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Director Rus of Symbotic Inc sells shares totaling $132,594

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Symbotic Inc: director Rus sells $132594 in shares

Trump assesses destruction in Texas while search operations persist for 160 individuals still unaccounted for

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Watch: ‘We’re filled with grief’ – President Trump visits Texas after deadly floods

US President Donald Trump has reassured Kerrville, Texas, residents that the government would help rebuild after floods hit the central part of the state last week, killing 120 people.

The president and First Lady Melania Trump met on Friday with local officials on the ground – at one point standing in front of an upended tractor trailer – and surveyed the damage.

“I’ve never seen anything like it,” Trump said, after taking a tour of the devastation.

More than 12,300 volunteers have gathered to help search for the 161 people still missing statewide. Officials said volunteers have been working 10 hours a day.

Watch: BBC’s Nomia Iqbal on Trump’s handling of the Texas floods as he visits disaster area

While storms damaged homes and killed residents throughout central Texas, Kerr County faced the brunt of the floodwaters.

Trump told officials gathered for an afternoon roundtable at a Kerrville youth center that he and the first lady were in town to “express the love and support, and the anguish of our entire nation”.

The first lady, who ordinarily keeps a low profile, also toured the devastation. She said she hugged and prayed with families of the victims during her visit.

“My deepest sympathy to all of the parents who lost beautiful young souls,” she said. “We are grieving with you. Our nation is grieving with you.”

She also promised to visit again.

Among those killed in the storms were 27 young girls who were attending Camp Mystic – one of 18 summer camps located on that stretch of the Guadalupe River.

In the wake of the deadly tragedy, questions have been raised about whether adequate warnings were provided and why camps weren’t evacuated ahead of the deluge.

Experts have said a number of factor led to the deadly impact of the flash flood, including the pre-dawn timing, the location of some homes, the patchwork of cell service and its overall speed and severity.

Trump dismissed a media question on what more could have been done to warn residents, saying: “Only an evil person would ask a question like that.”

The Guadalupe River levels, which rose to flood homes, roads and cars, caught many by surprise.

Watch: “I pray for them” – First Lady Melania offers condolences to Texas flood victims

The catastrophe unfolded before daybreak a week ago. The river rose 26ft (8m) in the span of just 45 minutes. Young children and staff at summer camps along the river were asleep as weather alerts went off.

Search crews in Texas are still sifting through debris for scores of missing people. Authorities have said they will not relent until everyone is accounted for.

Experts say that National Weather Service (NWS) alerts were timely in Texas last weekend.

But some have warned that cuts to federal agencies such as the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Organisation (NOAA) and its NWS subsidiary could affect the response to future sudden floods.

Watch: “We’re appreciative” – Texans react to Trump’s visit after devastating floods

Google swoops in for licensing deal as OpenAI’s $3 billion agreement with AI coding startup Windsurf falls through

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Google has struck a licensing deal with coding startup Windsurf, upending OpenAI’s $3 billion offer to acquire the startup after the clock on the deal’s exclusivity period expired.

The deal with Google means that Windsurf will continue to operate as an independent startup while key members of the team join Google, a source familiar with the matter told Fortune.

“We’re excited to welcome some top AI coding talent from Windsurf’s team to Google DeepMind to advance our work in agentic coding,” a Google spokesperson told Fortune in an emailed statement. The email also contained a statement from Windsurf founders Varun Mohan and Douglas Chen saying “We are excited to be joining Google DeepMind along with some of the Windsurf team.”

The news represents a setback for ChatGPT-maker OpenAI and comes as the generative AI startup has suffered talent raids from rivals like Meta. An OpenAI spokesperson confirmed to Fortune that the exclusivity period for the $3 billion acquisition deal with Windsurf, entered into in May, had expired, leaving Windsurf free to pursue other options.

AI coding startups, which use generative AI to assist programmers in writing code, have become one of the hottest categories in tech. Microsoft’s GitHub Copilot, built on OpenAI’s technology, has gained widespread adoption. In addition, Cursor, a startup backed by VCs like Thrive Capital, Accel, and Andreessen Horowitz, recently raised a $900 million Series C, hitting a $9 billion valuation.

Prior to making its bid for Windsurf, OpenAI had approached Anysphere about acquiring Cursor—but these discussions fell through as the startup wasn’t interested in being bought “even by OpenAI,” according to a report in TechCrunch.

Founded in 2021 by MIT classmates, and initially called Codeium, the startup changed its name to Windsurf in April, shortly before the OpenAI offer. The startup’s investors include Founders Fund, General Catalyst, Greenoaks, and Kleiner Perkins. TechCrunch reported in February that Windsurf was raising a funding round at a $2.85 billion valuation.

Introducing the 2025 Fortune 500, the definitive ranking of the biggest companies in America. Explore this year’s list.

US court rejects guilty plea for suspected mastermind of 9/11 attacks | Court Update

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A civilian court of appeals says ex-Pentagon chief Lloyd Austin ‘had full legal authority’ to withdraw the plea agreement.

Washington, DC – An appeals court in the United States has validated the decision of former Pentagon chief Lloyd Austin to withdraw a plea deal for Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, the alleged mastermind of the 9/11 attacks on the US in 2001.

A panel of judges at the Washington, DC-based federal court of appeals ruled on Friday that Austin “had full legal authority” to revoke the plea agreement for Mohammed and two other defendants.

That deal would have spared Mohammed the possibility of the death penalty in exchange for a plea of guilty.

Friday’s decision will prolong a decades-long legal saga for Mohammed, who has been imprisoned at a notorious detention facility in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, since he was captured in Pakistan in 2003.

Austin revoked the deal in August of last year, saying that the US public and victims’ families “deserve the opportunity to see” the case brought to trial before a military commission — an alternative justice system established for Guantanamo detainees.

But any trial is likely to be fraught with challenges — including questions about evidence obtained by torture — and will take years, extending the legal limbo for the Guantanamo detainees.

A military judge reinstated the plea agreements in November, and a military appeals court affirmed the decision one month later.

The administration of former President Joe Biden then took the case to a federal civilian court of appeals.

Lawyers for defendants like Mohammed argued that Austin was too late to revoke the agreements, parts of which were already materialising.

But the court of appeals in Washington, DC, ultimately ruled that Austin was right to wait for the outcome of the plea negotiations before revoking the deals.

Writing on behalf of the court’s majority, Judges Patricia Millett and Neomi Rao said that preventing the withdrawal of the deal would have sent the message that plea agreements are “irrevocable upon signing”.

“The Secretary acted within the bounds of his legal authority, and we decline to second-guess his judgment,” the ruling read.

However, dissenting Judge Robert Wilkins decried the decision as revoking a contract that was already in effect.

He likened nixing the plea agreement to refusing to pay a painter who has already finished parts of the work stipulated in a home repairs contract.

For years, rights groups have called for shutting down the detention facility at Guantanamo Bay, known as Gitmo.

The prison opened in 2002 to house prisoners from the so-called “war on terror” following the attacks in the US on September 11, 2001.

Detainees were arrested in countries across the world on suspicions of ties to al-Qaeda and other groups. Many endured torture at secret detention facilities, known as black sites, before being transferred to Guantanamo.

At Gitmo, civil liberty advocates say detainees had few legal rights. Even those cleared for release through the military commissions remained imprisoned for years, with no recourse to challenge their detention.

The detention facility once housed nearly 800 Muslim men and teenage boys. Now only 15 prisoners remain at the prison; three are eligible for release.

MBW’s Weekly Round-Up: Hipgnosis Makes a Comeback with Suno’s New Chief Music Officer

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Welcome to Music Business Worldwide’s weekly round-up – where we make sure you caught the five biggest stories to hit our headlines over the past seven days. MBW’s round-up is supported by Centtrip, which helps over 500 of the world’s best-selling artists maximize their income and reduce their touring costs.


This week, we learned that Merck Mercuriadis, the maverick founder of Hipgnosis Songs Fund, is launching a new investment firm targeting artist management companies and music catalogs. His new company will also be called Hipgnosis.

Elsewhere, South Korea’s financial regulator is reportedly preparing to refer HYBE Chairman Bang Si-hyuk to prosecutors over allegations related to the company’s IPO.

Also this week, over 200 people, including 20 employees from Beggars Group and Secretly Group, signed a letter objecting to Universal Music Group’s proposed takeover of Downtown Music Holdings.

Meanwhile, Paul Sinclair, who most recently served as General Manager and Executive Vice President of Warner’s Atlantic Records, has joined AI music platform Suno as Chief Music Officer.

Finally, Michael Nash, EVP and Chief Digital Officer at Universal Music Group, delivered a keynote presentation at the UN’s AI for Good summit in Geneva on Tuesday (July 8).

Here’s what happened this week…


1)  Hipgnosis is back: Merck Mercuriadis launching new company with ‘hundreds of millions’ in investment secured (report)

You didn’t think he was done, did you?

Merck Mercuriadis, the maverick founder of Hipgnosis Songs Fund, is launching a new investment firm targeting artist management companies and music catalogs through a partnership structure that gives acts and their representatives ownership stakes.

The Financial Times reported on Saturday (July 5) that Mercuriadis’ new venture has already secured commitments in the “hundreds of millions” of dollars, citing people familiar with the matter.

The FT quoted Mercuriadis as saying: “I’m going to amass five or six really important management companies, all of which have superstar artists and superstar managers that go with them.

“It’s all about them having control and all about them making the majority of the money [rather than labels]…”


Credit: Yonhap/Newcom/Alamy

2) HYBE vows to cooperate with authorities as South Korea financial regulator aims to refer Bang Si-hyuk to prosecutors (report)

HYBE has pledged to cooperate fully with authorities as South Korea’s financial regulator reportedly prepares to refer the K-pop giant’s founder and Chairman, Bang Si-hyuk, to prosecutors over allegations related to the company’s 2020 IPO.

That’s according to The Korea HeraldKorea Times and other local news outlets, which report that The Securities and Futures Commission’s capital market investigation team voted on Monday (July 7) to refer Chairman Bang to prosecutors, with the commission set to formally consider the recommendation at its July 16 meeting.


3) 200+ people sign letter objecting to UMG’s proposed takeover of Downtown, including 20 employees from Beggars Group and Secretly Group companies

Over 200 employees of indie companies have signed an open letter, distributed by IMPALA, addressed to Europe’s competition watchdog.

It urges the EC to conduct a “deep investigation” into Universal Music Group’s proposed acquisition of Downtown Music Holdings.

The letter’s signatories include significant representation from two leading indie music companies: UK-headquartered Beggars Group and US-headquartered Secretly Group.

They include 12 executives working for companies owned or co-owned by Beggars/XL, including 4ADEverlasting Records, Matador, Popstock, Rough Trade, and Young, plus XL Recordings and Beggars Group


Photo: Jimmy Fontaine

4) Paul Sinclair joins AI platform Suno as Chief Music Officer

A prominent record label executive is joining the leadership team of Suno, the AI music-making platform that – along with rival Udio – is facing a copyright infringement lawsuit by the majors.

Paul Sinclair, who spent over two decades at Warner Music Group (WMG) in various roles, is taking up the post of Suno’s Chief Music Officer, a role in which he will “guide how Suno’s AI-powered tools are integrated into the process of songmaking,” Suno said.

Sinclair spent the last several months advising Suno, the Boston-headquartered company said in a statement on Monday (July 7)…


5) UMG’s Michael Nash on AI: ‘Copyright is not the enemy of innovation…’ and 3 other things we learned from his keynote at the UN’s AI summit

Michael Nash, EVP and Chief Digital Officer at Universal Music Group, delivered a keynote presentation at the UN’s AI for Good summit in Geneva on Tuesday (July 8).

This summit, which counts over 13,000 registered delegates, gathers UN decision makers, politicians, ambassadors, and other stakeholders to discuss AI in the context of the UN Sustainable Development Goals.

During his speech, Nash offered insights into how the world’s largest music rights company is approaching artificial intelligence, and why he believes “market-based solutions are the answer” to AI’s challenges in music.

Here are four things that stood out from Nash’s presentation…


MBW’s Weekly Round-Up is supported by Centtrip, which helps over 500 of the world’s best-selling artists maximise their income and reduce their touring costs.Music Business Worldwide

Trump warns of imposing 35% tariffs on Canadian products

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US President Donald Trump has said he will impose a 35% tariff on Canadian goods starting on 1 August, even as the two countries were days away from a self-imposed deadline to reach a new trade deal.

The announcement came in the form of a letter published on Trump’s social media platform Truth Social, along with additional threats of blanket tariffs of 15% or 20% on most trade partners.

Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney said his government would continue to protect his country’s workers and businesses as they head towards the new deadline.

Trump has sent more than 20 such letters to other US partners this week. He also says he will soon announce new tariffs on the European Union.

Like Canada’s letter, Trump has vowed to implement those tariffs by 1 August.

A blanket 25% tariff has already been imposed on some Canadian goods, with the nation also hit hard by Trump’s global steel, aluminium and auto tariffs – though there is a current exemption in place for goods that comply with a North American free trade agreement.

US media is reporting that, for now, the Canada-United States-Mexico Agreement (CUSMA) exemption would still apply to this latest tariffs threat.

Trump has also imposed a global 50% tariff on aluminium and steel imports, and a 25% tariff on all cars and trucks not built in the US.

He also recently announced a 50% tariff on copper imports, scheduled to take effect next month.

Canada sells about three-quarters of its goods to the US, and is an auto manufacturing hub and a major supplier of metals, making the US tariffs especially damaging to those sectors.

Trump’s letter said the 35% tariffs were separate to those sector-specific levies.

“As you are aware, there will be no tariff if Canada, or companies within your country, decide to build or manufacture products within the United States,” Trump stated.

He also tied the tariffs to what he called “Canada’s failure” to stop the flow of fentanyl into the US, as well as Canada’s existing levies on US dairy farmers and the trade deficit between the two countries.

“If Canada works with me to stop the flow of Fentanyl, we will, perhaps, consider an adjustment to this letter. These Tariffs may be modified, upward or downward, depending on our relationship with Your Country,” Trump said.

Trump has previously accused Canada – alongside Mexico – of allowing “vast numbers of people to come in and fentanyl to come in” to the US.

In his response on X, Carney said Canada had made essential progress to “stop the scourge of fentanyl” in North America, and that his government was committed to continuing to work alongside the US to protect communities in both countries.

According to data from the US Customs and Border Patrol, only about 0.2% of all seizures of fentanyl entering the US are made at the Canadian border. Almost all of the rest is confiscated at the US border with Mexico.

Earlier this year, Canada also announced more funding towards border security and had appointed a fentanyl tsar in response to Trump’s complaints.

Canada has been engaged in intense talks with the US in recent months to reach a new trade and security deal.

At the G7 Summit in June, Carney and Trump said they were committed to reaching a new deal within 30 days, setting a deadline of 21 July.

Trump threatened in the letter to increase levies on Canada if it retaliated. Canada has already imposed counter-tariffs on the US, and has vowed more if they failed to reach a deal by the deadline.

In late June, Carney removed a tax on big US technology firms after Trump labelled it a “blatant attack” and threatened to call off trade talks.

Carney said the tax was dropped as “part of a bigger negotiation” on trade between the two countries.

On Friday, Canada’s industry minister Melanie Joly dismissed media questions about whether Ottawa was doing enough to stand for Canadians, saying: ‘We’re not going to negotiate in public.”

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Srebrenica’s Ongoing Tragedy: 30 Years Later, the Painful Task of Burying the Dead Continues

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Potocari, Bosnia and Herzegovina – In a grassy valley dotted with white gravestones, thousands of people gathered to mark 30 years since the Srebrenica massacre on Friday.

Seven victims of the 1995 genocide, some of whose remains were only discovered and exhumed in the past year from mass graves uncovered in Liplje, Baljkovica, Suljici and Kamenicko Brdo, were buried during the sombre anniversary on Friday.

Limited remains of one of the victims, Hasib Omerovic, who was 34 when he was killed, were found and exhumed from a mass grave in 1998, but his family delayed his burial until now, hoping to recover more.

Zejad Avdic, 46, is the brother of another of the victims being buried. Senajid Avdic was just 19 when he was killed on July 11, 1995. His remains were discovered in October 2010 at a site in Suljici, one of the villages attacked that day by Bosnian Serb forces.

“When the news came, at first, I couldn’t – I didn’t – dare tell my mother, my father. It was too hard,” Avdic told Al Jazeera, referring to the moment he learned that some of his brother’s remains had been found.

“What was found wasn’t complete, just a few bones from the skull.”

Zejad Avdic, 46, is the brother of one of the Srebrenica victims buried on Friday, Senajid Avdic, who was just 19 when he was killed [Urooba Jamal/Al Jazeera]

Families like Avdic’s have waited decades for even a fragment of bone to confirm their loved one’s death. Many have buried their loved ones with only partial remains.

The Srebrenica massacre was the crescendo of Bosnia’s three-year war from 1992 to 1995, which flared up in the aftermath of Yugoslava’s dissolution, pitting Bosnian Serbs against the country’s two other main ethnic populations – Croats and Muslim Bosniaks.

On July 11, 1995, Bosnian Serb forces stormed the enclave of Srebrenica, ​​a designated United Nations-protected safe zone, overrunning the Dutch UN battalion stationed there. They separated at least 8,000 Bosniak men and boys from their wives, mothers and sisters, slaughtering them en masse.

Thousands of men and boys attempted to escape through the surrounding woods, but Serb forces chased them through the mountainous terrain, killing and capturing as many as they could. Women and children were expelled from the city and neighbouring villages by bus.

Thousands of people attended the commemoration for victims of the massacre on Friday, which began with a congregational Islamic prayer – men, women and children prostrating in unison among the rows of gravestones.

After the prayer, the remains of the victims, who have been identified using extensive DNA analysis, were carried in green coffins draped with the Bosnian flag.

The coffins were lowered into newly prepared graves. At each site, groups of men stepped forward to take turns covering the caskets with soil, shovelling from nearby mounds in a solemn conclusion to the proceedings.

After the remains had been buried, the victims’ families crowded around the sites, wiping away their tears as an imam recited verses over the caskets.

Men take turns covering the caskets with soil, shoveling from nearby mounds of dirt.
Men take turns covering the caskets with soil, shovelling from nearby mounds of dirt [Urooba Jamal/Al Jazeera]

‘I will keep coming as long as I’m alive’

Fikrera Tuhljakovic, 66, attends the memorial here each year, but this year her cousin was among the victims being buried.

She said she is determined to ensure he is remembered and that all of the victims are never forgotten.

“I will keep coming as long as I’m alive,” Tuhljakovic told Al Jazeera.

Forensic scientists and the International Commission on Missing Persons have, in the decades since the mass killings, worked to locate the remains of those killed.

More than 6,000 victims have been buried at the memorial site in Potocari, but more than 1,000 remain missing.

A woman mourns the burial of her loved one [Urooba Jamal/Al Jazeera]
A woman mourns during the burial of her loved one [Urooba Jamal/Al Jazeera]

In 2007, the International Court of Justice (ICJ) declared the events in Srebrenica and the surrounding area a genocide. Bosnian Serb leaders Radovan Karadzic and Ratko Mladic were both convicted of genocide, war crimes and crimes against humanity and sentenced to life in prison.

In total, the tribunal and courts in the Balkans have sentenced almost 50 Bosnian Serb wartime officials to more than 700 years in prison for the genocide.

But many accused remain unpunished. Denial of the genocide also continues – especially among political leaders in Serbia and the Serb-majority entity of Republika Srpska, which was established in the northeast of the country at the start of the war in 1992 with the stated aim of protecting the interests of the Serbs of Bosnia and Herzegovina.

According to Emir Cica, Islamic Relief’s Bosnia country director, international institutions have not done enough to prevent events like Srebrenica from happening again, with similar atrocities happening in Gaza at the moment.

“When we see what has happened, for example, in Gaza, it is very painful for us because we understand this [experience],” Cica told Al Jazeera.

For Avdic, Gaza is indeed a painful reminder of history repeating itself.

“Today we are burying our victims of genocide, and today in Gaza, genocide is happening, too,” he said solemnly.

“I don’t know what kind of message to send; there’s no effect on those in power who could actually do something.”

Srebrenica Genocide Memorial in Potocari
The Srebrenica Genocide Memorial in Potocari [Urooba Jamal/Al Jazeera]

Achieving Unprecedented Levels in 3D-Printed Construction

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3D printing in construction is revolutionizing the industry, offering a faster, more affordable, sustainable, and creative method for creating living spaces. This technology is altering construction methodologies and expanding architectural design possibilities, turning previously unfeasible projects into reality. The White Tower, or Tor Alva, is an initiative by the ETH Zurich that exemplifies 3D printing’s potential in construction.

The White Tower overlooking the Alps

This thirty-meter-high building crafted through 3D printing with concrete extrusion is envisioned as a space for art installations and musical and theatrical performances. Its innovative design draws inspiration from the baroque builders of Canton Graubünden in Switzerland while embracing the possibilities offered by computational design and digital fabrication to revamp traditional building systems.

With a printing process that reduces concrete consumption by half and eliminates the need for formwork, the tower promotes a modular and sustainable construction method for the structural elements, which can be disassembled and rebuilt in another location. Designed to act as a beacon for travelers, the White Tower will be positioned along the Juliers Pass in the Alps, near the remains of an ancient Roman sanctuary. The structure will feature one hundred and two columns 3D printed with white concrete, supporting different levels connected by a spiral staircase. The top floor is designed to house an auditorium with seating for fifty people.

The construction process of the tower is anticipated to be completed in less than 900 hours, demonstrating the significant potential of 3D printing technologies in construction to streamline project timelines. And that is not the only advantage of this construction technique.

Advantages of 3D printing in the construction industry

3D printing in the construction sector is revolutionizing how structures are conceptualized, designed, and built. This technology offers several significant benefits that make it particularly attractive for various projects.

  • Accelerated construction times: As noted above, the ability to 3D print components and structures continuously allows projects to be completed in a much shorter timeframe compared to traditional construction methods.
  • Design flexibility: 3D printing in construction offers unprecedented design freedom, allowing the creation of shapes and structures that would be difficult or impossible to realize with conventional techniques.
  • Sustainability: This technology promotes sustainable construction by minimizing material waste and enabling the use of more environmentally friendly materials. The precision of 3D printing in construction ensures that only the exact amount of material needed for each project is used.
  • Customization: Allows mass customization of projects at a relatively low cost. Each element can be designed and manufactured to meet specific needs without significantly increasing production costs since no molds or formwork are required.
  • Improved safety: The automation of the construction process through 3D printing reduces the exposure of workers to hazardous working conditions, minimizing the risk of accidents in the workplace.
  • Cost reduction: 3D printing can significantly reduce construction costs by reducing the amount of wasted materials and optimizing the use of resources. In addition, the automation of the construction process reduces the need for labor, which also contributes to cost savings. In this video, you can learn about two techniques that allow to achieve these results:

 


 

3D printing methods in the construction industry

There are various 3D printing techniques currently under research and development, each with specific applications and advantages depending on the project and its location.

  • Material extrusion: Deposits materials layer by layer, commonly concrete or plastic, following a digital design. This is the additive manufacturing technique being used in the construction process of the White Tower, where a robot deposits layers as thin as five millimeters.
  • Binder jet printing: Uses a liquid binder sprayed onto a powdered material, layer by layer, to form a solid object.
  • Stereolithography (SLA) for construction: Creates objects by solidifying a liquid resin with ultraviolet light, layer by layer.
  • Selective laser sintering (SLS) for construction: Uses a laser to melt and solidify a material powder, building the desired object layer by layer.
  • Laser powder bed fusion (LPBF) or selective laser melting (SLM) for metals: Similar to SLS, but focused on metals, it melts metal powders with lasers to form complex structures.

Of all these 3D printing methods, the most common is material extrusion, especially with the use of concrete, due to its versatility, cost-effectiveness and the ability to build large-scale structures. In addition, this technique allows for a wide range of applications in the construction sector, from small components to entire buildings.

Interested in exploring further applications of 3D printing in construction? Dive into this insightful article to see how art and architecture merge beautifully in the creation of an extraordinary piece of 3D-printed street furniture.

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Stocks decline and Canadian dollar loses strength due to Trump’s increased tariffs.

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Stocks fall, Canadian dollar weakens as Trump doubles down on tariffs