— The new 20m2 control room serves as the technical heart of the school's comprehensive audio production facilities, enabling immersive audio recording, mixing, and post-production within their educational and performance complex. "EMA wanted to create an Atmos mixing room with a 7.2.4 speaker system," explains Amin Nehmeh, project engineer at WSDG. "With Dolby Atmos becoming increasingly prevalent in the industry, [EMA] wanted to ensure they were at the cutting edge, which meant upgrading to the newest standards."
— The probe labeled more than $1.1 million in purchases by Schwab and his wife using WEF funds as suspicious, The Wall Street Journal reported. The expenses included first-class flights for trips in which his wife had no business role, 14 hotel massages and trips to places like Venice, Italy, that appeared to have no business purpose. Schwab and his wife also allegedly received luxury gifts such as custom Tiffany cufflinks and Russian tea sets in violation of WEF policies. Schwab’s spokesperson told The Wall Street Journal that he donated most of the gifts in question to charity or displayed them at the WEF’s headquarters. The 87-year-old professor's alleged behavior included a late night June 2020 email to a female executive that said, "Do you feel that I am thinking of you," the WEF reportedly found. Schwab's spokesperson told The Wall Street Journal that such conduct does not reflect his character and that he merely meant to be a father figure to employees.
— SonntagsZeitung reported that the probe's preliminary findings indicate that Schwab's alleged wrongdoing could include meddling with the Global Competitiveness Report — a now-defunct yearly publication that assessed and ranked countries based on their economic competitiveness. The competitiveness report was discontinued during the Covid-19 pandemic. Official documents cited by SonntagsZeitung allege that Schwab intervened multiple times to alter or suppress unfavorable rankings for certain countries, particularly in the Middle East and North Africa and in India, allegedly to preserve diplomatic relations or avoid political fallout. In one instance, Schwab reportedly recommended shelving a negative report after discussing it with a government official, according to the newspaper. — (LINK)
— Unlike ChatGPT, Claude, or Gemini — all of which gather user data and continue to hold onto it for training and archival purposes — all of your chats with Lumo are completely end-to-end encrypted. Additionally, the company claims that it won't keep logs of your chats, and that any chat history or usage of the AI can only be accessed on the user's device. Access it for free at lumo.proton.me or by downloading the Lumo app on Android or iPhone devices.
— Titled "Towards the Horizon", it depicts a kneeling boy with a backpack, next to books and a pile of rocks. Made with chalk and charcoal it will hopefully be visible for several weeks, until it is washed away.
— Rated for cultural accessibility, cultural attractions, rich history, geographical attractions, great food.
— The site, which draws around 12,000 overnight stays each year, has been deemed unsafe after repeated mudslides and flooding.
— A survey by Comparis, an online comparison service, found that more than one in four adults expect their financial situation to worsen in 2025 compared with last year.
— On 5 June 2022, a debris flow came loose in Illgraben above the village of Leuk in the Valais, transporting 25,000 cubic metres of debris four kilometres through the bed of the Illbach river, before flowing into the Rhône at Susten. The team of scientists monitored the natural phenomena at several measuring stations. "We've known for a long time that these surges play a key role in the destructive force of debris flows. We were able to demonstrate that surges arise spontaneously on the surface of the flow. They stem from small irregularities, which grow over time, increasing in size and speed until they reach their maximum destructive force."
— In the mountains, a lack of snow threatens ski tourism, while in summer, storms make it harder to enjoy outdoor activities. One-third of the mountain huts operated by the Swiss Alpine Club are in danger because they are in an area where the permafrost is thawing. In the mountains, a lack of snow threatens ski tourism, while in summer, storms make it harder to enjoy outdoor activities. "Having 100 days with guaranteed 30-50 centimetres of snow is becoming increasingly unrealistic."
— The Global Business Optimism Index, compiled by business information service Dun & Bradstreet (D&B), fell by a significant 18% in Switzerland in the third quarter of 2025 compared to the previous quarter, according to a press release. "Sentiment in Switzerland thus deteriorated significantly more than the global average, where the decline was only 6%. Only in France (-20%) and Brazil (-19%) was the decline bigger. Overall, the negative trend of the previous two quarters continued."
— The attacks also targeted the visit by former Swiss President Alain Berset to Kyiv in November 2023, the World Economic Forum in Davos in 2024 and 2025, the Bürgenstock peace conference in June 2024, and the Eurovision in Basel in May 2025.
— Sweden, Denmark, the Netherlands and the UK round out the top five. Outside Europe, South Korea is the most innovative country.
— In contrast, the suicide rate among the younger population has fallen by around 30% in the past two decades. And the numbers are increasing: in the past 25 years, the proportion of over 85-year-olds in Switzerland who decide to take their life has quadrupled. Among 65- to 84-year-olds, this proportion has doubled. The main reason for this is euthanasia.
— The model, developed by researchers at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zurich (ETHZ) and the Institute for Snow and Avalanche Research (SLF), proved its worth during the landslides in Brienz and Blatten. It enables more accurate forecasts to be made of the course, height and propagation of alpine mass movements such as snow, ice and rock avalanches.
— After a first conclusive practical test in 2023 on the village of Brienz (Graubunden), which had been evacuated because of a landslide threat, the researchers carried out simulations in Blatten last spring. Their aim was to unofficially test their forecasting model in a more complex and unstable scenario than that of Brienz. At Blatten, in addition to the rocks and water, the ice also played a role and the terrain is very complex. As in reality, the results of the 3D simulation showed that most of Blatten was destroyed and that the hamlet of Weissenried was barely spared by the mass of collapsed rock and ice.
— The model also showed that the mass of the fall had spread by 1.2 kilometres on the south-west side of the valley and by 700 metres on the north-east side — very accurate values compared with the actual disaster. These results stunned the researchers at the time, but seemed rather implausible.
— Avalanche and debris flow modelling tools are generally based on two-dimensional "medium-depth" methods. They assume that the flow of rock and water is shallow and remains in constant contact with the ground, resulting in continuous friction. But the 3D model allows the particles to detach themselves from the surface, reducing friction on the ground and enabling the phases during which the material flies through the air to be accurately captured. This is a decisive factor in simulating the flow behaviour and propagation of flows in steep or complex terrain.
— Swissinfo: In the case of Blatten, the scientific simulations have not been shared with the Valais authorities, and are not part of the official studies currently under way, nor of risk management. The researchers' aim is not to replace existing 2D tools, but to offer a complementary solution when conventional models reach their limits.
— An officially private effort with opaque funding, the GHF began operations on May 26 after Israel halted supplies into Gaza for more than two months. Its operations have been marred by chaotic scenes and near-daily reports of mass casualty incidents. The GHF is based in the US state of Delaware, with a subsidiary registered in Geneva.
— Survey respondents gave Switzerland high marks for business (#2), quality of life (#3), social purpose (#7) and cultural influence (#8).
— Like most of Europe, temperatures in Switzerland are expected to be about 10C above average for the time of year. Temperatures could rise to highs of 35C, while there's also the threat of thunderstorms causing heavy downpours towards the end of the week. For the earlier kick-offs at 18:00 CET (17:00 BST), it is expected temperatures will be between 27 and 30C. But it's predicted to be cooler — between 24 and 27C — for the later 21:00 CET kick-offs. The tournament begins on 2 July as Iceland play Finland in Thun in the 17:00 BST game, with the temperature forecast to be 28C. However, it's expected to be 29C when hosts Switzerland face Norway in Basel later that evening. The heatwave is set to last until Monday, when temperatures are expected to drop by 10C to highs of 23C.
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