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Toronto’s Pinnacle SkyTower Becomes Canada’s Tallest Building at 1,154 ft

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A new residential skyscraper has set a North American record, becoming the tallest building in Canada – and it’s not even finished yet. Named the Pinnacle SkyTower, it will rise to an impressive supertall height of 351.85 m (1,154 ft) in Toronto once complete.

Designed by Hariri Pontarini Architects, the skyscraper currently sits at 100 floors and will eventually reach 106. The height milestone surpasses the recent One Bloor West tower, by Foster and Partners, which held the “Canada’s tallest building” bragging rights for just a few short months.

Of course, the CN Tower looms even larger nearby, though that’s classified as a structure, not a building, so it doesn’t count. To put the new skyscraper’s height into perspective, it’s significantly taller than any building in Western Europe, whereas if it were located in the USA it would sit at a not-too-shabby 12th tallest in the official height rankings.

The Pinnacle SkyTower offers views of Lake Ontario and the Toronto skyline, including Canada’s famous CN Tower, pictured nearby

Pinnacle International

The building has a slender and elegant profile, with an aerodynamic 12-sided, tapered design that allows it to take severe winds in its stride. It draws inspiration from Toronto’s waterfront architecture and incorporates angular, diamond-shaped geometry to better complement other buildings in the city’s downtown area.

The interior’s 106 floors will host 958 residential units, as well as the new Le Meridien Toronto Pinnacle Hotel. Scant information is available yet on the apartment interiors, but as you’d expect, Pinnacle International promises that they will be suitably luxurious, with high-quality materials and 80,000 sq ft (7,432 sq m) of amenities, including a restaurant on the top floor, which will actually sit level with the CN Tower’s observation point nearby.

Balconies will be installed up to the 88th floor and impressive floor-to-ceiling windows will wow visitors with choice views of Lake Ontario and the city skyline.

The Pinnacle SkyTower has an elegant and aerodynamic 12-sided, tapered design
The Pinnacle SkyTower has an elegant and aerodynamic 12-sided, tapered design

Pinnacle International

According to the developer, the project is expected to be completed and begin welcoming guests sometime in 2026. We’ve no word on apartment costs yet, but we’ll go out on a limb and say these won’t be affordable starter homes, which are desperately needed to ease Toronto’s housing crisis.

Source: Pinnacle International

Nanox and Althea France ink distribution agreement for imaging technology

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Nanox signs distribution deal with Althea France for imaging system

The Toxic Consequences of Recycling Lead for U.S. Car Batteries

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new video loaded: Recycling Lead for U.S. Car Batteries Is Poisoning People

Recycling lead for U.S. car batteries is poisoning children — and we know because we tested them. Will Fitzgibbon, a reporter at The Examination, describes how children in Nigeria developed lead levels associated with lifelong brain damage, and how factory workers told us they were coughing up black dust.

By Will Fitzgibbon, Peter S. Goodman, Melanie Bencosme, Jon Miller, Laura Salaberry, Rebecca Suner and Finbarr O’Reilly

November 25, 2025

Tech Predictions for 2026 by Amazon’s Chief Technology Officer, Werner Vogels

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Good morning. Several years ago, Amazon CTO Werner Vogels began sharing predictions on how technology would likely impact our lives the following year. In the past, he has foreseen the impact of digital technology in sports, AI assistants in developer productivity, machine learning embedded in production lines, and ‘fem tech’ in women’s health. As CTO since 2005, he occupies a unique perch to see—and even shape—what’s next. He also has a vested interest, of course, in embracing the technologies that his company creates. But these predictions are worth taking note of as these trends—if they materialize—will affect wide swaths of the economy.

So what’s he forecasting for 2026? 

  • Companionship is redefined for those who need it most: Companion robots will address the loneliness epidemic, especially for seniors and those with cognitive or other health issues. 
  • The dawn of the renaissance developer: Like the Renaissance greats who understood science, art and engineering, polymath developers will thrive.
  • Quantum-safe becomes the only safe: With bad actors now harvesting data in anticipation of quantum’s arrival, the window for proactive defense is closing.
  • Defense technology changes the world: Defense contractors are flush with capital and acting more like startups, compressing the timeline from battlefield to civilian applications of the technology. 
  • Personalized learning meets infinite curiosity: For most of human history, only the wealthy could afford a personal tutor or coach. That’s about to change.

I spoke with Vogels about the thinking behind this year’s predictions. Among other things, he admits that technology tools from AI to military drones can obviously harm or help, depending on the intention of the user. But he’s an optimist, especially about the potential for personalized learning and software developers.

And how does he see the mission of the CTO—a role that can cover everything from being the person who manages data centers to the founder focused on product? “I actually think CTOs are horrible managers. You should never put a CTO in charge of people,” he argues. “VPs of engineering wake up in the morning, thinking ‘Do I have the best team in the best situation? Can I shield them from politics and stuff like that? The CTO thinks about, ‘What’s the next technology that we should be building?’ Actually, that was my role for many years within Amazon. Then you become a technology provider, and then your role changes again. You have to understand how your customers are actually using your technology.”

As for what excites him most: “Especially in Africa, I’ve met so many motivated engineers that don’t want to come to the U.S. They don’t want to go work for a large company. They want to solve the problem in their country. I love that. That’s where the real progress lies.” Click here for our full interview.

Contact CEO Daily via Diane Brady at diane.brady@fortune.com

Top news

Google challenges Nvidia’s chips

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U.S. meets with Russia

U.S. Army Secretary Dan Driscoll met with Russian officials in Abu Dhabi on Monday and Tuesday in another hopeful sign that Russia’s invasion of Ukraine may soon end. 

VWs, made in China

Volkswagen said Tuesday that it can for the first time make new electric vehicles entirely in China and do so for half the cost of making them in its native Germany. VW has invested billions in localized R&D in China and plans to introduce about 30 EVs there in the next five years.

Tim Cook’s possible successors

Since Apple CEO Tim Cook turned 65 recently , speculation has intensified about his possible successors. John Ternus, Craig Federighi, Eddy Cue and Greg ‘Joz’ Joswiak are all reportedly in the running and oversee different parts of the company. 

The Big Short investor compares Nvidia with Cisco

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Novo Nordisk’s slump continues

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Is robot-driven unemployment already here?

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The markets

S&P 500 futures were down 0.16% this morning. The last session closed up 1.55%. STOXX Europe 600 was flat in early trading. The U.K.’s FTSE 100 was flat in early trading. Japan’s Nikkei 225 was up o.07%. China’s CSI 300 was up 0.95%. The South Korea KOSPI was up 0.3%. India’s NIFTY 50 is down 0.29%. Bitcoin was up at $87K.

Around the watercooler

She ran her parents’ dry-cleaning business at 18. Today, the ‘godmother of AI’ is advising world leaders and running a billion-dollar startup by Eva Roytburg

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Billionaire MacKenzie Scott extends her philanthropy with a $17 million gift to Oklahoma’s oldest public community college, where most students rely on aid by Jessica Coacci

As boomers are forced back to work because they can’t afford to retire, Robinhood CEO says Gen Zers are opening retirement accounts at just 19 years old by Emma Burleigh

CEO Daily is compiled and edited by Joey Abrams and Claire Zillman.

Presidential election in Guinea-Bissau sees rivals Embalo and Dias both claim victory | Elections Update

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Conflicting claims come before the release of official results by the country’s electoral commission.

The two leading candidates in Guinea-Bissau’s presidential election – incumbent Umaro Sissoco Embalo and main challenger Fernando Dias – have both declared victory before the release of official results.

Both campaigns had claimed on Monday that their contender exceeded the 50 percent threshold needed to win outright, eliminating the need for a run-off.

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“We have won the presidential race. We will not have a second round,” Dias told supporters in the capital, Bissau, adding that people were “tired” and wanted change.

Hours later, Embalo’s campaign spokesperson Oscar Barbosa also claimed the president had won outright, insisting there would be no run-off and calling on rivals to avoid making claims that undermine the electoral process.

There was no immediate comment by the National Electoral Commission, which is expected to announce provisional results on Thursday, regarding the conflicting claims.

Twelve candidates competed in Sunday’s poll that saw a turnout of more than 65 percent.

The African Party for the Independence of Guinea and Cape Verde (PAIGC), the movement that led the fight against Portuguese colonial rule, was barred from fielding a candidate for the first time.

The party endorsed Dias, boosting his campaign, especially after former Prime Minister Domingos Simoes Pereira, the PAIGC leader, backed him. The 47-year-old is standing with the Party for Social Renewal.

Embalo, 53, is a former army general who served as prime minister from 2016 to 2018. He is seeking to become Guinea-Bissau’s first president in 30 years to win a second term.

Opposition parties argue that Embalo’s mandate should have ended earlier this year. The Supreme Court ruled that his term should run until early September, but the election was pushed back to November.

Embalo dissolved parliament, which was controlled by the opposition after the 2019 and 2023 legislative elections, and has not allowed it to sit since December 2023.

Guinea-Bissau has experienced repeated coups and attempted coups since its independence more than 50 years ago, and remains one of the world’s poorest countries, with half the population living in poverty, according to the World Bank.

More than 200 international observers were in the country to monitor the electoral process, including from the West African regional bloc ECOWAS, the African Union and the community of Portuguese-speaking countries.

UK dance music artist Sonique signs catalog deal with Armada

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Amsterdam-headquartered independent dance music label Armada Music says it has acquired the catalog of Grammy-nominated British singer, songwriter and DJ Sonique.

Under the deal, Armada Music said it will hold the worldwide rights to Sonique’s “entire catalog” of songs, including her hit single It Feels So Good, which reached No. 1 in the UK and No. 8 on the Billboard Hot 100, the company announced Friday (November 21).

Originally released in the UK in 1998, It Feels So Good also gained momentum from US radio, resulting in a re-release in May 2000. It then reached No. 1 on the UK Singles Chart for three week and was the third-biggest-selling single in the UK in 2000. The track also reached No. 8 on the Billboard Hot 100, and earned Sonique an Ivor Novello Award and the BRIT Award for Best British Female in 2001.

The song was featured last year in a rework by Matt Sassari and HUGEL, which has already topped 130 million Spotify streams in 11 months. Another hit single, Sky, peaked at No. 2 on the UK Singles Chart.

Sonique first gained prominence as the lead vocalist of electronic dance group S’Express in the late 1980s before going on a solo career. Last year, she performed a sold-out London’s Royal Festival Hall headline show with a full band, strings and choir. The same year, she performed at the Glastonbury’s Silver Hayes stage for the first time and joined Pete Tong’s Ibiza Classics arena tour.

“Her music has left an indelible mark on dance culture, and we are committed to nurturing and elevating her legacy for a new generation of fans while continuing to engage her dedicated base worldwide.”

Maykel Piron, Armada Music Group

Commenting on the deal, Maykel Piron, CEO and Co-Founder of Armada Music Group, said: “We are incredibly excited to welcome Sonique’s phenomenal catalog to the Armada Music family.

“Her music has left an indelible mark on dance culture, and we are committed to nurturing and elevating her legacy for a new generation of fans while continuing to engage her dedicated base worldwide.

“This long-term partnership reflects our belief in the enduring power and potential of her incredible body of work.”

Sonique added: “Signing with Armada Music feels like the perfect next step in my journey. It’s a chance to honor the songs and moments that shaped my career while also opening the door to new music.”

“Signing with Armada Music feels like the perfect next step in my journey. It’s a chance to honor the songs and moments that shaped my career while also opening the door to new music.”

Sonique

Added Sonique: “I’m proud to have a label with such a powerful dance heritage supporting both my catalogue and my future, and I feel energized, inspired, and ready for what’s ahead.”

The deal comes as Armada Music has grown its catalog to over 50,000 tracks in the dance music industry. It represents artists like Armin van Buuren, ARTY, D.O.D, Eelke Kleijn, Jan Blomqvist, Joris Voorn, KI/KI, Lilly Palmer, Loud Luxury, Sunnery James & Ryan Marciano, THEMBA and Yulia Niko.

Armada Music Group also operates as the parent company for its music rights investment vehicle, BEAT Music Fund, launched in 2023 and described as “the first-ever dance investment fund.”

The company tells us that the Sonique deal was struck via Armada directly, rather than the BEAT Music Fund.

In September, BEAT acquired the entire master rights catalog of Netherlands-headquartered Mixmash Records including hits like Show Me Love by Steve Angello and Laidback Luke feat. Robin S (169 million streams) and Turbulence by Steve Aoki and Laidback Luke feat. Lil Jon (40 million streams).

In March, the fund acquired the rights to “a large portion” of masters from Tiga, a DJ, producer, and founder of Turbo Recordings. The deal includes rights to some of Tiga‘s most streamed tracks, including the hit Sunglasses at NightBugatti, and You Gonna Want Me, Let’s Go Dancing, and HAL ft. Kölsch. The tracks have collectively amassed over 33 million Spotify streams.

Last year, BEAT acquired the catalogs of Kevin SaundersonMarkus Schulz, and Robbie Rivera. The deal with techno pioneer Saunderson saw BEAT acquire artist shares from a portion of Sanderson’s Inner City catalog.

Music Business Worldwide

Minister raises concerns over visa ‘abuse’ amid increase in student asylum claims

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UK’s Indo-Pacific Minister Seema Malhotra has defended her government’s immigration proposals during a visit to India, while expressing concern about a rise in foreign students seeking asylum at the end of their studies.

Under the new plans, some migrants could have to wait up to 20 years before they can settle permanently in the UK and the qualifying period for indefinite leave to remain will be extended from five to 10 years.

The proposals will apply to an estimated 2.6 million people who arrived in the country since 2021. They have drawn criticism from some quarters, including a few Labour MPs, even though the Conservatives gave the measures a cautious welcome.

The reforms are “in line with what countries around the world do” to stop the abuse of their immigration systems, Malhotra told the BBC in the southern Indian city of Chennai, adding that there was a “very strong message we also send, which is that we welcome those coming legally”.

According to Malhotra some16,000 international students from across the world had applied for asylum in the UK last year after completing their courses, which she said was evidence of abuse of legal migration routes.

A further 14,800 students sought asylum this year to June 2025, latest Home Office figures show. It is unclear how many of them are Indian nationals.

“We’ve seen visa abuse in the case of legal routes, where people have gone legally and then sought to overstay when their visas weren’t extended,” Malhotra said.

“If you see that level of abuse, it undermines your immigration system. It undermines public confidence, and the fairness and control people expect.”

India remains one of the UK’s biggest sources of international students, but demand is cooling.

The number of Indian students heading to the UK has fallen 11% from last year as tougher immigration rules kick in. This has triggered concern among UK universities which rely on foreign students and are already under financial strain.

According to the Migration Observatory at the University of Oxford, India was the top country of origin for foreign students in the UK in 2023-2024, making up 25% of arrivals. China followed at 23% while Nigeria made up 8%.

Malhotra said while Britain still “very much welcomes” Indian students, her government was working with universities to ensure they are genuine foreign students.

She said the recently concluded free trade agreement (FTA) between the UK and India had also encouraged UK universities to open local campuses in India, with Liverpool University announcing it will open a campus in Bengaluru city in 2026 last week.

The FTA, signed in July after years of negotiations, is forecast to boost the UK’s GDP by £4.8bn annually and expand bilateral trade between the two countries by £25.5bn.

As part of the education chapter in the deal, nine UK universities have been cleared to set up campuses across India.

However, these wider trade ambitions face a domestic political climate that has hardened around migration.

During a visit to India in October, Sir Keir Starmer said the UK would not relax visa rules for Indian nationals despite Delhi’s long-standing push for easier mobility in return for trade concessions.

Malhotra rejected the idea that Britain wants deeper trade while shutting the door to Indian professionals, citing the nearly half-a-million visas granted to Indian nationals last year across work, study and visitor categories.

The UK is moving towards a “contribution-based” immigration system, where settlement and long-term stay depend on a person’s economic contribution rather than the length of time they have lived in the country, Malhotra said.

The government’s proposal to overhaul the UK’s immigration system is part of a broader attempt to show firmer control over borders, but has drawn criticism from some Labour MPs and members of the House of Lords, particularly over their potential impact on international recruitment in sectors like healthcare and social care.

While the reforms are still under consultation, Malhotra, when asked about settlement routes for migrant professionals like nurses and care workers said, “we are expanding routes for those with skills in areas that the UK requires”.

A survey by the Royal College of Nursing (RCN) had warned that up to 50,000 nurses could leave the UK if the government went ahead with its immigration proposals.

The report notes that the UK now has more than 200,000 internationally educated nursing staff, making up around 25% of the country’s total nursing workforce of 794,000.

A significant number of these nurses and care workers are from India. Several investigations, including by the BBC, have shown that many of them have fallen prey to cross-border visa scams and lost hundreds of thousands of pounds.

But Malhotra said the UK was ramping up efforts to protect people from such exploitation and working with law enforcement agencies of countries like India to share intelligence and crack down on such gangs.

Follow BBC News India on Instagram, YouTube, Twitter and Facebook.

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Viola Ford Fletcher, a survivor of the 1921 Tulsa Massacre, passes away at the age of 111 | Obituary Report

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Fletcher fought for greater recognition of one of the deadliest incidents of race violence in US history.

Viola Ford Fletcher, one of the last survivors of Oklahoma’s 1921 Tulsa Massacre, has died at age 111.

Despite her advanced age, Fletcher was a well-known activist thanks to her work trying to win justice for the victims of one of the worst episodes of racial violence in United States history.

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“Today, our city mourns the loss of Mother Viola Fletcher. She was a survivor of one of the darkest chapters in our city’s history and endured more than anyone should,” Tulsa Mayor Monroe Nichols wrote in a Facebook post. “Mother Fletcher carried 111 years of truth, resilience, and grace and was a reminder of how far we’ve come and how far we must still go.”

Fletcher was seven years old at the time of the Tulsa Massacre in Oklahoma, a state living under the Jim Crow system that segregated the US South from the end of the 1800s until the Civil Rights Movement of the 1960s.

The massacre began on May 31, 1921, when police arrested 19-year-old Dick Rowland, a Black shoeshiner, over allegations that he had assaulted a white woman, according to a report by the US Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division.

When a group of white men gathered at the courthouse calling for Rowland to be lynched, a group of Black men from a nearby community responded and tried to protect him before “all hell broke out”, the report said.

Over the next two days, vigilante groups and law enforcement looted and burned down 35 blocks of Tulsa’s Greenwood District, which was then home to one of the wealthiest Black communities in the US. The Bureau of Labour Statistics in 2024 estimated that the scale of the damage was around $32.2m when adjusted for inflation.

As many as 300 residents of Tulsa were killed and another 700 injured, the report said, although the final tally is unknown because many were buried in unmarked graves.

Survivors like Fletcher and her family were forced to leave the area. Left destitute, her family became sharecroppers, a form of subsistence work where farmers give over almost all their harvest to their landlord.

Rowland was never charged, after Sarah Page, the lift operator he was accused of assaulting, said that she did not want to prosecute the case.

Despite the scale of devastation, the Tulsa Massacre received limited national attention until Oklahoma state launched an investigative commission in 1997. Efforts to win compensation for victims in 2001, however, failed due to the statute of limitations.

On the centennial anniversary of the massacre, Fletcher testified before the US Congress in 2021 about her experiences and co-authored a memoir, Don’t Let Them Bury My Story, with her grandson in 2023.

Fletcher was mourned by US leaders like former President Barack Obama.

“As a survivor of the Tulsa Race Massacre, Viola Ford Fletcher bravely shared her story so that we’d never forget this painful part of our history. Michelle and I are grateful for her lifelong work to advance civil rights, and send our love to her family,” Obama posted on X.

European car sales increased by 4.9% in October, according to ACEA

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European car sales rise 4.9% in October, ACEA says