If you like a lot of chocolate on your biscuit … look away now
The return of ‘Tescopoly’? How Britain’s biggest retailer dominates everyday life
Supermarket chain has quietly got its groove back to grab even more of shoppers’ spending this yearReach into your pocket and you will probably find evidence of Tesco. Whether it is a Clubcard, mobile phone or just a receipt from one of its 3,000 stores, the UK’s biggest retailer is engrained in everyday British life.As its chief executive, Ken Murphy, proudly proclaimed this month, the supermarket chain has grabbed even more of our spending this year, landing almost a third of all grocery sales and receiving more than £1 in every £10 spent in UK retail. Data released this week showed Tesco’s sales growth outgunning its traditional rivals.The retailer’s resurgence represents a remarkable turnaround for a business whose relentless growth across Britain through the 1990s and early 2000s was abruptly curtailed as management became too focused on overseas expansion and profits over service
Ed Miliband needs a plan now to help industry weather UK transition to net zero | Phillip Inman
Ed Miliband may want his political legacy to be a transition to net zero, but he could find his eventual political epitaph includes words on how he helped bury UK industry under the weight of high electricity charges.Industrial ovens are being switched off and turbines spun for the last time as businesses add up the cost of powering their factories and decide it’s not worth the time and trouble.It would be harsh to blame the energy secretary for a crisis he inherited and a decline in manufacturing that has been going on for four decades. But the way the transition to renewables was managed under the Tories, and now under Miliband can only be described as a disaster that will see much of UK industry depart for an easier life elsewhere.The decline is not new
Inside San Francisco’s new AI school: is this the future of US education?
In the world’s tech innovation epicenter, an “AI-powered” private school has made headlines for unabashedly embracing the technology.Alpha School San Francisco, which opened its doors to K-8 students this fall, is the newest outpost of a network of 14 nationwide private schools. Its learning model entails just two hours of focused academic work per day, during which the school says students can learn twice as fast as their counterparts in traditional schools – with the help of artificial intelligence.AI, Alpha says, is central to the school’s learning philosophy, brand and impact on students.Alpha is not alone in its efforts to incorporate AI into the classroom
The platform exposing exactly how much copyrighted art is used by AI tools
Ask Google’s AI video tool to create a film of a time-travelling doctor who flies around in a blue British phone booth and the result, unsurprisingly, resembles Doctor Who.And if you ask OpenAI’s technology to do the same, a similar thing happens. What’s wrong with that, you may think?The answer could be one of the biggest issues AI chiefs face as their era-defining technology becomes ever more ubiquitous in our lives.Google and OpenAI’s generative artificial intelligence is supposed to be just that – generative, meaning it develops novel answers to our questions. Ask it for a time-travelling doctor, you get one that their systems have created
Ilia Malinin opens Olympic season with 40-point blowout at Grand Prix de France
Ilia Malinin began his Olympic season in devastating form, winning the Grand Prix de France by an extraordinary 40-point margin to underline his dominance of men’s figure skating.The 20-year-old American, nicknamed the Quad God, landed five quadruple jumps in his free skate on Sunday in Angers to finish with 321.00 points overall – well clear of France’s three-time defending champion Adam Siao Him Fa on 280.95. Georgia’s Nika Egadze was third with 259
William Haggas criticises Oisin Murphy for ‘professional foul’ riding tactics
William Haggas, one of Britain’s most successful and respected trainers, said on Sunday that he believes Oisin Murphy employs riding tactics that amount to a “professional foul”.Haggas also claimed the champion jockey has been “getting away with blue murder for a while” as local stewarding panels are deciding that resulting interference is accidental.Speaking on Racing TV’s Luck On Sunday programme, Haggas said that Murphy, who was crowned champion jockey for the fifth time at Ascot on Saturday, is “the best around” and “an outstanding rider”, but added that he feels the jockey can allow his mount to “lean across” an opponent, stopping their momentum at a vital stage of a race.Haggas pointed to an incident in a juvenile maiden at Sandown in August when Murphy, riding Corinth for John and Thady Gosden, impeded Loz Vegas, trained by Peter Chapple-Hyam and ridden by Harry Davies, in the closing stages. Corinth crossed the line half a length in front and while Loz Vegas was awarded the race in the stewards’ room, the interference was deemed to be accidental as a result of Corinth “racing green”
Revealed: UK Foreign Office staff pushed for Israel trip despite suspension of trade talks
Chancellor says she ‘can’t leave welfare untouched’ this parliament as budget looms
No 10 says talks happening ‘at pace’ across government to lift ban on Maccabi Tel Aviv fans attending Aston Villa match – as it happened
Your Party sets out constitution plans including new year leadership contest
Mark Sedwill is frontrunner to become new UK ambassador to US, sources say
Nearly 2,000 Foreign Office jobs ‘at risk’, says PCS union