A wake-up call for all of us to resist the far right | Letters
Bank of England expected to leave UK interest rates on hold and slow bond-selling QT programme – business live
Good morning, and welcome to our rolling coverage of business, the financial markets and the world economy.All eyes are on the Bank of England today as it prepares to announce its latest monetary policy decision at noon UK time, but for once interest rates are not on everyone’s mind.The BoE is widely expected to leave Bank Rate unchanged at 4%, a day after UK inflation remained painfully high over its target at 3.8%.The real interest is whether it adjusts its bond-selling programme, giving a helping hand to chancellor Rachel Reeves
Tax rises in, two-child limit out: what Resolution Foundation’s boss is urging Reeves before budget
“She clearly has to fix the problem. I think it’s one thing to come back twice. We don’t want to be here a third time.” Bluntness served Ruth Curtice well in her past life as a senior Treasury official. These days, she deploys it publicly, as chief executive of the Resolution Foundation – urging Rachel Reeves to think the unthinkable before November’s crunch budget
Meta announces first Ray-Ban smart glasses with in-built augmented reality display
Meta has announced three new pairs of AI smart glasses, including the first Ray-Bans with a built-in screen for augmented reality.The Meta Ray-Ban Display will be the first smart glasses with a heads-up display from a mainstream brand since the ill-fated Google Glass. They use a classic Wayfarer-like styling to avoid looking too obviously like wearable technology, while still having a camera, speakers and microphone.A small, bright and crisp colour display is projected on to the inside of the right lens, which appears to float just below the wearer’s eye line, and can show anything from text and images to live video calls. The display appears when interacting with the glasses, but isn’t visible from the outside
Google DeepMind claims ‘historic’ AI breakthrough in problem solving
Google DeepMind claims it has made a “historic” artificial intelligence breakthrough akin to the Deep Blue computer defeating Garry Kasparov at chess in 1997 and an AI beating a human Go champion in 2016.A version of the company’s Gemini 2.5 AI model solved a complex real-world problem that stumped human computer programmers to become the first AI model to win a gold medal at an international programming competition held earlier this month in Azerbaijan.In a performance that the tech company called a “profound leap in abstract problem-solving”, it took less than half an hour to work out how to weigh up an infinite number of possibilities in order to send a liquid through a network of ducts to a set of interconnected reservoirs. The goal was to distribute it as quickly as possible
Vuelta chaos shows selling sport as a tool for peace can create its own battlefield | Jonathan Liew
High fives all round at Hamas high command. The triumphant clink of Gaza Cola tins pings across the bunker. It’s been a tough week for the lads, what with five of their members being killed in the Doha airstrike, but you’ve got to celebrate the little victories, yeah? And as they use what remains of their fragile satellite internet connection to refresh the Cyclingnews live blog for the final time, the Hamas Grand Tour Disruption Division (Vuelta Branch) can toast an operation executed to perfection: the successful mobilisation of more than 100,000 members of the Madrid battalion to force the curtailment of stage 21 of the Tour of Spain.“They asked us to quit the Vuelta, but we did not surrender to the terrorists,” said Sylvan Adams, co‑owner of the Israel-Premier Tech team targeted by mass protests that disrupted several stages. On Sunday, huge crowds of protesters in Madrid forced the race to conclude 27 miles short of the finish
Counties in dark over fate as Championship restructure vote is delayed
The final round of County Championship matches next week will take place with some counties in the dark over what is at stake after a decision on the format for next year was deferred until the end of the season.The Guardian has learned that a vote on the structure for next season has been delayed on integrity grounds, because of concerns that counties in Division One at risk of relegation could field weakened teams if that threat is suddenly removed.There is also a feeling among the Professional Game Group, who are running the process, that postponement will give them the best chance of securing the 12 votes required to introduce a new structure next season.Amid ongoing confusion, online secret ballot forms are to be issued next week but the deadline for voting has not been confirmed and no announcement will be made until the season has concluded.After a lengthy consultation that began in April, the counties will be asked to vote on whether to maintain the current 10-eight divisional split or move to 12-six next season with the fixture list cut from 14 to 12 or 13 matches
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Thomasina Miers’ recipes for cod with courgettes, green olives and lemon, and a blackberry and almond slice
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