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World Wide May 23, 2026

Iran Weighs US Peace Proposal Amid 'Deep and Significant' Disagreements

Iran's mission to the UN accuses the US of 'excessive demands' as peace talks face challenges. Paki…
The Stalemate in US-Iran Peace Talks Iran's mission to the United Nations has accused Washington of 'excessive demands' that are pushing peace talks towards collapse. The development comes amid reports that the US administration is preparing for strikes on Iran if negotiations fail. Pakistan's Mediation Efforts Pakistan's army chief, Asim Munir, visited Tehran and met Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi. They 'exchanged views on the latest diplomatic efforts and initiatives to prevent escalation of tensions.' The US Stance on Iran US President Donald Trump confirmed that he would not attend his son's wedding and would stay in Washington due to 'circumstances pertaining to government.' This fueled speculation that the situation had entered a sensitive stage. The Road to a Potential Breakthrough Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesperson Esmaeil Baghaei cautioned that Munir's visit did not mean 'we have reached a turning point or a decisive situation,' as 'deep and significant' disagreements remained. The Diplomatic Efforts Al Jazeera's Tehran correspondent reported that Araghchi had held phone calls with his Turkish, Iraqi, Qatari, and Omani counterparts, as well as with UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, about the state of the peace talks. The Regional Impact The ongoing regional war has affected the global economy due to the closure of the Strait of Hormuz. Pakistan's Prime Minister and Foreign Minister are set to discuss efforts to resolve the crisis during their visit to China, Iran's top trading partner.
#Iran #United States #Pakistan
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Entertainment May 23, 2026

Game of Thrones' Hannah Murray on Being Sectioned: 'I Am Not Concerned'

Game of Thrones actress Hannah Murray shares her experience of being sectioned in a psychiatric hos…
The LeadGame of Thrones actress Hannah Murray shares her experience of being sectioned in a psychiatric hospital in her new memoir "The Make-Believe: A Memoir of Magic and Madness." The actress describes her mental health journey and the experience of being involuntarily admitted under the Mental Health Act.The Hospital ExperienceThe door to the room opens. A man enters the room. He is a Black man, bald and overweight. He is dressed in uniform. Blue uniform, a blue lanyard that reads "NHS". But I know Steve, the leader of the organisation that introduced me to magic, is a magician. I know he can appear in disguise.I approach the man and try to kiss him.He does not let me kiss him. Then no. It is not Steve.The man has brought me a plate of toast. He has brought me a cup of tea. I add sugar to the tea, which I would never have done in my former life, but a spoonful of sugar helps the medicine go down!I am a Ritual Master. And this, drinking my own urine, is a powerful ritual. This is all I need now to survive … I will never need to eat again. I survive on liquids and air and lightI do not eat the toast. I drink the tea. I am alone in the room again and I urinate into the cup and drink that too.I am a Ritual Master. And this, drinking my own urine, is a powerful ritual. This is all I need now to survive. It is the most potent of potions I can drink. I am a self-contained, utterly self-sufficient being. I will never need to eat again. I survive on liquids and air and light.I decide to explore outside the room. Outside my sanctuary. He has not come. So maybe I need to go searching for him …The Phone CallTime jumps. I am in a corridor lit by overhead strip lights. The electric light is pale yellow in tone. I am sat on one of three chairs in a row against the wall. The chairs are purple, curved plastic. I am still waiting for him to appear.There are two doors in front of me. One is the door to the blue room with the blue sofa and chair. Behind the other door is an office of some kind, and there is a woman in there, shuffling papers and talking on the phone.The woman comes out of the office. She is holding out my phone. My only possession now – the one artefact from my previous life. There is someone she wants me to speak to.Him.When I hold the phone to my ear, I hear a voice I recognise.But the voice belongs to my mother."Hannah?" she says. "Where are you? What's going on?"There is distress in her voice. Her voice is trembling with pain and anxiety.I do not want to hear it.This is a test. A horrible test, certainly, but one that I can pass. They are trying to tempt me back into the human. They are trying to lure me back into the past.I hang up the phone.But, after a moment, it starts to ring. The word Mum lights up the screen."Talk to her," says the woman.I answer the call.My mother sounds different now. Calmer. She asks again what's going on but gently, even cheerfully. I tell her everything's OK. That I'm fine. I tell her not to worry. I'm in a good place.This is the last time I will ever hear her voice, I think. This is the way I say goodbye.The DiagnosisThey tell me I am being sectioned.The words jar with my beliefs."Section 2 … the Mental Health Act … 28 days … right to appeal … "I cock my head.This does not fit at all. It does not fit in the world of Steve, of Ritual Master, of Shambhala and the invention of magic.I am not concerned. I am concerned only with the energy I can feel spiralling up through my body and the voices I can hear in my head.I pace the hospital corridors, delivering a tearful monologue, delivering the greatest performance of my life. A phrase comes to me. The Girl With All the Gifts. The title of a post-apocalyptic horror film released in 2016, starring Gemma Arterton.I am a magician. I am an actress. I am a writer. I have superhuman strength. I can fly. Anything that can be imagined, I can perform it. Every skill and every ability is mine.The film came out as a warning, and a prophecy.And because of me, the apocalypse has been averted.I am the saviour of the planet. I am the girl with all the gifts.The Journey to RecoveryIt was very hard, the journey to get here. It took 27 years. The path was twisting and full of setbacks, there were challenges and so much pain. There were times I wanted to give up. It was very hard. Everyone will have to make their own journey, and their journeys will be their own, unique as snowflakes or fingerprints. That is the beauty of it, the joy of it. Everyone has to figure it out for themselves.But I have laid the groundwork. I have walked the path. It starts with the energy healing, and it goes on and on through the seven dimensions, through increasingly magical planes. It goes on and on until you meet your soulmate, like I met mine.I was in a TV show called Game of Thrones, hidden in plain sight in the midst of a cultural phenomenon. I, the key to the world's salvation, wore the face of a character called Gilly, but really I played every role. Then I worked on a film called Detroit in Boston. David Benioff and Dan Weiss and Kathryn Bigelow were the four horsemen of the apocalypse. Numbers are irrelevant. Three counts as four. David and Dan and Kathryn cast me in the roles that brought about my destiny. The end and beginning of the world.I am the Ur-actress. I am every actress. Every performance ever given has been animated by my energy, my talent, by the gestures and facial expressions I am performing here and now.The Memoir and BeyondThis is an edited extract from The Make-Believe: A Memoir of Magic and Madness by Hannah Murray, published by Cornerstone (£18.99). To support the Guardian, order your copy at guardianbookshop.com. Delivery charges may apply.Hannah Murray will be in conversation with Jessie Cave at Kings Place in London on 5 June.
#Hannah Murray #Game of Thrones #Mental Health
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Sports May 23, 2026

Boro and Hull Prepare for Wembley Final Amid Spygate Controversy

Middlesbrough and Hull City prepare for the Championship playoff final after Southampton's expulsio…
The Spygate Scandal That Reshaped the Championship PlayoffsWhen television cameras captured Hayden Hackney crying after Middlesbrough's extra-time defeat to Southampton in the Championship playoff semi-final, little did the Championship's player of the season know that images captured days earlier would ultimately ensure his presence at Wembley. Southampton's expulsion from the playoffs for spying on Middlesbrough's training session has set up an unexpected final between Boro and Hull City, with both teams attempting to disregard the surrounding 'weird and crazy' noise.The Unfolding of the Spygate ScandalThe controversy began when Southampton manager Tonda Eckert dispatched an intern analyst, William Salt, to film one of Middlesbrough's pre-match training sessions on his phone. The mission's aim was to assess the availability of Hayden Hackney, who had been sidelined with a calf injury. Unfortunately for Salt, a freelance photographer on assignment with Middlesbrough happened to capture images of him attempting to conceal himself between a tree and a bush.Middlesbrough promptly submitted a formal complaint to the English Football League (EFL), and 'spygate' began gaining rapid traction in the national news agenda. The disciplinary commission subsequently expelled Southampton from the playoffs and docked them four points for the next season. When Southampton's appeal was dismissed just over 24 hours later, the precedent was set that would ultimately send Middlesbrough to Wembley.The Financial Stakes of the Unexpected FinalThe Championship playoff final represents a potential windfall of at least £205m in additional Premier League revenue for the winner. Hull City owner Acun Ilicali has spent recent days consulting lawyers who believe Southampton's expulsion should result in automatic promotion and the cancellation of the playoff final. Meanwhile, Jakirovic has bought 70 Wembley tickets for family and friends from Croatia, highlighting the personal significance of this unexpected opportunity.For Middlesbrough manager Kim Hellberg, the situation has been particularly challenging. 'The head is tired,' admitted the 38-year-old as he discussed a 'weird and crazy' fortnight. 'There's been a lot of emotion. I haven't been able to sleep.' Hellberg's initial plan to keep the players training between the semi-final and the disciplinary commission was disrupted, making preparation for the final unusually difficult.How the Scandal Echoes Previous Football Espionage CasesThe EFL disciplinary panel's judgment was heavily informed by the so-called 'Canada case' from 2024, where Canada women's coach Bev Priestman was found to have choreographed a spying operation against New Zealand at the Paris Olympics. Canada was docked six Olympic points, and Priestman and two of her staff were banned from football for a year by FIFA.As Eckert contemplates a career in apparent tatters, he can take some heart from Priestman's impressive comeback at New Zealand's A-League women's side Wellington Phoenix. However, Eckert faces not only the sack at Southampton but a Football Association inquiry into his supervision of espionage against not merely Middlesbrough but Oxford and Ipswich, too, with a potential ban looming.Two Managers' Unexpected Paths to WembleyWhile Middlesbrough's Swedish manager Kim Hellberg was a surprise appointment when he swapped Stockholm's Hammarby for Teesside after Rob Edwards's defection to Wolves last November, Hull's Sergej Jakirovic had even more modest ambitions. Back in August, finishing 'somewhere between 10th and 15th' represented the summit of his aspirations when he arrived from Turkey.When Jakirovic took over at Hull, the club had just avoided relegation to League One on goal difference on the final day of the previous season. Moreover, an EFL transfer embargo restricted him to recruiting free agents and loan signings. Hull's sixth-placed league finish and defeat of Millwall in the playoff semi-final emphasizes that Hellberg would be unwise to underestimate the tactical talent of this Mostar-born Jürgen Klopp admirer and gegenpressing disciple.The Future of English Football Post-SpygateThis scandal has raised important questions about the integrity of English football and the measures needed to prevent similar incidents in the future. The EFL will likely face pressure to strengthen its regulations regarding spying and unauthorized filming of training sessions. Meanwhile, both Middlesbrough and Hull City must now navigate the unique challenge of preparing for a playoff final that neither expected to reach just weeks ago.For the players, particularly Hayden Hackney who is expected to make his first appearance since March, the final represents an opportunity to write their own story, separate from the controversy that has dominated the headlines. As both teams prepare for Wembley, the focus will shift from the 'weird and crazy' spygate noise to the football itself, with the winner securing a place in the Premier League and the financial rewards that come with it.
#Middlesbrough #Hull City #Southampton
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Tech May 22, 2026

Apple Challenges Epic Lawsuit Ruling, Seeks Review of App Store Rules

Apple is petitioning the U.S. Supreme Court to review a lower court ruling in its lawsuit with Epic…
The Ongoing Battle Between Apple and Epic Games Apple is once again fighting a court's ruling in its lawsuit with Epic Games over App Store commissions. The iPhone maker has petitioned the U.S. Supreme Court to review a lower court ruling, arguing that Epic Games' beef with Apple over its fee structure shouldn't lead to an injunction that applies to all developers on the U.S. App Store. The Dispute Over App Store Rules Epic Games never brought a class action and never attempted to show that enjoining Apple's conduct against all other developers — like Microsoft or Spotify, who have nothing to do with Epic — was necessary to provide relief to Epic. Apple argues that the injunction should be specific to Epic Games and not apply to other developers. The Data Analysis: Financial Implications Apple charges fees of 27% on external payments, which led to a civil contempt order. The company has seemingly infinite money to fund its legal battles, having been fighting Epic's original 2020 lawsuit for over five years. The Impact Analysis: Industry Ramifications The dispute has significant implications for the tech industry, particularly for companies like Microsoft and Spotify, which could be affected by the injunction. Epic Games criticized Apple's latest move as 'one last Hail Mary to delay a conclusion to this case and avoid opening up the gates to payment competition for the benefit of consumers.' The Prediction: Future Outlook The Supreme Court's decision on Apple's petition will have a significant impact on the future of the App Store and its rules. If the court rules in favor of Apple, it could limit the scope of the injunction and allow the company to maintain its current fee structure. However, if the court rules against Apple, it could lead to significant changes in the way the App Store operates and potentially open up the gates to payment competition.
#Apple #Epic Games #App Store
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Politics May 22, 2026

Russia's Indigenous Crisis: How Jailing of Activist Daria Egereva Exposes Systemic Threats

The jailing of prominent Indigenous rights activist Daria Egereva highlights the growing threats fa…
The Arrest That Sparked International ConcernThe operation began at 9am Moscow time, but took place across all of Russia's 11 time zones. Almost simultaneously, agents of the federal security service (FSB) raided the homes and workplaces of 17 Indigenous rights activists. Officers carried out searches, confiscated laptops and phones, and arrested and interrogated activists about participation in international forums. Most were let go; many have since left the country. Others remain in Russia, but will no longer speak up.Six months later, one remains in jail. Daria Egereva, one of Russia's foremost Indigenous rights activists, is accused of membership of a terror group. No trial date has been set. Her supporters say the charges are fabricated and she has been targeted for speaking out.Egereva was not just any activist. A member of the Selkup indigenous group, from western Siberia, she was a "bright star" of Russia's indigenous rights movement. As a member of the UN's Indigenous Peoples' Coordinating Body, she had international status. Weeks before her arrest, she had played a key role at Cop30 in Brazil as co-chair of the Indigenous People's Forum on Climate Change.Her jailing has shone a spotlight on the plight of Russia's Indigenous people, threatened by authoritarianism, extractivism and climate breakdown.The Climate Crisis in Russia's Arctic"They are really seeing the worst effects of climate change," said Alicia Moncada, director of global advocacy at Cultural Survival, which campaigns for Indigenous rights. "They are on the frontline of the frontline – that's why [Egereva's] advocacy was super important."The polar north is heating faster than any other part of the planet. In recent decades, temperatures in Arctic regions have risen three to four times faster than the global average. Communities based on permafrost are seeing their world collapse around them."The elders are saying that nature has stopped trusting us," said one exiled Indigenous leader, who requested that his name be withheld. "The traditional ways of predicting nature are not working any more."Many settlements sit next to the banks of rivers and lakes. Due to the melting permafrost, those banks are beginning to crumble. "There is a real threat of destruction for a lot of those villages," said the leader, who spoke through an interpreter. And the melting ice has brought a new source of tension: newly accessible critical mineral resources.Resource Extraction and Indigenous Displacement"All these resources of the Russian Federation, a majority of them are located under the lands of Indigenous people: gold, diamonds, oil, gas, coal," the leader said. "For some people it is a treasure, but for us it is a curse."Because the companies are coming to our land for those resources and they are pushing us out. Even if they don't push us out, the environmental situation in those places will become so bad that we are unable to hunt or fish."One of the elders said that we can adapt to anything, but we will not be able to survive without our land."The Government Crackdown on Indigenous ActivismAlthough Indigenous groups maintained their identities, by the end of the Soviet era they lacked independent organisation and relied on the state. Egereva had been part of a new generation of leaders who had encouraged community self-empowerment.But this assertiveness brought them into conflict with the authorities. Even before the war in Ukraine, the Russian state claimed that its enemies were exploiting environmental and indigenous issues. Now, with the war a pretext for a crackdown on civil society, Indigenous people are among those at the sharp end.To date, 830 organisations and 20,813 individuals have been put on the "list of terrorists and extremists", according to the UN. Among them was Aborigen Forum, a network of Indigenous defenders designated an "extremist organisation" in July 2024.Russian authorities have based their charges against Egereva and her co-defendant, Natalia Leongardt, a civil rights activist, on their involvement with Aborigen. Authorities claim it is part of an anti-state "post-Russia free nations forum".International Response and Russian DefenseIn a bail hearing on 29 April, Egereva and Leongardt denied being part of any anti-state conspiracy. "I am not familiar with and do not know this organisation," Egereva told the court. "What we are being accused of is completely untrue ... I ask to be allowed to return home and embrace my children."The court refused to grant them bail, remanding them in custody until at least mid-June. The following day, Russia celebrated a new federal holiday: the "Day of Indigenous Small-Numbered Peoples".The Russian embassy told the Guardian: "The investigation concerning Daria Egereva is an internal Russian legal matter, conducted in full accordance with Russian law. As proceedings are ongoing, we are not in a position to comment on the specifics of the case."Russia firmly rejects any allegations of violations of Indigenous people's rights. Unlike a number of western states – including Britain in its former colonies – Russia has no history of forced assimilation of Indigenous communities. Russian law affords Indigenous peoples special legal protections, guaranteeing their collective and individual rights, cultural identity, and linguistic heritage under the constitution and in line with international norms."Russia is actively engaged in the international climate agenda, taking account of both the challenges and the economic opportunities emerging in its northern regions – including expanded access to the northern sea route and mineral resources in permafrost zones. All such projects are carried out with the aim of supporting regional development, creating jobs and attracting investment, including for the benefit of Indigenous communities in these areas."
#Russia #Indigenous Rights #Daria Egereva
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Entertainment May 22, 2026

Doja Cat’s Manchester Show: Pop Icon Meets Avant‑Garde Freak

Doja Cat’s performance at Co‑Op Live in Manchester fused glitter‑laden pop‑rap with gritty rock the…
Concert Overview: Doja Cat’s Manchester ShowThe Guardian’s review captures a night where Doja Cat turned a 20‑metre train‑laden prelude into a statement of artistic freedom, delivering a set that spanned her early pop‑rap roots and the darker tones of Scarlet. The performance, held on 23 May 2026 at Co‑Op Live, positioned her as both a commanding bandleader and a self‑styled “true freak”.Stagecraft and Setlist: A Fusion of Pop and RockDoja arrived in a purple‑clad ensemble, complete with pasties, a high‑waisted bodysuit, and zebra‑print microphone, evoking a “scene‑kid Prince” aesthetic. Backed by a ten‑person band, she navigated a setlist that wove together tracks from Vie, 2021’s Planet Her, and the 2023 album Scarlet. Highlights included a muscular live rendition of “Make It Up”, the swagger of “Ain’t Shit”, and a metal‑infused take on “Tia Tamera”.Audience Metrics and Ticket DemandThe review does not disclose specific ticket sales or revenue figures, but notes that the venue’s capacity was filled and the audience responded enthusiastically to the eclectic showmanship. No concrete financial data were provided in the source article.What the Performance Signals for Pop‑Rap’s EvolutionDoja’s seamless shift between polished pop and raw rock challenges the conventional separation of genre‑specific tours.The theatricality—long train, shoulder‑pad hover, and acrobatic floor work—suggests a growing appetite for immersive, narrative‑driven concerts in mainstream pop.By integrating “freak” elements without sacrificing mainstream appeal, she sets a template for artists seeking authenticity alongside commercial viability.Looking Ahead: Doja Cat’s Tour and Future DirectionsFollowing Manchester, the artist will continue touring the UK until 29 May 2026. The review implies that future shows will likely maintain the dual‑mode approach, further blurring the line between pop spectacle and avant‑garde performance, and potentially influencing peers to adopt similarly bold stage concepts.
#Doja Cat #The Guardian #Vie album
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Entertainment May 22, 2026

Scenes from a Friendship review – a platonic One Day that will melt your heart

Scenes from a Friendship, a play by Jane Upton, explores the platonic bond between two theatre-obse…
The Play's Concept Imagine if One Day was set in Long Eaton. Now, take its sweeping, time-spanning love story, but make it platonic, and about two theatre-obsessed best mates. That’s the foundation for Jane Upton’s luminous, heart-exploding play, which catches Jess and Billy in a series of snapshots across their friendship. The Story Unfolds Beginning in the early 90s, during their school days, and then moving through their 20s, 30s and into their mid-40s, the play threads together teenage crushes, career decisions, breakups, marriages, births and children. Jess (Katie Redford) is an oversharer while Billy (Benedict Salter) has secrets. Their early years together pass through play rehearsals, parties, personal revelations and betrayals, but even in their lowest moments, the two are always pulled back to each other’s side. The Evolution of Friendship As their lives move in different directions, with Billy heading to London for drama school and later building a career as a high-flying agent, and Jess staying at home in a “suburban bubble” before eventually tiptoeing her way back into the creative scene as a playwright, they turn their noses up at the other’s choices. Still, in times of turmoil, they can’t help but pick up the phone or race across the country just to be there for their old friend. Their dialogue accurately captures people who know each other’s lives inside out. The Production Directed by Hannah Stone, the production shows friendship as something defining. Redford and Salter make their characters people we want to stay with across the decades. In fact, time here slips through our fingers. One moment they’re 15 in 1995, and Jess is getting advice from More! magazine; the next it is 2022, and a 42-year-old Billy is considering surrogacy for his next child. Abby Clarke’s design evokes nostalgia, with the back wall composed of white, Polaroid-inspired squares that shift from photographic outlines to mirrors. The Verdict With so much life to fit into 95 minutes, there are inevitable gaps in Billy and Jess’s stories. We could learn more about the structure of their families and the other relationships in their lives. But really, this is a play about the complicated, beautiful bond between two people. It leaves you desperate for more days with them. Where to Watch At Nottingham Playhouse until 12 June
#Theatre #Nottingham Playhouse #Scenes from a Friendship
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Tech May 21, 2026

The Palantir Paradox: Public Safety vs. Privacy in the Age of AI

The Metropolitan Police's bid to use Palantir's AI systems to combat a £125m funding shortfall high…
The Met's AI Dilemma: Efficiency or Surveillance?The row over the £50m Palantir contract for the Metropolitan Police hits the heart of how public services will be delivered in the coming years. Facing a £125m funding shortfall, the Met is under immense pressure to cut 1,150 posts. To survive, the force is turning to AI to automate the analysis of human intelligence reports, email caches, and phone records left by 21st-century crime.The Fiscal Reality Behind the AI PushThe adoption of AI in policing is not merely a technological upgrade but a desperate fiscal measure. The Home Office, under Shabana Mahmood, has explicitly called for police to adopt AI "at pace and scale." This directive comes as the government lacks its own systems and relies on private contractors to manage critical infrastructure. The £50m contract represents a significant investment in technology intended to replace human labor and maintain operational capacity despite severe budget cuts.Public Trust and the "Big Brother" FactorThe implementation of this technology faces significant internal and external resistance. The rank and file have expressed alarm, describing the AI surveillance system as "Big Brother" and a tool that causes "sleepless nights." Furthermore, the deal has been blocked by Sadiq Khan, who cited a "clear and serious breach" of procurement rules and concerns about funding firms that contradict London's values. Palantir's controversial history, including contracts with ICE and the US defense department, has tainted the company in the eyes of many politicians and the public.Future Outlook: Dependency on US Tech GiantsDespite the backlash, the UK is likely to remain dependent on US tech giants like Palantir. Experts suggest that British firms currently lack the scale and government backing to compete with Palantir's comprehensive toolset. As AI becomes part of critical infrastructure, the UK faces a difficult choice between developing domestic capabilities or accepting a reliance on controversial external providers to maintain public safety standards.
#Metropolitan Police #Palantir #Sadiq Khan
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Business May 21, 2026

BT Warns of Smartphone Price Rises Due to Chip Shortages from AI Boom

BT warns that smartphone prices may rise due to chip shortages caused by the boom in artificial int…
The Impact of AI on Chip Supply Chains BT has warned that the cost of smartphones could rise as technology companies buy up semiconductor chips due to the boom in artificial intelligence, putting pressure on supply chains. Chip Shortages and Price Increases The telecoms company’s chief executive, Allison Kirkby, said she was anticipating shortages as tech firms bought large quantities of memory chips to power the datacentres relied on by AI. Kirkby added that price increases would mainly hit smartphone handsets, but could also affect the cost of routers. The Data Analysis Memory chips are essential for almost every modern item of electronics and are also used in other important components such as graphics cards. The largest manufacturers of laptops and phones, including Microsoft, Samsung and Dell, have already begun to put up prices in response to the chip shortages and have pulled cheaper models from the market. Sony has also hiked the price of its PlayStation 5 consoles, including a $100 (£75) increase in the US, while Nintendo has confirmed a price rise for its Switch 2. The Impact Analysis A global investment spree in AI has led to a huge expansion of server farms, enormous banks of computers filled with high-end memory chips. These requirements are not only consuming the world’s current supply of chips, but also production capacity for the coming years, creating shortages and driving up the cost of electronics. The Prediction Kirkby said she had not yet seen price increases from premium handset manufacturers, but expected companies such as Apple to pass higher costs on to customers. BT plans to cut costs by a further £700m over the next four years and reported flat full-year earnings and falling revenues.
#BT #Artificial Intelligence #Chip Shortage
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