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Groenland : Le ministre des Affaires étrangères Maxime Prévot appelle au dialogue
Le ministre des Affaires étrangères, Maxime Prévot (Les Engagés), a appelé samedi soir au dialogue après que le président américain Donald Trump a annoncé frapper de droits de douane supplémentaires les pays européens envoyant des militaires au Groenland. “Nous restons ouverts pour collaborer sur les questions de sécurité de façon collective et non hostile”, écrit-il … lire plus

What Folds Out Of This Porsche Design Box Would Wipe Out Your Life Savings
C-Seed folding TVs are offered in sizes up to 221 inches. Screen folds into microLED panels with premium speakers. Indoor and outdoor versions offered, including for yachts. Ever stared at your fancy Samsung or Sony screen and thought, “Nice, but what if it could rise from the floor like a sci-fi monolith and resemble TARS from Interstellar?”. If that oddly specific craving has ever crossed your mind, the C-Seed folding TV, developed in collaboration with Porsche Design, might be exactly what you didn’t know you were waiting for. Read: Porsche Reimagines Prefabs With Stunning $1.5M Floating House The catch? Of course there’s one. Like most things designed to impress and overdeliver, it comes at a cost. And not a small one. Before you start imagining this thing in your living room, consider this: it costs more than three brand-new Porsche 911 Carreras put together. That model starts at $135,500. The Art of the Unfolding Screen C SEED The remarkable screens, available in several sizes and designed for both indoor and outdoor settings, resemble a sculptural installation more than something you’d use to watch next month’s Super Bowl. The models, known as the N1 and M1, rest horizontally when not in use, taking on the look of a futuristic cabinet, or, as mentioned earlier, something straight out of a sci-fi flick. However, with the touch of a button, the display automatically rotates to a vertical position. From there, each of the five microLED panels (or seven for the outdoor version) starts to unfold, displaying a screen said to offer “amazingly vibrant colors” and 1,000 nits of brightness. Audio isn’t an afterthought either. Each screen includes a built-in, full-range audio system, so there’s no need to clutter the setup with a cheap-looking soundbar or surround sound system to make the most of it.. It’s all part of the integrated package. C SEED The outdoor version works in much the same way as the indoor display, but can be configured with a taller column, a six-speaker sound system, and can even fold away into an underground storage compartment when not in use. View this post on Instagram A post shared by doug dushan (@dougsuniverse) Indoor models can be ordered in massive 165-inch, 137-inch, and 103-inch configurations, but those with more money to burn can even order a 221-inch display. The outdoor models are available in 201-inch and 144-inch sizes, and there’s even a version designed for the mega-rich to add to the decks of their superyachts. Adding one of these to your living room, backyard, or private floating compound will run you around $400,000. That’s a lifetime of paychecks for some, but for those deep enough into the billionaire bracket, it’s another line item on a well-curated wishlist.

OM : De Zerbi met en garde ses joueurs
Ô combien décevant contre Nantes (0-2) lors de la précédente journée, et brillant face à Angers (5-2) ce samedi. Ainsi pourrait-on résumer les deux de......
CAN 2025 : Sénégal - Maroc, finale en apothéose entre les deux favoris
Duel de lions, ce dimanche, en finale de la CAN : les Lions de la Teranga défient ceux de l'Atlas, à Rabat. En jeu, un premier sacre depuis 50 ans pour le pays hôte, ou un deuxième titre en quatre ans pour le Sénégal.

Faut-il vraiment débrancher sa box internet pendant la nuit pour faire des économies d’électricité ?

Mercato Manchester City : Un incident aérien retarde la visite médicale de Marc Guéhi

La ville de Bruxelles exprime sa solidarité avec le peuple iranien Place de Brouckère

Basket-ball – Pré-Nationale masculine : un derby tout à l’avantage de Colayrac sur le parquet du Val d’Albret
I quit finance at 54 to go full-time with my matchmaking side hustle. I love having a career where being older is an asset.
Cassindy Chao now works as a full-time matchmaker.Courtesy of Cassindy ChaoCassindy Chao worked in finance, including at JP Morgan and Goldman Sachs, but felt she never thrived.She started matchmaking as a side hustle while working in corporate restructuring.Chao finds that her age and life experience are valuable assets in the matchmaking industry.This as-told-to essay is based on a conversation with Cassindy Chao, 57, a matchmaker based in the Bay Area. This piece has been edited for length and clarity.Finance is a young person's arena. Long hours and stamina are treated as essential markers of a coveted hire. As I got older, I found myself wondering where that left someone like me: a middle-aged mom of three.I couldn't control getting older, so in 2022, at the age of 54, I became a full-time matchmaker.For the first time in my career, my age is an asset.Have you made an unconventional career move? If you're comfortable discussing it with a reporter, please fill out this quick form. We want to hear from people who have stepped out of or into corporate life in nontraditional ways.I discovered matchmaking at collegeI'm American-born Chinese, and in families like mine, there's often a plan: get good grades, attend a reputable school, and secure a respectable job. My parents wanted me to pursue a career in medicine, but because I struggled with chemistry. I went to Wellesley and majored in Chinese studies and economics.In my sophomore year, I became involved with the Asian Association's blind-date semi-formal. I had a lot of fun, even though I made some of the worst matches back then.I was so engrossed by match-matching that I started organizing the semi-formal event during classes and even dropping classes to focus on it. I never imagined it could be a career.I worked at JPMorgan and Goldman Sachs, but didn't thrive I graduated in 1990 and got a job at an investment bank. I loved art and creative work, but I needed a career that paid well because I wanted to send money to my parents. I got rejection after rejection from JPMorgan in New York, but as Asia boomed in 1993, being fluent in Mandarin became an advantage, and I got a job in the Hong Kong officeA year in, Goldman Sachs offered me a role in Hong Kong as well. The culture was one of working hard and playing hard, ultracompetitive, yet tight-knit. You made close friends because you were working late nights together on deals.Working at Goldman was addictive: I was getting paid a lot, traveling, and generally having a lot of fun, but I struggled with the numbers, and writing reports never came easily to me.Cassindy Chao left a career in finance to become a matchmaker.Courtesy of Cassindy ChaoI also found myself sacrificing my energy, creativity, and life to fulfill the needs of an organization. Deals were time-sensitive, people are accustomed to quick turnaround times, and it was all-hands-on-deck for various projects.It takes a lot out of you, and I remember my mom telling me that if I stayed at Goldman Sachs, I'd never get married. I think she was right.In May 1999, after five years at Goldman Sachs, I returned to California and got married soon after. My mom was sick at the time, and as painful as that period was, it forced me to stop and assess where I was going and what came next.It became clear that investment banking was not where I thrived.Matchmaking became my side hustleFrom 2002 to 2016, I worked on various projects in financial consulting: I was helping close companies for VCs and businesses manage their overseas operations.I had to draw boundaries around my time because it was intense, but the pay was good.In 2013, I read an article in a magazine about a matchmaker in Chicago. I had no idea that it could be a career, and I read loads of books on the topic.In 2015, I trained with a matchmaker and initially did it as a side hustle, which I publicized by building a website and emailing my network — long before I understood the…
Jeanne d’Arc moquée par un site gouvernemental : un défenseur à son secours

"Obligé d'interrompre..." : Jean-Luc Reichmann pris de cours dans Les 12 coups de midi

