They started by mixing sour plum vodka at home, now they produce 1,800 bottles every month
At every party, people would pull Alexander Cheong aside and ask the same question: can I get a bottle of that?
The “that” was his homemade Sour Plum Vodka. Sick of alcohol brands that felt serious and disconnected from the actual experience of drinking, Alexander started mixing his own at social gatherings, rooted in the Southeast Asian flavours he grew up with.
“Alcohol is a social lubricant,” he said. “It’s about making the worries and stress clear up. We want to embody not taking anything too seriously.”
That philosophy became the foundation of Clumzy—a spirits brand he built with two friends, Kenneth Tan and Daniel Lim, on one simple idea: bottling Southeast Asian flavours with a bit of a kick. Five years later, with just three flavours and no outside investment, the brand has crossed S$1 million in cumulative revenue.
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We spoke to the founders to find out how a kitchen experiment became a million-dollar business.
Starting a spirits brand from scratch
Clumzy is known for its signature Sour Plum Vodka./ Image Credit: Clumzy
The origins of Clumzy trace back to 34-year-old Alexander’s natural flair for mixology. Always the life of the party, he rarely enjoyed what he called “cold, hard, and serious” alcohol.
At social gatherings, to save money, he would mix his own cocktails, making his own flavourings from whatever he could imagine. Eventually, Alexander became known for his experimental jungle juices and punches, but one creation in particular stood out: a Sour Plum Vodka that became an instant crowd favourite at every party.
When COVID-19 hit, and social gatherings were restricted, demand for Alexander’s creations didn’t disappear—instead, it intensified. Friends and even friends of friends wouldn’t stop asking him to bottle his drinks for family occasions and casual nights in.
So, Alexander roped in his friend Kenneth to launch Clumzy in early 2021, taking orders via Instagram DMs only. Without any real push, word of mouth spread faster than they could keep up with.
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Clumzy’s early “medicine bottle” look (left) vs its revamped packaging (right) after Daniel came on board./ Image Credit: Clumzy
But there was one clear problem: branding.
The product started with a simple label and packaging that wasn’t particularly eye-catching. About a month in, they brought in Daniel, an experienced marketer and close friend, as the third co-founder to help turn the product into a proper brand.
Daniel’s entry laid down Clumzy’s branding foundations. He redesigned the labels and packaging—joking that the original bottle looked like a “medicine bottle”—along with new photography, the website, and the e-commerce platform, shaping the brand identity Clumzy is known for today.
From there, while Daniel handled brand and marketing, Alexander and Kenneth focused on the business, trade relationships, and operations.
“If it didn’t work out, we had nothing to fall back on”
Clumzy started out with one sole offering: the Sour Plum Vodka. The product is marketed for its versatility—being great for shots, served on the rocks or as a cocktail. Each bottle retails at S$58 with an alcohol by volume of under 20%.
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In the beginning, the spirit was made by the trio in Kenneth’s kitchen, which was stocked with giant Cambro containers and bottles. Supplies were stored in a small rented warehouse at S$200 per month, meaning they had to physically lug stock back and forth for every production run to Kenneth’s home.
At the time, they were making around 180 bottles a month—a capacity they quickly outgrew as demand surged beyond what a home setup could sustain.
Image Credit: Clumzy
Within just a few months, Clumzy became a legitimate side hustle generating real extra income on top of their day jobs. That created a genuine decision point for the co-founders: were they to stay comfortable with some pocket money, or risk everything to grow it into a real business?
Operating from a home kitchen came with clear limitations. They could only sell directly to consumers, with B2B opportunities completely off the table without a licensed commercial facility.
But upgrading wasn’t a small leap. Setting up a proper production space required tens of thousands of dollars—essentially their entire annual revenue at the time.
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If it didn’t work out, we had nothing to fall back on.
Daniel Lim, co-founder of Clumzy
Still, they chose to take the risk. The trio secured a liquor licence and set up a dedicated production facility, moving from manual preparation to automated mixing and bottling processes.
They hosted pop up booths almost every weekend
From the start, the founders have been prudent with their spending, purchasing only what was necessary. They bootstrapped the venture with “a couple of thousand dollars,” which generated revenue and paid for itself, breaking even within a year.
(Left): Alexander and Daniel at Loky’s and the Crew in 2025; (Right): Clumzy also dispenses slushies of its offerings at some events./ Image Credit: Clumzy
Early on, they also committed to building Clumzy through direct consumer engagement.
They signed up for pop-ups and hosted booths “almost every weekend,” becoming familiar faces at curated events like ArtBox 2023, Boutiques Singapore 2024, and Christmas Atelier 2025, amongst smaller pop-ups at bars and cafes since 2021.
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“Demand has been very strong,” Daniel noted. “We sold out on the first day of our first Boutiques Singapore back in 2022, which lasted two weeks. We made in one day what we normally would make over three to four days at other events.”
As Clumzy’s presence at weekend pop-ups grew, restaurants and eateries began taking notice, often after seeing strong customer demand at events or encountering the brand through word of mouth and social media.
At the same time, another key growth driver was how the founders expanded the ways customers could experience the product. They diversified into events, offering on-tap services for weddings and house parties, and experimented with more flexible formats, including slushie versions of their drinks at events.
“Diversifying into slushies made sense for us to create an option to make drinks that are fun for people who may not want to drink alcohol that tastes like alcohol,” Daniel shared.
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He added that 65% of their customers are women, reflecting how Clumzy has resonated with a demographic that traditional spirits brands have historically underserved.
Hitting the S$1M milestone
(Left): Clumzy’s booth at Boutiques Singapore 2025; (Right): Clumzy stocks at various partners like The Liquor Store./ Image Credit: Clumzy
Today, Clumzy produces around 1,800 bottles of spirits each month and has expanded to a team of eight. Its offerings are stocked at 11 retail partners, including Pat’s Music Pub and The Liquor Shop.
The business model currently sees revenue split roughly into 70% B2C and 30% B2B. After four years of operation, Clumzy crossed S$1 million in cumulative revenue in 2025, a significant milestone for a bootstrapped local spirits brand.
Clumzy launched with its Sour Plum Vodka, before the Chrysanthemum Lychee Gin and finally its Coconut Pandan Rum./ Image Credit: Clumzy
The brand has also since expanded its product line to three spirits, with customer feedback playing a crucial role in shaping its development.
While the Sour Plum Vodka developed a devoted following, it became clear that the polarising flavour was an acquired taste—some loved it instantly, while others needed time to warm up to it. This insight led to the development of the brand’s second flavour: the Chrysanthemum Lychee Gin, designed for those who find the sour plum variety too intense.
After persistent calls from customers for a third offering, the trio released Coconut Pandan Rum recently, a creation they felt was important to Clumzy’s identity as a business inspired by Southeast Asian flavours.
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Protecting what they’ve built
The trio believe strongly in what they’ve built and is looking to grow it organically./ Image Credit: Clumzy
Around the time Clumzy turned one, several parties approached the founders with offers: investment for equity stakes, rebranding under a larger umbrella, or outright acquisition.
At the time, all three founders still had day jobs. These offers initially felt genuinely attractive—a chance to take the brand one step up without carrying all the risk alone.
But Alex had the foresight to see what they’d be giving up: undervaluing everything that they stood for as a small founder-led brand. As such, they turned the offers down.
“In hindsight, some of those offers really shortchanged us,” Alex said. “I’m glad we trusted our gut in those decisions, and I’m glad we saw it all pay off eventually through our hard work.”
Clumzy at CellarFiesta 2025 and Artbox 2023./ Image Credit: Clumzy
Today, Clumzy is run by Alexander and Daniel, with Kenneth having taken a backseat in 2024.
The next chapter for the brand involves significantly expanded distribution. After months of negotiations with NTUC FairPrice, the brand’s spirits are set to hit its supermarket shelves soon, marking its entry into mainstream retail.
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Encouraged by strong demand in Singapore, international expansion is also on the horizon. The founders plan to bring Clumzy to Thailand and Australia, driven by interest from Singaporeans abroad who have discovered the brand and want access in their new home countries.
That said, the team has also observed a broader shift in drinking culture, with more consumers becoming intentional about their alcohol consumption. While nightlife has seen a decline, overall alcohol consumption remains relatively steady, as more people drink at home or during daytime social occasions.
Daniel noted that it’s all about a healthier relationship with socialising.
“People aren’t drinking less. They’re bored with sameness. Alcohol offerings have felt largely unchanged for decades. What people are genuinely hungry for is novelty and a sense of connection to something familiar,” Daniel explained.
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That sense of novelty and familiarity is what Clumzy aims to deliver.
Sony is removing some features from its TV guide and program guide displays for channels received by an over the air TV antenna on select models of Bravia televisions from 2023-2025. Cord Cutters News reported on the changes, which will take effect in late May.
Channel logos and thumbnail images in program descriptions are going away from the built-in TV Guide for antenna TV channels. Only programs from recently watched channels will be shown in the guide, and depending on the channel, program information may not be displayed. Change is also coming for set top box users, with the dedicated Set Top Box TV menu being removed and replaced by a Control menu. This setup will also not show program thumbnail images any longer.
This is an admittedly narrow use case in the age of both streaming and cable TV, but Sony didn’t provide any reason for making the change. And for those people who are impacted, this could be an unpleasant surprise next month that makes the TV guide and program guide much less helpful.
Sony just joined the ultra-fast gaming monitor party, and though it was a bit late, it could potentially turn a lot of heads there. On April 14, the company announced the INZONE M10S II, a 27-inch QHD OLED gaming monitor featuring a tandem OLED panel sourced from LG.
Like other ultra-fast gaming monitors, the Sony gaming monitor pulls double duty between two modes: 540Hz at QHD, and a staggering 720Hz at HD. Developed in collaboration with esports powerhouse Fnatic, the monitor is a successor of the M10S.
Sony has priced the M10S II gaming monitor at $1,099.99. Availability, however, is expected later this year.
Sony
But what does 720Hz actually do for you?
For everyday users, the monitor should offer razor-sharp visuals in QHD resolution at a 540Hz refresh rate with virtually no motion blur and the visual richness of an OLED panel. At this setting, the monitor offers 0.02 ms response time, which is exceptionally good.
However, the 720Hz HD mode is reserved for hardcore, professional, competitive gamers, who’d rather sacrifice the resolution for pure speed. While I personally don’t know anyone who can make use of such speed, tournament-level FPS gamers, whose fate is determined at the last possible millisecond, could surely put it to good use.
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The monitor also features a new Motion Blur Reduction algorithm that unlocks extra brightness during frames. So, instead of going dark, fast on-screen movements remain vivid.
Sony
What else did Sony launch with the monitor?
Sony didn’t stop at the INZONE MS10S II monitor; the company also launched INZONE H6 Air, an open-back wired gaming headphone, which is priced at $199.99, inspired by the studio-grade MDR-MV1 headphones and weighing just 199 grams.
Rounding up the launch are new Fnatic Edition accessories, which include Mouse-A, Mat-F, and Mat-D, along with a new translucent Glass Purple finish of the INZONE Buds wireless earbuds, which are all available now.
Like many engineers, Sarang Gupta spent his childhood tinkering with everyday items around the house. From a young age he gravitated to projects that could make a difference in someone’s everyday life.
When the family’s microwave plug broke, Gupta and his father figured out how to fix it. When a drawer handle started jiggling annoyingly, the youngster made sure it didn’t do so for long.
Sarang Gupta
Employer
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OpenAI in San Francisco
Job
Data science staff member
Member grade
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Senior member
Alma maters
The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology; Columbia
By age 11, his interest expanded from nuts and bolts to software. He learned programming languages such as Basic and Logo and designed simple programs including one that helped a local restaurant automate online ordering and billing.
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Gupta, an IEEE senior member, brings his mix of curiosity, hands-on problem-solving, and a desire to make things work better to his role as member of the data science staff at OpenAI in San Francisco. He works with the go-to-market (GTM) team to help businesses adopt ChatGPT and other products. He builds data-driven models and systems that support the sales and marketing divisions.
Gupta says he tries to ensure his work has an impact. When making decisions about his career, he says, he thinks about what AI solutions he can unlock to improve people’s lives.
“If I were to sum up my overall goal in one sentence,” he says, “it’s that I want AI’s benefits to reach as many people as possible.”
“I was interested in engineering, including the theoretical part of it,” Gupta says, “But I was always more interested in the applications: how to sell that technology or how it ties to the real world.”
In his spare time, Gupta built a smartphone app that let students upload their class schedules and find classmates to eat lunch with. The app didn’t take off, he says, but he enjoyed developing it. He also launched Pulp Ads, a business that printed advertisements for student groups on tissues and paper napkins, which were distributed in the school’s cafeterias. He made some money, he says, but shuttered the business after about a year.
After graduating from the university in 2016, he decided to work in Hong Kong’s financial hub and joined Goldman Sachs as an analyst in the bank’s operations division.
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From finance to process optimization at scale
After two parties agree on securities transactions, the bank’s operations division ensures that the trade details are recorded correctly, the securities and payments are ready to transfer, and the transaction settles accurately and on time.
As an analyst, Gupta’s task was to find bottlenecks in the bank’s workflows and fix them. He identified an opportunity to automate trade reconciliation: when analysts would manually compare data across spreadsheets and systems to make sure a transaction’s details were consistent. The process helped ensure financial transactions were recorded accurately and settled correctly.
Gupta built internal automation tools that pulled trade data from different systems, ran validation checks, and generated reports highlighting any discrepancies.
“Instead of analysts manually checking large datasets, the tools automatically flagged only the cases that required investigation,” he says. “This helped the team spend less time on repetitive verification tasks and more time resolving complex issues. It was also my first real exposure to how software and data systems could dramatically improve operational workflows.”
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“Whether it’s helping a person improve a trait like that or driving efficiencies at a business, AI just has so much potential to help. I’m excited to be a little part of that.”
The experience made him realize he wanted to work more deeply in technology and data-driven systems, he says. He decided to return to school in 2018 to study data science and AI, when the fields were just beginning to surge into broader awareness.
He discovered that Columbia offered a dedicated master’s degree program in data science with a focus on AI. After being accepted in 2019, he moved to New York City.
One of his major academic highlights, he says, was a project he did in 2019 with the Brown Institute, a joint research lab between Columbia and Stanford focused on using technology to improve journalism. The team worked with The Philadelphia Inquirerto help the newsroom staff better understand their coverage from a geographic and social standpoint. The project highlighted “news deserts”—underserved communities for which the newspaper was not providing much coverage—so the publication could redirect its reporting resources.
“Journalism was an interesting problem set for me, because I really like to read the news every day,” Gupta says. “It was an opportunity to work with a real newsroom on a problem that felt really impactful for both the business and the local community.”
The GenAI inflection point
After earning his master’s degree in 2020, Gupta moved to San Francisco to join Asana, the company that developed the work management platform by the same name. He was drawn to the opportunity to work for a relatively small company where he could have end-to-end ownership of projects. He joined the organization as a product data scientist, focusing on A/B testing for new platform features.
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Two years later, a new opportunity emerged: He was asked to lead the launch of Asana Intelligence, an internal machine learning team building AI-powered features into the company’s products.
“I felt I didn’t have enough experience to be the founding data scientist,” he says. “But I was also really interested in the space, and spinning up a whole machine learning program was an opportunity I couldn’t turn down.”
The Asana Intelligence team was given six months to build several machine learning–powered features to help customers work more efficiently. They included automatic summaries of project updates, insights about potential risks or delays, and recommendations for next steps.
The team met that goal and launched several other features including Smart Status, an AI tool that analyzes a project’s tasks, deadlines, and activity, then generates a status update.
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“When you finally launch the thing you’ve been working on, and you see the usage go up, it’s exhilarating,” he says. “You feel like that’s what you were building toward: users actually seeing and benefiting from what you made.”
Gupta and his team also translated that first wave of work into reusable frameworks and documentation to make it easier to create machine learning features at Asana. He and his colleagues filed several U.S. patents.
At the time he took on that role, OpenAI launched ChatGPT. The mainstreaming of generative AI and large language models shifted much of his work at Asana from model development to assessing LLMs.
OpenAI captured the attention of people around the world, including Gupta. In September 2025 he left Asana to join OpenAI’s data science team.
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The transition has been both energizing and humbling, he says. At OpenAI, he works closely with the marketing team to help guide strategic decisions. His work focuses on developing models to understand the efficiency of different marketing channels, to measure what’s driving impact, and to help the company better reach and serve its customers.
“The pace is very different from my previous work. Things move quickly,” he says. “The industry is extremely competitive, and there’s a strong expectation to deliver fast. It’s been a great learning experience.”
Gupta says he plans to stay in the AI space. With technology evolving so rapidly, he says, he sees enormous potential for task automation across industries. AI has already transformed his core software engineering work, he says, and it’s helped him enhance areas that aren’t natural strengths.
“I’m not a good writer, and AI has been huge in helping me frame my words better and present my work more clearly,” he says. “Whether it’s helping a person improve a trait like that or driving efficiencies at a business, AI just has so much potential to help. I’m excited to be a little part of that.”
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Gupta has been an IEEE member since 2024, and he values the organization as both a technical resource and a professional network.
IEEE’s member directory tools are another valuable resource that he uses often, he says.
“It’s been a great way to connect with other engineers in the same or similar fields,” he says. “I love sharing and hearing about what folks are working on. It brings me outside of what I’m doing day to day.
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“It inspires me, and it’s something I really enjoy and cherish.”
A few years ago agricultural equipment giant John Deere found itself on the receiving end of multiple state, federal, and class action lawsuits for its efforts to monopolize tractor repair. The lawsuits noted that the company consistently purchased competing repair centers in order to consolidate the sector and force customers into using the company’s own repair facilities, driving up costs and logistical hurdles dramatically for farmers.
“As we continue to innovate industry leading equipment and technology solutions supported by our world-class dealer network, we are equally committed to providing customers and other service providers with access to repair resources,” said Denver Caldwell, vice president, Aftermarket & Customer Support. “We’re pleased that this resolution allows us to move forward and remain focused on what matters most – serving our customers.”
Except if John Deere had cared about customer service, they wouldn’t be in this predicament.
In addition to intentionally acquiring repair alternatives to monopolize repair and drive up consumer costs, John Deere also routinely makes repair difficult and costly through the act of software locks, obnoxious DRM restrictions, and “parts pairing” — which involves only allowing the installation of company-certified replacement parts — or mandatory collections of company-blessed components.
More recently, the company had been striking meaningless “memorandums of understanding” with key trade groups, pinky swearing to stop their bad behavior if the groups agree to not support state or federal right to repair legislation. Several such groups backed off their criticism, only to have John Deere continue its monopolistic behavior, the FTC’s complaint notes.
The annoyance at John Deere’s behavior has driven a broad, bipartisan movement that’s in very vocal support for state and federal guidelines enshrining “right to repair” protections into law. Unfortunately, while all fifty states have at least flirted with the idea of a state law, only Massachusetts, New York, Texas, Minnesota, Colorado, California, Oregon, and Washington have actually passed laws.
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And among those, not one has taken any substantive action to actually enforce the new law, something that needs to change if the movement is to obtain and retain meaningful policy momentum.
As a company, Fluke has been making electronic test equipment longer than the bipolar junction transistor has been around for. In that time they’ve developed a fairly stellar reputation for quality and consistency, but like any company they don’t support their products indefinitely. [ogdento] owns a Fluke meter that isn’t nearly as old as the BJT but still has an age well outside of the support window, and since the main problem was the broken LCD display they set about building a replacement for this retro multimeter.
Initially, [ogdento] had plans to retrofit this classic multimeter with a modern OLED, but could not find enough space for the display or a way to drive it easily. The next attempt to get something working was to build a custom one-off LCD using a drill press as an end mill, which didn’t work either. But after seeing a Charlieplexed display from [bobricius] as well as this video from EEVblog about designing custom LCDs, [ogdento] was able to not only design a custom PCB and LCD display to match the original meter, but was able to get a manufacturer in China to build them.
The new displays have a few improvements over the old; mostly they are more stylistically inspired by later Fluke models and have a few modern improvements to the LCD itself. There were are few issues during prototyping but nothing that was too hard to sort out, such as ordering the wrong size elastomeric strips initially. For anyone who needs to replace a custom LCD and can’t find replacement parts anymore, this project would be a great starting point for figuring out the process from the ground up.
If you have been waiting for Gemini to actually feel like it knows you, your wait is almost over. Google’s Personal Intelligence, which launched earlier this year for paid US subscribers, is now rolling out globally.
What is Gemini Personal Intelligence and what can it do?
Google
Personal Intelligence connects Gemini to your Google apps. Think Gmail, Google Photos, YouTube, Search, Maps, Calendar, Drive, and more. It uses your existing data to give smarter, more tailored responses without requiring you to explain everything each time.
The use cases are genuinely impressive. Ask Gemini for shopping recommendations, and it will factor in your recent purchases and style preferences. Stuck troubleshooting a device you do not remember buying? It can pull the exact model from your purchase receipts in Gmail.
Google
If you are planning a trip with a tight layover, Gemini can use Personal Intelligence to check your gates, walking time, and meal preferences all at once. It can even suggest a new hobby based on patterns it notices across your activity.
Google says this is an opt-in feature, so you choose which apps to connect. Importantly, Gemini does not train directly on your Gmail or Photos data. It references them to answer your questions, but keeps the underlying personal content separate from model training.
Who can use Gemini’s Personal Intelligence feature?
Personal Intelligence works across desktop, Android, and iOS with languages supported by Gemini. The global rollout is now live for Google AI Plus, Pro, and Ultra subscribers everywhere except the European Economic Area, Switzerland, and the UK. Free Gemini users globally will get access within the next few weeks.
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Why does this matter?
Google
Personal Intelligence is probably the most significant thing Google has done with Gemini so far. Gemini is slowly becoming the kind of AI assistant that actually understands your life, not just the internet.
With access to Gmail, Photos, Maps, and more, Gemini will no longer feel like a generic chatbot and behave like a genuine personal assistant. No other AI assistant comes close to having this kind of data advantage baked in from the start.
The partnership will bring together Bull’s supercomputing infrastructure and Equal1’s ‘breakthrough’ silicon-spin quantum computers.
Bull, a Paris-based high-performance computing (HPC), artificial intelligence and quantum technology company, is to partner with Dublin start-up Equal1, a silicon-powered quantum computing technology provider.
Equal1 and Bull stated that their deal will “advance the next generation of hybrid quantum-classical technologies with European solutions”, at a time when quantum computing is beginning to transition from promise to practical reality.
The pair said the partnership will combine Bull’s supercomputing infrastructure and quantum emulation expertise with Equal1’s breakthrough silicon-spin quantum computers, as agreed in a memorandum of understanding.
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The collaboration will focus on three core pillars – technical integration, joint research and development to advance innovation, and a focus on sovereign European projects whereby both companies will collaborate on EU-led quantum initiatives amid the global quantum race.
Commenting on the announcement, Bruno Lecointe, the senior vice-president and global head of HPC, AI and quantum at Bull, said: “The convergence of high-performance computing and quantum technologies is redefining how we address the world’s most complex challenges.
“10 years after launching the first quantum emulator of the market, innovation has always been part of Bull’s DNA and we remain committed to designing hybrid architectures that help translate emerging technologies into operational capability.
“By integrating Equal1’s silicon-spin quantum servers into our Qaptiva ecosystem, we are enabling a seamless bridge between HPC, quantum emulation and quantum execution. This alliance ensures our customers can leverage quantum-centric supercomputing to achieve real-world outcomes with unprecedented efficiency and performance.”
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Jason Lynch, the CEO of Equal1, added: “By building quantum processors on standard silicon, we are turning quantum from bespoke laboratory hardware into deployable infrastructure. This collaboration with Bull is a vital step in bridging the gap between breakthrough hardware innovation and industrial workloads.
“Together, we are positioning our joint solutions as the standard for high-performance computing, enabling seamless integration into existing data centres and driving a more sustainable digital future.”
Earlier this year, Equal1 announced it had raised $60m in a funding round led by Ireland Strategic Investment Fund, with participation from Atlantic Bridge, the European Innovation Council Fund, Matterwave Ventures, Enterprise Ireland, Elkstone and TNO Ventures.
At the time, Equal1 said that the investment would enable deployment to HPC centres – including to the European Space Agency’s Phi-lab in Italy – advance the roadmap towards “millions” of on-chip qubits, scale manufacturing and grow its team.
Apple sometimes closes retail stores. The company always has private and public reasons why, but the communities and workers that are impacted don’t care much about what they are.
Apple Trumbull – Image Credit: Apple
On April 9, it was revealed that Apple was preparing to close three of its stores in the United States in June. The group consists of Apple North County in Escondido, California, Apple Towson Town Center in Towson, Maryland, and Apple Trumbull in Trumbull, Connecticut. After the initial shock of the closures, people are still expressing their feelings about the store closures. However, as usual, nothing is straightforward in the court of public opinion. Continue Reading on AppleInsider | Discuss on our Forums
Oh sure, you’ve got calculators. There’s that phone program of course, and the one that comes with your OS, and the TI-86 and possibly RPN numbers you’ve had since high school.
But what you don’t have is a Flapulator, at least not until you build one. Possibly the be-all, end-all of physical calculating devices, the Flapulator does its calculating live on a split-flap display. It’s kind of slow and the accuracy is questionable, but the tactility is oh, so good.
This baby boasts a 6-digit display, where the decimal point and negative sign each require one digit. Inside is a Raspberry Pi Pico, which can calculate for around 4 hours on a full charge. But the coolest part (aside from the split-flap display, naturally) has got to be the 24-key, hand-wired mechanical keyboard. There’s also a couple of LEDs that light up to keep track of the current mathematical operation.
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The story behind this one is kind of interesting. [Applepie1928] found out that one of their favorite mathematician-comedian-pi-lovers who is known for signing calculators was coming to town. With four weeks to whip something up, this was, amazingly, the result. Check it out in action after the break.
Intel and Google signed a multi-year deal to keep Xeon in cloud infrastructure
Google Cloud instances C4 and N4 already run on Xeon 6 processors
Intel and Google are co-developing custom IPUs for networking and storage
Intel and Google have announced a multi-year collaboration that will keep Intel Xeon processors at the heart of Google Cloud infrastructure for the foreseeable future.
The agreement spans multiple generations of Xeon chips and includes systems used for AI workloads, inference tasks, and general-purpose computing across Google’s global data centers.
Google Cloud instances such as C4 and N4 already rely on Xeon 6 processors, and this deal ensures that pattern continues.
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Why CPUs still matter in an era of specialized AI hardware
“AI is reshaping how infrastructure is built and scaled,” said Lip-Bu Tan, CEO of Intel.
“Scaling AI requires more than accelerators — it requires balanced systems. CPUs and IPUs are central to delivering the performance, efficiency, and flexibility modern AI workloads demand.”
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The announcement comes at a time when many hyperscalers are accelerating adoption of custom Arm-based processors for AI tasks.
Counterpoint Research recently claimed 90% of AI servers running custom silicon will rely on the Arm instruction set architecture, leaving x86 with only a small share of new deployments.
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To ensure Xeon remains relevant, Intel and Google are also jointly developing custom infrastructure processing units designed to handle networking, storage, and security workloads.
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These IPUs operate as ASIC-based accelerators that move infrastructure tasks away from host CPUs, freeing Xeon processors to focus on application execution.
This separation improves system efficiency and resource allocation across large cloud deployments running AI tools, AI agents, and large language models.
CPUs and infrastructure acceleration remain a cornerstone of AI systems — from training orchestration to inference and deployment,” said Amin Vahdat, SVP and Chief Technologist for AI Infrastructure at Google.
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Google currently uses both Xeon 5 and Xeon 6 processors across multiple service layers alongside its own custom Arm-based Axion processors.
These deployments continue alongside Google’s own custom processors used in other parts of its infrastructure stack.
Intel and Google state that collaboration across CPUs and IPUs will continue across future system generations, covering ongoing integration efforts across cloud infrastructure layers.
They maintain that CPUs and infrastructure accelerators remain part of current cloud design patterns across distributed systems.
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Many workloads running in Google’s data centers require backward compatibility with x86 architecture, while others need maximum single-thread performance that Xeon CPUs deliver.
These requirements are expected to persist for years, which explains why Intel and Google signed this multi-year agreement.
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