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  • ManageEngine Introduces Causal Intelligence and Autonomous AI to IT Operations for Faster Incident Response

    Egypt, Cairo, Feb 18 – ManageEngine, a division of Zoho Corporation and a leading provider of enterprise IT management solutions, today added new causal intelligence and autonomous AI capabilities in Site24x7, its full-stack observability platform. These enhancements transform how enterprises handle outages, shifting from firefighting to autonomous resilience. By drastically reducing mean time to recovery (MTTR) and ensuring service-level agreement (SLA) compliance, Site24x7 helps IT teams safeguard the customer experience and retain trust.

    Modern IT environments are increasingly fragmented across hybrid clouds, microservices, and dynamic networks, generating massive volumes of telemetry and predictive anomaly signals every second. When an incident occurs, this complexity turns troubleshooting into a needle-in-a-haystack search, often leading to prolonged downtime. IT teams struggle to correlate anomaly signals and events across these layers, delaying the critical fix to restore normalcy, jeopardizing brand reputation.

    “Hybrid and cloud-native architectures have made IT operations highly interconnected, while IT managers are under constant pressure to resolve incidents quickly amid growing complexity,” said Srinivasa Raghavan, director of product management at ManageEngine. “By combining predictive anomaly detection, intelligent event correlation, service dependency context, and AI-driven causal insights, Site24x7 cuts through alert noise to show not just what is broken, but what caused it and what it impacts, helping teams identify the true fault faster and significantly reduce MTTR while minimizing service disruption.”

    “Triaging and resolving incidents in hybrid environments with growing infrastructure complexity can quickly become a nightmare, especially when SLA commitments are on the line,” said Pravir Kumar Sinha, IT leader at Synechron, a global IT services company and one of the early customers to access the feature. “With Site24x7 AIOps , we’re able to filter out nearly 90% of alert noise, pinpoint issues faster, and accelerate resolution. This helps us achieve stronger SLA adherence, reduce MTTR, and ultimately deliver reliable digital experience for customers.”

    The introduction of autonomous AI in Site24x7 represent a practical step toward more autonomous IT operations by analyzing observability data, reducing cognitive overload, and turning insights into clear, actionable guidance. “With MCP providing the control and governance layer, we ensure this intelligence is applied securely and within enterprise guardrails. This empowers IT leaders move toward agentic workflows with confidence, stay ahead of the AI adoption curve, and strengthen the resilience of their critical digital services,” said Raghavan.

    Key capabilities include:

    • Domain-aware causal correlation with predictive anomaly detection: Detects anomalies and correlates related signals across applications, infrastructure, and networks into a single, context-rich problem—so teams can quickly understand what is connected and where to start.
    • Customizable AI Agents with governed, task-driven automation: Enables customers to create and tailor AI Agents, set approved guardrails using solution documents, and assign tasks that guide agents from analysis to guided action—making response workflows more consistent across teams.
    • MCP-enabled agentic foundation for customers: MCP provides the enabling layer for customers to build and operationalize agentic use cases on top of observability data—standardizing how agents access data, follow approved guidance, and execute tasks within enterprise-ready controls and auditability.
    • Orchestrated remediation with Qntrl: Co-ordinates downstream actions through structured workflows and repeatable runbooks, powered by Zoho’s workflow and orchestration platform Qntrl, with approvals and traceability built in to support controlled automation.

    These AIOps capabilities are now available for all users in Professional and Enterprise plans.

  • Gurugram Rentals Stay Resilient Despite Rent Dip in OND’25

    New Delhi, Feb 18: Gurugram’s rental market reflected a demand-driven trend during the October–December 2025 quarter, even as rents witnessed a sequential decline, according to the latest Rental Index by Magicbricks.

    During OND ’25, rental demand in Gurugram increased by 3.6% quarter-on-quarter and 13.1% year-on-year underscoring sustained tenant interest across key micro-markets. In contrast, rental supply remained relatively stable, declining marginally by 0.6% QoQ, while recording a 7.5% YoY increase, indicating measured additions to available inventory.

    Demand trends reveal a clear preference for compact housing. 1 and 2 BHK units together accounted for 75% of total rental demand, reflecting affordability-led choices by professionals and nuclear families. However, supply remains skewed toward larger configurations, with 3 BHK units comprising 52% of total listings, highlighting a structural demand–supply imbalance.

    From a budget perspective, 44% of rental demand in Gurugram was concentrated in the INR 10,000–20,000 range. In contrast, supply was significantly tilted toward premium homes, with 36% of listings priced between INR 50,000 and 1 lakh per month, underscoring a clear affordability mismatch.

    Gurugram continues to benefit from its strong corporate presence, infrastructure upgrades, and connectivity enhancements. While rents have softened in the short term, rising demand indicates underlying resilience. The current phase reflects recalibration rather than slowdown, with demand firmly anchored in compact, mid-segment housing even as supply remains weighted toward larger, premium configurations.

    The OND’25 data suggests that future rental momentum in Gurugram will hinge on better alignment between affordable housing demand and available inventory.

    Magicbricks is India’s No.1 property site

    As the largest platform for buyers and sellers of property to connect in a transparent manner, Magicbricks has monthly traffic exceeding 2 crores and an active base of over 15 lakh property listings. Magicbricks has metamorphosed into a full stack service provider for all real estate needs, with services including home loans, interiors, and expert advice.

    With 17+ years of experience and deep research-based knowledge, Magicbricks also presents a repertoire of insight-driven platforms like MBTV—India’s leading online real estate YouTube channel—and other proprietary tools so that home buyers can access all information related to price trends, forecasts, and locality reviews.

  • Seco® High Feed SP07 reduces inventories and maximizes productivity

    Capable of handling a wide mix of materials, Seco® High Feed SP07 excels in all machining strategies and allows you to push productivity levels, particularly on complex components.

     

    A positive cutting rake angle ensures optimal chip formation, while the stable insert design and constant lead angle deliver predictable cutting behavior, paramount for unmanned production.

    Reduce the need for skilled labor

    The SP07 addresses common industry challenges: frequent tool changes, unpredictable results, and high costs due to rapid wear. In one reliable solution, it simplifies tool management and reduces the need for skilled labor. Digital traceability via Data Matrix codes further streamlines operations, making the SP07 ideal for high-volume and unmanned production.

    High metal removal rates in shallow depths of cut

    Each insert features four cutting edges, maximizing usage and extending tool life. Even with shallow depths of cut (≤0.8 mm), the SP07 maintains high metal removal rates, ensuring manufacturers stay on track with productivity goals. The result is a significant reduction in cost per part and improved operational efficiency.

    “Our customers need to boost productivity and cut costs. Seco® High Feed SP07 delivers reliable, flexible performance across materials”, says Benoît Patriarca, Product Manager Copy High Feed Milling. “The four cutting edges and digital traceability simplify processes further, even when skilled labor is limited.”

    With its origins in Fagersta, Sweden and present in more than 75 countries, Seco is a leading global provider of metal cutting solutions for indexable milling, solid milling, turning, holemaking, threading and tooling systems. For nearly 100 years, Seco has driven excellence throughout the entire manufacturing journey, ensuring high-precision machining and high-quality 

  • Brookhaven Lab Builds Successful ‘Cloud in a Box’

    Feb 18: In a quiet laboratory, a team of atmospheric scientists and engineers at the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Brookhaven National Laboratory recently gathered around a workstation to watch as little floating speckles, illuminated by a curtain of green light, swirled into a haze, then wisp of a cloud.

    This instance of creation unfolded inside a programmable atmosphere they’d built from scratch.

    “We saw the birth of a cloud,” said Brookhaven atmospheric scientist Arthur Sedlacek. “There was a lot of excitement and happiness, and relief, in that moment. Needless to say, we definitely weren’t quiet after that.”

    Researchers will use the new convection cloud chamber, a customizable one-cubic-meter metal box, to tackle fundamental unknowns that remain about clouds.

    Clouds might seem simple — white, fluffy shapes drifting overhead — but they remain one of the biggest sources of uncertainty in models of weather and Earth’s complex atmospheric system.

    Scientists know that clouds play important roles in regulating Earth’s energy balance, controlling how water moves through the atmosphere, driving storm formation, and influencing how intense weather systems become. Still, researchers’ understanding of the physics underlying cloud processes is limited.

    “We need repeatable, controlled experiments in order to tease out the key factors and mechanisms governing those underlying small-scale processes,” Sedlacek said. “For example, one long-standing unsolved problem in our community is how drizzle or raindrops are formed in warm clouds. Why do some clouds precipitate while others do not?”

    Collecting key and abundant measurements from clouds in nature, while challenging, provides some data needed to address these questions. Brookhaven scientists and their collaborators have piloted specially equipped aircraft through clouds to collect such data. But each flythrough hits a cloud that has already changed since the plane’s first pass.

    The cloud chamber will allow scientists to study clouds in a more controlled setting.

    “The cloud chamber provides us with a unique environment to isolate and rigorously study important but still poorly understood cloud microphysical processes,” said Brookhaven atmospheric scientist Fan Yang. “We can use it to mimic real atmospheric clouds under well-controlled laboratory conditions and perform detailed, repeatable cloud measurements.”

    Watch as a cloud forms in the chamber. Scientists use a green laser to see the process. (Brookhaven National Laboratory)

    Controlled cloud making

    Brookhaven Lab’s convection cloud chamber combines ingredients needed to make a cloud: air that is supersaturated with water and aerosol particles, tiny particles suspended in the atmosphere that can trigger the condensation of water vapor into cloud droplets.

    Scientists first fill the chamber’s bottom baseplate with water. Then they heat it up, releasing water vapor into the chamber through evaporation. The top panel of the box is cold. As the warm water vapor from the bottom rises and mixes with cool air from the top, it builds up an atmosphere where the air is “thick” with humidity.

    “Cloud formation requires the relative humidity to be greater than 100% — a condition we refer to as supersaturation,” Sedlacek said. “Such a supersaturated environment is achieved in the chamber by the mixing of warm humid air with cold humid air.”

    To trigger cloud droplet formation in this supersaturated atmosphere, scientists inject aerosol particles, such as table salt, into the chamber to serve as “seeds” for cloud formation. When water vapor from the air condenses on the salt particles, it forms tiny cloud droplets. In the humidified environment, these droplets will continue to grow through additional condensation of water vapor. Eventually, this establishes a steady state between the cloud droplet particle size and the relative humidity.

    “One major advantage of a convection cloud chamber, compared with other types of cloud chambers, is that we can maintain a turbulent cloud for hours in a steady state,” Yang said. “This will allow repeated measurements of cloud properties, which improves statistical robustness.”

    The cloud chamber at Brookhaven Lab is made up of individual heating and cooling side panels that allow researchers to steer settings such as relative humidity, temperature, and the degree of mixing and swirling in the air, or turbulence, to create a complex structure. Rearranging the heating and cooling side panels will allow the creation of different internal chamber conditions, resulting in more complex cloud schemes to be formed. Additionally, the chamber is designed so that scientists can measure the influences of things like aerosol composition and size, temperature on cloud formation, cloud droplet size distribution, and cloud persistence.

    “From an experimental perspective, there are lots of knobs we can turn to create specific atmospheric conditions within the chamber,” Sedlacek said. “We’ve started thinking about how we can incorporate artificial intelligence and machine learning into the cloud chamber’s workflow.”

    The unique modular design also offers flexibility for the future. For example, the structure is meant be expandable. Adding another cubic meter on top would expand the working volume, leading to increased cloud lifetime. This would open the door to even more ambitious studies of drizzle and rain drop formation, the researchers said.

    Making measurements with advanced imaging

    A crucial component of these studies is using tools that can take measurements inside the cloud chamber without touching and disrupting the cloud and its environment. The Brookhaven team is developing next-generation instrumentation and methods to make this possible.

    “We want to be able detect the transition of aerosols to cloud droplets to drizzle without sticking instruments inside the chamber so that we don’t disrupt the air flow,” Sedlacek said. “To realize this goal, we’ll use light.”

    Scientists aim to, first, detect aerosols particles that activate into cloud droplets by tagging the particles with fluorescent dye. Tagged and activated aerosols will light up when hit by a laser. Next, researchers will use time-correlated photon-counting lidar — a laser-based remote-sensing instrument — to observe a cloud’s structure at the scale of a single centimeter. Then, to detect drizzle and follow its movement within the cloud chamber, they plan to use novel THz radar that captures individual droplets and measures how fast they fall.

    Powered by collaboration

    What started out as brainstorming, scribbles, and long chats turned into a solid design for a successful convection cloud chamber — one of only two in the nation — thanks to close collaboration between scientists, engineers, and support staff across Brookhaven Lab.

    “The expertise necessary to create something like this chamber requires modelers, observationalists, experimentalists, and engineers to pull it all together — and that is part and parcel of what national labs do,” Sedlacek said.

    Engineers from the Lab’s Instrumentation Department and scientists from the Environmental Science and Technology Department began collaborating on the cloud chamber a few years ago, after a meeting that highlighted Instrumentation’s capabilities and how they could support scientific research. That discussion sparked the idea to build a cloud chamber together.

    As the team formed, engineers refined the design while learning more about the scientific requirements — especially the need for precise temperature control.

    “It was a very iterative process,” said mechanical engineer Nathaniel Speece-Moyer. “We have great people and resources on site, and we used our engineering judgment to weigh different design options with frequent input from the scientific staff. We converged on a final design that the group is happy with.”

    The final design is modular and carefully controls temperature while ensuring that air and particles inside the chamber remain undisturbed. All of the hardware is located outside the chamber to avoid interfering with experiments.

    Many of the components were fabricated in house by Brookhaven Lab’s fabrication services, which reduced costs and allowed the engineering team to make adjustments along the way, said mechanical engineer Connie-Rose Deane.

    “This cloud chamber is a great example of how engineers, scientists, and technicians can collaborate together to achieve something special,” Deane said. “We also had a lot of support from budget, safety, and facilities staff. What really powered me through this work was the excitement everyone brought to the project.”

    Throughout the process, the team also drew on experience gained from the Michigan Technological University’s (MTU) Pi Cloud Chamber, the only other convection cloud chamber in the United States. Raymond Shaw, a professor at MTU, has a joint appointment with Brookhaven’s Environmental Science and Technology Department and was key to developing both chambers.

    “Cloud chamber science is experiencing a resurgence for several reasons,” Shaw said. “Perhaps most importantly, the atmospheric physics community has realized that there are still fundamental questions about how aerosol and cloud particles interact that directly influence how we can simulate atmospheric flows using coarse-resolution models, such as for storm or weather forecasting. The simplified, controlled, repeatable, and well-characterized conditions provided by a laboratory experiment in a cloud chamber can provide important insights.”

    At the same time, additional advances now make it possible to simulate these processes in great detail, enabling direct comparisons between experiments and computational models, Shaw said.

    Yang added: “The cloud chamber at Brookhaven Lab is the outcome of more than 10 years of experience. We’ve learned a lot from the Michigan Tech Pi Cloud Chamber group and from a multi-institution research activity jointly funded by DOE and the National Science Foundation aimed at exploring ideas for a larger-scale cloud chamber facility. We want to shout out all the work that led to this very smart design.”

    Scientists, engineers, and technicians worked together to assemble Brookhaven Laboratory’s convection cloud chamber. (Timothy Kuhn/Brookhaven National Laboratory)

    Looking beyond the clouds

    The potential of Brookhaven Lab’s new “cloud in a box” testbed stretches beyond just studying clouds. Its creators encourage suggestions for other research areas it can support. 

    Ideas floated for potential uses so far include investigations into how atmospheric conditions impact the performance of energy and information infrastructure, as well as the movement of bioaerosols — tiny natural particles such as pollen and pathogens.

    “The environment we create inside this chamber opens up other applications,” Sedlacek said. “We welcome the opportunity for ‘out-of-the-box’ ideas that this brand-new capability at Brookhaven Lab can provide.”

    This work was supported by Brookhaven’s Laboratory Directed Research and Development program.

     Brookhaven National Laboratory is supported by the Office of Science of the U.S. Department of Energy. The Office of Science is the single largest supporter of basic research in the physical sciences in the United States and is working to address some of the most pressing challenges of our time.

  • Barbra Streisand Women’s Heart Center Leads $7.5M Aging Study

    LOS ANGELES (Feb. 17, 2026) — The National Institutes of Health and the National Institute on Aging have awarded a multi-institutional research team led by investigators in the Smidt Heart Institute at Cedars-Sinai $7.5 million to further study how damage to tiny blood vessels contributes to heart disease, cognitive decline and frailty as women age.

    The new, five-year grant to examine sex-based differences in multiple age-related diseases supports the Microvascular Aging Effects—Women’s Evaluation of Systemic Aging Tenacity in Heart, Brain and Frailty study, commonly called MAE-WEST HBF. The acronym is a nod to the late actor, who reportedly once said, “You’re never too old to become younger.”

    MAE-WEST HBF builds on prior research from Cedars-Sinai’s Barbra Streisand Women’s Heart Center that showed small blood vessel disease, chronic inflammation and iron buildup in women are linked to impaired heart, brain and kidney function, and declining physical strength.

    “Armed with this funding, we are eager to continue uncovering biological mechanisms behind sex-based differences in aging and heart health,” said C. Noel Bairey Merz, MD, the principal investigator of MAE-WEST HBF and director of the Barbra Streisand Women’s Heart Center in the Smidt Heart Institute. “A better understanding of the causes of common age-related conditions in women could lead to more effective prevention and treatment strategies.”

    For more than two decades, Bairey Merz and her team have made landmark discoveries in women’s heart health, particularly in coronary microvascular disease—a condition that occurs more often in women and results from damage to the heart’s smallest blood vessels. Symptoms of the condition, which can be subtle, were previously often dismissed, misdiagnosed or undertreated. But improved diagnostic tools and treatments resulting from Bairey Merz’s discoveries have contributed to significant reductions in cardiovascular deaths among women.

    The new study brings together a multidisciplinary team of experts, including Pascal Sati, PhD, director of the Neuroimaging Program in the Department of Neurology at Cedars Sinai. Collaborators at UCLA will oversee biostatistical analysis, while those at the University of Texas at Arlington will lead frailty research.

    “We now have effective treatments for small vessel dysfunction in the heart,” Bairey Merz said. “If we can better understand its effects on the brain and musculoskeletal system, we may be able to find ways to prevent or slow multiple age-related diseases—including declines in cognition and mobility—in both women and men.”

    Although women generally live longer than men do, women experience higher rates of chronic conditions and so spend more years in poor health. Ultimately, investigators hope the new study will pave the way for a future in which healthy aging for women includes earlier screenings, advanced technology, and preventive care that identifies risks and stops diseases before they begin.

    “After more than 25 years of progress in women’s cardiovascular research, this grant helps advance whole-person care that supports heart health, brain function and physical strength,” said Eduardo Marbán, MD, PhD, executive director of the Smidt Heart Institute. “All three are equally essential to healthy aging.”

    Cedars-Sinai Health Sciences University is advancing groundbreaking research and educating future leaders in medicine, biomedical sciences and allied health sciences.

  • Airrived Named Gartner Tech Innovator in Agentic AI, Defining the Agentic Era for Enterprise Security and IT

    Gartner recognition spotlights Airrived’s composable multiagent architecture, domain-specialized cybersecurity agents, and leadership in making Agentic AI native to enterprise security, IT, and operations—shifting from bolt-on experimental AI to built-in, standardized AI that delivers infinite outcomes

    DUBLIN, Calif.Feb 18:- Airrived, the company behind the Agentic OS, announced it has been named a Tech Innovator in Agentic AI in the Gartner “Emerging Tech: Tech Innovators in Agentic AI” report (16 September 2025). Airrived was recognized for its composable multiagent architecture and expert cybersecurity agents that enable automated risk remediation, positioning it as a leader in domain-specialized agentic AI for enterprise security, IT, and business operations.

     According to the report, “Airrived offers a no-code platform for the development and management of cybersecurity agents to cybersecurity practitioners. Airrived provides a library of prebuilt security agents as well as tools to create enterprise-specific agents. Airrived offers customization tools, such as RAG, reinforcement learning from human feedback (RLHF) and low-rank adaptation (LoRA) fine-tuning. Airrived’s multiagent solution uses a composite AI architecture that includes open-source large language models, large vision models, domain- and task-specific LLMs, machine learning models, knowledge graphs and vector databases. This multifaceted model and data architecture is unique in its ability to support domain-specialized automation and complex use cases with high accuracy.”

    “Bolt-on AI creates demos; built-in agentic intelligence delivers outcomes. Airrived moves enterprises from experimentation to a true operating model for AI, and that shift is what Gartner recognized with our Tech Innovator designation in Agentic AI,” said Anurag Gurtu, Co-Founder and CEO of Airrived. “The future of enterprise AI is not assistive or scripted—it is standardized, agentic intelligence embedded into the operating layer. This recognition validates Airrived as the enterprise operating system for agentic AI, built to deliver measurable operational advantage at scale.”

     From Bolt-On Experimental AI to Built-In Standardized AI

    Enterprises today are constrained by fragmented agentic AI point products and legacy platforms with bolt-on experimental AI. Intelligence is fragmented, AI is shallow, and only a handful of specialists can make it work. What’s left is AI that summarizes instead of deciding, automation that collapses under real-world complexity, and humans forced to act as the glue stitching systems together to connect workflows, make decisions, and drive outcomes.

     Airrived eliminates that fragmentation entirely with built-in standardized AI.

     Airrived’s Agentic OS is a new operating layer that makes agentic intelligence native to the enterprise. Rather than delivering AI as features, copilots, or scripted automation, Airrived enables organizations to fine-tune LLMs, compose deep-reasoning agents, and orchestrate intelligence across systems, all without requiring AI expertise.

     The platform unifies and operationalizes critical enterprise domains—including SOC, GRC, IAM, vulnerability management, IT, and business operations—within a single agentic system designed to reason end-to-end, take action across tools, and continuously improve over time.

    This is why enterprises don’t just deploy Airrived. They standardize on it.

     Recognition and Momentum

    Airrived has been recognized as a Security Today CyberSecured Award winner, and a BIG Innovator in Agentic AI, underscoring its leadership in shaping the next generation of enterprise AI platforms.

     In addition to industry recognition, Airrived is deployed across many leading enterprises, including a Fortune 150 insurance company, one of the largest fast-casual restaurant chains, a global bank, and a major telecom infrastructure company. These early deployments validate Airrived’s ability to operate at enterprise scale and support complex, high-volume environments where reliability, governance, and speed are critical.

     By positioning agentic intelligence as an operating system—not a feature, Airrived is setting a new standard for how enterprises design, deploy, and scale AI across their most critical operations.

  • Ambuja Cements inaugurates STEM Lab to promote experiential learning

    New Delhi, Feb 18: Ambuja Cements, the 9th largest building materials solutions provider globally and part of the diversified Adani Portfolio, as part of its CSR, inaugurated a STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics) Lab at the Ambuja Cements supported Zilla Parishad Primary School in Upparwahi, Chandrapur. The event was held in the presence of Block Education Officer Mr. Kalyan Jogdan, school and Panchayat representatives, and Ambuja Cements staff.

    During the event, students demonstrated various models developed in the newly established STEM Lab, reflecting experiential learning and scientific curiosity. The presentations impressed the Chief Guest, who interacted with the students, appreciated their efforts, encouraged them to continue exploring science and technology, and distributed chocolates as a token of appreciation.

    Ambuja Cements’ continued CSR support for education initiatives, has encouraged the school to aim for state-level recognition. The school administration has also secured first place in the State Government’s Mazi Shala drive and winning a prize of ₹11 lakh.

    The Block Education Officer acknowledged Ambuja Cement’s consistent support in strengthening infrastructure and enhancing the quality of education across Upparwahi and surrounding areas. The programme also featured an interaction session where student Ms. Nisha Kanarkar interviewed the Chief Guest, who responded enthusiastically. Along with the STEM Lab, a cement concrete road was also inaugurated, contributing to improved local infrastructure.

  • Infinix India Unveils ‘World Take NOTE’ Campaign, Launches NOTE Edge with Yashasvi Jaiswal as the Face of All-Round Power

    Feb 18: Infinix India has strengthened its NOTE series portfolio with the announcement of the NOTE Edge, set to launch tomorrow. Alongside the launch, the brand has rolled out its high-impact digital campaign, #WorldTakeNote, featuring young cricket sensation Yashasvi Jaiswal as the face of the NOTE series.

    Conceptualised by Havas Creative India, the campaign reflects Infinix’s core philosophy—performance over noise—and reinforces its commitment to delivering meaningful innovation for India’s ambitious youth.

    The 77-second brand film draws a compelling parallel between Jaiswal’s journey—from being doubted to becoming one of India’s most talked-about young cricketers—and Infinix’s challenger mindset as a tech brand that prioritises consistent, uncompromising performance. The narrative underscores the belief that true impact is driven by substance, not hype.

    Speaking on the collaboration, Yashasvi Jaiswal said, “I am excited to partner with Infinix for the NOTE series. I have always believed that hard work, preparation, and self-belief matter more than the noise around you. Together, we are launching the NOTE Edge, which stands for performance, innovation and delivering real value to users. This collaboration reflects the same spirit that drives me on the field and inspires me off it.”

    Anupama Ramaswamy, MD & Chief Creative Officer, Havas Creative India, added, “Gen Z doesn’t wait for the world to take note. They make sure it does. For them, technology isn’t just a device—it’s identity and expression. Yashasvi represents that unapologetic, ambitious spirit. This campaign is built on a simple idea: when ambition finds its edge, you don’t chase the spotlight—you become impossible to ignore.”

    NOTE Edge: Built for All-Round Power

    The NOTE Edge introduces cutting-edge technology powered by Android 16-based XOS 16, offering enhanced personalisation, fluid animations, and smarter AI-driven features. It is equipped with India’s first MediaTek Dimensity 7100 SoC in its category, ultra-fast charging capabilities, and a sleek 7.2mm design featuring a One Tap AI Button.

    Positioned as an all-round performer, the NOTE Edge integrates strength across design, display, power, camera, and durability—ensuring that performance is embedded throughout the entire device experience rather than isolated to a single feature.

    With this launch, Infinix reinforces its commitment to delivering tangible, everyday performance for students, gamers, creators, and first-time achievers who demand speed, reliability, and power without compromise.

    The NOTE Edge will be available on Flipkart, the official Infinix website, and retail stores across India.

  • Mihup, Qualcomm Technologies Partner to Boost Multilingual Voice AI for BFSI

    New Delhi, Feb 18 : Mihup, a pioneering Indian Voice AI company, today announced a collaboration with Qualcomm Technologies, Inc. to co-create and take to market multilingual, enterprise-grade Voice AI solution for the Banking, Financial Services and Insurance (BFSI) sector, optimized for on-device AI platforms.

    The collaboration aims to enable a new generation of secure, scalable and high-performance voice AI, where intelligence runs directly on the device, reducing dependency on the cloud while delivering low latency, stronger privacy, and reliable performance in real-world enterprise environments.

    As BFSI organizations accelerate digital transformation, the need for AI-powered customer engagement has never been greater. However, cloud-only Voice AI deployments continue to face challenges around cost, bandwidth constraints, latency, and sensitive data exposure. Qualcomm Technologies and Mihup will work together to enable Voice AI that is built for regulated industries, delivering faster customer service, improved agent productivity, and better governance of critical customer data.

    “In a linguistically diverse market and voice-first like India, enterprises and industries such as BFSI need secure, scalable AI to drive efficiency and financial inclusion”,

    said Savi Soin, Senior Vice President, India President, Qualcomm Technologies.

    “Our collaboration with Mihup demonstrates how on-device AI on Qualcomm platforms can bring real-time, multilingual conversational intelligence closer to users. By enabling Mihup’s vernacular Voice AI to run directly on our on-device AI platforms, we are helping deliver high-performance, secure solutions for frontline systems, thereby supporting broader financial inclusion and global scalability.”

    Tapan Barman, CEO, Mihup commented on the partnership

    Mihup’s long-standing mission is to bridge the gap between humans and machines through seamless, voice-first interactions. In a market as vast as India, it requires intelligence that is both local and affordable. By merging Qualcomm’s NPU capabilities with Mihup’s proprietary voice stack – engineered specifically for vernacular and on-device usage – we have eliminated the barrier of recurring infrastructure costs. We are delivering an 80% cost reduction and total data sovereignty directly on the silicon. This is the shift from vision to production reality, providing the Indian frontline with Voice AI that is secure, instant and built to scale.”

    Mihup’s Voice AI contact center solution will operate on a hybrid architecture, with its vernacular speech recognition and custom language models optimized to run on Qualcomm NPUs, enabling real-time transcription and agent to assist directly on-device. High-volume and repetitive workloads such as speech-to-text and real-time agent support will run locally, while advanced tasks can scale through cloud resources when required.

    This architecture is designed to significantly reduce cloud reliance and improve cost efficiency. According to Mihup’s internal deployment analysis, shifting high-volume speech workloads on-device can reduce total cost of ownership by up to 78%, depending on scale and usage patterns. For BFSI institutions, the solution enables multilingual customer service, sales, and collections powered by real-time conversational intelligence that mirrors how customers naturally speak. By bringing intelligence closer to the conversation, it delivers quicker responses, real-time insights, and a more secure and consistent customer experience.

    With commercial deployments in India acting as a proof-of-scale, the collaboration is expected to validate the on-device AI model for Voice AI adoption at enterprise scale. While built for India’s linguistic diversity and cost sensitivity, the solution will be positioned for expansion into other developing markets and regulated industries globally.

  • Timely delivery the key for developers in face of rising Dubai construction costs

    Century Tower completes handovers two months ahead of schedule in Business Bay as wider delay threat looms

     

    Dubai, UAE, Feb 18: With rising construction costs reshaping the economics of Dubai’s real estate market, a project in Business Bay has shown that timely delivery remains the most powerful asset for developers.

     

    Century Tower, a 23-floor residential building comprising 210 units, has completed handovers two months ahead of schedule, a rarity in today’s property sector.

     

    Developed by AMBS Real Estate Development, with sales led by fäm Properties as master agent, the project is a reminder that finishing projects on or ahead of schedule can make all the difference in an increasingly competitive real estate landscape.

     

    Firas Al Msaddi, CEO of fäm Properties, says the message to developers across Dubai is that, regardless of how well a project sells on launch, the priory is to start construction immediately.

     

    “Developers who have launched projects, whether fully sold or partially sold, must recognise that the market pricing they relied on two or three years ago, or even one year ago, is no longer relevant. Construction costs have increased and are still rising,” said Al Msaddi.

     

    “The longer that construction is delayed, the higher the cost the developer has to absorb, and the primary driver, inflation, is forecast to continue rising over the coming years. Developers must do their homework, select proven contractors, secure materials early, and build realistic timelines into their financial models from day one.”

     

    A Turner & Townsend report revealed a notable 2025 increase in the price of construction materials, which now amount to around 60% of construction baseline costs in the UAE.

     

    Concrete, MEP, plastics, timber and structural steel prices are forecast to rise again this year, while supply chain issues continue to compound delays. Developers are increasingly buying materials in bulk to reduce lead times and limit cost exposure.

     

    Off-plan demand remains dominant in Dubai real estate. Data from DXBinteract showed that first sales from developers accounted for 12,106 transactions totalling AED52B in January, compared with 5,362 resales valued at AED 20.5B.

     

    But the pressure is on developers to match demand with delivery. Investors and end users attracted by quality construction and design are more focused than ever on how soon their income-generating assets, or homes, will go from off-plan to ready.

     

    In the case of Century Tower, more than 90% of the apartments were sold on the launch day in June 2024. By then, unlike typical off-plan projects that go to market before construction starts, building work was already well advanced.

     

    “This response to property launches has generally become much more considered in recent years, as investors and end users take more time and care to analyse projects, and do their own market research,” said Al Msaddi.

     

    “Buyers look beyond the marketing renders and location promises. They want to see that the developer has a trusted reputation for quality construction and timely delivery. This is another sign of market maturity. Early completions help alleviate common concerns about off-plan projects, and reinforce buyer confidence in those who deliver on their promises.”

     

    Century Tower was designed to meet a gap in the market for uniquely crafted residences in Business Bay’s Golden Triangle. The building’s design, layout and specifications were the result of in-depth market research and analysis by fäm Properties to match investor and buyer needs.