Category: KB

  • MIL-OSI USA: InCHIP’s Weight Management Research Group Publishes NIH Trial Results in Top Medical Journal

    Source: US State of Connecticut

    For the majority of people who lose weight, keeping the weight off can be challenging.

    Research has shown biological, behavioral, and environmental factors may undermine weight loss maintenance. Within 2 to 3 years, most individuals will regain nearly all the weight they lost. As a result, the U.S. National Institutes of Health (NIH) has identified weight-loss maintenance as the next major challenge in obesity treatment.

    Tricia Leahey, professor of allied health sciences and director of the UConn Institute for Collaboration on Health, Intervention, and Policy (InCHIP), and, Amy Gorin, professor of psychological sciences and vice provost for health sciences and interdisciplinary initiatives, have led a new study that underscores the power of patient-delivered care for weight loss maintenance.

    Leahey and Gorin also direct InCHIP’s Weight Management Research Group, which develops and assesses weight management interventions for the treatment of obesity and reduction of chronic disease.

    The study, which was recently published in the prestigious, peer-reviewed academic journal, JAMA Internal Medicine, found that patient-delivered care may be more effective than care delivered by professional staff.

    Tricia Leahey, director of the Institute for Collaboration on Health, Intervention, and Policy

    “Patient-delivered care holds great potential, but how patients promote health behavior change has not been investigated extensively. Our goal with this study was to better understand how patient care providers support weight loss maintenance and improve cardiovascular disease risk, and whether this model would be sustainable long-term,” says Leahey, who is the study’s lead author.

    Leahey is a clinical health psychologist who has extensive experience developing and evaluating lifestyle interventions for obesity treatment. Her recent work has explored how patient-provided care influences short-term weight loss outcomes.

    Overweight and obesity are complex health conditions that can increase one’s risk of hypertension, type 2 diabetes, heart disease, stroke, and more. In addition, adults with obesity can pay up to $2,505 in additional medical expenses per year. From 2001 to 2016, total direct medical costs relating to obesity doubled from $124 billion to $260.6 billion.

    Obesity impacts about 40% of U.S. adults, according to data from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Obesity treatment, whether lifestyle, pharmaceutical, or surgery, produces significant weight loss and reduces the risk of diabetes and cardiovascular disease. However, these risks may return if weight is regained.

    Traditionally, treatment for sustaining weight loss is delivered regularly over the course of 18 months by professional staff who have a master’s degree and training in behavioral weight loss maintenance. While this approach is effective, it can be costly and difficult to maintain. Research has also demonstrated that weight regain occurs after treatment ends.

    Insights into patient-provided care

    Patient-delivered care may be a more cost-effective option that could be sustainable indefinitely. This model employs two types of patient providers: mentors and peers. Mentors are patients who have successfully altered their health behaviors and coach incoming patients on lifestyle change. Peers are incoming patients who support and coach one another. Typically, patient-delivered care employs a hybrid approach that incorporates patients and professional staff.

    The research evidence supporting the efficacy of patient-provided care has been mixed. Studies have shown this model can enhance quality of life and survival rates for cancer patients. It has also been shown to improve short-term blood sugar levels in individuals with diabetes and weight loss outcomes when used in conjunction with professionally delivered treatment.

    Other studies suggest the effectiveness of patient-provided support is limited when used for managing depression or pain.

    Despite these varied outcomes, patient care providers may offer a unique sense of empathy and motivation not replicated by professional caregivers. Fellow patients may also provide ongoing weekly support over an extended period, and possibly when patients need it the most – again, not possible with professional providers.

    Leahey and Gorin’s study addressed these research gaps. It is the first study to examine the efficacy of a treatment intervention fully delivered by patient-providers and compare it to professionally delivered treatment. The study is also the first to train patient providers to provide all components of the treatment intervention, include both types of patient providers, and determine whether patients continue to coach one another after the treatment period ends.

    “This study offers insights into how patient providers may support weight loss maintenance over the long-term. By including both mentors and peers in the treatment intervention, we leveraged the strengths of both to provide a more effective treatment program,” says Leahey.

    Required: ongoing support and intervention

    The National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Disease funded the study (PI: Leahey; Co-I: Gorin), which employed a two-phase weight loss maintenance design considered the gold standard for weight loss maintenance trials.

    Phase one was a weight loss intervention where all study participants engaged in a 4-month online obesity treatment program based on the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s National Diabetes Prevention Program (DPP). This evidence-based lifestyle change program provides education on eating healthy, physical activity and behavior change strategies to support weight loss.

    Phase one participants who lost more than 5% of their body weight were eligible to participate in the study’s second phase, the weight loss maintenance trial.

    Phase two participants were randomly assigned to participate in one of two weight loss maintenance interventions – patient-delivered treatment or standard of care delivered by a professional.

    The authors found that study participants in the patient-delivered intervention group had superior weight loss maintenance compared to those in professional care.

    Additionally, the patient-delivered treatment group had significantly lower diastolic blood pressure and resting heart rate and this group engaged in more lifestyle activity and less sedentary behavior during the weight loss maintenance program.

    These results are meaningful and demonstrate the potential of patient-delivered care in behavioral medicine where health behavior maintenance remains a significant challenge, whether weight loss, smoking cessation, physical activity, or other behavior.

    “Sustaining health behaviors, including weight loss, requires ongoing intervention and support. Patient-provided treatment eliminates the need of costly professional care and promotes ongoing support and excellent maintenance outcomes,” says Leahey.

    Leahey and Gorin’s study indicates that patient-provided care for weight loss maintenance is just as effective as the gold-standard, professionally delivered treatment, potentially shifting the obesity treatment paradigm for long-term weight loss maintenance.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Security: NPCC Innovation and Digital Summit will take place in October

    Source: United Kingdom National Police Chiefs Council

    The Summit aims to harness digital capability and technology to deliver public safety and confidence in policing.

    The National Police Chiefs’ Council (NPCC) Innovation and Digital Summit will be taking place between 20 to 22 October 2025 in Liverpool with applications for the Digital Awards 2025 now open. 

    The Summit is being organised by the NPCC Digital, Data and Technology Coordination Committee (DDaT) and the NPCC Science and Innovation Coordination Committee in coordination with the Office of the Police Chief Scientific Adviser, industry partners and Police Digital Service (PDS). It will be an opportunity for policing to strengthen collaboration between forces, law enforcement and industry.  

    National Police Chiefs’ Council (NPCC) Lead for Digital, Data and Technology Chief Constable Rob Carden and Lead for Science and Innovation Jeremy Vaughan, said: “The NPCC Innovation and Digital Summit is an opportunity to bring senior leaders and practitioners from across policing , together  with those who have key roles in innovation, business changes, digital, data and technology in the law enforcement bodies. 

    “This is a Summit which is being put together by policing, for policing, so that we can ensure that those delegates attending are able to strengthen their digital capabilities and explore opportunities to improve the way they use technology in order to better protect the public and the communities we serve.” 

    The Digital Awards 2025 will be taking place during the summit on evening of 21 October, where policing will be recognising the outstanding contributions by police staff and teams across UK law enforcement agencies.  

    Nominations are open until 14 July 2025 and judging will take place following the closing date. Only UK based law enforcement agencies or their team are eligible to be nominated to receive an awards but nominations can be made by policing, partners or suppliers. Those wishing to submit a nomination should visit https://bit.ly/DigAwards25.  

    Eight distinct categories will celebrate achievements in various areas: 

    • Innovation in Embedding Digital Solutions to Front Line Policing: This category celebrates the exceptional efforts of an individual or team who have successfully embedded innovative digital solutions into front line policing. 
    • Excellence in Cyber Security: This category celebrates the efforts of an individual or team who have gone beyond to ensure the protection of police systems and data from threats and data loss. 
    • Collaboration in the furthering of Digital, Data and Technology: This category recognises effective use of partnerships and collaboration to deliver enhanced digital, data, or technology capabilities for the benefit of UK policing.  
    • Enabling Diversity & Inclusion in Science & Technology: This category recognises the outstanding efforts of an individual or team who have supported, promoted, or inspired diversity and inclusion within their organisation or in the wider policing community, particularly in the fields of science and technology. 
    • Excellence in Training, Talent & Development in Digital, Data & Technology: This category is for an individual or team who have facilitated the development of others in the fields of digital, data and technology. 
    • Excellence in Productivity & Value for Money: This category will recognise the impact an individual or team have had on reducing or avoiding costs whilst improving quality of service or capabilities. 
    • Excellence in Science & Technology Leadership: This category acknowledges great leadership, irrespective of role or rank, in the delivery of excellent solutions surrounding Science and Technology. 
    • Digital Data and Technology Ambassador: This category looks to identify those who have gone beyond reasonable expectations to promote and facilitate more effective and efficacious use of Digital Data and Technology within UK Policing. 

    The NPCC Digital Awards will be judged by representatives from the NPCC Digital, Data and Technology Coordination Committee, NPCC Science and Innovation Coordination Committee, the Office of the Police Chief Scientific Adviser, trade bodies (representing the supplier community) and Police Digital Service.  

    Chief Constable Gavin Stephens, Chair of the National Police Chiefs’ Council said: “These awards are a fantastic opportunity to honour and celebrate the digital pioneers who are shaping the future of policing. It is a great way to recognise the individuals and teams making a real difference on the ground – where dedication meets innovation in law enforcement, ensuring police forces have the tools they need to keep communities safe and secure.  

    “I am looking forward to seeing the innovation on display from our talented colleagues across the UK.” 

    The award winners and nominees will be celebrated at the National Police Chiefs’ Council Innovation and Digital Innovation Summit 2025. The event is shaping up to be the biggest and most impactful summit yet, bringing together the UK’s leading figures in law enforcement, technology, and data on October 20-22 in Liverpool. More information on how to attend is available on the Police Digital Service website

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Appointment to Security Vetting Appeals Panel

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    News story

    Appointment to Security Vetting Appeals Panel

    A new Deputy Chair has been appointed.

    Sir James Goss has been appointed as an additional Deputy Chair of the Security Vetting Appeals Panel for a period of four years, concluding in April 2029.

    Sir James was a Deputy High Court Judge (Admin Court) from 2013 to 2014, and in October 2014 became a judge of the High Court of Justice. He was assigned to the Queen’s Bench Division and received the customary appointment as a knight bachelor.

    He is currently a Director of Criminal Training at the Judicial College and a Judges Lodgings representative on the High Court Judges Association. 

    The Security Vetting Appeals Panel reviews decisions to refuse or withdraw National Security Vetting and the process involved. You can find out more about what the Panel does here.

    The Panel currently has 11 sitting members: a Chair, a Deputy Chair and 9 Lay Members.

    Updates to this page

    Published 3 June 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Reforms to bolster flood protection for communities across the country

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    News story

    Reforms to bolster flood protection for communities across the country

    Delivering on the government’s Plan for Change, proposals will introduce a simplified approach benefitting poorer communities and speeding up project delivery

    A photo of flood defences on a beach

    New proposals to accelerate the construction of flood schemes and protect thousands of homes and businesses in the nation’s cities and rural areas from the risks of flooding have been unveiled today (Tuesday 3 June) by Floods Minister Emma Hardy.  

    A simpler, transparent approach will replace the current complex and labour-intensive process of applying for funding, which disproportionately affects councils with less resources. 

    The proposals will make it easier for authorities, including councils, to bid for central government funding. This will benefit poorer councils who have less resource to commit to the application process. 

    They will also ensure money is distributed more effectively across the country – including for rural and coastal communities. 

    And faster applications will help speed up delivery of vital schemes – crucial to boosting the country’s preparedness for extreme weather events. 

    Established more than a decade ago under the previous government, the existing outdated formula for distributing money to proposed flood defences is complicated, slows down applications and neglects more innovative approaches such as natural flood management. 

    Speaking at the Flood & Coast Conference in Telford, Minister Hardy outlined fresh proposals to replace this system and introduce a simple, flexible and strategic approach to investment in flood resilience projects.

    Floods Minister Emma Hardy said:

    Councils have struggled for years with securing money for flood defences due to a complex and archaic application process. Dealing with the impacts of flooding gets in the way of growth for businesses and can be devastating for hard-working families.

    That is why, as part of our Plan for Change, this Government is reforming how flood funds are distributed to protect businesses, rural and coastal communities as we invest over £2.65 billion in flood defences across the country.

    Minister Hardy set out how the government will fully fund the first £3 million of proposed flood and coastal erosion projects, giving a crucial boost to schemes. For remaining costs above this, schemes would only need to secure 10% of the remaining costs from other sources, such as private investment, as the government would cover the rest. This approach would mean more schemes will see their funding gaps filled and stop local communities needing to secure more funding themselves.

    The consultation – which opens today – will also seek views on how projects are prioritised each year for delivery, such as on their value for money or whether certain outcomes should be bolstered, such as for flood resilience in deprived communities or the level of private funding raised.  

    Delivering on the Government’s Plan for Change, these proposals will help boost economic growth, by empowering businesses to inject money into local areas and thereby creating more jobs.  

    Environment Agency Executive Director for Flood and Coastal Risk Management, Caroline Douglass said:

    Better protecting communities in England from the devastating impacts of flooding is one of our top priorities as climate change brings more extreme weather. 

    We support the government’s bold strategic vision to transform the approach to investment in resilience to flood and coastal erosion, helping to streamline the delivery of flood schemes and improve existing assets to protect communities better.

    The consultation also outlines plans to mainstream investment in natural flood management, which uses nature to reduce the risk of flooding, while also providing wider benefits such as improved water quality, vital habitats for wildlife and increased access to nature. This will help boost protection for rural communities, with dozens of projects under the Government’s Natural Flood Management programme already achieving this.  

    It also considers how communities can make better use of property flood resilience measures, such as flood doors or smart air bricks. These items help prevent water from entering a property or reduce the amount of floodwater that enters during significant flooding.

    Updates to this page

    Published 3 June 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI: Private Debt Investor Features Grier Eliasek in June Edition of Middle Market Direct Lending Report

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    NEW YORK, June 03, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Prospect Capital Management L.P. (“Prospect”), investment adviser to Prospect Capital Corporation (NASDAQ: PSEC) and other funds, announced today that Prospect Capital Corporation’s President and Chief Operating Officer, Grier Eliasek, is featured in the June 2025 Private Debt Investor (“PDI”) Middle Market Direct Lending Report. In the Q&A-format feature, Mr. Eliasek highlights the attractive opportunities in the lower and core middle-market, where lenders have the potential to secure favorable deal terms and pursue higher risk-adjusted returns.

    The PDI feature underscores Prospect’s market leadership in the lower and core middle-market direct lending space. Mr. Eliasek discusses Prospect’s underwriting strategy to emphasize less cyclical industries and target companies with resilient cash flows. Prospect also focuses on negotiating lower leverage multiples, tighter covenants, higher credit spreads, and higher SOFR floors to protect yield and manage credit risk.

    “In the lower and core middle-market, Prospect still typically obtains financial ratio maintenance covenants,” said Mr. Eliasek. “Such covenants have significantly disappeared from the upper middle-market due to intense lender competition at that end of the market.”

    Mr. Eliasek highlighted a trend of significant capital being raised for direct lending at the upper end of the market, with increasing convergence between the upper mid-market and broadly syndicated markets.

    Under the guidance of Prospect’s senior leaders, who have worked together for over two decades, Prospect’s flagship mid-market direct lending vehicle (Prospect Capital Corporation) has generated an investment level realized gross annualized internal rate of return (“IRR”) of approximately 13% (based on total capital invested and of approximately $11.8 billion and total proceeds from such exited investments of approximately $14.9 billion).

    To read the full Q&A, refer to PDI’s June 2025 Middle Market Direct Lending Report, available in print or online. A link to the article is also available on Prospect’s website via the following link: https://prospectcap.com/private-debt-investor-expert-qa-with-grier-eliasek.

    About Prospect Capital Management L.P.:

    Prospect is an SEC-registered investment adviser headquartered in New York City that, along with its predecessors and affiliates, has 38 years of experience investing in and managing high-yielding debt and equity investments using both private partnerships and publicly traded closed-end structures. Prospect and its affiliates employ a team of 140 professionals who focus on credit-oriented investments yielding attractive current income. Prospect, together with its affiliates, has $7.9 billion of regulatory assets under management as of March 31, 2025. For more information, call (212) 448-0702 or visit https://www.prospectcap.com.

    Internal Rate of Return:

    IRR is the discount rate that makes the net present value of all cash flows related to a particular investment equal to zero. IRR is gross of general expenses not related to specific investments as these expenses are not allocable to specific investments. Investments are considered to be exited when the original investment objective has been achieved through the receipt of cash and/or non-cash consideration upon the repayment of a debt investment or sale of an investment or through the determination that no further consideration was collectible and, thus, a loss may have been realized. Prospect Capital Corporation’s gross IRR calculations are unaudited. Information regarding internal rates of return are historical results relating to Prospect Capital Corporation’s past performance and are not necessarily indicative of future results, the achievement of which cannot be assured.

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Prospects of “smart transport” discussed at Polytechnic University

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: Peter the Great St Petersburg Polytechnic University – Peter the Great St Petersburg Polytechnic University –

    The Polytechnic University hosted another seminar on artificial intelligence, where participants discussed expanding the capabilities of passenger transport in St. Petersburg.

    Pavel Polyakov, Head of the Information Technology and Intelligent Systems Department at Gorelectrotrans, spoke about the new functional capabilities of the rolling stock and transport infrastructure of the city. Pavel Sergeevich noted what intelligent systems the city transport is already equipped with and what else will be added. He spoke in detail about the driver monitoring camera, the active safety and driver assistance system (ASDS), which use AI technologies. Today, the company operates 302 tram cars with the ASDS system.

    Pavel Polyakov emphasized that smart transport should be trained in basic skills of work in real conditions at specialized testing grounds, and all systems should have information exchange and the possibility of mutual integration. Currently, such a tram is being tested at the testing ground on the territory of “Shavrovo”, where RFID tags, V2X equipment, and traffic lights are installed. After the adoption of the relevant resolution of the government of St. Petersburg, this rolling stock will go on city routes.

    Even when switching to unmanned mode, we will not abandon human participation in the movement. Our main task is to ensure the safety of passengers and improve the quality of services provided, – noted Pavel Polyakov.

    Deputy Head of the Computer Technology, Communications and Communications Service of Gorelektrotrans Andrey Sokolov spoke about the development of methods that will allow an objective assessment of the degree of reliability of a particular system and the level of trust in them.

    Everyone is waiting for certain approaches, requirements and restrictions before implementing systems in practice. And here we are already talking about trusting and explanatory artificial intelligence, which will provide justifications for why this or that decision was made, – commented the moderator of the seminar, head of the laboratory “Industrial systems of streaming data processing” of SPbPU Marina Bolsunovskaya.

    Associate Professor of the Higher School of Management of the Institute of Metallurgy and Metallurgy Dmitry Plotnikov noted that the regulatory framework is lagging far behind the technology, and outlined the interdisciplinary tasks in the development of ground unmanned vehicles. He emphasized that it is necessary to conduct a lot of tests and accumulate data that will form the basis of standards. Dmitry Plotnikov spoke about unmanned vehicles that were developed at SPbPU, about the prospects for the implementation of AI systems in transport.

    The participants discussed the possibility of trial operation of the Polytechnic University’s development in the GET — a control system for unmanned cargo transport based on the Gazelle e-NN vehicle. They also considered the advantages of virtual modeling of road situations instead of real tests. Dmitry Plotnikov emphasized that virtual modeling will not completely replace real tests, since it is impossible to virtually foresee all physical processes. Marina Bolsunovskaya believes that at the first stage, virtual modeling can be carried out and then confirmed by full-scale tests. They are important, since not all real-world objects have been analyzed and fully described.

    Please note: This information is raw content directly from the source of the information. It is exactly what the source states and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI: Spatial Web Foundation Announces IEEE Approval of Spatial Web Standards

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    LOS ANGELES, June 03, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — The Spatial Web Foundation (SWF) proudly announces that The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) has officially ratified the P2874 Spatial Web standards: the Hyperspace Modeling Language (HSML) and the Hyperspace Transaction Protocol (HSTP).

    These global standards establish the technical foundation for a secure, interoperable, and intelligent Spatial Web—enabling collaboration between AI agents, IoT devices, robotics systems, and digital infrastructure across real-world environments.

    The Spatial Web Protocol, Architecture, and Governance Standards were developed over a five-year period by IEEE Working Group comprised of members from industry, government, academia, and civil society. The Standards were developed within the IEEE Artificial Intelligence Standards Committee, under the auspices of the IEEE Computer Society, the largest global community of computer scientists and engineers.

    The Spatial Web standards are not just a technical protocol, but a global framework for how intelligent systems interact with both the physical and social worlds. By encoding semantic meaning, spatial context, and temporal logic, these standards enable the digital representation of people, places, objects, and processes in a manner that machines can understand and act upon—while ensuring alignment with human-designed systems of law, governance, and coordination.

    Just as past IEEE standards laid the foundation for technologies like Wi-Fi® and Bluetooth®, the Spatial Web standards (HSML and HSTP) provide a common language that manufacturers, developers, and engineers can rely on to build interoperable, compliant systems, reducing friction, accelerating deployment, and lowering integration costs. At the same time, they provide governments, regulators, and institutions with a technical foundation for developing policies, laws, and safeguards that help ensure these systems operate safely and ethically in the real world.

    By defining the methods and the rules for intelligent agents to interact with both digital systems and physical environments, the Spatial Web standards unlock new possibilities for automation, coordination, and control in sectors such as smart cities, logistics, manufacturing, defense, healthcare, aerospace, and virtual worlds.

    Key benefits include:

    • Increased interoperability across hardware, software, and environments
    • Improved explainability and transparency in autonomous systems
    • Spatial encoding of laws and permissions to improve governance and regulatory compliance
    • Reduced integration costs through standardized protocols and metadata structures
    • Accelerated development of AI and robotic systems with plug-and-play intelligence and data permissions

    “The ratification of the Spatial Web standards marks a turning point—akin to the launch of TCP/IP for the internet,” said Bastiaan den Braber, Director of Operations at the Spatial Web Foundation. “The standards lay the groundwork for a network that is not just informational, but spatial and intelligent—bridging the gap between the physical and digital worlds. This is how we prepare for, build, and benefit from the next era of the Web.”

    “The Spatial Web standard offers the blueprint for harmonizing activities across digital twins, physical infrastructure, and AI and human agents,” said George Percival, Vice-Chair of the IEEE P2874 Working Group. “This is a foundational leap toward scalable, semantic interoperability across domains.”

    About Spatial Web Foundation

    The Spatial Web Foundation is dedicated to the development and implementation of socio-technical standards that will provide a safe and secure and interoperable foundation for the Spatial Web. These standards ensure that exponential technologies are not only technically robust but also socially beneficial, safe, compliant with existing laws, and in alignment with societal norms and values. SWF is a community of developers, creators, scientists, and innovators with a shared mission to enable a hyper-connected, contextually aware, ethically-aligned network of humans, machines, and artificial intelligence.

    On behalf of the Company

    Press Inquiries: https://spatialwebfoundation.org/swf/contact/ 

    You can find more information at: https://spatialwebfoundation.org/ and https://sagroups.ieee.org/2874/ 

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI Economics: Andrew Bailey: State of trade

    Source: Bank for International Settlements

    It is a great pleasure to be in Dublin, and I want to start by thanking the Irish Association of Investment Managers for inviting me again to speak. I say again because I also have to begin with an apology, for standing you up last year at short notice when the General Election was called in the UK. And so, my other thanks is to my fellow Governor Gabriel, for stepping in last year when I withdrew at short notice.

    Not much has happened in the last year. To keep it topical, I am going to use my time to talk about trade, both in goods and in financial services. This is not only topical but highly relevant, because Ireland and the UK are both open economies, with long-established trade connections, and likewise strong connections in financial services.

    Trade matters. It matters at both the economy-wide or macro level, and at the level of individual firms, the micro level. And, almost needless to say, the two are closely linked.

    I am going to start by laying out key elements of the big picture, before moving on to talk about financial services. My starting point is two key elements of the macro dimension of trade. In many past times in talking about trade it would have been easy to pass over them, as points that are not contested. I think they need repeating today.

    The first point is that trade supports output in the economy – and it is good for economic welfare. As I will come on to, there are important qualifications to this point, but they don’t invalidate it. From Adam Smith onwards, it has broadly been accepted that trade supports specialisation and efficiency of production and it enables knowledge transfer, and these features support productivity and economic growth.

    The second point is that we should not expect trade between countries to be in balance all of the time. The whole world should be in balance – because it is a closed system as we have not found and started trading with extra-terrestrial life yet. But as individual countries, we are not closed, as Ireland and the UK demonstrate. Unfortunately, the world’s exports and imports don’t usually equal each other, but that’s down to our counting not ET.

    However, since trade balances between countries don’t balance – and they should not be expected to do so, – what determines the balances and patterns of trade? At the whole economy, or macro, level the answer is that trade is determined by the balance between a country’s saving and investment – macroeconomic fundamentals. And, these are shaped by factors such as business conditions and cycles, productivity growth, savings behaviour, interest rates, fiscal policy choices and exchange rates. In other words, trade is an outcome of the big driving forces of economies, and if we want to affect trade patterns on a lasting basis, that’s where we should look.

    Well, up to a point, yes. I am conscious that what I have just said is a rather a textbook espousal of the case for free trade. No apologies, I do believe in free trade. But, I’m also aware that things are not that simple – the story doesn’t end there. Trade patterns are also shaped by national policies, particularly industrial policies, and by the rules–based world trading system that seeks to set the guardrails for such policies.

    Now, the argument, as I interpret it, of the US Administration is that those rules have been stretched beyond breaking point, and actions have to be taken to put this right.

    As I read it, there are two parts to this argument.

    The first is that the rules of the world trade system – based around the World Trade Organisation – have broken down, and are in need of reform. IMF staff have pointed to more use of industrial policies around the world in recent years, and argued that these should only be used for very limited domestic objectives such as local market failures, but that has not been the case of late, and that this practice will and has exacerbated trade tensions. More concretely, between 2009 and 2022 China implemented around 5,400 so-called subsidy policies, which were concentrated in priority sectors, i.e., ones that matter. This was equal to about two-thirds of all the subsidy measures adopted by G20 advanced economies combined.

    The macro story on trade is influenced by what goes on at the micro level, and we can’t see these two as distinct. There has been an increase in the use of industrial policies – one country has been active on this front, but it’s not alone.

    The second point is around how the rules of engagement of the world trade system have come under pressure from new developments which have affected all of us. Let me briefly set out two which are closely linked. First, before the outbreak of Covid world trade had grown rapidly, more rapidly than world output, and in doing so the supply chains for final products had become much more complicated, but also efficient in the sense that they had exploited the benefits of trade.

    This meant that a lot more of world trade comprised so-called intermediate goods – inputs to the final product, but not the product itself. This exploited one of the longest standing principles of free trade – so-called comparative advantage. In other words, produce stuff where it is most efficient relatively speaking to do so, accepting that the relative point means that no country should specialise in everything. Over time, the trade system has become more and more refined – we have heard the phrase “just in time delivery”. This was highly efficient, until it wasn’t.

    Covid dealt a blow to the efficiency of the trade system. Even though initial pandemic-related supply chain disruption was resolved quite rapidly, as we recovered from Covid these trading patterns and systems did not return to normal as quickly and fully as we expected.

    Why was that? There were no doubt a number of reasons, but a large one is the growth of national security concerns as a threat to the efficiency of trade. In reality, sadly, Russia’s illegal war in Ukraine provided real evidence of the disruption that can happen, and is one factor behind a growing threat from national security to our assumptions on frictionless trade. To be clear, national security concerns are not a good reason to retreat indiscriminately from global trade. The best way to ensure resilience to geopolitical risk is not by reshoring production, but by diversifying supply chains among reliable partners who abide by international law.

    Viewed from the perspective of a central bank responsible for monetary policy, the inevitable conclusion is that we cannot assume that the supply sides of our economies behave as efficiently as they did before Covid. And this was a substantial cause of the very difficult upsurge in inflation.

    I am going to conclude on broader trade with a number of points, and then say something on financial services. Four points strike me as very important on trade.

    First, while I am an unshaken believer in free trade, I do accept that the system has come under too much strain, we have to work hard now to rebuild it, and it is incorrect to dismiss those who argue for restrictions on trade as just wrong-headed. We need to understand what lies behind these arguments. That said, I want to get back to an open trading system.

    Second, to solve the issues we face, we need to look at the macro level – the big economic drivers that I mentioned earlier, and call out where and why we think there are unsustainable trade imbalances. We need to strengthen the IMF’s surveillance in order to improve the process for calling out unsustainable trade imbalances. But we must also look at the micro-level – the rules based world trade system – and work out what we need to do to solve this problem and make it more effective again.

    Third, if it is believed that tariff action is needed to create the shock and awe to get these issues on to the table and dealt with, then something has gone wrong with the multilateral system, and we need to deal with that.

    Fourth, creating a sustainable world trading system matters to all of us. It matters to countries like Ireland and the UK, which are highly open economies, and have been throughout their development. And it matters to central bankers and economic policymakers because our jobs are much harder if we face more inflexible and uncertain supply side conditions in our economies, as we appear to do today.

    Almost all of the attention in recent months in the area of trade has been on goods trade – tangible stuff. Tariffs are a tool whose use is largely confined to the world of goods trade. But, there are two other important features of the trade world. First, alongside trade in goods sits trade in services-intangibles. For the UK, the latest numbers indicate that the total volume of trade was made up of 54% goods and 46% services. For Ireland the numbers are 28% goods and 72% services.

    Financial services are an important part of trade in services and particularly so for Ireland and the UK.

    The second important feature of the trade world is that alongside tariffs sit non-tariff barriers. These are all sorts of obstacles to trade, some put in place deliberately, some are features with their origin in other objectives than affecting the flow of trade, and others which are just there who knows why. Non-tariff barriers to trade are by no means limited to trade in services, but they are the dominant form of restriction in that world.

    This brings me to Brexit. I have to start with an important disclaimer. As a public servant, I take no position on Brexit per se – it was a decision of the British people, and has been put into effect. That said, our evolving trading and regulatory relationship with the EU requires many judgements on the most effective way to do so – what delivers the most effective outcome.

    I want to make two important points in this context. The first relates more to trade in goods, the second to financial services. Let me start with goods. I said earlier that trade enhances and supports economic activity.

    It follows that if the level of trade is lowered by some action, it will have an effect to reduce productivity growth and thus overall growth. Just as tariffs, by increasing the cost, can reduce the scale of trade, the same goes for the type of non-tariff barrier that Brexit has created. Now to reiterate, this does not mean that Brexit is wrong, because there can be other reasons for it, but it does suggest, I think powerfully, that we should do all we can to minimise negative effects on trade.

    The evidence on Brexit suggests that in the UK the changing trade relationship has weighed on the level of potential supply.

    I conclude from this that, just as the Windsor Agreement on trade involving the UK and Ireland was a welcome step forward, so too are the initiatives of the current UK Government to rebuild trade between the UK and EU, and of course there is a very particular important aspect here for the UK and Ireland.

    Let me turn to financial services. There is often an impression given that the flow of trade in financial services is predominantly from the UK to the EU. In other words, the UK is an exporter of financial services. This creates the notion of a one-way street, and that leads to the image of a dependency, and from there the notion of the dependency in some sense being unhealthy starts to come in.

    My strong view is that – contrary to this one way idea – the relationship goes both ways, and that is a good thing. And, this is very well illustrated by the relationship between Ireland and the UK in the area of financial services.

    Let me draw out the two-way street point some more, using the example of the 2022 shock to Liability Driven Investment funds connected to UK pension funds, so-called LDI funds. The LDI episode occurred when UK financial assets saw a significant repricing, with a particular impact on long-dated gilts. The Financial Policy Committee at the Bank of England judged that UK financial stability was at risk due to dysfunction in the gilt market and recommended that the Bank take action. This action took the form of intervening via temporary purchases of long-dated gilts.

    Many of the funds involved were domiciled in other jurisdictions, including here in Ireland and Luxembourg. To be very clear, domicile was not a part of the problem. But, it had to help to enable the solution, and it did. A co-ordinated response between the UK, Ireland and Luxembourg was essential, and I am very grateful to the Central Bank of Ireland and the authorities in Luxembourg for helping us to respond effectively.

    There have been important lessons from the LDI episode, which are increasingly relevant in the context of the increased market volatility we have seen in recent weeks following the US announcement on trade tariffs last month. Together, working with other UK regulators, the Central Bank of Ireland and the authorities in Luxembourg, we have taken action to build resilience in LDI funds. And I hope this close cooperation can continue as we seek to navigate another two way street by building more resilience into money market funds in the EU and the UK, as we strengthen our domestic rules.

    The benefits of open financial markets as well as the dependencies also tend to go both ways.

    The UK and EU are both seeking to strengthen our domestic capital markets. The EU’s Savings and Investment Union agenda and the UK government’s reforms to pensions are both seeking to direct savings towards productive investment. These are important measures, not least given the pressing need for financing some of the common structural challenges we face in the UK and EU – for example, defence and security, demographics, and the technological and climate transitions.

    But strengthening domestic capital markets is only part of the story. The scale of investment needed requires access to global capital, supported by open financial markets. The alternative is fragmentation, which we have unfortunately seen in the global economy in recent years, which reduces the size of markets, and makes them inherently less stable. Fragmentation also increases the cost of capital, undermining growth and investment. Financial market openness, built on a foundation of robust global standards and trust, is a much better alternative.

    To repeat, open financial markets are a good thing. As with goods trade, open financial markets support economic growth as well as increasing investment and reducing the cost of capital. So the benefits of open financial markets, as well as the dependencies, tend to go both ways, so a two-way street; and working together effectively is the best way.

    As such, there is merit in seeking to increase the openness of our financial markets by reducing non-tariff barriers.

    The Bank of England and the Central Bank of Ireland enjoy a very strong relationship, which is built on trust and respect, fostered by close cooperation and coordination and a steadfast commitment to shared values and working together in international bodies to promote global standards. And, my strong view is that this type of work benefits the industries that we oversee. The message that I get consistently, and rightly, is that firms want robust but fair and consistent regulatory standards which will support both stability and competition, and set the level playing field on which they operate.

    Thank you.

    I would like to Sarah Breeden, Lee Foulger, Mike Hatchett, Himali Hettihewa, Karen Jude, Jake Levy, Zertasha Malik, Jeremy Martin, Harsh Mehta, James Talbot, Lanze Gardiner Vandvik, Sam Woods for their help in the preparation of these remarks.

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI Global: The Michelin Guide is Eurocentric and elitist − yet it will soon be an arbiter of culinary excellence in Philly

    Source: The Conversation – USA – By Tulasi Srinivas, Professor of Anthropology, Religion and Transnational Studies, Emerson College

    Could a Philly cheesesteak joint actually get a Michelin star?

    The famed Michelin Red Guide is coming to Philadelphia, and inspectors are already scouting local restaurants to award the famed Michelin star.

    Michelin says the selected restaurants will be announced in a Northeast cities edition celebration later this year. Boston will also be included for the first time.

    As an anthropologist of ethics and religion who has an expertise in food studies, I read the announcement with some curiosity and a lot of questions. I had seen this small red guide revered by chefs and gourmands alike around the globe.

    How did the Michelin guide begin reviewing restaurants? And what makes it an authority on cuisine worldwide?

    The Michelin Guide has retained its iconic red cover for more than a century.
    Matthieu Delaty/Hans Lucas/AFP via Getty Images

    From tires to terrines

    It all began in 1889 in the small town of Clermont-Ferrand in the Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes region of France. Brothers Andre and Edouard Michelin founded their world-famous Michelin tire company, fueled by a grand vision for France’s automobile industry – though there were fewer than 3,000 cars at the time in the whole of France.

    To encourage travel, they distributed a red-bound guide filled with maps and helpful tips on routes and destinations. Initially free to automobile owners, it soon started to sell for seven francs – roughly US$1.50 at the time. The guide later added lists of restaurants and eateries along with other points of travel interest.

    Being French, readers had questions about the quality of the food at these establishments, so the brothers started a rating system of a single star to denote high-quality establishments worthy of their elite customers and their fancy automobiles.

    But that wasn’t enough for discerning diners. So the guide created a discriminating hierarchy of one-, two- and three-star establishments: one star for “high-quality cooking worth a stop,” two stars for “excellent cooking worth a detour,” and three stars for “exceptional cuisine worth a special journey.”

    An army of anonymous inspectors

    How do restaurants get a Michelin star – or three? According to the guide, restaurants have to be consistently extraordinary to garner three stars. To ensure a restaurant’s excellence is consistent, Michelin has to surveil them repeatedly, which it does using a stable of mysterious diners called “inspectors.”

    You might be thinking of Inspector Clouseau, the klutzy, misguided detective from the Pink Panther movies played by the inimitable Peter Sellers.

    Mais non!

    Michelin inspectors are dreaded anonymous restaurant reviewers. They dine at restaurants unannounced and undercover, and inevitably write scathing critiques of everything – ingredients, food, chefs and dishes – in their reports.

    In the 2015 Bradley Cooper movie “Burnt,” the restaurant is obsessed with the mystery Michelin inspectors, who dine incognito. Restaurateur Tony, played by Daniel Bruhl, instructs the dining room staff on how to spot them:

    “No one knows who they are. No one. They come. They eat. They go. But they have habits. One orders the tasting menu, the other orders a la carte. Always. They order a half a bottle of wine. They ask for tap water. They are polite. But attention! They may place a fork on the floor to see if you notice.”

    Japan’s Chizuko Kimura, a Michelin-star chef, at her restaurant Sushi Shunei in Paris.
    Julien De Rosa/AFP via Getty Images

    Holy grail for chefs

    The inherent elitism of the iconic Michelin Guide was central, though left unspoken.

    To counteract the guide’s existential classist bias, Michelin introduced the Bib Gourmand award in 1997 to identify affordable “best value for money restaurants.” Bib Gourmand restaurants are easier on the wallet than Michelin-starred establishments and offer casual dining. The award’s logo is the Bibendum, also known as the inflatable Michelin Man, licking his lips.

    In 2020, the guide introduced yet another award: the green star for eateries with farm-to-table fresh quality.

    Today, the Michelin Guide has become a vaunted yet controversial subjective yardstick by which restaurants are measured.

    Getting a Michelin star has become a holy grail for many chefs, a Nobel prize of cuisine. Chefs speak of earning a star as an honor they have envisaged for a lifetime, and starred chefs often become celebrities in their own right.

    The 2022 dark comedy “The Menu” stars Ralph Fiennes as one such celebrity Michelin chef, whose exclusive island restaurant has a lavish modern menu that culminates in a mystery performance. His greatest fear is losing his Michelin star – a cause for lament, mental health crises and, sometimes, murder.

    Three stars for Eurocentrism

    The Michelin Guide evaluates restaurants on the quality of their ingredients, the mastery of their flavors, the chef’s personality in their cooking, the harmony of flavors, and the consistency of the cuisine over the course of numerous visits.

    Yet somehow, all these factors, seemingly easily translatable across the world’s cuisines, has led to an intensely parochial guide.

    Only in 2007, 118 years after its inception, did the guide recognize Japanese cuisine as worthy of its gaze. Soon after, stars rained down on Tokyo’s many stellar eateries.

    On a contemporary map charting where the Michelin Guide is found, huge swathes of the world are missing. There is no Michelin Guide in India, one of the world’s greatest and oldest cuisines, or in Africa with its multiplicity of cultural flavors.

    Perhaps a side of racism with the boeuf bourguignon?

    Despite a movement to decolonize food by rethinking colonial legacies of power and extractive ways of eating, Michelin has derived its stellar reputation primarily from reviewing metropolitan European cuisine. It has celebrated obscure European gastronomic processes such as “fire cooking” in Stockholm’s famous Ekstedt restaurant, and new chemical processes such as “molecular gastronomy” in Spain’s famed el Bulli eatery.

    One could say Michelin is a somewhat conservative enterprise. Rather than leading the way, it has followed consumers’ expanding palates.

    In 2024, in a rare break with tradition, Michelin awarded one star to a small family-run taqueria, El Califa De León, in Mexico City. The taqueria is known for its signature tacos de gaonera – thinly sliced rib-eye steak cooked in lard on fresh corn masa tortillas with a squeeze of lime.

    Some discerning diners worried that Michelin had gone downhill.

    Quelle horreur!

    The decision to give a star to a Mexican restaurant that is essentially just a steel counter, fridge and griddle was so unlike Michelin that it resorted to describing El Califa tacos as “elemental and pure”; language previously reserved only to describe elite cuisine.

    The Michelin-starred taqueria El Califa de León in Mexico City is known for its tacos de gaonera.
    Apolline Guillerot-Malick/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images

    A big bill

    Soon-to-be-reviewed Philadelphia boasts a portfolio of epicurean excellence, with contributions from a global diaspora of culinary creators. Restaurants such as Zahav, Kalaya and Mawn – which serve Israeli, Thai and Cambodian food, respectively – are surely eyeing their prospects for a starry future.

    That Boston and Philadelphia’s tourism boards likely paid for the pleasure of the guide visiting their cities has been a topic of discussion among food cognoscenti. Reportedly, the Atlanta Tourism Board paid nearly $1 million for Michelin to visit their city. Is Michelin merely a well-regarded shakedown? A few stars in exchange for a million dollars?

    After indirectly footing that big bill, what can local diners look forward to in the wake of Michelin awards scattering across the Northeast?

    Since Michelin restaurants are notoriously difficult to get into – the award invariably prompts a surge in customers and reservations – the enhanced reputation of the restaurants might translate to price increases for diners.

    Starred restaurants will also likely feel tremendous pressure to maintain high food quality and service, and this too can add to cost – particularly in an era of tariffs on foreign ingredients and alcohols.

    Diners won’t escape unscathed. Industry officials suggest that Michelin stars add an average of $100 per diner per star. But, on the upside, diners may be able to gawk at local and international celebrities at dinner, since hanging out at Michelin-starred establishments has long been a celebrity preoccupation.

    So if you have a favorite hot restaurant in Philadelphia, better make that reservation immediately, before a Michelin star makes it impossible to get in.

    Read more of our stories about Philadelphia.

    Tulasi Srinivas does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

    ref. The Michelin Guide is Eurocentric and elitist − yet it will soon be an arbiter of culinary excellence in Philly – https://theconversation.com/the-michelin-guide-is-eurocentric-and-elitist-yet-it-will-soon-be-an-arbiter-of-culinary-excellence-in-philly-256667

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-OSI China: China calls for strengthening financial cooperation among SCO members

    Source: People’s Republic of China – State Council News

    BEIJING, June 3 — Chinese Vice Premier Ding Xuexiang on Tuesday called for strengthening financial cooperation among member states of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) to give strong impetus to the development of regional countries.

    Ding, also a member of the Standing Committee of the Political Bureau of the Communist Party of China Central Committee, made the remarks during a group meeting with foreign representatives attending a meeting of the SCO member states’ finance ministers and central bank chiefs.

    Ding said that Chinese President Xi Jinping proposed a series of important suggestions and measures for jointly building a more beautiful home of the SCO at the “Shanghai Cooperation Organization Plus” meeting last year in Astana.

    China is willing to take its rotating presidency of the SCO as an opportunity and work with other member states to prioritize development, strengthen financial cooperation, expand the local currency settlement, promote digital inclusive finance, and actively work for the establishment of an SCO development bank, Ding said.

    Speaking on behalf of the foreign side, SCO Secretary-General Nurlan Yermekbayev spoke highly of the work carried out by China as the rotating chair of the SCO, and expressed the willingness to collaborate with the Chinese side to uphold the “Shanghai Spirit” and promote regional prosperity and development.

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI China: China rolls out ‘ASEAN visa’ for 10 ASEAN countries, ASEAN observer Timor-Leste

    Source: People’s Republic of China – State Council News

    China has launched an “ASEAN (the Association of Southeast Asian Nations) Visa” for the 10 ASEAN countries and ASEAN observer Timor-Leste, Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson Lin Jian told a regular press briefing on Tuesday.

    According to Lin, China will issue the corresponding category of “ASEAN Visa” for business personnel from the 11 countries, as well as their spouses and children, who meet the requirements. The visa will allow multiple entries within five years and a maximum stay period of 180 days.

    Lin said the “ASEAN visa” is launched on the basis of the comprehensive mutual visa exemption with Singapore, Thailand, Malaysia and other countries and the issuance of the “Lancang-Mekong visa” to Mekong River countries, aiming to further facilitate the cross-border movement of people within the region.

    In recent years, the building of the China-ASEAN community with a shared future has been continuously advanced, and important achievements have been made in jointly building a common home that features peace, tranquility, prosperity, a beautiful environment, and friendship, Lin noted.

    Noting that China and Southeast Asian countries have frequent personnel exchanges, Lin said further facilitating personnel exchanges is a common aspiration for both sides. 

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI China: China’s domestic trips rise 5.7% during annual Duanwu holiday

    Source: People’s Republic of China – State Council News

    An aerial drone photo taken on May 31, 2025 shows teams playing a dragon boat-based tug-of-war at Xujiachong bay in Zigui County, central China’s Hubei Province, on May 31, 2025. [Photo/Xinhua]

    China’s tourism sector saw steady growth during the 2025 Duanwu Festival holiday, with domestic trips increasing by 5.7 percent year on year to 119 million, according to data released by the Ministry of Culture and Tourism on Tuesday.

    Tourism revenue reached 42.73 billion yuan (5.95 billion U.S. dollars), up 5.9 percent compared with the same holiday last year.

    Also known as Dragon Boat Festival, this holiday combines cultural traditions and leisure activities — featuring dragon boat races, the consumption of zongzi, which are sticky rice dumplings, folk singing and classical performances.

    Museums, art galleries and cultural venues nationwide incorporated intangible heritage and folk customs into their 2025 offerings, thereby enhancing visitor experiences.

    Coinciding with Children’s Day on June 1, this year’s holiday saw family trips and study tours grow in popularity. 

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI Australia: Free education in the ACT

    Source: Northern Territory Police and Fire Services

    • This article summarises free education and training available to Canberrans.
    • Support is available to children and students, as well as adults looking to change careers or upskill.

    Free education is available for Canberrans looking to start their career, change direction or upskill.

    Students and those returning to work can also access support.

    This is not an exhaustive list of free education in Canberra.

    Free three-year-old preschool

    Canberra families can access free preschool for children who are three years old. Canberra families can use preschool for free. They get up to 300 hours each year.

    This equates to about six hours per week, generating an average saving of $1329 per child for eligible families.

    For information on which Childhood Education and Care services across Canberra offer the free three-year-old preschool program visit act.gov.au/education.

    Free TAFE is jointly funded by the ACT and Australian Governments.

    Free TAFE offers free training courses through CIT for people who want to learn, retrain or upskill.

    The courses on offer address skills shortages across essential in-demand sectors such as:

    • hospitality and tourism
    • children’s education and care
    • construction
    • aged care, health and disability care
    • technical and digital.

    Find out more at cit.edu.au.

    ACT Women’s Return to Work Grants program

    This grants program supports women who have been out of the workforce for more than six months to re-enter the workforce.

    A grant of up to $1,000 is available to eligible woman who meet the criteria.

    The grants can be used for:

    • courses
    • resources for study
    • work clothing.

    Grant recipients also get a one-on-one mentoring session that offers:

    • links to education and training opportunities
    • employment support.

    Work Experience and Support program

    The Work Experience and Support program helps multicultural Canberrans who are unemployed.

    This program provides recipients a chance to:

    • build your skills and knowledge
    • experience an Australian workplace
    • improve your job seeking confidence and competitiveness
    • build a network of contacts in the ACT public service.

    The program runs full-time over 12 weeks. Successful participants will get a Certificate II in Workplace Skills from CIT.

    There are two application rounds per year. Find out more at act.gov.au.

    Adult and Community Education JobTrainer grants program

    The JobTrainer program assists Canberrans facing challenges in learning, training, and employment.

    It aims to help them develop essential skills needed to participate effectively in the labour market and contribute to Canberra’s economic growth.

    The programs are for participants aged 17 years or older and not enrolled in or attending a school, college or other program leading to the completion of Year 12.

    Libraries ACT’s digital resources

    Libraries ACT has a huge inventory of digital learning and educational materials for people of all ages.

    From learning to read, vocabulary or story time in languages other than English. Libraries ACT offers a huge range of learning resources.

    Canberrans can access:

    • a huge range of kid’s resources
    • newspapers, magazines and comics
    • arts and crafts instructional videos
    • English and foreign language resources.

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    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-OSI Australia: Your guide to live music in Canberra

    Source: Northern Territory Police and Fire Services


    Canberra is a vibrant hub for live music, offering a rich mix of international, national, and local performances. No matter your taste, there’s a venue and genre to suit everyone.

    Whether you’re heading to your local pub for a casual gig or counting down to a major concert you’ve had booked for months, Canberra’s diverse music scene has something for you.

    The Baso Belconnen (formerly known as the Basement)

    The Baso is known for its underground vibes and hosting some of the biggest touring acts in Canberra. A long-standing venue with a reputation for packed gigs and good music.

    The Pot Belly nourishes the soul of those seeking a venue that feels like a house party. From rock gigs to acoustic nights, it caters to your hard-core needs.

    The George is well-known for having great music and supporting local up and coming talent. Catch live music Wednesday, Fridays and Sundays.

    From Friday night jazz jams to debut tours, Gang-Gang has a list of gigs, comedy, trivia and music for everyone. A well-known inner-north hub for good music and times.

    Are live music and craft beer your jam? Then the Taphouse is a great spot to enjoy a chilled Friday night or Sunday with friends and a schnitzel.

    The Old Canberra Inn is a well-known pub in Lyneham. It has live music from local bands from Wednesday to Sunday. If you want a family-friendly meal and some quiet jazz or acoustic music, this is a great place to go.

    Live at the Polo is a beloved inner-north hub. It’s a live music venue that features local artists and musicians from around the world. You can check their music page to find out about intimate acoustic sets, energetic band nights, and music you can groove to.

    Iconic live music venues renowned for showcasing top international and national talent across all genres. Under the ucliveˣ brand, fresh lineups are released every month.

    On Tuesday evenings, enjoy performances by the city’s best local duos, trios, and quartets showcasing the smooth sounds of jazz. On Wednesday nights, there are jam sessions where top jazz musicians from Canberra play fun and lively Chicago-style jazz.

    Giddy up! Fun Time Pony is the perfect spot for those seeking a blend of lively music and a dance floor. Trivia, comedy, and live local bands every Saturday attract large crowds.

    Shadows is a vibrant venue that often spills out of the well-known Sydney Building. It features a diverse lineup of DJs and live bands, showcasing genres such as New Wave, Darkwave, Post-Punk, Goth, Glam, Art Rock, Industrial, and EBM.

    Squeaky Clean above Verity Lane has mastered the art of burgers and live music. Check out their Verity Lane Way Festivals and enjoy a mix of Canberra and surrounding talent.

    Smack bang in the heart of Canberra, King O’Malley’s offer at least four nights of live music a week. Catch up with friends over a drink and dinner and enjoy up-beat folk on Thursdays. There is rock’n’roll on Fridays and Saturdays and classic Irish folk music every Sunday evening.

    Live music and great food — Dissent is a café by day, dive bar by night. Join the team for an eclectic mix of live music and entertainment. Help support a vibrant live music scene and the strong community spirit that makes Canberra truly unique.

    A powerhouse for national and emerging talent, the Street Theatre is a staple for the Canberra communities performing arts and live music scene.

    Llewellyn Hall hosts a wide range of local and international performers, with frequent appearances by the Canberra Symphony Orchestra, Australian Chamber Orchestra, and Musica Viva. It also serves as an exceptional stage for diverse events, including contemporary music, comedy, dance, and public lectures.

    The pulse of live music and entertainment in Canberra, Canberra Theatre offers something for everyone, across all ages and musical tastes. From family favourites like Bluey to iconic artists like Paul Kelly, it delivers an unforgettable lineup sure to satisfy every live music lover.

    The capital’s largest events venue hosting major artists. Located in the heart of the city, within the CBD’s entertainment precinct, there’s superb sounds and a view from every seat.

    A buzzing southside community hub. The Irish Club showcases top talent from Canberra and nearby regions every Friday night. Known for its family friendly atmosphere, they also have traditional Irish music and live music each month.

    Rose Cottage showcases a variety of local talent. Whether you’re cozying up by the fire inside or enjoying the sunshine in the courtyard, there’s always a great lineup and plenty to enjoy.

    From jazz to First Nations open-mic nights and coventry jams, the Tuggeranong Arts Centre house a diverse and exciting range of artists and talents all year-round. Keep an eye out for live music and entertainment at the lakeside centre.

    Enjoy live music every Saturday night at the Durham, where Canberra’s best local bands and DJs come together for a fun night out.

    Renowned for its rich history of hosting legendary acts like Cold Chisel, INXS, AC/DC, and John Farnham. The German Club continues to build its reputation as a destination for great food and exceptional live music. Discover a dynamic lineup of local, interstate, and international artists and entertainment on their website.

    The Wesley Music Centre, located in Canberra’s inner south, is a lively hub for classical and chamber music. The Centre is home to numerous community arts groups and is dedicated to nurturing local musical talent. Join their popular Wednesday lunchtime concert series or weekly program of performances.

    More than one location

    Smith’s is one of Canberra’s most iconic and loved performance venues. The bar and performing arts café showcase events of all genres of music, comedy, poetry, cabaret, burlesque, performance art.

    P.J O’Reilly’s Irish Pub, Canberra City & Tuggeranong

    Canberra’s classic Irish pubs, located in both the City and Tuggeranong, offer a diverse range of entertainment and live music for everyone. From DJs to acoustic performers, you’re guaranteed a great meal and fantastic tunes no matter which side of town you’re on.

    To help you discover the right act or genre, check out these great resources:

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    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-OSI Australia: Missing middle reforms to boost housing choice

    Source: Northern Territory Police and Fire Services

    The reforms aim to create more diverse housing options that blend seamlessly into Canberra’s suburbs.

    In brief:

    • The ACT Government has proposed housing reforms.
    • These aim to enable more low-rise housing within existing Canberra suburbs.
    • Canberrans can have their say on the reforms via YourSay Conversations.

    The ACT Government has proposed reforms to increase housing supply and choice across the ACT.

    Changes to suburban zoning and new design requirements aim to boost supply of high quality, sustainable ‘missing middle’ housing types in Canberra.

    Canberrans can now learn more about the reforms and share their thoughts via the YourSay Conversations website.

    What is the ‘missing middle’?

    The term ‘missing middle’ refers to homes that are somewhere between detached standalone houses and medium- to high-rise apartments.

    These include:

    • multi-occupancy houses on a block
    • townhouses
    • terrace homes
    • low-rise apartments.

    These housing types offer Canberrans greater choice, close to existing:

    • schools
    • transport
    • shops
    • parks
    • community facilities and services.

    More choice, not just more homes

    Canberra’s population is set to reach 700,000 by 2050. The Missing Middle Reforms will greatly increase the Government’s ability to reach its goal of 30,000 new homes by 2030.

    The reforms go beyond simply building more homes. The aim is to create more diverse housing options that blend seamlessly into Canberra’s suburbs.

    This means increasing the land availability within the ACT’s existing urban footprint, to increase opportunities for development.

    Have your say on the reforms

    Canberrans can now share their thoughts on the reforms, which comprise:

    • suburban zoning changes
    • a Missing Middle Housing Design Guide, developed with local industry design and construction experts.

    To have your say, go to the YourSay Conversations website.

    Read more like this:


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    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Voter register key dates announced

    Source: Hong Kong Information Services

    The Registration & Electoral Office (REO) announced today that the publication date of the provisional register for the 2025 Election Committee subsectors (ECSSs) will be advanced to June 24.

    The provisional register and omissions list for the ECSSs will be available for inspection until June 30 by specified persons under the law.

    The final register for the 2025 ECSSs will be published on July 21.

    The REO explained that the arrangement was made to tie in with the ECSS By-elections to be held on September 7, as well as the subsequent eighth-term Legislative Council general election to be held on December 7 this year.

    It elaborated that the Electoral Legislation (Miscellaneous Amendments) Ordinance 2025 empowers the Electoral Registration Officer (ERO) to suitably advance the publication of the registers for ECSSs in the year of the LegCo general election, so that the ECSS By‑elections of the year can be conducted in accordance with the most updated information included in the register without having to adopt the register published in late September in the year earlier. To enable the ECSS By‑elections to be conducted on the basis of the latest voter situation, the ERO will advance the compilation and publication of the 2025 provisional/final registers for ECSSs.

    Voters/new applicants of ECSSs who received requests from the REO for supplementary information should reply by June 9.

    Separately, voters who have been included in the omissions list for ECSSs will receive reminder letters from the REO to confirm their eligibility. These individuals must reply or provide supplementary information by June 30 so that they may, upon the Revising Officer’s approval, keep their voter status and be included in the final register of ECSSs. They may also raise claims or objections on or before June 30.

    The REO will publish notices in the Gazette on July 4 to announce the number of Election Committee (EC) members to be returned for the relevant subsectors at the ECSS By-elections, the designated bodies of subsectors that need to fill vacancies of EC members and the number of EC members that they can nominate, and the details for the submission of nomination forms.

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Public Notice of Intent to Issue a Categorical Exclusion to Prudence Park Water Co-Op

    Source: US State of Rhode Island

    Rhode Island Department of Health (RIDOH) is seeking public comment on intent to issue a Categorical Exclusion.

    RIDOH has reviewed for approval the request by the Prudence Park Water Co-Op for a Categorical Exclusion determination for proposed installation of three (3) bladder pressure tanks and a water flow meter. The proposed tanks and flow meter are to be installed within Prudence Park Water Co-Op’s existing pumphouse located on in Prudence Park, Portsmouth, RI.

    It has been determined that any impacts would be minor and short term in duration and that the project will not individually, or cumulatively over time, have a significant effect on the quality of the environment. Therefore, RIDOH is hereby giving notice of intent to issue a Categorical Exclusion for the proposed project pursuant to the requirements and authority set forth in Chapter 46-12.8 of the General Laws of Rhode Island and the Drinking Water State Revolving Fund regulations (216-RICR-50-05-6).

    A copy of the proposed Categorical Exclusion can be obtained by calling RIDOH’s Center for Drinking Water Quality at 401-222-6867 weekdays from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. or by emailing DOH.RIDWQ@health.ri.gov. All material submitted for review is available for public inspection weekdays from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. at RIDOH, Center for Drinking Water Quality, Three Capitol Hill, Room 209, Providence, RI 02908.

    Written comments should be sent to the Center for Drinking Water Quality at the address above or emailed to DOH.RIDWQ@health.ri.gov within thirty (30) days of the date of this notice.

    A public hearing to hear or otherwise receive comments on the proposed intent to issue a Categorical Exclusion will be held if RIDOH receives such a request by twenty-five (25) persons, or by a governmental agency, or by an association having not less than twenty-five (25) members, within ten (10) days of published notice. If a public hearing is held, it will be open to the public, recorded and held at least five (5) days before the end of the public-comment period. A hearing will not be held earlier than ten (10) days after notice of its location, date, and time published. A request for a public hearing should be sent to the Center for Drinking Water Quality at the address above or emailed to DOH.RIDWQ@health.ri.gov. Notice should be taken that if RIDOH receives a request(s) as provided above on or before 4:30 p.m., July 03, 2025, a public hearing will be held at the following time and place:

    July 10, 2025, at 11:00 a.m. RIDOH Auditorium Three Capitol Hill Providence, Rhode Island 02908

    Interested persons should contact RIDOH to confirm if a hearing will be held at the time and location noted above.

    The location of the public hearing will be accessible to the handicapped. Interpreter services for people with hearing impairment and audiotapes for people with vision impairment will be made available. RIDOH is handicap accessible to individuals with disabilities.

    Please call RIDOH’s Center for Drinking Water Quality at 401-222-6867 for further information. For individuals requesting communication assistance, call Rhode Island Relay (TTY) at 711 or 800-745-5555 at least forty-eight (48) hours in advance.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI: Canada Energy Partners Extends Private Placement

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    VANCOUVER, British Columbia, June 03, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Canada Energy Partners Inc. (NEX: CE.H) (the “Company”) announces that the TSX-Venture Exchange has approved an extension of its non-brokered private placement until June 26/2025.

    Please see the original news release announcing the private placement issued on April 11/2025 for more information.

    On behalf of the Board of Directors of
    Canada Energy Partners Inc.:

    Grant Hall
    President

    For more information, please contact:

    CANADA ENERGY PARTNERS INC.
    Attention: Grant Hall, President
    Email: ghall9612@gmail.com
    Direct Phone: (520) 668 4101

    Neither the TSX Venture Exchange nor its Regulation Services Provider (as such term is defined in the policies of the TSX Venture Exchange) accepts responsibility for the adequacy or accuracy of this release.

    This press release contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of applicable securities laws. Forward-looking statements are frequently characterized by words such as “plan”, “expect”, “project”, “intend”, “believe”, “anticipate”, “estimate” and other similar words or statements that certain events or conditions “may” or “will” occur, including, without limitation, estimated revenues. Forward-looking statements in this press release include statements about the anticipated filing deadline for the Annual Filings. Forward-looking statements are subject to a variety of risks and uncertainties and other factors that could cause actual events or results to differ materially from those projected in the forward-looking statements. These factors include, without limitation, the failure to file the Annual Filings by the anticipated date. Readers are cautioned that reliance on such information may not be appropriate for other purposes. The forward-looking statements contained in this press release are made as of the date hereof, and the Company undertakes no obligation to update publicly or revise any forward-looking statements, whether because of new information, future events or otherwise, unless so required by law.

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: Ethos Specialty Expands Transactional Risk Capacity with Starr Partnership

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    NEW YORK, June 03, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Ethos Specialty Insurance Services LP (“Ethos Specialty”), a Bishop Street Underwriters (“Bishop Street”) company, today announced the expansion of its North American Transactional Risk capacity through a new partnership with Starr, a global insurance and investment organization.

    As the Transactional Risk market continues to tighten—amid hardening conditions and widespread capacity constraints—Ethos Specialty remains undeterred in its mission to deliver best-in-class solutions. The addition of Starr to Ethos’s panel of premier carriers underscores that commitment and further solidifies Ethos’s position as one of the most sought-after partners in the space. Starr joins an already robust, “A” rated lineup that includes AXIS and Skyward Specialty, bringing total capacity limits to $45M in the U.S. and $25M in Canada.

    “We’re proud to partner with Starr, a global leader in commercial insurance,” said Navine Aggarwal, Chief Executive Officer at Ethos Specialty. “Starr’s legacy of underwriting excellence and financial strength aligns perfectly with our mission to provide market-leading risk solutions across the U.S. and Canada.”

    Starr brings over a century of experience and a global footprint spanning more than 100 countries. With an AM Best rating of “A” (Excellent), Starr’s capacity further enhances Ethos’s ability to serve clients across diverse industries with confidence.

    This partnership comes amid a period of exceptional growth for Ethos Specialty. While many peers have contracted, Ethos has grown its Transactional Risk business by over 90% year over year—driven by a clear flight to quality among insureds seeking trusted, proven partners. Its ability to attract top-tier carriers like Starr reflects a reputation for underwriting excellence, innovation, and consistent claims performance. With a rapidly expanding footprint, world-class talent, and a forward-thinking approach, Ethos is well-positioned to shape the future of Transactional Risk across North America and beyond.

    To learn more about Ethos Specialty’s solutions, contact our team at headoffice@ethossspecialty.com.

    About Ethos Specialty
    Ethos Specialty is a leading Managing General Underwriter (“MGU”) that develops industry-specific insurance programs and provides specialized underwriting services on behalf of high-quality carrier and syndicate partners. Ethos focuses on managing risks related to transactions, offering multiple solutions including Representations and Warranties (R&W) and tax insurance. For more information, visit www.ethosspecialty.com.

    About Starr
    Starr is a leading insurance and investment organization with a presence on six continents. Through its operating insurance companies, Starr provides property, casualty, and accident and health insurance products, as well as a range of specialty coverages including aviation, marine, energy, and excess casualty insurance. For more information, visit www.starr.com.

    About Bishop Street
    Bishop Street Underwriters, a RedBird Capital portfolio company, seeks to partner with Managing General Agents/Underwriters as well as niche underwriting teams. Bishop Street aims to combine their best-in-class (re)insurance executive team’s vision with RedBird’s strong track record, expertise, and network in the financial services sector to build a differentiated platform uniquely positioned to capitalize on secular growth tailwinds in the industry. For more information, please go to www.bishopstreetuw.com.

    Media Contacts

    Ethos Specialty
    Lauren Meyer
    lauren.meyer@ethosspecialty.com
    (248) 849-0992

    Starr
    Hunter Hoffmann
    hunter.hoffmann@starrcompanies.com
    (646) 630-4944

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: SIOS Technology Announces New Distribution Agreement with Climb Channel Solutions

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    SAN MATEO, Calif., June 03, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — SIOS Technology Corp., a leading provider of application high availability (HA) and disaster recovery (DR) solutions, today announced a new distribution agreement with Climb Channel Solutions, an international specialty technology distributor and wholly owned subsidiary of Climb Global Solutions, Inc. (NASDAQ: CLMB). This partnership will enable Climb to distribute SIOS DataKeeper and SIOS LifeKeeper products to its extensive network of reseller partners across the Americas region.

    SIOS delivers innovative high availability and disaster recovery solutions that protect critical applications from downtime and data loss. SIOS LifeKeeper provides automated failover clustering, ensuring continuous operation of essential applications, while SIOS DataKeeper offers real-time replication for high availability and disaster recovery in both cloud and on-premises environments. Together, these solutions help businesses maintain uptime, safeguard data integrity, and achieve seamless business continuity.

    “Partnering with Climb Channel Solutions strengthens our ability to deliver industry-leading HA and DR solutions to a broader audience,” said Masahiro Arai, COO of SIOS Technology. “With Climb’s expertise in connecting innovative technologies with reseller partners, we are excited to expand access to our solutions and help organizations achieve greater resiliency and reliability.”

    “Climb Channel Solutions specializes in delivering emerging and established IT technologies, offering flexible financing, real-time quoting, and best-in-class channel operations to drive speed to market and exceptional service,” said Dale Foster, CEO of Climb Channel Solutions. “This partnership enhances Climb’s portfolio of technology offerings, equipping customers with critical solutions that ensure business continuity and operational efficiency.”

    For more information about SIOS Technology and its high availability solutions, visit www.us.sios.com. To learn more about Climb Channel Solutions, visit www.ClimbCS.com.

    About SIOS Technology Corp.

    SIOS Technology Corp. high availability and disaster recovery solutions ensure availability and eliminate data loss for critical Windows and Linux applications operating across physical, virtual, cloud, and hybrid cloud environments. SIOS clustering software is essential for any IT infrastructure with applications requiring a high degree of resiliency, ensuring uptime without sacrificing performance or data – protecting businesses from local failures and regional outages, planned and unplanned. Founded in 1999, SIOS Technology Corp. (https://us.sios.com) is headquartered in San Mateo, California, with offices worldwide.

    SIOS, SIOS Technology, SIOS DataKeeper, SIOS LifeKeeper and associated logos are registered trademarks or trademarks of SIOS Technology Corp. and/or its affiliates in the United States and/or other countries. All other trademarks are the property of their respective owners.

    Media Contact:

    Beth Winkowski
    Winkowski Public Relations, LLC for SIOS
    978-649-7189
    bethwinkowski@US.SIOS.com

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: 3D Systems’ Additive Manufacturing Solutions Enable Pioneering Research on Advanced Thermal Control Systems for Next Generation Space Missions

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    • 3D Systems’ applications expertise, technologies foundational to research projects led by Penn State, Arizona State & NASA Glenn Research Center
    • Additive manufacturing enabling novel titanium and nitinol passive heat pipes for space applications with 50% reduced weight enabling more efficient thermal management
    • Researchers advance state-of-the-art for thermal management of CubeSats with projected 6× greater deployed-to-stowed-area ratio with one of the first additively manufactured shape memory alloy (nitinol) radiators
    • 3D Systems’ solutions accelerating the adoption of additive manufacturing use in space applications — a total addressable market anticipated to reach nearly $4 billion by 2030

    ROCK HILL, S.C., June 03, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Today, 3D Systems (NYSE: DDD) announced the Company is collaborating with researchers from Penn State University and Arizona State University on two projects sponsored by the National Aeronautics & Space Administration (NASA) intended to enable ground-breaking alternatives to current thermal management solutions. Severe temperature fluctuations in space can damage sensitive spacecraft components, resulting in mission failure. By combining deep applications expertise with 3D Systems’ leading additive manufacturing (AM) solutions comprising Direct Metal Printing (DMP) technology and tailored materials and Oqton’s 3DXpert® software, the teams are engineering sophisticated thermal management solutions for the demands of next-generation satellites and space exploration. The project led by researchers with Penn State University, Arizona State University, and the NASA Glenn Research Center1 in collaboration with 3D Systems’ Application Innovation Group (AIG) has resulted in processes to build embedded high-temperature passive heat pipes in heat rejection radiators that are additively manufactured in titanium. These heat pipe radiators are 50% lighter per area with increased operating temperatures compared with current state-of-the-art radiators, allowing them to radiate heat more efficiently for high power systems. Additionally, a project led by researchers at Penn State University and NASA Glenn Research Center2 with 3D Systems’ AIG yielded a process to additively manufacture one of the first functional parts using nickel titanium (nitinol) shape memory alloys that can be passively actuated and deployed when heated. This passive shape memory alloy (SMA) radiator is projected to yield a deployed-to-stowed area ratio that is 6× larger than currently available solutions, enabling future high-power communications and science missions in restricted CubeSat volume. When deployed on spacecraft, such as satellites, these radiators can raise operating power levels and reduce thermal stress on sensitive components, preventing failures and prolonging satellite lifespan.

    Traditionally, heat pipes have been manufactured with complex processes to form porous internal wick structures that passively circulate fluid for efficient heat transfer. Using Oqton’s 3DXpert® software, the Penn State/Arizona State/NASA Glenn/3D Systems project team embedded an integral porous network within the walls of the heat pipes, avoiding subsequent manufacturing steps and resulting variability. Monolithic heat pipe radiators were manufactured in titanium and nitinol on 3D Systems’ DMP technology. The titanium-water heat pipe radiator prototypes were successfully operated at temperatures of 230°C and weigh 50% less (3 kg/m2 versus over 6 kg/m2), meeting NASA goals for heat transfer efficiency and reduced cost to launch for space-based applications.

    The Penn State/NASA Glenn/3D Systems team is also pushing the boundaries of what is possible with metal AM by developing a process to 3D print passively deployed radiators with shape memory alloys. The chemistry of these materials can be tuned to change shape with application of heat. SMAs can withstand repeated deformation cycles without fatigue and exhibit excellent stress recovery. The team again used 3DXpert to design the deployable spoke structure of the radiator. This was then 3D printed in nitinol (NiTi), a nickel-titanium shape memory alloy, using 3D Systems’ DMP technology. When affixed to a spacecraft such as a satellite, this device can be passively actuated and deployed when heated by fluid inside, thus removing the need for motors or other conventional actuation in space. The passive shape memory alloy radiator developed by the team offers transformative advances with projected deployed-to-stowed area ratio that is 6× larger than what is currently considered state-of-the-art (12× versus 2×) and 70% lighter (<6 kg/m2 versus 19 kg/m2).

    “Our long-standing R&D partnership with 3D Systems has enabled pioneering research for the use of 3D printing for aerospace applications,” said Alex Rattner, associate professor, The Pennsylvania State University. “The collective expertise in both aerospace engineering and additive manufacturing is allowing us to explore advanced design strategies that are pushing the boundaries of what is considered state-of-the-art. When we complement this with the software capabilities of 3DXpert as well as the low oxygen environment in 3D Systems’ DMP platform, we are able to produce novel parts in exotic materials that enable dramatically improved performance.”

    “3D Systems has decades of leadership developing additive manufacturing solutions to transform the aerospace industry,” said Dr. Mike Shepard, vice president, aerospace & defense, 3D Systems. “Thermal management in the space environment is an ideal application for our DMP technology. These latest projects, in collaboration with the teams at Penn State, Arizona State, and NASA Glenn Research Center, demonstrate the potential of our DMP technology to create lightweight, functional parts that advance the state-of-the-art in thermal management for spacecraft applications. Thermal management is an extremely common engineering challenge and the DMP process can deliver solutions that are effective for many industries including aerospace, automotive, and high-performance computing/AI datacenters.”

    According to Research and Markets3, the global market for additive manufacturing in the aerospace industry was estimated at $1.2 billion in 2023 and is projected to reach $3.8 billion by 2030. Additive manufacturing is making a significant impact by enabling the production of airworthy parts with reduced weight and improved performance. In the last decade alone, 3D Systems has worked alongside aerospace industry leaders to produce more than 2,000 structural titanium or aluminum alloy components for space flight, and over 200 critical passive RF flight parts. There are currently more than 15 satellites in orbit with 3D Systems-produced flight hardware on board. For more information, please visit the Company’s website.

    Forward-Looking Statements
    Certain statements made in this release that are not statements of historical or current facts are forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Forward-looking statements involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors that may cause the actual results, performance or achievements of the company to be materially different from historical results or from any future results or projections expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements. In many cases, forward-looking statements can be identified by terms such as “believes,” “belief,” “expects,” “may,” “will,” “estimates,” “intends,” “anticipates” or “plans” or the negative of these terms or other comparable terminology. Forward-looking statements are based upon management’s beliefs, assumptions, and current expectations and may include comments as to the company’s beliefs and expectations as to future events and trends affecting its business and are necessarily subject to uncertainties, many of which are outside the control of the company. The factors described under the headings “Forward-Looking Statements” and “Risk Factors” in the company’s periodic filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, as well as other factors, could cause actual results to differ materially from those reflected or predicted in forward-looking statements. Although management believes that the expectations reflected in the forward-looking statements are reasonable, forward-looking statements are not, and should not be relied upon as a guarantee of future performance or results, nor will they necessarily prove to be accurate indications of the times at which such performance or results will be achieved. The forward-looking statements included are made only as of the date of the statement. 3D Systems undertakes no obligation to update or review any forward-looking statements made by management or on its behalf, whether as a result of future developments, subsequent events or circumstances or otherwise, except as required by law.

    About 3D Systems
    For nearly 40 years, Chuck Hull’s curiosity and desire to improve the way products were designed and manufactured gave birth to 3D printing, 3D Systems, and the additive manufacturing industry. Since then, that same spark continues to ignite the 3D Systems team as we work side-by-side with our customers to change the way industries innovate. As a full-service solutions partner, we deliver industry-leading 3D printing technologies, materials and software to high-value markets such as medical and dental; aerospace, space and defense; transportation and motorsports; AI infrastructure; and durable goods. Each application-specific solution is powered by the expertise and passion of our employees who endeavor to achieve our shared goal of Transforming Manufacturing for a Better Future. More information on the company is available at www.3dsystems.com.

    Investor Contact:   investor.relations@3dsystems.com
    Media Contact:      press@3dsystems.com


    1 NASA STMD 80NSSC22K0260 (https://tfaws.nasa.gov/wp-content/uploads/TFAWS2024-PT-3.pdf)

    2 NASA 80NSSC23M0234 (https://govtribe.com/award/federal-contract-award/cooperative-agreement-80nssc23m0234)

    3 Revolutionizing Aerospace: How Additive Manufacturing is Set to Transform the Industry by 2030 (January 2025).

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: Vivakor Strengthens Permian Presence with 10 Pipeline Stations, Fueling Revenue and Margin Expansion

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    Dallas, TX, June 03, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Vivakor, Inc. (Nasdaq: VIVK) (“Vivakor” or the “Company”) is an integrated provider of energy transportation, storage, reuse, and remediation services. Vivakor’s growth strategy is anchored in the Permian and Eagle Ford Basins where the Company is positioned to opportunistically expand its integrated crude oil storage, logistics, and marketing value chains.

    Vivakor owns and operates 10 strategically located pipeline injection stations in the core Permian Basin in Texas and New Mexico. These facilities receive and aggregate crude oil transported by truck from production wells, throughputting volumes into interstate crude oil pipelines that include Centurion (Lotus), Plains Basin Pipeline (PAA), and the West Texas System (EPD).

    Vivakor’s Footprint in the Permian

    “Our facilities position Vivakor as a critical logistics hub in the Permian,” said James Ballengee, Chairman, President, and CEO. “These assets enable us to support increasing volumes from upstream operators, enhance crude blending and compression efficiency, and ultimately drive revenue growth and operating leverage as activity scales.”

    Mr. Ballengee continued, “The Permian continues to be biggest contributor to U.S. production of crude oil and NGLs, supporting international and domestic energy demand. Consistent drilling, quantities produced, and barrels brought to key markets bolster our revenues and business model. Our Permian facilities provide Vivakor with a capital-efficient means of giving producers needed market access while generating a rewarding return on capital for the Company.”

    Vivakor’s infrastructure directly supports its broader strategy to deliver vertically integrated services in one of the world’s most productive oil regions. With the Permian accounting for more than 40% of total U.S. oil output, Vivakor’s expanded operations give it a front-row seat to the sector’s next growth cycle.

    About Vivakor, Inc.

    Vivakor, Inc. is an integrated provider of sustainable energy transportation, storage, reuse, and remediation services, operating one of the largest fleets of oilfield trucking services in the continental United States. Its corporate mission is to develop, acquire, accumulate, and operate assets, properties, and technologies in the energy sector. Vivakor’s integrated facilities assets provide crude oil and produced water gathering, storage, transportation, reuse, and remediation services under long-term contracts.

    Once operational, Vivakor’s oilfield waste remediation facilities will facilitate the recovery, reuse, and disposal of petroleum byproducts and oilfield waste products.

    For more information, please visit our website: http://vivakor.com

    Cautionary Statement Regarding Forward-Looking Statements

    This news release may contain forward-looking statements within the meaning of the “safe harbor” provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Such forward-looking statements are based upon the current beliefs and expectations of our management and are inherently subject to significant business, economic and competitive uncertainties and contingencies, many of which are difficult to predict and generally beyond our control. Actual results and the timing of events may differ materially from the results anticipated in these forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements may be identified but not limited by the use of the words “anticipates,” “expects,” “intends,” “plans,” “should,” “could,” “would,” “may,” “will,” “believes,” “estimates,” “potential,” or “continue” and variations or similar expressions. Our actual results may differ materially and adversely from those expressed in any forward-looking statements as a result of various factors and uncertainties, including, but not limited to, pending or expected transaction and ownership structures, the valuation of such transactions, the likelihood and ability of the Company to successfully and timely consummate planned acquisitions, the risk that any required regulatory approvals are not obtained, are delayed or are subject to unanticipated conditions that could adversely affect Vivakor or the expected benefits of transactions, our ability to maintain the listing of our securities on The Nasdaq Capital Market, disruption and volatility in the global currency, capital, and credit markets, changes in federal, local and foreign governmental regulation, changes in tax laws and liabilities, tariffs, legal, regulatory, political and economic risks, our ability to successfully develop products, rapid change in our markets, changes in demand for our future products, and general economic conditions.

    These risks and uncertainties include, but are not limited to, risks and uncertainties discussed in Vivakor’s filings with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, which factors may be incorporated herein by reference. Actual results, performance or achievements may differ materially, and potentially adversely, from any projections and forward-looking statements and the assumptions on which those forward-looking statements are based. There can be no assurance that the data contained herein is reflective of future performance to any degree. You are cautioned not to place undue reliance on forward-looking statements as a predictor of future performance as projected financial information and other information are based on estimates and assumptions that are inherently subject to various significant risks, uncertainties and other factors, many of which are beyond our control. All information set forth herein speaks only as of the date hereof in the case of information about Vivakor or the date of such information in the case of information from persons other than Vivakor, and we disclaim any intention or obligation to update any forward-looking statements as a result of developments occurring after the date of this communication. Forecasts and estimates regarding Vivakor’s industries and markets are based on sources we believe to be reliable; however, there can be no assurance these forecasts and estimates will prove accurate in whole or in part.

    Investor Contact:
    Phone: (949) 281-2606
    info@vivakor.com

    Attachment

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: Primech AI Signs Lease Agreement with Leading Facilities Management Leader for HYTRON LITE Robot Deployment at One of Singapore’s Largest Hospitals

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    SINGAPORE, June 03, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Primech AI Pte. Ltd. (“Primech AI” or the “Company”), a subsidiary of Primech Holdings Limited (Nasdaq: PMEC), today announced the signing of a two-year lease agreement with one of the leading facility management service providers for the deployment of its innovative HYTRON LITE autonomous bathroom cleaning robot at one of Singapore’s largest public hospitals.

    The two-year agreement represents a milestone in commercializing Primech AI’s robotics technology. It underscores the growing market demand for advanced cleaning automation in complex, high-traffic environments such as healthcare facilities. This deployment represents another milestone with Primech AI’s entry into the critical healthcare sector, where stringent cleaning and hygiene standards are paramount, confirming the commercial viability of the HYTRON LITE robot for high-stakes environments where consistent sanitization is essential for patient and staff safety.

    “Securing this deployment at one of Singapore’s premier healthcare institutions marks a significant milestone in our commercialization strategy,” said Charles Ng, Co-Founder and Chief Operating Officer at Primech AI. “Healthcare environments demand the highest standards of cleanliness and operational reliability. This deployment demonstrates our HYTRON LITE robot’s capabilities in meeting these exacting requirements while addressing the critical labor challenges faced by the healthcare sector.”

    HYTRON LITE incorporates the NVIDIA Jetson Orin Super, a state-of-the-art System-on-Module (SoM) designed for robust edge AI and robotics applications. Known for its compact size and powerful AI capabilities, the NVIDIA Jetson Orin Super facilitates high-energy efficiency and superior AI processing at the edge. The HYTRON LITE robot will provide autonomous cleaning services, delivering consistent, high-quality sanitization while reducing the manual labor burden on facility management staff. The robot’s advanced features include the self-generation of electrolyzed water for eco-friendly cleaning, contactless and contact-based cleaning capabilities, self-charging systems, automated water handling, air-drying, and floor-mopping functions.

    “This deployment is particularly significant as it allows us to demonstrate our technology’s value in an environment where cleaning quality directly impacts patient outcomes,” added Mr. Ng. “The healthcare sector represents a key growth market for our robotics solutions, and we’re excited to showcase how automation can enhance both operational efficiency and hygiene standards.”

    The first HYTRON LITE robot is scheduled to be delivered by early June 2025, with installation, setup, and training to be provided by Primech AI’s specialized technical team.

    About Primech AI

    Primech AI is a leading robotics company dedicated to pushing the boundaries of innovation in technology. With a team of passionate individuals and a commitment to collaboration, Primech AI is poised to revolutionize the robotics industry with groundbreaking solutions that make a meaningful impact on society. For more information, visit www.primech.ai.

    About Primech Holdings Limited

    Headquartered in Singapore, Primech Holdings Limited is a leading provider of comprehensive technology-driven facilities services, predominantly serving both public and private sectors throughout Singapore. Primech Holdings offers an extensive range of services tailored to meet the complex demands of its diverse clientele. Services include advanced general facility maintenance services, specialized cleaning solutions such as marble polishing and facade cleaning, meticulous stewarding services, and targeted cleaning services for offices and homes. Known for its commitment to sustainability and cutting-edge technology, Primech Holdings integrates eco-friendly practices and smart technology solutions to enhance operational efficiency and client satisfaction. This strategic approach positions Primech Holdings as a leader in the industry and a proactive contributor to advancing industry standards and practices in Singapore and beyond. For more information, visit www.primechholdings.com.    

    Forward-Looking Statements

    Certain statements in this announcement are forward-looking statements, including, for example, statements about completing the acquisition, anticipated revenues, growth, and expansion. These forward-looking statements involve known and unknown risks and uncertainties and are based on the Company’s current expectations and projections about future events that the Company believes may affect its financial condition, results of operations, business strategy, and financial needs. These forward-looking statements are also based on assumptions regarding the Company’s present and future business strategies and the environment in which the Company will operate in the future. Investors can find many (but not all) of these statements by the use of words such as “may,” “will,” “expect,” “anticipate,” “aim,” “estimate,” “intend,” “plan,” “believe,” “likely to” or other similar expressions. The Company undertakes no obligation to update or revise publicly any forward-looking statements to reflect subsequent occurring events or circumstances or changes in its expectations, except as may be required by law. Although the Company believes that the expectations expressed in these forward-looking statements are reasonable, it cannot assure that such expectations will be correct. The Company cautions investors that actual results may differ materially from the anticipated results and encourages investors to review other factors that may affect its future results in the Company’s registration statement and other filings with the SEC.

    Company Contact:
    Email: ir@primech.com.sg

    Investor Relations Contact:        
    Matthew Abenante, IRC
    President                                        
    Strategic Investor Relations, LLC                                         
    Tel: 347-947-2093
    Email: matthew@strategic-ir.com

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: Ingersoll Rand Acquires Lead Fluid, Boosts Regional Growth Strategy in Life Sciences

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    • Execution of bolt-on acquisition supports Ingersoll Rand’s in-region, for-region strategy
    • Acquisition will enhance company capabilities in life science applications
    • Pre-synergy Adjusted EBITDA purchase multiple in low double-digits

    DAVIDSON, N.C., June 03, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Ingersoll Rand Inc., (NYSE: IR) a global provider of mission-critical flow creation and life science and industrial solutions, has acquired Lead Fluid (Baoding) Intelligent Equipment Manufacturing Co., Ltd. (“Lead Fluid”), reflecting its commitment to an in-region, for-region growth strategy.

    China-based Lead Fluid designs and manufactures advanced fluid-handling products, including peristaltic pumps, syringe pumps, gear pumps, and pump heads, used for life science applications requiring precise fluid delivery, sterile conditions, and gentle handling of sensitive materials. Its annual revenue is approximately $8 million.

    Lead Fluid will join the Life Sciences platform within the Precision and Science Technologies (P&ST) segment.

    “As we continue to execute bolt-on acquisitions that further our in-region, for-region strategy, Lead Fluid is a leading domestic brand with an excellent reputation,” said Vicente Reynal, chairman and chief executive officer of Ingersoll Rand. “This acquisition demonstrates our ability to work directly with family founders to add leading companies to Ingersoll Rand. We look forward to strengthening our life science capabilities in China and the overall durability of our portfolio by increasing our exposure to this high-growth, sustainable end market.”

    About Ingersoll Rand Inc.

    Ingersoll Rand Inc. (NYSE: IR), driven by an entrepreneurial spirit and ownership mindset, is dedicated to Making Life Better for our employees, customers, shareholders, and planet. Customers lean on us for exceptional performance and durability in mission-critical flow creation and life science and industrial solutions. Supported by over 80+ respected brands, our products and services excel in the most complex and harsh conditions. Our employees develop customers for life through their daily commitment to expertise, productivity, and efficiency. For more information, visit www.IRCO.com.

    Forward-Looking Statements
    This news release contains “forward-looking statements” within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, including statements related to Ingersoll Rand Inc.’s (the “Company” or “Ingersoll Rand”) expectations regarding the performance of its business, its financial results, its liquidity and capital resources and other non-historical statements. These forward-looking statements generally are identified by the words “believe,” “project,” “expect,” “anticipate,” “estimate,” “forecast,” “outlook,” “target,” “endeavor,” “seek,” “predict,” “intend,” “strategy,” “plan,” “may,” “could,” “should,” “will,” “would,” “will be,” “on track to” “will continue,” “will likely result,” “guidance” or the negative thereof or variations thereon or similar terminology generally intended to identify forward-looking statements. All statements other than historical facts are forward-looking statements.

    These forward-looking statements are based on Ingersoll Rand’s current expectations and are subject to risks and uncertainties, which may cause actual results to differ materially from these current expectations. Should one or more of these risks or uncertainties materialize, or should underlying assumptions prove incorrect, actual results may vary materially from those indicated or anticipated by such forward-looking statements. The inclusion of such statements should not be regarded as a representation that such plans, estimates or expectations will be achieved. Important factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from such plans, estimates or expectations include, among others, (1) adverse impact on our operations and financial performance due to natural disaster, catastrophe, global pandemics (including COVID-19), geopolitical tensions, cyber events or other events outside of our control; (2) unexpected costs, charges or expenses resulting from completed and proposed business combinations; (3) uncertainty of the expected financial performance of the Company; (4) failure to realize the anticipated benefits of completed and proposed business combinations; (5) the ability of the Company to implement its business strategy; (6) difficulties and delays in achieving revenue and cost synergies; (7) inability of the Company to retain and hire key personnel; (8) evolving legal, regulatory and tax regimes; (9) changes in general economic and/or industry specific conditions; (10) actions by third parties, including government agencies; and (11) other risk factors detailed in Ingersoll Rand’s most recent Annual Report on Form 10-K filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (the “SEC”), as such factors may be updated from time to time in its periodic filings with the SEC, which are available on the SEC’s website at http://www.sec.gov. The foregoing list of important factors is not exclusive.

    Any forward-looking statements speak only as of the date of this release. Ingersoll Rand undertakes no obligation to update any forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information or development, future events or otherwise, except as required by law. Readers are cautioned not to place undue reliance on any of these forward-looking statements.

    Contacts:
    Investor Relations:
    Matthew.Fort@irco.com

    Media:
    Sara.Hassell@irco.com

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: Standard Lithium, in Partnership with Telescope Innovations, to Produce Next Generation Solid-State Battery Materials

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    NEW AND NOVEL LOW TEMPERATURE IP-PROTECTED METHOD FOR PRODUCING LITHIUM SULFIDE DEVELOPED IN PARTNERSHIP BETWEEN STANDARD LITHIUM AND TELESCOPE INNOVATIONS

    LITHIUM PRODUCTS FROM STANDARD LITIHIUM’S ARKANSAS DEMONSTRATION PLANT USED TO MAKE NEXT GENERATION LITHIUM SULFIDE PRODUCT FOR USE IN SOLID STATE BATTERIES

    VANCOUVER, British Columbia, June 03, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Standard Lithium Ltd. (“Standard Lithium” or the “Company”) (TSXV:SLI) (NYSE American:SLI), a leading near-commercial lithium company, is pleased to announce the successful production of battery quality lithium sulfide as part of a collaboration with Telescope Innovations.

    As previously mentioned (see Aug 28th 2024 news release), Standard Lithium has been working with its research and development partner, Telescope Innovations, to develop new and novel conversion technologies to make next generation battery materials. This new conversion process has now been successfully used to convert lithium hydroxide produced by Standard Lithium at its southern Arkansas Demonstration Plant, into battery quality lithium sulfide (Li2S – see news release dated May 7th 2025). Samples of the lithium sulfide have been shipped to solid-state battery companies in Asia and North America for ongoing testing and validation purposes.

    Standard Lithium’s President and COO, Dr. Andy Robinson commented “this development of new IP and technology with our research partner, Telescope Innovations, exemplifies our approach to becoming the leading new lithium company in North America. Whilst our principle area of focus, and capital allocation, is building the first DLE project in North America at our South West Arkansas Project Phase 1 with our joint venture partner Equinor, we understand that constant technological evolution is integral to staying at the forefront of this rapidly evolving industry. This recent work led by Telescope demonstrates that we are able to take lithium chemicals produced from the Smackover Formation in southern Arkansas, and then transform them into the feedstocks required by the next generation of batteries. Our partnership with Telescope Innovations continues to be a “win-win” for our shareholders and their’s.

    Lithium sulfide is a key raw material required for many next-generation solid-state battery chemistries (see news release: Toyota works with partners to develop Li2S based batteries), but despite the importance of lithium sulfide in the next generation of battery technology, it is only produced commercially in very small quantities and at very high cost. The technical collaboration between the two teams has resulted in a novel low-temperature patented process that has the following advantages:

    • Feedstock flexibility – both lithium hydroxide and lithium carbonate are viable inputs;
    • Impurity tolerance – allows the use of technical-grade feedstocks;
    • Lower processing temperatures (<100 °C) – reduces equipment complexity and operating costs; and,
    • Enhanced safety in manufacturing – avoids high-temperature conditions and associated thermal risks.

    About Standard Lithium Ltd.

    Standard Lithium is a leading near-commercial lithium development company focused on the sustainable development of a portfolio of large, high-grade lithium-brine properties in the United States. The Company prioritizes projects characterized by high-grade resources, robust infrastructure, skilled labor, and streamlined permitting. Standard Lithium aims to achieve sustainable, commercial-scale lithium production via the application of a scalable and fully integrated Direct Lithium Extraction (“DLE”) and purification process. The Company’s flagship projects are located in the Smackover Formation, a world-class lithium brine asset, focused in Arkansas and Texas. In partnership with global energy leader Equinor, Standard Lithium is advancing the South West Arkansas project, a greenfield project located in southern Arkansas, and actively exploring promising lithium brine prospects in East Texas.

    Standard Lithium trades on both the TSX Venture Exchange and the NYSE American under the symbol “SLI”. Please visit the Company’s website at www.standardlithium.com.

    Investor and Media Inquiries

    Chris Lang
    Standard Lithium Ltd.
    +1 604 409 8154
    investors@standardlithium.com

    X: @standardlithium
    LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/standard-lithium/

    Neither the TSX Venture Exchange nor its Regulation Services Provider (as that term is defined in policies of the TSX Venture Exchange) accepts responsibility for the adequacy or accuracy of this release. This news release may contain certain “Forward-Looking Statements” within the meaning of the United States Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 and applicable Canadian securities laws. When used in this news release, the words “anticipate”, “believe”, “estimate”, “expect”, “target, “plan”, “forecast”, “may”, “schedule” and other similar words or expressions identify forward-looking statements or information. These forward-looking statements or information may relate to intended development timelines, future prices of commodities, accuracy of mineral or resource exploration activity, reserves or resources, regulatory or government requirements or approvals, the reliability of third party information, continued access to mineral properties or infrastructure, fluctuations in the market for lithium and its derivatives, changes in exploration costs and government regulation in Canada and the United States, and other factors or information. Such statements represent the Company’s current views with respect to future events and are necessarily based upon a number of assumptions and estimates that, while considered reasonable by the Company, are inherently subject to significant business, economic, competitive, political and social risks, contingencies and uncertainties. Many factors, both known and unknown, could cause results, performance or achievements to be materially different from the results, performance or achievements that are or may be expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements. The Company does not intend, and does not assume any obligation, to update these forward-looking statements or information to reflect changes in assumptions or changes in circumstances or any other events affecting such statements and information other than as required by applicable laws, rules and regulations.

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: Syncfusion® Launches Canadian Data Center for BoldSign®

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    RESEARCH TRIANGLE PARK, N.C., June 03, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Syncfusion, Inc.®, the enterprise technology provider of choice, today announced the launch of a data center in Toronto, Canada, for BoldSign®, the company’s eSignature solution. This expansion lets Canadian organizations using BoldSign comply with local privacy laws and regulatory standards while also enhancing platform performance.

    “Canadian organizations need trusted tools that support compliance and deliver speed,” said Daniel Jebaraj, CEO of Syncfusion. “The investment in a new data center reflects our commitment to delivering a secure, high-performance, affordable eSignature solution to our growing Canadian customer base.”

    Hosting data in Canada aligns with data residency laws and provides faster, more reliable signing experiences. The Toronto data center is certified compliant with SOC 2® standards. It minimizes cross-border data exposure, while Canadian jurisdiction offers added legal clarity and protection.

    The BoldSign platform delivers fast, secure, and scalable eSignature functionality with modern APIs, automated workflows, and audit-ready compliance. With data centers in the U.S., the European Union, and now Canada, as well as qualified electronic signature (QES) certification for EU customers, BoldSign is purpose-built to meet the performance and regulatory needs of global organizations.

    To learn more about compliance and security features in BoldSign and its affordable, transparent pricing, visit https://boldsign.com.

    About Syncfusion, Inc.
    Headquartered in the technology hub of Research Triangle Park, N.C., Syncfusion, Inc.® delivers an award-winning ecosystem of developer control suites, embeddable BI platforms, and business software. Syncfusion was founded in 2001 with a single software component and a mission to support businesses of all sizes—from individual developers and start-ups to Fortune 500 enterprises. Though its pilot product, the Essential Studio® suite, has grown to over 1,900 developer controls, its mission remains the same. With offices in the U.S., India, and Kenya, Syncfusion prioritizes the customer experience by providing feature-rich solutions to help developers and enterprises solve complex problems, save money, and build high-performance, robust applications.

    Contact: Brittany Kearns
    Phone: 571-271-7211
    Email: brittany@crossroadsb2b.com

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI Economics: RBI imposes monetary penalty on India Home Loan Ltd., Mumbai, Maharashtra

    Source: Reserve Bank of India

    The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has, by an order dated May 27, 2025, imposed a monetary penalty of ₹32,000 (Rupees Thirty Two Thousand only) on India Home Loan Ltd., Mumbai, Maharashtra (the company) for non-compliance with certain directions issued by RBI on ‘Know Your Customer (KYC)’. This penalty has been imposed in exercise of powers conferred on RBI under the provisions of Section 52A of the National Housing Bank Act, 1987.

    The statutory inspection of the company was conducted by the National Housing Bank with reference to its financial position as on March 31, 2023. Based on supervisory findings of non-compliance with RBI directions and related correspondence in that regard, a notice was issued to the company advising it to show cause as to why penalty should not be imposed on it for its failure to comply with the said directions. After considering the company’s reply to the notice and oral submissions made during the personal hearing, RBI found, inter alia, that the following charges against the company were sustained, warranting imposition of monetary penalty:

    The company had failed to:

    1. carry out periodic review of risk categorisation of accounts with such periodicity being at least once in six months; and

    2. conduct periodic updation of KYC of its customers.

    This action is based on the deficiencies in regulatory compliance and is not intended to pronounce upon the validity of any transaction or agreement entered into by the company with its customers. Further, imposition of monetary penalty is without prejudice to any other action that may be initiated by RBI against the company.

    (Puneet Pancholy)  
    Chief General Manager

    Press Release: 2025-2026/469

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI Global: Austen and Turner: A Country House Encounter captures the spirit of two great geniuses, born 250 years ago

    Source: The Conversation – UK – By Oksana Hubina, Research Fellow, English literature, University of Leeds

    Self-Portrait by J.M.W Turner (1799) and an engraving of Austen by William Home Lizars (1869). Wiki Commons, CC BY-SA

    Harewood House, with its impressive history and classic English beauty, is a magnificent place to visit in Leeds, west Yorkshire. The house frequently hosts remarkable exhibitions and cultural events devoted to art, poetry and history.

    This time, its doors are open for a new exhibition Austen and Turner: A Country House Encounter, which marks the 250th anniversaries of the landscape painter J.M.W. Turner and the novelist Jane Austen.

    The anniversaries have presented an opportunity for the co-curators of Harewood House Trust and the Centre for Eighteenth Century Studies at the University of York to unite the incredible works of two outstanding personalities of the Regency era.

    Their masterpieces reflect their common engagement with the cultural and societal significance of British country houses and their landscapes. Though the pair seem to have never met, the expressiveness of Turner’s paintings are complemented by the literary richness of Austen’s manuscripts.


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    The exhibition creatively highlights the common threads within Austen and Turner’s work through shared themes. The first is Austen Meets Turner, which explores how Austen and Turner’s interests and experiences intersected in the country estates that inspired their works.

    I was especially struck by Harewood House from the North East (1797). Turner captured the magnificent building with such softness and light. The painting makes the landscape feel peaceful and alive, showing his ability to transform a real place into something almost dreamlike.

    It highlights the grandeur of the landed aristocracy of the time, symbolising wealth, influence and a strong social hierarchy that was rooted in land ownership. Austen also used houses as symbols of status and wealth in her novels. Pemberley in Pride and Prejudice (1813), for example, reflects the class, riches and style of the love interest, Mr Darcy.

    Another theme that attracted my attention was Encounters with Austen and Turner, located at the heart of the Harewood House library. Here, among the letters is another of his well-known paintings, Harewood Castle from the South East (1798). A visit to the exhibition can be complemented by a short walk to the real castle ruins in the Harewood grounds.

    You just cannot take your eyes off this painting. Turner captures the ruin bathed in soft, natural light, blending the architectural detail of the castle with the surrounding pastoral landscape. His delicate use of colour and atmospheric perspective evokes a sense of romantic nostalgia, highlighting the harmony between human history and nature – a key feature of his style.

    Objects of genius

    The theme Interior Worlds deserves special attention. It is especially engaging because it offers the opportunity to feel the presence of Austen and Turner through the very objects that once made them famous.

    Turner’s travelling watercolour box from 1842, for example, was made by the artist using two cards attached to a linen cloth. It was designed to hold a new kind of watercolour block, variations of which are still manufactured today.

    Another such item is the original handwritten version of Austen’s unfinished novel Sanditon, penned during the last months of her life in 1817.

    A first edition of Sense and Sensibility is also on show, with a fascinating explanation of the history behind its creation. Originally titled Elinor and Marianne and written in 1795, it was intended to be a novel in letters. But Austen later revised the text, and the version as we know it was published anonymously in 1811.

    Finally, a collection of period costumes from Austen adaptations makes this exhibition truly memorable. An impressive collection of costumes from Sense and Sensibility (1995), Pride and Prejudice (1995) and Emma (2020) are on display.

    Each garment reflects the elegance and social nuance of the Regency era, bringing Austen’s characters vividly to life. The craftsmanship and historical detail in the costumes evoke a sense of timeless charm that deepen the viewer’s connection to the novels.

    This incredible exhibition is sure to move everyone who really wishes to engage with the high art and experience the historical spirit of the Regency era.

    Oksana Hubina works at the School of English, University of Leeds. She receives funding from the British Academy in the field of the humanities.

    ref. Austen and Turner: A Country House Encounter captures the spirit of two great geniuses, born 250 years ago – https://theconversation.com/austen-and-turner-a-country-house-encounter-captures-the-spirit-of-two-great-geniuses-born-250-years-ago-257492

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-OSI Global: Why climate professionals are often held to unrealistic standards

    Source: The Conversation – UK – By Maddie Sinclair, PhD Candidate, School of Health and Wellbeing, University of Glasgow

    r.classen/Shutterstock

    Climate professionals, people who work in roles which address climate change, are often criticised for what they eat or how they travel. Criticism of lifestyle choices by colleagues, family members or even strangers can be demotivating. Worse, it can hinder efforts towards building a sustainable future.

    As more people start working in sustainability, both in traditional sectors such as climate researchers or public health professionals and within other workspaces where sustainability is embedded into an existing role, this type of criticism is in danger of becoming more familiar.

    Climate change affects everyone, whether we like to admit it or not. It can be overwhelming to know how best to act on all the advice about living more sustainably. In fact, increased knowledge about what is necessary for a sustainable lifestyle can be paralysing, and prevent someone from taking action.

    Of course, many of us do want to live more sustainably. But some people may feel restricted by the efforts and costs of taking these extra steps to change multiple aspects of our busy daily lives.


    Get your news from actual experts, straight to your inbox. Sign up to our daily newsletter to receive all The Conversation UK’s latest coverage of news and research, from politics and business to the arts and sciences.


    Instead of revamping our own lifestyles, it can be easier to challenge those recommending these changes to our behaviour, to see if they are following their own rules.

    Climate professionals know which choices are best for the environment. But when you see one of them flying to a UN climate summit, drinking from a plastic water bottle or caught red-handed eating a beef burger, how do you feel? Confused? Vindicated? Perhaps, relief? If the very people who are advising us how to live sustainably aren’t practising what they preach, does this absolve us of responsibility to act?

    Whether intentional or not, holding climate professionals to unrealistic standards is a tactic which delays effective climate action. It slows down climate action by redirecting responsibility and foregrounding low-impact solutions.

    Calling out the failure of climate professionals can emphasise the difficulties of sustainable living and reinforce the idea that slowing down climate change is impossible. You may think that these imperfections are a reflection on their hypocrisy and limits the integrity of their work. In reality, it’s an indication that we are all people operating in a broken system, no matter our expertise.

    Criticising climate scientists doesn’t tackle the root of the problem.
    Sklo Studio/Shutterstock

    Recent research from the World Resource Institute think tank into sustainable dietary, energy and transport choices stresses the importance of systemic change.

    The report found that a system in which governments and businesses support and normalise sustainable behaviour would be far more effective than the weight of individuals taking action alone. And so, as a society, we need to value the work of those advocating for systems change, rather than scrutinising their lifestyle choices.

    Ultimately, rich nations, wealthy people and fossil fuel companies are disproportionately to blame for climate change. However, their preferred narrative concerning the importance of individual action, rather than system change, prevails.

    And this is nothing new. BP popularised the concept of a carbon footprint over 20 years ago. This displaced responsibility for environmental impact from large organisations and systems and towards citizens.

    While people tend to view the impact of climate change as relevant to them, they may not be able to envisage a greener future. This is because people tend to focus on immediate effects rather than longer term outcomes. Short-term environmental policies can fuel this short-term thinking, preventing us from conceptualising a future that recovers from climate change.

    Quick climate dictionary: the meaning of a carbon footprint.

    Change from within the system

    It’s easier to blame climate professionals for not sticking to their own advice, than to think about change at a higher level. But climate professionals must be part of the system to change the system, much to their frustration.

    In fact, climate researchers like us actually fly more than researchers in other fields, because structural factors such as limited funding, accessibility of locations and professional pressures matter more than individual attitudes for reducing flights. How can we expect all the necessary voices to be at the table during international climate conferences if flying is the only feasible way for many to attend?

    Some climate professionals do lead very impressive sustainable lifestyles. We should celebrate these efforts. But we need to dispel the expectation that all climate professionals have the resources to act the same within a broken system.




    Read more:
    Quick climate dictionary: what actually is a carbon footprint?


    Remember, climate professionals are working towards a system which empowers all citizens to choose these sustainable lifestyles, including their own. For instance, some researchers are studying the positive climate impact of protected cycle lanes, producing evidence in support of their construction in cities worldwide.

    Imagine if public transport and active travel were the most obvious choice for everyone. If you wanted to drive, then you would have to meticulously plan a route incorporating private transport lanes, or be prepared to adapt if they don’t exist. Which would you choose?

    Climate professionals are experiencing a whole spectrum of emotions related to climate change, including feeling stuck between what they say and what they do. Focusing on their personal behaviour risks discrediting and devaluing important climate-focused work.

    This can detract from valuable conversations about the urgent need for wider systemic change. The next time you speak to a climate professional, try not to catch them out. Instead, ask about their work and its influence on changing the system – we guarantee they will be more receptive.


    Don’t have time to read about climate change as much as you’d like?

    Get a weekly roundup in your inbox instead. Every Wednesday, The Conversation’s environment editor writes Imagine, a short email that goes a little deeper into just one climate issue. Join the 45,000+ readers who’ve subscribed so far.


    The authors do not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and have disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

    ref. Why climate professionals are often held to unrealistic standards – https://theconversation.com/why-climate-professionals-are-often-held-to-unrealistic-standards-253859

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-OSI Global: Fewer men are choosing to become vets – ‘male flight’ could be the reason

    Source: The Conversation – UK – By Hamish Morrin, Veterinary Lecturer in Clinical Communication Skills, University of Central Lancashire

    ZoranOrcik/Shutterstock

    If you take your dog, cat or fish to see a vet in the UK, the person who treats them is likely to be a woman. According to the Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons, 61% of current UK vets are female. University admissions are even more skewed. Among vets who had recently qualified, nearly 80% were female.

    This wasn’t always the case. In the 1930s, when James Herriot – author of books including All Creatures Great and Small and for many the iconic British vet – was practising, almost all vets were male.

    The women’s liberation movement of the 60s and 70s saw an influx of female vet students. You might expect a levelling of the playing field to lead to a profession now equally split between genders, but that isn’t so.

    I teach veterinary clinical communication skills to veterinary students. My research relates to developing communication strategies that are effective across a wide range of cultures and social groups. However, vets are not very culturally diverse: as well as the majority being female, nearly all are heterosexual and white.

    This can limit their experience and understanding of different perspectives. As part of a wider piece of research into student experience of communication, I have reviewed the history of veterinary demographics, with some surprising results.


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    Historically, vets worked mainly in farms with large animals, for which clients perceived physical strength to be crucial. Increasing pet ownership means most vets now work with small animals.

    This change in focus has altered society’s perception of veterinary work from “practical” to “caring”, and it has been suggested that this has discouraged boys from considering the profession. Veterinary salaries have also stagnated for some time, which may make the job less attractive to men.

    In the past, much more veterinary work took place with large animals on farms.
    Dusan Petkovic/Shutterstock

    There is very little research to support any of these theories, but the most relevant and largest study available comes from the US in 2010. When applications to vet schools across the country from the 1960s to early 2000s were reviewed, one factor predicted student choice: the more female students there were, the less likely males were to apply.

    This is an understudied sociological phenomenon called “male flight” or “gender flight”. It seems that, in some professions at least, men lose interest once the number of women rises above 60%.

    Another study of UK workplaces found the same thing when modelling various reasons for gender disparities. Men not choosing professions such as pharmacy and accountancy due to increased female presence was the best explanation.

    These findings are concerning when connected with a UK study from 2018 called Drawing the Future. Thirteen thousand UK school children aged between seven and 11 were asked to draw pictures of their dream job. Researchers found that – perhaps unsurprisingly – dream jobs were strongly gendered, and that this happens from a young age.

    “Vet” was third overall, a very popular job choice. But when you split that by gender, it was the second most popular job for girls, but only ninth for boys. This very much matches the gender balance of vet school applicants, so we can hypothesise that attitudes to being a vet are set early in life.

    Need for diversity

    Most diversity initiatives aim to reduce barriers for underrepresented groups. The veterinary profession isn’t nearly as diverse as it could be – only around 4% of vets come from Black and ethnic minority backgrounds, compared to 18% of people in the UK population overall.

    Various reasons for this have been suggested, including lack of representation and financial barriers. But we actually don’t know why this is; applications to veterinary medicine by non-white students are lower than for other degrees.

    But in the case of gender, boys can become vets. They simply don’t want to.

    There’s value of diversity in general within the veterinary profession. Vets don’t just work in clinics with pets: they also play a key public health role preventing disease in animal populations and ensuring the health and welfare of farm animals.

    There are many animal charities that rely on vets to help support the human-animal bond, such as rescuing and rehoming animals, working with pets belonging to homeless people, or caring for the pets of people fleeing domestic violence. This means working with people from all over the UK, from all backgrounds.

    Many studies of stress in the veterinary profession identify difficulties with communication as a key problem. Indeed, communication is highlighted as a key skill for veterinary students by the Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons and many studies of veterinary education. But there lies a challenge common to homogeneous professions. Learning to communicate effectively with others is more difficult when there is less diversity.

    This issue of gender flight has broader social implications. When men leave a profession due to increased numbers of women, wages tend to stagnate, which is a serious issue for students who frequently leave their five-year vet degrees with substantial debt.

    One place to start might be looking at how young children view vets – and what might make it a profession to choose as a result of personal ability and preference, rather than social pressure.

    Hamish Morrin does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

    ref. Fewer men are choosing to become vets – ‘male flight’ could be the reason – https://theconversation.com/fewer-men-are-choosing-to-become-vets-male-flight-could-be-the-reason-254827

    MIL OSI – Global Reports