a comparative advantage. Positioning the state as a green-energy destination also helps align local development goals with global capital flows increasingly driven by ESG (Environmental, Social and Governance) considerations. Equally important is the political messaging. By showcasing India’s investment opportunities on a global platform, Assam is also strengthening India’s brand value. Sarma’s assertion that Assam has positioned itself as a “dependable destination for investors” is significant in a global environment marked by supply chain disruptions, geopolitical uncertainty and capital caution. Reliability and policy stability are now as valuable as tax incentives. Assam’s role as a key pillar of India’s Act East Policy adds another layer of strategic relevance. Connectivity projects, improved logistics and cross-border trade opportunities with Southeast Asia mean that investments in Assam are no longer limited to the state’s domestic market alone. They are gateways to a wider regional economy. When Sarma invites the global community to explore Assam’s opportunities, he is effectively pitching the state as India’s eastern launchpad. Perhaps the most substantive part of the Davos engagement, however, lies in the discussion on the future-ready workforce. Participation in the panel titled “Securing a Future-Ready Workforce for the Next Industrial Era”, alongside leaders from the United States, Europe and international institutions, highlights Assam’s recognition of a hard truth: capital without skills is hollow growth. Automation and artificial intelligence are not distant threats; they are present realities. For a young state demographically, this presents both risk and opportunity. Sarma’s emphasis that growth must be “fast but fair, advanced but accessible” reflects an understanding that technological transformation cannot be elitist. If Assam’s youth are not equipped to participate in the new economy, investments will remain enclaves rather than engines of broad-based prosperity. The reworking of the skilling framework, especially through institutions like the Assam Skill Development University, indicates a shift from generic training to industry-aligned curricula. This is a welcome departure from older models where skill programmes were often disconnected from market needs. Embedding industry-friendly programmes at the heart of education policy is essential if Assam is to avoid the paradox of educated unemployment. Critics will, of course, point out that MoUs do not automatically translate into realised investments. That caution is valid. India has seen many grand announcements fade into partial implementation. But dismissing Assam’s current push as mere optics would be equally shortsighted. The consistency from Advantage Assam to Davos, from green energy to skilling, suggests a coherent strategy rather than episodic enthusiasm. As the Chief Minister prepares to address sessions on travel and tourism, along with bilateral meetings and media interactions, the broader picture becomes clear. Assam is engaging the world not as a passive recipient of aid or attention, but as an active negotiator of partnerships. Davos, ultimately, is not the destination; it is the amplifier. The real test will be how these commitments are grounded back home in policy execution, infrastructure readiness and institutional capacity. But for a state that once struggled to be noticed in national economic debates, Assam’s confident presence on the global stage marks a significant psychological and political shift. In that sense, the ₹1 lakh crore ambition is as much about belief as it is about balance sheets. And belief, once institutionalised, can be a powerful driver of transformation.

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Guest Idea: Finding a Northwest Passage to the Sea
platodata67d ago

Guest Idea: Finding a Northwest Passage to the Sea

According to science, it was unexpected in 2008 when the famed Northwest Passage across the Arctic Ocean, which links the Atlantic to the Pacific, opened at the same time as the Northeast Passage. The Northeast Passage was expected to open first due to the Coriolis effect. As the world turns to the east, in the [...]

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