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TMC Freeriderz celebrates 25th anniversary

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As Yosuke Hamazaki led the way to his office above his TMC Freeriderz shop along Skier’s Approach, he commented that space hadn’t really had an adult’s touch.

Perhaps that’s because a quarter-century ago, at age 16, he made that space the inaugural headquarters of his shop, which is still going strong today.

In fact, it was his dad’s storage space for his rental shop below, but became Hamazaki’s shop and de facto bedroom space after he fell in love with the sport after joining the local freestyle club a couple of years prior.

“I took everything from my dad’s storage and put it in my own personal bedroom. He gave me a chance to try it, and then a following took place,” he said, noting his father came to Whistler in the 1970s as a ski instructor and was an hot-dog skiing pioneer alongside Wayne Wong.

With freestyle skiing emerging as a discipline in the early 1990s, Hamazaki had the freedom to explore via retail in a similar way that he and his contemporaries were pushing boundaries on the mountain.

However, with athletes coming from a wide variety of backgrounds, there was still a matter of finding that connection with customers.

“We didn’t want to create what’s going on. We wanted that to happen organically with the customers. The customers were starting to tell us what their style was,” he said. “Some people were local: leather jackets, jeans, and that was the style. Another person would be the Euro-style, where they would have neon-colored baggy pants … or really tight pants.

“It is, as a shop, difficult to cater to all those different groups of people.” Hamazaki made the foray into designing clothing at age 19 and certainly made an appeal to some fringe fashionistas.

“We made some wild pants. We made some snakeskin-style ski pants. We wanted to add flavor to what our sport was trying to become,” he said. “We would design the product, get a mother in North Vancouver to draw the patterns for us. I went to her house in one day, then drive to a pattern-cutter place on the other side of town, had to drive to a zippered place to get the zippers and end up at a factory.”

Hamazaki sees parallels to the growth of freestyle and his own shop, as both have had to justify their existence and deal with the ebbs and flows of popularity.

“In the shop, it was a very big challenge because it was a sport that we had to sell to each individual coming in. It wasn’t on TV, it wasn’t in the magazines yet,” he said. “When (people from other sports) want to try it, we were really accommodating, so I think that’s one thing that helped freeride skiing become what it is today.”

At the time of his debut, other ski shops were starting to have small freestyle sections, but soon after, stores were opening based on Hamazaki’s blueprint, which created additional competition.

All these years later, Hamazaki is looking to expand to Honolulu, Hawaii of all places. While it might seem like an odd place to open a winter sports store, he cited the success of Island Snow, a small snowboard shop that eventually became the world’s leading Burton dealer. It’s a way of accessing the Asian market, as many tourists vacation in Hawaii and tend to find excellent deals for the equipment they’d use at home.

“If we do this shop in Hawaii, it would basically be a stamp that says ‘Wow, freestyle is here,'” he said.

In its infancy, TMC stood for The Mogul Corner, but to recognize the diverse array of freestyle disciplines, is now short for True Matrix Core, a saying from Hamazaki’s father with the message of believing in the path one chooses with the whole heart. Hamazaki also credits his father, who also owned a gift shop and a fur shop, providing him the opportunity to forge his own way, but also a willingness to provide expertise to help him if needed.

“He’d always let me make the mistakes, but he was adamant about teaching me what I should be doing,” Hamazaki said. “Usually, they weren’t personal mistakes. They were business mistakes, but I’d take it personally.”

Despite some challenging years with lower snow or the Olympics drawing people to watch sports more than participate in them, Hamazaki always found a way through, whether it was turning into a flag shop during the Games or sticking it out with smaller companies as they weathered their own downturns in popularity. But deep down, he feels there will always be a place for freestyle, a lesson he took from skiing’s status when he first got involved.

“It had the image of stretchy pants and through the ’80s, the neon colors and all that. It was a fun time, but it kind of seemed like it was dying down,” he said. “In my heart, it doesn’t matter what’s going on in reality as long as you’re feeling like you’re part of something, you’re part of a community.”

To perhaps highlight its entrenchment in the community, TMC recently finished fifth in Canada and tops in Whistler in Freeskier’s Top Shop contest (Comor and Whistler Village Sports also made the top 10). Hamazaki was grateful for the 2,000-plus votes, and looking back, is thrilled to have reached the
milestone he has.

Hannah Barwell is the most renowned for his short stories. She writes stories as well as news related to the technology. She wrote number of books in her five years career. And out of those books she sold around 25 books. She has more experience in online marketing and news writing. Recently she is onboard with Apsters Media as a freelance writer.

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Intel has Optimized 500 Artificial Intelligence Models for Core Ultra Processors

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“An important milestone has been reached in Intel’s efforts to establish itself as the leading chip supplier for AI PCs: the company announced that over 500 AI models have been optimized for its Core Ultra processors.”

The AI models, according to the Santa Clara, California-based company, cover “more than 20 categories of AI, including large language, diffusion, super resolution, object detection, and computer vision,” as of Wednesday. These models are available from industry partners Hugging Face, PyTorch, ONNX Model Zoo, and OpenVINO Model Zoo.

These include Google’s Bert natural language understanding model, Microsoft’s Phi-2 small language model, Meta’s Llama large language model, OpenAI’s Whisper speech recognition model, Stability AI’s Stable Diffusion 1.5 text-to-image generation model, and the Mistral language model.

Models “form the backbone of AI-enhanced software features like object removal, image super resolution, or text summarization,” according to Intel, which highlights the significance of its optimization work. It further stated that the models are compatible with the Core Ultra’s neural processing unit (NPU), GPU, and CPU.

According to the company, “the breadth of user-facing AI features that can be brought to market and the number of enabled/optimized models are directly correlated.” It is impossible to design a feature without a model. The feature cannot operate at its peak efficiency without runtime optimization.

The semiconductor giant is in an arms race with rivals AMD and Qualcomm to not only provide the best processors for AI PCs but also to enable compelling software experiences with the goal of creating greater demand for their respective products.

Along with the AI model optimization project, Intel has been developing over 300 AI-powered features for PCs with Core Ultra processors in collaboration with more than 100 independent software vendors (ISVs). In December, the company released its Core Ultra lineup; this is being done as part of its AI PC Acceleration Program, which was started a few months prior.

The company stated that the work it has done to establish AI PCs as a new device category and the investments it has made in client AI processing, framework optimizations, AI tools like OpenVINO, and other related areas have made its software enablement work possible.

Robert Hallock, vice president and general manager of AI and technical marketing in Intel’s Client Computing Group, said in a statement, “This unmatched selection reflects our commitment to building not only the PC industry’s most robust toolchain for AI developers, but a rock-solid foundation AI software users can implicitly trust.”

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Conduent and Microsoft Collaborate to Use AI to Increase Business Efficiency

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AI-Powered Strategic Alliance for Improved Business Operations

Conduent, a provider of business services, recently announced a strategic partnership with Microsoft. The purpose of this partnership is to lead the way in generative artificial intelligence (AI) applications in important industries. The partnership’s primary goals are to use AI to transform healthcare administration, improve customer support, and strengthen fraud detection systems.

Boosting Cloud-Based Secure AI Adoption

Conduent’s clients will be able to take advantage of a secure cloud environment at a faster rate thanks to the synergy between Conduent and Microsoft. Three generative AI pilot programs are presently being developed by the alliance, one of which aims to efficiently extract data from medical documents. The goal of this project is to use Microsoft’s Azure AI Document Intelligence and Azure OpenAI Service to expedite the resolution process.

AI’s Strong Effect on the Growth of Small Businesses

The applications of AI go beyond the healthcare sector and include small businesses, where AI is thought to be a growth accelerator. AI has many uses, from enhancing customer service to automating marketing campaigns to expand its market reach. Particularly tailored AI solutions are being developed for small businesses, taking into account their unique resource limitations, making advanced AI tools more accessible to them.

Businesses with limited resources can now benefit from AI models developed by companies like Microsoft, which has garnered attention and given them a competitive advantage in the market. Supporters of these scaled models emphasize how easy it is to integrate, how affordable, and how little data these models require—all of which are advantageous for most companies that handle large volumes of sensitive data.

Conduent and Microsoft’s partnership is a big step toward bringing artificial intelligence (AI) into conventional business models, optimizing workflows, and establishing new benchmarks for customer and client interaction.

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A positive mindset, steering positive financial change, meet Oz Clement Knight

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Oz Clement Knight pushes boundaries as a top financial educator and entrepreneur, inspiring lives worldwide.

It is sometimes not just about feeling passionate about working in a particular field; it is more than that for a few rare professionals and business owners who strive for excellence daily, besides feeling passionate about all they choose to lay their hands on. When we saw the rise of Oz Clement Knight, who has been in the financial sector for several decades, we understood how a person needs to surrender to his aspirations and goals in life to push boundaries and steer positive change.

Oz Clement Knight is all about this and beyond. At every step in his journey, he has proved why he deserves to be called a leader in the financial realm, for he has stayed committed to taking his clients to the financial success they wish to achieve and, in the process, has reached the forefront of the industry.

He has been pioneering financial success for others through two incredible ventures, namely OHL Ventures Fund LLC and Ozmarq Holdings Ltd. The former is a Delaware series limited liability company to make venture capital and growth equity investments in diverse leading seed stage, early stage, and developmental stage and later stage private companies, with companies engaged in social media, social media, life sciences, and clean tech businesses. Through the fund, he promises to create returns for investors by helping them identify and invest in potential leading-edge companies that can later provide them with massive returns.

The latter serves as the Manager of the fund that will establish a series of funds for purchasing securities of a portfolio company/companies from a secondary source, making a separate and distinctive investment directly in a portfolio company/companies, and/or investing in the interests of investment funds, special purpose vehicles, or other entities whose portfolios consist of one or more portfolio companies.

With his years of experience and knowledge in private wealth management, investment banking, and capital markets, the financial educator, who loves spreading his knowledge among others, especially the youngsters in the field, has ensured that he offers financial services that cater to the individual needs of his clients, eventually empowering them to navigate the varied financial complexities in their journey to reach financial success.

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