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24 Aug 2025   
  
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Emily in Paris assistant director dies ‘suddenly’ during filming
Local media named the man as 47-year-old Diego Borella, an assistant director on the show. 
© 2025 BBCWorld 4:25am 

All Blacks seek polish with their points
All you need to know ahead of the All Blacks v Argentina Rugby Championship match. 
© 2025 Stuff.co.nz 4:25am 

You can now rent this iconic Sir Ian Athfield-designed home
Ever wanted to live in a home designed and built by Kiwi legend, Sir Ian Athfield, but doubt you could ever afford it? 
© 2025 Stuff.co.nz 4:15am 

Want to earn $140k? Here are jobs that will get you there
It’s not just doctors, lawyers and accountants earning the big bucks, tradies can climb the salary ladder too. 
© 2025 Stuff.co.nz 4:15am 

We’re having a moment, NZ. Feigning outrage over the unwillingness of Ardern and co to face the music on Covid.
Opinion: We’re having a moment, feigning outrage over the unwillingness of Ardern, Robertson and Hipkins to front to phase two of the Royal Commission into the Covid pandemic. 
© 2025 Stuff.co.nz 4:15am 

-GENIUS was just the prologue. Stablecoins represent a platform shift in payments. The stage is set.
-Can the AI data center boom be stopped? Meet some opponents with battle plans.
-Ukraine marks flag day as Russians claim advances in the east

It’s official: The U.S. owns 9.9 percent of Intel
On Friday afternoon, Intel confirmed what everyone already knew: that the U.S. government is taking the unprecedented step of investing $8.9 billion into the company. On Tuesday, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said that the United States was pushing Intel to accept its $10.9 billion CHIPS Act funding as an equity deal instead. On Friday, President Trump confirmed that deal in a White House press conference. Intel now has formally published a statement outlining the terms of the agreement. The government will invest $8.9 billion into Intel as part of a purchase of common stock, paid for by the $5.7 billion in grants awarded but not yet paid to Intel as part of the U.S. CHIPS and Science Act and $3.2 billion awarded to the company as part of the Secure Enclave program, Intel said in a statement. The actual investment will total $11.1 billion, Intel said, because of $2.2 billion in CHIPS Axct grants that Intel has already received. All told, the U.S. government will own 9.9 percent of Intel, made up of 433.3 million shares of Intel common stock at $20.47 per share. After hours, Intel’s share price had climbed to $24.80, but the government still received a discount. The U.S. government said that its investment would be a passive one, “with no Board representation or other governance or information rights.” The government also pledged to vote with Intel in matters requiring shareholder approval. It remains to be seen whether President Trump, who is notoriously outspoken, adheres to these goals. The government also has the option to purchase an additional basket of shares worth five percent of the company but only if Intel’s ownership of its foundry business drops below 51 percent. That would seemingly cement Intel’s foundry aspirations, although the additional capital doesn’t solve the fundamental question: who will use it? Intel has previously said that it would slow an Ohio fab and put off manufacturing projects in Poland and Germany as it weathered layoffs. That provoked former chief executive Craig Barrett and others to suggest that Intel’s customers bail it out. Broadcom and TSMC were even named as suitors. Trump originally called for Intel chief executive Lip-Bu Tan to step down, citing concerns that his investments had close ties to the Chinese government — even though he allowed Nvidia and AMD to sell AI chips to Chinese government after paying 15 percent of its revenues. On Friday, Trump said that he had met with Tan, and that the Intel chief had agreed to pay $10 billion to the government, and that other, similar deals could happen as well. “As the only semiconductor company that does leading-edge logic R&D and manufacturing in the U.S., Intel is deeply committed to ensuring the world’s most advanced technologies are American made,” Tan said. “President Trump’s focus on U.S. chip manufacturing is driving historic investments in a vital industry that is integral to the country’s economic and national security.” Intel cited executives from Microsoft, Dell, HP, and AWS in support of the investment. 
© 2025 PC World 3:05am 

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The Rich Lister ‘supersonicing’ the brain drain - and hoping it boomerangs
Jamie Beaton started Crimson at 17. It’s now worth $1b. His next venture aims to speed up the brain drain so when Kiwis return, NZ gets the mega-spoils of their mega-success. 
© 2025 Stuff.co.nz 4:25am 

‘Hidden gem’ - the lifestyle village beating the property slump
Property values rose 2.1% in this semi-rural spot, while they dipped across the country. 
© 2025 Stuff.co.nz 4:15am 

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From devastation to healing: A doctor who listened, a community that endured
150 survivors, rescuers and community heroes interviewed for new project. 
© 2025 Stuff.co.nz 4:15am 

She’s endured nine surgeries after a damaging procedure – now it may be offered again
For Michelle Scott, going to the bathroom is a combination of willpower, pain, and extremely sophisticated technology installed by a French surgeon. 
© 2025 Stuff.co.nz 4:15am 

-Northern Iraq's Kurdish region on edge after arrest of local opposition leader

South Africa v Australia live updates: Rugby Championship test, Cape Town
Live updates of the Rugby Championship test between the Springboks and Wallabies. 
© 2025 NZ Herald 3:25am 

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