Cork success at BT Young Scientist

The projects were on show at the RDS

Tomás Markey, a sixth year student at St Brogan’s College, Bandon won best individual at the 61st BT Young Scientist & Technology Exhibition for his project ‘PM-DAC: A system for removing CO2 from the atmosphere’.

PM-DAC is a Passive & Modular Direct Air Capture framework that reduces the cost of carbon dioxide sequestration in the fight against climate change.

Leonard Hobbs, Chair of Technology Individual Judges, said, “The judges were very impressed with the level of innovation demonstrated by the best overall individual winner, Tomás Markey who addressed one of the greatest challenges currently facing the world in the excess of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. Tomás demonstrated his prototype at the exhibition which showcased an impressive mechanical and scalable design and novel carbon capture technology, which resulted in a cost effective approach to this challenging and topical issue.”

Congratulations to Tomás Markey from St. Brogan’s College, Bandon, for winning Best Individual at BTYSTE 2025. His project is ‘PM-DAC: A system for removing CO2 from the atmosphere.’#BTYSTE2025 #BTSYTE pic.twitter.com/qk9fNqi0GW— BT Young Scientist (@BTYSTE) January 11, 2025

Anaus Syed Muhammad, a student at Bruce College, Cork, was recognised for developing a noninvasive method of screening blood using smartphone cameras.

His project has been named winner of the 2025 Irish Aid / Self Help Africa Science for Development Award at the BT Young Scientist & Technology Exhibition.

‘HemaSense: Screens for anemia, blood conditions without needle sticks’ – created a method of noninvasive blood screening of haemoglobin using smartphone cameras. 

Minister for International Development and Diaspora, Sean Fleming said:  “Science and technology has the potential to tackle major issues facing people across the world. The Science for Development Award encourages young people to use their curiosity and talent to develop projects with the potential to improve people’s lives and make the world a better place.

“I was hugely impressed by the projects on display. Anaus from Bruce College in Cork was a deserved winner for his innovative project. A huge amount of work went into developing this project and I want to congratulate him, his teacher Labhras White and the wider school community for receiving this award.The winner of the Science for Development award will travel to the Gambia with Self Help Africa later this year to further develop their project in a real world setting.”

The Science for Development award is judged independently. The judges look for evidence of how a project could offer practical improvements in the lives of people in low-income countries.

Congratulations to Anaus Syed Muhammad from Bruce College, Cork. Winner of 2025 Irish Aid/Self Help Africa Science for Development Award @BTYSTE The prize was presented this evening at an awards ceremony by Minister @SeanFlemingTD Read more 👉https://t.co/56QkxuY4zX pic.twitter.com/45Zda8cqN5— Irish Aid (@Irish_Aid) January 10, 2025

‘Psychologically scarring’ horror film dubbed best in memory now available to watch online

Your support helps us to tell the storyFrom reproductive rights to climate change to Big Tech, The Independent is on the ground when the story is developing. Whether it’s investigating the financials of Elon Musk’s pro-Trump PAC or producing our latest documentary, ‘The A Word’, which shines a light on the American women fighting for reproductive rights, we know how important it is to parse out the facts from the messaging.At such a critical moment in US history, we need reporters on the ground. Your donation allows us to keep sending journalists to speak to both sides of the story.The Independent is trusted by Americans across the entire political spectrum. And unlike many other quality news outlets, we choose not to lock Americans out of our reporting and analysis with paywalls. We believe quality journalism should be available to everyone, paid for by those who can afford it.Your support makes all the difference.Read moreA “psychologically scarring” horror film, dubbed one of the best serial killer movies in recent memory, is now available for streaming. Longlegs, directed by Oz Perkins (Gretel & Hansel, I Am the Pretty Thing that Lives in the House), follows FBI agent Lee Harker (Maika Monroe) as she investigates a series of murders attributed to a Satanic killer known as Longlegs (Nicolas Cage) in the 1990s.When the film was released it was dubbed “one of the best serial killer films in recent memory” by Matt Neglia, editor of Next Best Picture , who added that the movie was “psychologically scarring” as well as “sinister” and an “unnerving descent into hell that will haunt your mind and soul”.Some fans were left unable to sleep as audiences hailed the movie as the best in the genre since The Silence of the Lambs.Those who missed the film in cinemas will now be able to watch it on Prime Video.Part of the terror associated with Longlegs is Cage’s terrifying transformation, which was kept cryptic in the film’s trailer ahead of its release. The actor told Entertainment Weekly that this decision was the equivalent to “driving people towards a freak show at a circus tent”.Film was considered one of the best in recent memory

Nicole Kidman admitted she had to pause filming of new movie as she ‘didn’t want to orgasm any more’

Nicole Kidman has spoken about what it was like to film her latest movie, Babygirl, explaining she actually had to pause filming because she ‘didn’t want to orgasm anymore’.The film was finally released in cinemas in the UK on Friday (10 January) after a lot of chatter about the plot in recent months.The erotic thriller was written and directed by Halina Reijn and stars Kidman as high-ranking CEO and married mother, Romy.The film follows Romy as she begins a passionate and exhilarating affair with her younger intern, Samuel (Harris Dickinson).Meanwhile, Antonio Banderas plays her husband Jacob, with the likes of Sophie Wilde and Esther McGregor also starring.Kidman has called the film her ‘most exposing’ yet, explaining that she was ‘left ragged’ by the filming.The movie explores the power dynamics between Romy and Samuel, and as you can imagine, there’s a lot of sexually charged moments between the two.So much so that Kidman had to halt filming on several occasions as she didn’t ‘want to orgasm any more’.Babygirl is finally in cinemas (A24)”There was an enormous amount of sharing and trust and then frustration. It’s like, ‘Don’t touch me’,” she explained in an interview with The Sun.”There were times when we were shooting where I was like, ‘I don’t want to orgasm any more’.”Don’t come near me. I hate doing this. I don’t care if I am never touched again in my life! I’m over it.”It was so present all the time for me that it was almost like a burnout.”This isn’t the first time Kidman has opened up on what it was like to partake such explicit scenes, with the star explaining how intimacy co-ordinators helped her feel comfortable during shooting.“I’m a huge believer still in the sacredness of the set or the actors’ space and it never being violated,” she admitted. “It’s ours, it’s the bubble, and then there’s the world outside.”It’s Nicole Kidman’s most erotic film to date (A24)Dickinson has also praised intimacy co-ordinator Lizzy Talbot, as he said: “She was important for the film and broke the unnecessary barrier and conversation around what you have to do.”Speaking of the film’s director, Kidman added: “I knew [director] Halina [Reijn] wasn’t going to exploit me. It’s the story I wanted to be part of, that I wanted to tell.“Every part of me was committed to that. There was enormous caretaking by all of us, we were all very gentle with each other and helped each other.”You can watch Babygirl in cinemas now.

Alison McMurtrie encourages Longford people to apply for Back for Business

Back for Business, the free government programme that helps returned emigrants start and develop businesses in Ireland, is now open to applications.Now in its eighth cycle, the programme is seeking offers of interest from people who have recently returned to Longford or are still living abroad but thinking of returning in the near future.
Those eligible to apply include returned Irish emigrants who have lived abroad for at least a year and have returned to Ireland in the last three years, and emigrants currently living abroad who are planning to return to Ireland in the near future.
The 8th cycle of the programme will run from February to June 2025 and there is no charge for those selected to participate. Up to 50 places will be available nationally. Eligible candidates have until Thursday, January 16, to submit their applications. Those interested can apply through www.backforbusiness.com.
Funded by the Irish Abroad Unit, Department of Foreign Affairs, the programme was created to foster and support entrepreneurial activity among emigrants recently returned to Ireland.Since launching in 2017, Back for Business has helped entrepreneurs who are returned emigrants to significantly grow sales and employment. It also addresses challenges that all early-stage
entrepreneurs encounter, but also focuses on additional barriers faced by emigrants who have been living away from Ireland. Participants on the last cycle, Back for Business 7, quadrupled their collective turnover from €300,000 at the start of the programme to €1.2million at its conclusion. Their collective employee numbers also increased from 14 to 47 during the cycle. Back for Business 8 participants will take part in round table sessions focused on goals and milestones, which are facilitated by voluntary Lead Entrepreneurs who have experience of successfully starting and growing a business.
The 8th cycle’s Lead Entrepreneurs are: serial entrepreneur Hannah Wrixon; Morgan Browne, CEO of Milner Browne and Enterpryze; Paul Duggan of The Gardiner Group; Seamus Reilly, co-founder and formerly of Critical Healthcare; Sinead Doherty, founder and CEO of Fenero; and Thomas Ennis, founder of the Thomas Ennis Group.
Former participants from Longford include Alison McMurtrie of Idunn Consulting which helps companies develop strategic plans to aid business growth.Alison hails the Back for Business programme for linking her with a network of fellow entrepreneurs, connections which she would otherwise have struggled to foster after so many years living abroad.
“We have a very active chat in which we support and bounce ideas off each other. And the sessions were really helpful, whether that’s the legal content or setting KPIs from KPMG. When I moved back my problem was a lack of a network. I didn’t know anyone. Back for Business opened a lot of doors.”
Back for Business Lead Entrepreneur Thomas Ennis says: “I was lucky enough to receive excellent mentoring when I was starting out and it made all the difference. It is great to be in a position to give back and to support those at the start of their entrepreneurial journey.”
The deadline for completed applications for Back to Business 8 is midnight on Thursday, January 16, 2025. For more information or to register your interest in receiving an application form, please see www.backforbusiness.com

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LA’s small-business owners see years of work and history go up in smoke

Paul Rosenbluh was in Vancouver, Washington, finalizing a restaurant purchase when he learned that his existing eatery in Altadena, California, had been incinerated.

He and his wife, Monique King, had run Fox’s Restaurant, a “gem on the hill” of the Los Angeles-area community, since 2017. The diner was a local staple dating back to 1955, and Rosenbluh first laid eyes on its charred husk this week through a Facebook video that was sent to him after the Eaton Fire swept through the area.

Fox’s Restaurant co-owners Paul Rosenbluh and Monique King lost the iconic Altadena, Calif., diner to the Eaton Fire last week. (Paul Yem for NBC News)

“I don’t want to say [we’re] exchanging one restaurant for another, but that’s kind of how it’s going to transpire,” Rosenbluh recalled thinking on the 14-hour drive back to Altadena. “We literally just closed escrow on Tuesday when all this stuff started to go down.”

He’s one of many small-business owners across greater Los Angeles who are just beginning to reckon with the devastating wildfires that have raged across the region, turning decades of history and years of entrepreneurial effort to ashes within hours.

Destroyed buildings along the coast near Topanga Beach (Wray Sinclair for NBC News)

Business had been steady at Fox’s, Rosenbluh said — it always had been. The diverse neighborhood is full of older residents who retired there and never left, ensuring there were always “tons and tons of regulars” at the diner.

“They came into the restaurant, [I] talked to them back in the alley. We knew these people,” he said. Now, many of their homes are “just gone.”

The couple is now figuring out how the other restaurants they own in the area — Cindy’s and Little Beast, both in Eagle Rock — can absorb Fox’s 15 or so employees into their operations, which are also on alert as responders continue to battle the evolving conflagrations. Although Fox’s was insured, Rosenbluh said he has little hope of rebuilding it.

“If all the infrastructure is gone, well, you can’t rebuild a building if you have no power or gas or water,” he said. “Or customers.”

Others who lost their buildings, like Candace Frazee, co-founder of the Bunny Museum, are defiant.

“We will rebuild,” she vowed, even though the property’s insurance won’t cover construction costs. In an Instagram story announcing the end of the location’s 27-year run, Frazee asked if anyone wanted to donate a building to the organization, a 501(c)(3).

The Guinness World Record-certified site was an Altadena fixture displaying a panoply of rabbit-related memorabilia, from handmade antiques to pop-culture characters. It burned down on Wednesday morning after an all-night effort in which Frazee said she and her husband tried to tame the fire by hosing down the building.

A firefighter walks past a charred topiary at the site of the destroyed Bunny Museum in Altadena on Thurs. (Chris Pizzello / AP)

“Feeling still in shock,” she said Friday. “It was standing, and then it wasn’t.”

Unlike longtime establishments, Aether was just starting to develop a loyal clientele when it was swallowed in flames, said owner Kristina Adam.

She opened the wellness studio just over a year ago, two blocks from the rental home she shared with her husband and 2-year-old daughter in the Pacific Palisades. By Thursday afternoon, they’d evacuated to a friend’s place in the West L.A. neighborhood — in time to get to safety but unable to save either property from the destruction.

Utensils litter the ground near a restaurant in Topanga Beach (Wray Sinclair for NBC News)

Adam said she’d built Aether’s customer base from scratch into the hundreds, offering retreats, energy readings and yoga classes. Like Rosenbluh, she witnessed all that work reduced to cinders from miles away on her phone screen, via texted video footage.

“The roof was gone, the walls were burning, the staircase in front was burning,” she said. “That was a very heartbreaking moment.”

Picnic tables and a portion of a guest list survived the flames in Topanga Beach (Wray Sinclair for NBC News)

Adam said she’d recently started collaborating with other businesses in Topanga Beach to host group wellness events. She suspects those partners’ studios are likely gone, too. “I don’t know if anybody’s thinking about what comes from here on out, because the Palisades are pretty much wiped out,” she said.

It may be some time before Adam or others in the local business community are fully apprised of each other’s plans or predicaments. Recent days have brought harrowing experiences for some residents who’ve struggled to track down family members during the crisis.

A drive through an area in Altadena that was destroyed by the Eaton Fire shows the devastation the blaze brought to the community. Annette Arreola reports for the NBC4 News at 12:30 p.m. on Saturday, Jan. 11, 2025.

A man spent the afternoon handing out cash to fire victims. “If they have a Louis bag, the money is not earmarked for them.”

On Thursday, James Benjamin posted a notice on the Instagram account of Wylie’s Bait Shop, a Topanga Beach institution since 1946: “If anyone has any contact with Ginny or knows her whereabouts, please DM this account. She doesn’t have a cell phone.”

Benjamin, 23, runs the store’s social media and was referring to his great aunt, Ginny Wylie. The bait shop proprietor, whom Benjamin said is in her 80s, hadn’t been heard from in more than 24 hours.

Charred cans on a melted metal shelf and a destroyed bar stool sat among the debris of burned-down businesses in Topanga Beach (Wray Sinclair for NBC News)

“We’ve been posting on NextDoor, and we’ve also been calling the Red Cross and different shelters,” he said Thursday afternoon. “I know she was escorted by a sheriff, but I don’t know exactly who.”

Wylie, who couldn’t be reached by NBC News, had inherited the shop from her grandparents, the original owners, and became known as the local authority on Malibu surf fishing. “Be ready to spend some time and share some stories,” one Yelp reviewer wrote in 2018. “She always helps you feel like you’re a kid about to go fishing with grandpa. Not many places like this in the world.”

Wylie’s Bait and Tackle, an institution frequented by surf fishing aficionados since 1946, was destroyed by the Palisades Fire (Wray Sinclair for NBC News)

Wylie’s was “a huge hub of the Topanga-Malibu surf fishing community,” Benjamin said, adding that his great aunt is “definitely like a legend.”

Wylie had been seen leaving the store on Wednesday morning and tried to call her family from a shelter, he said. Since then, customers had reported on social media that the shop was engulfed in flames along with other nearby properties.

By Thursday afternoon, Benjamin said authorities had found his great aunt at makeshift shelter set up in a Ralph’s supermarket. “She’s still there and in good spirits,” he said late Friday.

A few miles away in the Palisades, another Ralph’s location had already burned to the ground.

This story first appeared on NBCNews.com.  More from NBC News:

Japanese filmmaker whose arrest caused international outcry backs calls for Aung San Suu Kyi’s release

Your support helps us to tell the storyFrom reproductive rights to climate change to Big Tech, The Independent is on the ground when the story is developing. Whether it’s investigating the financials of Elon Musk’s pro-Trump PAC or producing our latest documentary, ‘The A Word’, which shines a light on the American women fighting for reproductive rights, we know how important it is to parse out the facts from the messaging.At such a critical moment in US history, we need reporters on the ground. Your donation allows us to keep sending journalists to speak to both sides of the story.The Independent is trusted by Americans across the entire political spectrum. And unlike many other quality news outlets, we choose not to lock Americans out of our reporting and analysis with paywalls. We believe quality journalism should be available to everyone, paid for by those who can afford it.Your support makes all the difference.Read moreA Japanese filmmaker sentenced to 10 years in jail in Myanmar has backed calls for Aung San Suu Kyi to be freed. Toru Kubota, who was arrested while covering a protest in Yangon and whose case led to international outcry, told The Independent: “I sincerely hope for her earliest release, along with the release of more than 20,000 detainees.”It comes after three former foreign secretaries called for Ms Suu Kyi to be freed by the brutal military junta which runs the country.William Hague, Sir Malcolm Rifkind and Jack Straw argue the ousted leader was jailed on trumped-up charges by the dictatorship and deserves the chance to lead her country democratically.Ms Suu Kyi, who faces 27 years in prison, is believed to have spent long periods in solitary confinement since her arrest by the military in February 2021.Aung San Suu Kyi before her arrest

Science careers go way beyond ‘standing in a lab’

The second episode of The Leaders’ Room season two features Regeneron Ireland lead, Muriel O’Byrne.
The Leaders’ Room podcast features interviews with the country managers of some of Ireland’s leading sci-tech multinationals. It was created in partnership with IDA Ireland.
In the second episode of season two, Regeneron Ireland lead Muriel O’Byrne shared her perspectives on leadership in the biotech sector, as well as on the importance of supporting the next generation of scientists.
“It’s not about browbeating about the sciences; it’s just saying, ‘Hey, science goes way beyond the careers that you can have standing in a lab’,” she said.
“You can have commercial roles where you start off with science; you can have regulatory roles where you start off in science; you can be running clinical studies and have started off in science. So, it’s really to make sure they understand that it can open an awful lot of doors.”
> > READ MORE
Words by Jenny Darmody

Madha Gaja Raja Twitter Review: Is Vishal’s 12-year delayed film HIT or FLOP? Find out

After 12 years, Madha Gaja Raja has finally hit the screens today on 12th January 2025. Vishal and Santhanam starrer movie is directed by Sundar C. The movie is a perfect blend of action and comedy keeping the users on the edge of their seats, gaining positive responses.   The moviegoers took to social media to share their thoughts on the film. Reacting to the performances and storyline, one of the X users wrote, “#MadhaGajaRaja (3.5/5) – A proper Pongal festive entertainer. Sundar C’s film works even after a decade, there is ample comedy with fun stretches that will chuckle you up for sure. The@iamsanthanam we miss these days is back in blazing form. Forget the logic, enjoy the magic!.”

Behind the Scenes of Hallmark’s Polar Opposites: Filming Locations and Cast Stories

Hallmark’s latest movie, Polar Opposites, premiered on January 11, starring Rhiannon Fish and Markian Tarasiuk. Filmed in breathtaking locations, the movie takes viewers on a journey through Patagonia and Ushuaia, Argentina. Read on for behind-the-scenes stories from the cast and details about the filming locations. According to IMDb, Polar Opposites was filmed in Patagonia and Ushuaia, Argentina. Ushuaia, known as the End of the World, is a popular gateway to Antarctica.

Online safety laws ‘unsatisfactory’ and ‘uneven’, says UK science minister

Online safety legislation is “unsatisfactory” and “uneven”, the science secretary has said as he expressed hopes for parliament to learn to legislate faster on the issue.Peter Kyle said he had given a “very personal commitment to making sure that everybody – particularly people with vulnerabilities, and every child is vulnerable – has protection”, after Ian Russell, whose daughter killed herself after viewing harmful content on social media, told Keir Starmer the UK was “going backwards” on online safety.Russell, who is also the chair of the Molly Rose Foundation (MRF), said in his letter to the prime minister on Saturday that the regulator Ofcom’s implementation of the Online Safety Act 2023 had been a “disaster”.The act is the UK’s first major legislation to regulate social media, search engine, messaging, gaming, dating, pornography and filesharing platforms.The legislation gives Ofcom the power to fine firms that fail to meet these duties – potentially up to billions of pounds for the largest sites – and in serious cases seek clearance to block access to a site in the UK.However, Russell said unless there were changes to the act, “the streams of life-sucking content seen by children” would “soon become torrents – a digital disaster”.Sharing his frustrations with the legislation, Kyle told the BBC One’s Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg programme: “The frustration I have is that the bill was conceived with a whole set of principles, including taking down illegal [content] but also tackling the area where the volume of interaction could have a negative impact – legal but harmful.“Kemi Badenoch, when she was running for [Tory] leader at that exact point that the bill was passing through parliament, said this was legislating for hurt feelings.“That entire bit of the bill was taken out, so I have inherited a landscape where we have a very uneven, unsatisfactory legislative settlement.”Kyle added: “I want to focus on getting all the powers I can have implemented, that will happen in the course of this year. I’m very open-minded and I have said publicly we will have to legislate into the future again. We can’t just wait every decade or so and do a big bang of online harm legislation and also other bits of technological legislation.“We need to get parliament more into the cycle of updating the law because things like deepfakes, for example, come down the line and in three months they are developed, designed, deployed and they are impacting society.”skip past newsletter promotionafter newsletter promotionMeta, which owns Facebook and Instagram, announced its plans on Tuesday to scrap its longstanding factchecking programme in favour of a community notes system.The science secretary said British law had not changed and tech companies must still comply with it, and claimed Mark Zuckerberg’s comments was “an American statement for American service users”.Kyle appeared to defend the Meta chief executive, pointing to other comments in which Zuckerberg had “mentioned the need to take down illegal activity” and “keep children safe online”.Meta, which also owns WhatsApp and Threads, plans to “work with President [Donald] Trump to push back on governments around the world that are going after American companies and pushing to censor more”, Zuckerberg said in his statement.He said Meta would also “get rid of a bunch of restrictions on topics like immigration and gender” that were “out of touch with mainstream discourse”.Kyle said: “There is one thing that has not changed and that is the law of this land and the determination of this government to keep everyone safe.”He added: “Access to the British society and economy is a privilege, it is not a right. If you come and operate in this country you abide by the law, and the law says illegal content must be taken down.”