Posted on

600 VodafoneThree UK sites now offer integrated coverage

Just over two months since it began operations following the merger of two of the UK’s leading telcos, VodafoneThree has announced that, as part of its £11bn investment programme, it has switched on over 600 sites that allow legacy Vodafone and Three customers to use both networks at no extra cost.

Vodafone and Three first announced plans to merge in June 2023. The new combined business – 51% owned by Vodafone Group and 49% by CK Hutchison Group Telecom (CKHGT) Holdings – is the biggest mobile network operator in the UK, with 27 million customers through the combined entities.

VodafoneThree will operate a multi-brand mobile strategy in the consumer market, with Vodafone, Three, VOXI, Smarty and Talkmobile remaining. Vodafone will be the only brand for business customers, offering one team able to tailor systems to a customer’s needs, with the ambition to become the UK’s biggest converged network for business.

VodafoneThree claims to be the only UK operator with a quarter-by-quarter, year-by-year, guaranteed plan to reach 99.95% 5G standalone (5G SA) population coverage by 2034. The 5G SA network build-out plan is front-loaded so that it will hit 90% population coverage from a current baseline of 47% by the end of the third year, and up to 50 million people will have access to its fastest 5G speeds in just one year.

Through the use of the company’s multi-operator core network (MOCN) technology, customers’ devices will automatically connect to the best coverage available, effectively giving them access to two networks at no extra cost. VodafoneThree believes this will see customers of both brands experience improved coverage, reliability and speed when using 4G and 5G networks.

Customers do not need to do anything to benefit from the new technology, as VodafoneThree engineers are using a weighted set of criteria to manage capacity and maximise customer benefits without having an impact on the existing service. For business mobile customers in particular, this is claimed to result in smoother day-to-day operations, with connectivity that keeps staff, services and customers connected everywhere they need it.

Through the sharing of combined spectrum, VodafoneThree said that within two weeks of beginning business, seven million Three and Smarty customers received a 4G boost, with an average improvement in 4G data speed of up to 20% and 40% in some key towns and cities, thanks to the integration of combined spectrum.

Three key benefits are said to stand out from the sharing: peak period improvements; the elimination of 4G notspots; and enhanced 5G coverage. With the MOCN, at busy times for the network, customers will be moved from a busy site to one that is able to provide the required level of performance. It is also designed to simultaneously relieve the strain on the busy site, providing a better experience for all customers.

By providing 4G coverage to 16,500km of the UK where it wasn’t previously available to either brand’s customers, VodafoneThree said it can eliminate notspots across an area 10 times the size of London and that around 71% of the UK population (circa 50 million) will have access to VodafoneThree’s fastest 5G speeds by the end of year one, thanks to bringing the networks together and an accelerated 5G roll-out plan. 

The first stages of the technology are being activated remotely, enabling faster deployment across Vodafone and Three’s networks. Some masts can be upgraded remotely with MOCN technology, with what is effectively a software upgrade. Others, however, will need to have new hardware fitted to them. The company accepted that completing such hardware upgrades, especially in remote areas of the country, will take time.

Commenting on the integration programme, VodafoneThree chief network officer Andrea Donà said: “Bringing our networks together marks a major milestone for VodafoneThree, unlocking greater capacity, reducing 4G notspots and expanding 5G coverage. Just weeks into the roll-out, millions of customers are already seeing the benefits of a nationwide boost, powered by our spectrum integration and Multi-Operator Core Network technology. It’s a clear signal of VodafoneThree’s ambition and ability to move at pace to deliver a new era of connectivity.” 

Source

Posted on

Obituary: Dame Stephanie ‘Steve’ Shirley, founder, entrepreneur and philanthropist

The technology sector lost a great on 11 August 2025, with the passing of Dame Stephanie Shirley at the age of 91.

More affectionately known as Steve, Shirley was a serial founder, entrepreneur and philanthropist who was part of the technology sector for over half a century.

Originally from Germany, aged five, Shirley – who at the time was named Vera Buchthal – was one of the thousands of children who came to the UK on The Kindertransport before the outbreak of the Second World War.

She grew up with her sister and foster parents in the West Midlands, developing a background in technology and mathematics from a young age, and after school, she got a job building computers and coding for the Post Office Research Station in Dollis Hill.

After doing night classes to gain a degree in mathematics, she then went on to get a job at another technology company.

But this was during a time when women were less equal to men than they are now, and Shirley became frustrated with the disparity faced by women both in and out of the workplace.

Wanting to change things for the better, she took her husband Derek’s advice and adopted her family nickname, Steve, to be taken seriously after efforts to start her own company fell on deaf ears once it was clear she was a woman.

Flexible working

Shirley was a pioneer in flexible working, founding a technology company called Freelance Programmers in 1962. Candidates were asked if they had access to a telephone, as there was no office, so the staff of predominantly women worked from home selling software and programming.

She once told Computer Weekly it would be illegal for her to set up a company in the same way today. “You couldn’t possibly have a company that set out to be gendered,” said Shirley. “I deliberately tried to build a company that was female-friendly and a crusade for a company by women for women.”

She wanted the company to be one she would want to work for, and over time it made her and many of her employees millions.

Renamed Xansa, the company grew to more than 8,000 people before being sold to Steria in 2007.

Shirley used this wealth for her philanthropic efforts, which has seen her fund several charities and foundations, and has been predominantly driven by support for her late son, Giles, who was severely autistic and epileptic.

She initially founded a residential home for people with severe autism, called Kingwood, with the goal of giving her son what he needed to live the best life possible.

Following this, she also founded The Shirley Foundation, Prior’s Court School for students with autism, and UK autism research charity Autistica, all aimed at making the lives of individuals with autism better.

Philanthropic endeavours

Across her lifetime, Shirley spent millions of pounds supporting charities and other philanthropic endeavours.

In support of the technology sector, she also helped fund – and was a master of – tech-focused charity The Worshipful Company of Information Technologists, and was a founding donor and co-founder of The Oxford Internet Institute in 2001.

Shirley has been recognised for her relentless work for women, technology and those with autism, and in 2017, was awarded a Member of the Order of the Companions of Honour (CH) for her services to tech and philanthropy – she has also been awarded an OBE and a DBE.

When Computer Weekly launched its Most Influential Women in UK Tech Hall of Fame in 2015, Shirley was one of only three who made the initial list.

She was an inspiration for many, and appears in both the Bletchley Park and California computing museums.

Shirley has claimed in the past that her childhood made her strive to make sure her life had been “worth saving” by bringing her to the UK as a young child, and her incredible life full of extraordinary achievements proves she succeeded in that aim.

She will be greatly and sadly missed.

Source

Posted on

How To Stop Google Gemini From Training On Your Personal

Cheng Xin/Getty Images

Privacy should be a priority when browsing the web, especially in this era that brought generative AI experiences to all sorts of applications, starting with chatbots like Gemini. If you’re using chatbots for personal projects and work chores, you should ensure that the privacy of your data is protected and that Google can’t use any Gemini data from your personal chats to train future versions of Gemini. The good news is that it’s incredibly easy to stop Google from collecting your Gemini data for training purposes: You’ll need to switch off a toggle called “Gemini Apps Activity” (“Keep Activity”) on desktop or mobile, and that will ensure Google won’t use your chats for Gemini development.

I’ll explain in detail in what follows how to turn off the “Gemini Apps Activity” feature, which Google is about to call “Keep Activity” following a Gemini update. Regardless of the name, the process won’t change. Conversely, you can reverse the procedure to turn on Gemini data collection, in case you think your data should be used to train future AI models.

Before you change this setting, you should also be aware that no matter how you set this key privacy toggle, Google will store the contents of your Gemini chats for three days (72 hours) for service and feedback purposes before deleting them. If chats go to manual review, they might be kept for longer, but they won’t be used for training next-generation Gemini versions.

Stop Gemini from training on your data on the web

Chris Smith / BGR

Whether you use Gemini on iPhone, Android, or the web, you have access to the same privacy controls to stop Google from training Gemini on the personal data in your chats. You’re looking for the same privacy setting, called “Gemini Apps Activity” at the time of this writing. Google announced in mid-August that the setting will be called “Keep Activity” in the near future, but that’s just a name change. The functionality will stay similar. In what follows, I’ll show you how to turn off “Gemini Apps Activity” (“Keep Activity”) on desktop and mobile.

  1. Load gemini.google.com in your browser
  2. Sign into your Google account if you’re not signed in
  3. Expand the left-hand menu by hovering your mouse on top of it if it’s not expanded. The menu will also tell you whether Gemini Apps Activity is turned on or off, as seen above.
  4. Look for the Activity button that has a clock with an arrow around it and tap it
  5. Your Google account settings page will open on the Your Gemini Apps Activity section (see screenshot below)
  6. Click the Turn off button (If the setting is already turned off, you don’t need to do anything else)
  7. Optional step 1: If you use Gemini Live on mobile, make sure the Improve Google services with your audio and Gemini Live recordings box doesn’t have a tick in it (see screenshot below). 
  8. Optional step 2: Delete past Gemini Apps Activity that the app collected before you disabled the feature (see screenshot below).

Chris Smith

Stop Gemini from training on your data on iPhone or Android

Chris Smith / BGR

The process above is almost identical on iPhone and Android for preventing Google to train future Gemini models on your personal data:

  1. Open the Gemini app for iPhone or Android
  2. Sign into your Google account if you’re not signed in
  3. Tap your profile picture on the right side
  4. Look for the Gemini Apps Activity button that has a clock with an arrow around it and tap it
  5. Your Google account settings page will open in the mobile app loading Your Gemini Apps Activity
  6. Click the Turn off button (If the setting is already turned off, you don’t need to do anything else.)
  7. Optional step 1: If you use Gemini Live on mobile, make sure the Improve Google services with your audio and Gemini Live recordings box doesn’t have a tick in it (see screenshots above). 
  8. Optional step 2: Delete past Gemini Apps Activity that the app collected before you disabled the feature (see screenshots above).

Things to keep in mind

Chris Smith / BGR

As you can see above, preventing Google from training AI on your Gemini chat data involves the same steps on desktop and mobile. You only need to turn off the “Gemini Apps Activity” (“Keep Activity”) setting once and it’ll apply everywhere. It’s up to you to choose between the desktop and mobile experience.

If you use Gemini with multiple Google accounts, you will have to repeat the process for each of them. Log into a different account to repeat the steps above, on either desktop or mobile.

If you use a Google Workspace account that’s managed by your business, Google won’t use your Gemini data to train future AI versions by default. You don’t have to update any setting to reach this level of privacy. The downside is that you can’t turn off activity saving unless you also manage that Google Workspace account (see screenshots above).

The “Gemini Apps Activity” (“Keep Activity”) setting is reversible. You can change your mind at any time. Also, if you do want your data to train future versions of Gemini, you can still delete chats from Google’s servers (see the optional steps mentioned above).

Finally, I’ll remind you not to share sensitive data with any AI chatbot, regardless of how you feel about companies using your personal data to improve future AI models. You should avoid giving chatbots financial, health, and work-related data in your prompts as long as that data is processed in the cloud.

Source

Posted on

Industry 5.0: More than a numbers game for future manufacturing

There’s nothing the technology and communications industry likes more than the arrival of a next generation. For example, look at the comms industry and the clamour that centres around the launch of the next generation of mobile around a decade after the launch of the previous iteration. The clamour for 6G, set for commercial launch arrival in 2030, is really beginning to start in earnest, despite 5G being nowhere near pervasive nor diffuse.

In engineering, however, things move a little different. Despite the daily emergence of innovation in design, manufacturing and collaboration technology, the market has not been hung up so much on generations. But with the growing emergence of Industry 5.0, could all this change?

Before digging deeper into Industry 5.0, let’s look at the past and Industry 4.0. In terms of a basic definition, Industry 4.0 essentially refers to the fourth industrial revolution and the transformation of manufacturing processes, promoting connected manufacturing and the digital convergence of industry, businesses and other processes. Falling into this definition are the likes of robotics, artificial intelligence (AI), internet of things (IoT) and automation. Industry 4.0 also includes real-world use cases such as supply chain management, logistics, warehousing and cyber security.

What this reflects is just how modern engineering processes have evolved over the past few decades to the point where there are many interconnected disciplines taking place, often at the same time – and there is a fundamental need for this. Over the course of the lifetime of a product or service, everything in the cycle of conception to operation and maintenance will have changed to some degree, from a minor tweak to a major overhaul.

“Engineering works differently today, and not just in the tools we use, but in how we think about the role of the engineer,” says Chris Brown, senior vice-president of sales at Fathom Manufacturing. “[We should be] focused on empowering our engineers to do the work they want to be doing, solving problems, collaborating with customers and driving innovation, not chasing down tacit knowledge or manually reviewing drawings for the thousandth time.

“We [have been] using technology and data systems not as decision-makers, but as research assistants that quietly run behind the scenes, surfacing historical learnings, analysing risks and proactively flagging potential issues, all while the engineer stays focused on the bigger picture. That’s a huge shift. 10 years ago, it was about automation replacing labour. Today, it’s about augmentation giving our engineers superpowers.”

Brown’s main point is that when you give engineers advanced tools and support, they can deliver better designs faster, with fewer iterations, and with more confidence in the outcomes – all of which he says is a huge win for both the engineering team and the customer. That means Industry 5.0 can elevate design and engineering teams into a new kind of role, becoming what Brown calls “tech-augmented innovators” at the centre of the process. This will see firms capture the speed and power of Industry 4.0 technologies and then augment it with insight and creativity.

“Design and engineering teams are no longer just behind-the-scenes executors, they’re front and centre, driving innovation through a partnership of human and machine. That is the essence of Industry 5.0 in our view, putting people at the heart of advanced manufacturing, armed with the best technology, to achieve things neither could do alone.”

One of the basic truths in manufacturing is that there are few industries like it when it comes to dealing with change. In manufacturing, change is a constant, and interconnections are taking on a whole new paradigm for engineering with the advent of advanced comms technologies. Breakthroughs in communications technologies, such as standalone 5G networks, can open up even more new vistas in terms of the possibilities of design and manufacturing. Industry 5.0 can raise this to higher levels, not just in how it is carried out but also the personal and environmental contexts of processes.

A wasteless world

Michael Rada is generally accepted as the founder of Industry 5.0. He stresses that it not a sales tool or a buzzword, but a new global ecosystem that helps to reduce the negative impact of industrial development on the global ecosystem.

In terms of chronology, Rada believes that Industry 5.0 was launched at the end of 2015, but its principles have been implemented since 2013 by the industrial upcycling methodology applied in companies and businesses mainly in Czech Republic.

He says that the aim for Industry 5.0 is to “build a wasteless world for all”, based on the principles of systematic waste prevention and recognising five types of waste – physical, social, urban, process, wasting of time – that are applicable everywhere to factories, entrepreneurs, corporations, homes and governments. Rada notes that the United Nations (UN) first mentioned Industry 5.0 in December 2021, then three years later integrated Industry 5.0 in its Global waste management outlook 2024 report.

While observing that the number of businesses, companies, corporations and governments adopting the term Industry 5.0 is now growing rapidly, Michael Rada believes that a significant volume of funding has been made available for projects utilising Industry 5.0. He highlights that the biggest funded Industry 5.0 project of 2023 was a low Earth orbit (LEO) satellite constellation project in Canada, which secured $2.1bn from the Canadian government and which is being built assembled and tested on production lines using Industry 5.0 techniques. These include AI, automation, co-bots, augmented reality and assemblers.

Such technologies and techniques are now firmly established in the world of connected engineering. Speaking to Computer Weekly in February 2025, Dassault Systèmes senior vice-president Gian Paolo Bassi said the conversation of its sector has now evolved from Industry 4.0, taking an evolutionary step from a marketplace that which was focused on automation, productivity and innovation without taking into account the effect of technological changes in society as outlined by the likes of Rada.

“The industry has decided that it’s time for an evolution. It’s called Industry 5.0,” he stated. “At the intersection of the experience economy, there is a new, compelling necessity to be sustainable, to create a circular economy. So then, at the intersection, [we have] the generative [AI] economy.”

Dassault first revealed it was working with generative AI (GenAI) design principles in 2024, and as the practice has evolved within the company, Bassi outlined that it now captures two fundamental concepts. The first is the ability of AI to create content based on language models that comprise details of processes, business models, designs of parts assemblies, specifications and manufacturing practices. These models, he said, would not be traditional, generic, compute-intensive models such as ChatGPT; instead, they would be vertical, industry-specific and trained on engineering content and technical documentation. 

“We can now build large models of everything, which is a virtual twin, and we can get to a level of sophistication where new ideas can come in and be tested, and much more knowledge can be put into the innovation process. This is a tipping point,” he said in February 2025. “It’s not a technological change, it’s a technological expansion – a very important one. Generative AI can create content and, more importantly, know-how and knowledge that can be used by our customers immediately.”

In Bassi’s belief, this is what AI is best at: exploiting the large models of industrial practices, with the most important benefit of addressing customer needs as the capabilities of AI are translated into the industrial world, offering a pathway for engineers to save precious time in research and spend more time on being creative in design, without massive, network-intensive models, while being able to design and manufacture with knowledge of the downstream requirements for components and their sustainability.

Bassi was adamant that, conscious of the actual phenomenon or not, the concept of Industry 5.0 was being adopted by every one of the company’s customers, putting in place policies to support the concept and looking to generate sustainability gains when deploying software in their industry, improving the safety and ergonomics of workplaces, as well as workflows.

Sights set on edge AI

Computer vision is very much part of the Industry 5.0 toolkit and will inevitably be deployed to enable engineering businesses to use advanced comms and AI at the edge of networks more efficiently and sustainably.

In an advancement of this field, global industrial hardware company OnLogic and computer vision software firm viso.ai are teaming up to “revolutionise” the deployment and scalability of edge AI vision solutions looking to address what they believe are the critical challenge of simplifying and scaling complex vision workloads in an era where real-time data analysis and automation are said to be paramount.

Explaining the rationale for their partnership, the companies say industries ranging from manufacturing and construction to retail and smart cities are looking to use computer vision to drive operational efficiency, enhance quality control, manage workforce safety and gain actionable insights. Yet they caution that to date the complexities associated with hardware selection, software integration and deployment are presenting significant barriers to entry. 

The companies say that their partnership will mean users can expect to see integrated offerings that include OnLogic’s industrial computers pre-configured with viso.ai’s platform, enabling them to deploy and scale their edge AI vision initiatives. They add that they will be able to deliver systems that can focus on delivering pre-validated and optimised solutions tailored to meet the specific needs of various industries, including manufacturing, logistics, construction, retail and smart cities.

Ultimately, while the forthcoming era of smart manufacturing will see Industry 5.0 technologies that encompass hyper-personalised production to real-time decision-making, they will not aim to replace human instinct and insight. Instead, they will embrace these capabilities and not try to automate people out of the process.

Read part two: Continuing our look at Industry 5.0 with what effect it is having on those deploying the technology.

Source

Posted on

Industry 5.0: Applying the human touch

In the first part of our look at Industry 5.0, we explored the evolution of manufacturing processes, with a focus on the way in which Industry 4.0 technologies and processes have developed to make industry more efficient.

Yet for many firms, a blunt reality exists whereby industry leaders are tackling a pressing issue stemming from Industry 4.0 in that the promised digital transformation has failed to deliver on its promises – not because of technology, but because of human oversight. Companies are seeing that despite significant investments in automation and robotics, productivity has remained stagnant, skilled roles are going unfilled and employee turnover continues to rise.

Industry 4.0 promised a revolution in manufacturing, but designed to cut costs through automation, it has faced slow adoption and industry resistance. But was leaving people behind its biggest flaw?

People at the centre

In the Industry 4.0 era, engineers spent a lot of time focused on programming machines and analysing data, often spending a lot of time gathering information or tweaking parameters. Now, Industry 5.0 is shifting the focus back to the people – ensuring that technology empowers workers rather than complicating their jobs. It isn’t just a buzzword; it’s already taking shape.

When deployed effectively, Industry 5.0 can reinforce the value of human expertise in the engineering process rather than diminishing it. Its emergence could transform the roles of design and engineering teams, turning them into tech-empowered innovators, says Chris Brown, senior vice-president of sales at Fathom Manufacturing.

“The way we think about it is simple: humans at the centre, tech in the background…Engineers can devote far more time to creative problem-solving and high-level decision-making, rather than hunting down data or manually checking every detail. In other words, technology is keeping them out of the role of ‘librarians’,” he says.

“For example, a modern engineer might use an AI-driven system to instantly pull up relevant past project data or to automatically flag potential design issues, instead of spending days searching through documents or tapping on colleagues’ shoulders for tacit knowledge. This kind of ‘connected-worker’ approach, equipping engineers with real-time knowledge and digital support, enables them to interface seamlessly with machines, data and co-workers to boost efficiency and safety.”

The result is that engineers spend less time on drudgery and more time on innovation, using their expertise to make fast, smart decisions with the insights that technology feeds them. Asif Rana, president of Hexagon Nexus’ Connected Worker business concurs, noting that while Industry 4.0 focused on automation, data analytics and machine-to-machine communication, Industry 5.0 brings people back into the equation.

“It’s about creating smarter, more sustainable systems that are built around human collaboration, not just machines talking to each other. We see Industry 5.0 as the bridge between people and digital systems, helping people on the shop floor interact more easily with machines, software and data in real time. It’s a more human-centred approach to manufacturing. You can’t have human-machine collaboration without the digital foundation; automation, real-time machine data and connected systems are still crucial.”

CADDi – a provider of manufacturing systems designed to transform legacy drawings and supply chain data – also firmly believes that embracing a human-centric approach through industry is critical for manufacturing’s future. It warns of a danger approaching the industry in the form of a culture gap whereby manufacturing struggles to attract and retain talent not due to a lack of ability, but because workplaces remain hierarchical, rigid and disconnected from modern workforce expectations.

The company argues that technology should augment, not replace, human expertise, and that AI works best by enhancing workflows instead of adding complexity. It stresses that “real” results are possible with the right approach, with significant cost reductions from areas such as procurement made possible by adopting AI-powered technology designed around real people, not just around efficiency targets.

Asif Rana agrees: “Where Industry 4.0 was all about the technology itself, Industry 5.0 is about how we use that technology to make work better for people, creating value with those technologies and involving humans in a more sustainable, efficient way. It’s not just about optimising machines. It’s about improving workflows, supporting workers and creating long-term value for both businesses and society.”

Disruptive advantage

There’s also a deeper human element in greater efficiency in manufacturing, says Manish Kumar, CEO of engineering software and solutions developer SolidWorks. Talking to a client earlier in 2025, he asked what their company’s biggest challenges was – most in engineering would say, ‘Cost and time to market’, but not in this case, Kumar recalls.

“Their challenge was unique. They said, ‘We have a large population close to retirement, and once they retire, how do I capture what they know?’ So, I asked them, ‘How do you do it?’ They are asking everyone to convert what is in their heads in terms of documents processes, and it gets saved in a certain repository, in certain locations. So, how do you pass on that knowledge? Every time someone new joins, they are trained. There is onboarding training for people to know where to look [for information].

“But if I am working in your firm for a long time, if I look at some part which came out with a defect, I’ll be able to – as an experienced person – predict what happened and why that defect was there. [That is] because I know that certain conditions makes that kind of effect. If you’re a new person and saw that effect, how would you ask that question? There is no person around, and onboarding training is not going to give you that answer.

“A lot of clients of ours are in that situation where there is a lot of embedded knowledge and know-how in their workforce and [there’s a need] to extract that…How do you leverage that knowledge? To me, that is the biggest challenge, and that challenge is driving us to prepare the foundation of our generative experiences.”

Kumar says this extends from whether it is a manufacturing failure, or how to create drawings, or how to create parts, or previous assemblies. It is using all of that embedded knowledge to create the next generation of assembly. Kumar believes that his industry has reached a tipping point where all these different technologies can be combined to give what he calls “disruptive advantage” to clients – something that was just not possible until recently.

Moreover, he suggests that in working on AI, progress is going to be at a pace which firms will not be able to even predict. “As a CEO, my job is to be an optimist, but my fear is that my optimism is still going to be not fast enough,” he adds.

Kumar believes that companies will have to balance evolution with revolution in terms of the technologies and services they use. The key will be understanding the engineering problem precisely and then creating value.

The same challenge will be true for technology suppliers, suggests Rana: “Industry 5.0 has been pivotal in the design of Nexus. We’ve made key investments in technologies like generative AI to support this. Some of these tools work like digital co-pilots, helping workers do their jobs more easily across design, engineering, operations and quality. Others provide behind-the-scenes intelligence that makes digital workflows smarter and more connected. Because of this, our goals have expanded to go beyond general productivity.

“[We see] this as a continuous loop: capture, create, immerse, activate. Capture real-world data from machines and processes, create digital workflows that enhance how people and systems work, immerse teams in the data and tools they need to act confidently, and activate improvements in real-time across the shop floor.”

Challenges and champions

Despite its current usage and clear utility, there are still challenges to address before Industry 5.0 becomes widespread. Many manufacturers still don’t have a solid Industry 4.0 foundation, resulting in siloed data, tools that don’t talk to each other and a lot of processes that are still manual. There is also a technology solution landscape that is quite fragmented, made worse by a growing global skilled labour shortage making it harder for manufacturers to modernise at scale. 

Hexagon’s Rana emphasises that the object should be to create “an autonomous connected ecosystem”, with self-learning expertise systems covering all stages of the manufacturing lifecycle, adding: “It’s about creating a system that works on three levels: automation, the Industry 4.0 layer; human-centric workflows, the Industry 5.0 layer; autonomous, self-learning systems, the next frontier.”

One challenge that may be rather underestimated in regards to data. Systems are only as good as the history you feed them. In manufacturing, a lot of data takes the form of PDFs as well as institutional and tacit memory or legacy file systems. Digitising that knowledge takes real time and effort, says Chris Brown.

“Even once the systems are ready, there’s the human element of trust,” he adds. “In our industry, especially in mid-sized companies, the humans with the deepest and most insightful knowledge are often the ones most hesitant to let go of being the ‘keeper of the answers’. That’s not a tech problem, that’s a change management problem. You have to show people that the technology is there to amplify their expertise, not diminish it. If you try to shortcut that step, the tools won’t stick, adoption rates will be low and you’ll be back to the thing that’s been harming this industry for 40 years – the little phrase, ‘That’s the way we have done things around here for years’.”

Another challenge involves people: that is, finding the right champions and discovering a way to measure just how much an improvement Industry 5.0 is. This kind of transformation needs more than a new software, it needs people inside the company who have, says Brown, the vision, credibility and communication skills to bring everyone together for the experience.

“Your first adopters aren’t just testers, they’re your internal champions, bringing people into the fold as the need arises and championing the solution in every challenge, they and their co-workers face,” he adds. “They make or break whether the broader team buys in. As for how we measure success, we track the usual suspects, speed to quote, design revisions, throughput and cost efficiency. But to me, those are trailing indicators. As an industry, we need to get out of the rear-view mirror and start looking out the windshield.

“The real leading indicator is how our engineers feel about their work. Are they spending more time doing what they’re great at and love? Are they more energised in design reviews and on calls with the companies’ customers? Are we seeing ideas surface that wouldn’t have before? When engineers are freed up to be engineers, and not librarians and firefighters, everything else improves with it – customers feel it, margins reflect it, culture thrives on it.”

In essence, to be a success, Industry 5.0 will not just be about smarter manufacturing or smarter production lines, it will be about more fulfilled, more effective people in industrial workplaces. If the appropriate technology is ready to serve the people, it’s now on companies to make sure it is deployed to make people more effective, building smarter, more adaptive operations tailored to their digitisation and business goals. In all, it’s about balance, using the technology to empower, not replace.

Source

Posted on

Do Yourself A Favor, Never Buy These PC Parts Used

Om.Nom.Nom/Shutterstock

Building a PC is one of the great joys of PC gaming, and once you build one, you’ll never go back. But it can get expensive quickly. Even a budget PC build will cost you around $500 to $800, and that’s before you add in a monitor and peripherals. Buying used PC parts is a viable alternative that can knock off a few hundred dollars if you shop smart. The problem with buying used is that you could get scammed or end up with parts that don’t work as advertised. 

That’s why you need to be selective when shopping for used PC parts. Do your research, ask the buyer lots of questions, and test the part, if possible. But, if that’s not possible, it’s better to stay away from certain PC parts, especially ones that are impossible to judge based purely on looks. Otherwise, you might end up with used PC parts that need to be replaced almost immediately, costing you more money in the long run. 

3 PC parts you should never buy used

Vershinin89/Shutterstock

If there’s one PC component you should never buy used, it’s the power supply unit (PSU). While a used PSU may pass the eye test, the only way to know if it functions properly is by installing it in your system, at which point it may be too late. A bad PSU can damage your PC or even catch on fire, so it’s best not to leave it up to chance. It’s always recommended to get one you trust. 

Graphics cards (GPUs) are so expensive these days; at the time of this writing, even Nvidia’s budget RTX 5050 costs $250. Wanting to buy used is understandable, especially when buying new is impossible because cards are out of stock. While you can find a great deal on a used GPU, you’re just as likely to get scammed by receiving the wrong graphics card; one that’s been used for mining crypto, which can have a negative effect on performance; or, in some cases, no card at all. Rather than gamble your money on what is probably the most expensive part of the system, spend the extra cash on a new card. That way, if anything happens to it, you can get a refund through the warranty.

CPUs are delicate components that can easily be damaged, which is why it’s best to get a new one that comes in the right packaging. You won’t have to worry about the CPU having bent pins or being ruined by static electricity, a real concern when handling a processor. Buying new is also worth it if you’re a gamer, as new CPUs sometimes come bundled with a game —AMD’s new Zen 5 processors come bundled with “Monster Hunter Wilds,” for example. 

3 more PC parts you should buy used

aileenchik/Shutterstock

If you’re looking to save some money, buy a used air cooler. While air coolers are not expensive, hovering around $150 on the high end, you can get one for even cheaper by buying used. Since there are no electronics onboard, what you see is what you get with an air cooler, meaning it can pass the eye test. Just make sure there is no visible damage, such as dents or bent cooling fins — you can always replace a worn or damaged fan.

PC cases come in a wide range of colors and sizes, and many cost less than $100. But if you want a high-end case, buying used is a great idea. You may even find a case that has been discontinued or out of stock, making your build more unique. And if you are replacing an existing one, there are plenty of ways to repurpose your old PC tower. 

One more thing you should buy used is memory, more commonly known as RAM. More memory is great for gaming and using creative software, but it can get expensive. It gets even pricier if you get faster memory or RAM sticks with RGB. As long as you get the right kind of RAM for your system, there’s nothing wrong with buying used. It’s worth noting that, while RAM can degrade and fail over time, it’s not an issue most PC owners face. 

Source

Posted on

MX Fiber extends gigabit access across south-east Mexico with optical

Despite boasting one of the country’s largest populations, the south-east Mexico region has long lacked high-quality network infrastructure, but aiming to close this digital divide, Mexican comms provider MX Fiber has announced that it is creating a digital backbone in the region spanning 1,800km.

MX Fiber specialises in communication infrastructure assets, with a focus on long-haul and metropolitan fibre optic networks in Mexico. Currently, it owns and manages over 800km of existing networks, and the new infrastructure is being built on Nokia’s Flex-Grid DWDM technology and 1830 Photonic Service Switch (PSS).

The backbone is intended to lay the digital foundation to support economic revitalisation and modern services for communities, businesses and government projects. Customers across Chiapas, Tabasco, Quintana Roo, Campeche and Veracruz will soon benefit from faster internet, enhanced cloud access and support for data-intensive applications. These areas have long lacked sufficient infrastructure.

The infrastructure supports throughput up to 2.4Tbps and is designed to offer scalable 10G, 100G and 200G services, which Nokia said makes it ideal for next-generation cloud, enterprise and government workloads. Indeed, the comms tech provider claimed the added capacity would transform connectivity for datacentres, industrial zones and subsea transport hubs, laying the groundwork for smarter commerce, transportation, public services, mobility and digital inclusion.

Commenting on the deployment, MX Fiber CEO Nestor Bergero said: “We are very happy to work with Nokia to deploy a proven, optical solution that delivers massive capacity and high-quality services at a lower operational cost. This solution is crucial to supporting our customers and to the success of mega-projects such as the Interoceanic Corridor of the Isthmus of Tehuantepec and Maya Train, which are designed to spur economic development in the region. We look forward to continuing to grow and evolve with Nokia.”

Javier Falcón, vice-president of network infrastructure, Latin America, at Nokia, added: “This is a major step forward for digital inclusion and economic empowerment in south-eastern Mexico. We’re honoured to support MX Fiber with world-class optical technology that delivers scale, reliability and future-ready performance.”

The Nokia 1830 PSS is built to allow for upgrades to 400G and 800G without disrupting existing services. Nokia said that built-in dynamic network management and real-time performance monitoring via optical time-domain reflectometry (OTDR) will give MX Fiber customers “the peace of mind that their connectivity is robust, responsive and ready for future demands”.

The new network in Mexico is the latest in a series of recent deployments in the Latin American region by Nokia to support digital inclusion.

In Brazil, the tech firm formed a partnership with telecoms infrastructure organisation Solis Tower Telecom do Brasil, which it said would offer a flexible and competitive digital agriculture solution, bringing much-needed connectivity to agribusinesses in rural parts of Latin America’s largest country. The partnership aims to expand private wireless networks that will help deliver gains in productivity, efficiency and sustainability, and ultimately an increase in food production. It will also drive digital inclusion and bring reliable connectivity to many farming communities in rural or plantation areas.

In addition, Nokia is working with operator Global Fiber Peru to deploy a subaquatic and future-proof optical, IP and fibre broadband network in the South American area known as the three-border region – where Peru, Colombia and Brazil adjoin. It is one of the most remote and least connected areas in the world, but the tech provider said it is endeavouring to reduce this considerable digital divide.

Source

Posted on

What boards should look for in a CISO

Over the years, I’ve seen how dramatically the chief information security officer (CISO) role has evolved and how, in many boardrooms, that evolution is still catching up. Cyber security has moved to the top of the agenda, and rightly so. Yet, despite the growing urgency, I still see boards unsure of what they should really be looking for in a CISO.

It’s not just about hiring someone with the right credentials or technical pedigree. Choosing the right security leader is one of the most important strategic decisions a board can make. Because today’s CISO isn’t just there to put out fires, they’re there to help prevent them from ever happening, and to do so in ways that protect the business while enabling it to grow.

The question is: what does a great CISO look like from the board’s perspective?

The role has outgrown its job description

It wasn’t long ago that most CISOs came up through the infrastructure or engineering ranks. The role was highly technical, mostly internal-facing, and focused on keeping systems running securely in the background. That’s changed.

Today’s CISOs are being asked to be much more than security architects. They’re expected to understand brand risk, interpret complex regulations, speak fluently to investors, and navigate global threat landscapes, all while ensuring their teams can respond at speed and scale when something goes wrong. In some cases, they’re signing off on financial filings and taking legal responsibility for incidents.

It’s a big job. And it requires more than technical skill. It demands business acumen, communication finesse, and a mindset rooted in partnership and accountability.

Risk translator, not just risk reporter

One of the most valuable skills a CISO can bring to the table is the ability to translate risk into language the board understands. This isn’t about dumbing things down. It’s about framing decisions in a way that’s aligned with business priorities.  

When the CISO presents, are they simply listing threats and vulnerabilities? Or are they clearly articulating what those risks mean to the business? Can they explain how a delay in patching a system might affect customer trust, revenue, or regulatory standing?

Great CISOs don’t just report risk. They help boards make informed choices about which risks to accept, which to mitigate, and where to invest. That level of clarity builds confidence, even in the face of uncertainty.

Strategic partner with a growth mindset

A strong CISO is someone who understands how the business operates, not just the security tools it runs on. They know which systems drive revenue, where data flows, and how customers interact with the product or platform.

Security shouldn’t be a blocker. It should be an enabler. Boards should be looking for CISOs who ask, “How can we secure this and make it easier for our teams to move fast?” That’s the kind of leader who contributes to innovation, rather than holding it back.

What works for me is treating security as a business function, not a separate domain. When security is woven into strategic conversations from the beginning, alignment becomes far easier, and that’s how you build momentum that actually sticks.

Comfortable in ambiguity

No matter how good your defences are, the nature of cyber security means that there’s always some degree of uncertainty. The best CISOs aren’t paralysed by that, they thrive in it. They know how to make decisions with incomplete information, how to guide a team through a fog of conflicting signals, and how to stay calm when the pressure is highest.

That kind of resilience can’t always be captured on a CV. Boards need to engage directly with candidates to get a feel for how they operate in crisis. Because when a breach happens, or a regulation shifts overnight – you want someone who brings stability, not panic.

Board fluency and cultural alignment

Technical knowledge is important. But at the board level, communication and leadership style often matter more.

Can this person hold their own in a boardroom full of seasoned executives? Do they instil trust? Are they able to challenge assumptions constructively and frame their input around enterprise risk, not just security checklists?

And just as importantly, ask yourself are they a good cultural fit? Every organisation has a different rhythm. Some are fast-moving and aggressive. Others are consensus-driven. The right CISO is someone who can adapt to that rhythm while still holding the line on what matters.

Where boards get it wrong

I’ve seen boards make some well-intentioned missteps in this space. One of the most common is hiring based on logo pedigree or technical certifications alone. Those things may look impressive, but they’re no guarantee of leadership ability.

Another trap is assuming that the CISO “owns” the risk entirely. In reality, risk is a shared responsibility. A good CISO facilitates conversations across the executive team. They don’t make unilateral decisions and they drive alignment and surface consequences.

And finally, there’s the tendency to view past incidents as an automatic red flag. Security is about continuous improvement. What matters isn’t whether a breach ever happened. It’s how the leader responded, what they learned, and what they changed as a result.

Lessons from both sides of the table

Having served on boards myself, I’ve seen how transformative it is when a company really understands and values the CISO role. The conversations shift. The investments become more strategic. And the security function starts to drive not just protection, but progress.

It’s also a two-way street. CISOs need to understand the language of the board. That means being able to speak to material risk, business impact, and long-term resilience.

If your CISO can bridge that gap, they’re not just a protector. They’re a partner.

Secure leadership starts at the top

Choosing the right CISO isn’t just a security decision. It’s a business leadership decision. And it’s one that can shape the future of your company more than almost any other executive hire.

So if you’re sitting on a board and evaluating security leadership, I’d encourage you to think beyond the job description. Ask how your CISO sees the business. Ask how they influence change. Ask whether you’ve given them what they need to succeed.

Because when you back the right CISO, you’re not just reducing risk. You’re building a smarter, stronger company.

Rinki Sethi is chief security officer at Upwind Security,a Bay Area cloud security specialist.

Source

Posted on

How To Enable YouTube’s Dark Mode Feature On iPhone

Photo Agency/Shutterstock

YouTube is definitely one of the must-have apps to install on the iPhone, as it provides quick access to entertainment and plenty of helpful videos that can help you when you’re in a bind and need a quick tutorial or review. But watching YouTube isn’t always easy on the eyes, especially if you’re dealing with low-light environments or when watching clips at night. Thankfully, you can enable YouTube’s Dark Mode directly from the YouTube app with a few taps in the Settings menu.

You can set the YouTube appearance to match the device theme, in which case YouTube will auto-switch between the light and dark themes, matching your iPhone’s appearance. But Dark Mode might provide YouTube users an improved viewing experience during the day as well, so you might want to choose Dark Mode for all YouTube use, regardless of your experience.

In what follows, I’ll give you a step-by-step guide to turning on YouTube’s Dark Mode on the iPhone, but the same procedure is also available on other devices, including iPad, Android phones and tablets, and the YouTube web app.

How to turn YouTube’s Dark Mode on the iPhone

Chris Smith, BGR

Before customizing your YouTube theme preference, you have to make sure the YouTube app is installed on your iPhone. If it’s not, you’ll have to download it from the App Store. (As a reminder, older iPhones and iPads have lost access to the YouTube app.) Once you load the app, you’ll want to log into your YouTube (Google) account, especially if you have access to a YouTube Premium subscription. You can also use YouTube without an account if you choose to.

Here’s how to enable Dark Mode when signed into your YouTube account:

  1. Tap your profile picture in the bottom right corner of the app’s menu bar.
  2. Tap the Settings icon in the top right corner (the wheel icon).
  3. Tap the General menu (the wheel icon again).
  4. Tap the Appearance menu.
  5. Tick Dark Theme in the list of options on the next screen.

As soon as you choose Dark Mode in the menu, the app’s theme will switch to Dark Mode. The obvious exception is making the change at night, with the YouTube app having the “Use device theme” option enabled. In this scenario, the YouTube app will already be displaying the Dark Theme. Once you’ve made your selection, you can return to watching videos by pressing the “<" arrow at the top left of the screen until you leave the Settings section. You can return to the "Appearance" menu later to change your experience again. The same steps above apply to the iPad version of the YouTube app.

Source

Posted on

5 Instructions That Can Improve Your ChatGPT Prompts

Photo Agency/Shutterstock

ChatGPT is one of the most popular AI chatbots in the world, and it didn’t take long for OpenAI to get the platform on all our phones, tablets, and computers. There’s a lot you can get out of using ChatGPT, from answering questions to comparing products, building itineraries, and so much more, but it all starts with a user prompt.

Think of user prompts as a digital blueprint for your AI pal to follow. If you’ve been using ChatGPT for a while and are having trouble getting the bot to deliver the type of responses you’ve been aiming for, that initial blueprint you’re laying out might need some additional work. To assist, we’ve put together this list of five instructions that can improve your ChatGPT prompts, including altering your communication style and giving the AI tool clear instructions. While these suggestions won’t bring about perfect results from every query, they should certainly help pave the way toward a better AI experience.

Lead with clarity and context

Vithun Khamsong/Getty Images

ChatGPT does its best work when you take the time to fill your prompts with as much detail as possible. This isn’t to say you won’t get any type of useful response when you enter a more open-ended prompt, such as, “Tell me about the rides at Walt Disney World,” but the more context and direction you provide up front, the better the results will be.

A reworked version of that example prompt might read something like, “Tell me about the best rides at Walt Disney World for children ages 6 and younger.” A good rule of thumb is to think about the type of audience your prompt is intended for. If ChatGPT knows who it’s thinking for, you’ll likely receive responses that are more thorough and well crafted. The more clarity you can provide early on, the fewer chances you’ll have of the AI asking for clarification down the road. Home in on your prompt’s who, what, where, when, and why for the kinds of personalized results ChatGPT is renowned for.

Assign tone and roles

aileenchik/Shutterstock

ChatGPT does a remarkable job at wearing whatever hat you tell it to wear, and it delivers the best results when these hats are well labeled. The best way to do this is by giving the AI assistant a clearly defined role. Let’s say you’re fresh out of college and pricing out a New York City apartment for your first post-grad job. Instead of spending hours steeped in confusing Zillow entries, you can fire up ChatGPT and say, “Act as an NYC realtor who specializes in finding apartments for recent college graduates.” When I put that prompt into ChatGPT, the AI responded in a friendly and congratulatory tone and informed me that it would prioritize budget, safety, commute, and lifestyle.

To customize the response further, you can even tell ChatGPT what tone to use. When I refined my prompt to say, “Act as a brief, no-nonsense NYC realtor,” the AI immediately switched gears from happy-to-hold-your-hand to … New York City. ChatGPT NYC edition: “Alright, kid, here’s the deal. You just got outta school, you’re broke but think you’re rich, and you want an apartment in the city that doesn’t smell like old pizza and regret. I get it.” See how changing up the tone can make a big difference?

Use the formatting you want to see

Mijansk786/Shutterstock

Many of us are familiar with the phrase “lead by example,” an adage that also helps to tighten the bolts of ChatGPT’s responses. When typing out prompts, picture what it would be like to receive a giant text message with zero punctuation. For the record, it’s terrible — your brain doesn’t know where to start and stop reading. Just as it’s confusing for you, it can throw off ChatGPT, too, so it pays to put a little thought into how you type your prompts — especially if you want to get clear, thoughtful responses in return.

Now, this isn’t to say you need to cross every T and dot every I in your prompts, but organizers like commas, colons, and periods go a long way toward the AI delivering a response that’s just as structured and coherent. ChatGPT also likes delimiters, sequences, and lists. When you format your prompts accordingly, you’re doing two things: giving ChatGPT a better shot at comprehending all the information you’re feeding it, and also providing a kind of format framework for the AI to follow. This should lead to results that are much easier to comprehend.

Work collaboration into your ChatGPT prompts

Tada Images/Shutterstock

Sometimes, it doesn’t hurt to put ChatGPT in the driver’s seat. If you’re struggling to fill out a prompt, you can always key in what’s locked and loaded in your head, with instructions to follow up. For example, I wrote a ChatGPT prompt that went something like, “I want to save [mystery dollar amount] by August 2026. Ask me questions to help you help me reach this goal.” Because the AI knew I’d be providing more information, it delivered a response that was broken up into several questions (such as “How much do you already have set aside?” and “What’s your monthly after-tax income?”), and proclaimed this would help us “reverse-engineer my savings plan.”

ChatGPT is also designed to fill in the gaps when it knows information is missing from a prompt. Sometimes called the “blank line” prompt, these queries intentionally — or unintentionally — leave out information or include a fill-in-the-blank for ChatGPT to complete. And you’d be surprised at just how adept the AI is at filling in the gaps. In many cases, the AI won’t even need to ask you for further clarification (unless you tell it to).

Take time to refine your communication

Alex Photo Stock/Shutterstock

If at first you don’t succeed, just tell AI to try again. There’s a good chance that ChatGPT will deliver results that require tweaking from time to time. Word changes and additional context in your prompts are always a solid place to start with result revisions. You can also ask ChatGPT to provide a more straightforward or more complex response, a shift in tone, or something as specific as a result in the form of crayoned kid drawings.

ChatGPT is constantly improving and evolving, but at its core, it’s a deep-learning model that — more often than not — will bring its A-game when supplied with the kind of prompts our five instructions reinforce. The same goes for other AI chatbots, too, including popular competitors like Google Gemini and Microsoft Copilot. From one platform to the next, these AI companions are designed to clear the fog for us humans as much as possible, so why not take an extra few seconds on your prompts to get as much out of them as humanly possible?

Source