Boeing is ramping up 737 Max production to 47 planes a month
A new assembly line opening July 6 in Everett, Washington, is expected to push output to 52 jets a month next year
"OUTPUT" · 총 97건
필터 보기현재 지수
50.3
0 = 부정 우세
50 = 중립
100 = 긍정 우세
최근 7일 기준 88,009건을 분석한 결과, 뉴스 심리지수는 50.2(균형)입니다. 긍정 4,374건(5.0%)·중립 81,486건(92.6%)·부정 2,149건(2.4%)이며, 중립 비중이 뚜렷하게 높습니다. 성향 지수는 종합 14.7(중도 균형)입니다.
A new assembly line opening July 6 in Everett, Washington, is expected to push output to 52 jets a month next year
India reports GDP growth of 7.8% in Q4 on services sector output boost
Malaysia's crude and condensate production dropped by 5.5% from a year earlier to 43 million barrels in the first quarter of 2026, due to a slump in crude output, the Department of Statistics Malaysia (DOSM) said on Friday. Crude oil production dipped by 9.4% to 28.1 million barrels in the first quarter, down from 31.5 million barrels for the same period of 2025, the data showed. Condensate output increased by 3% to 14.9 million barrels, up from 14.4 million barrels in the first quarter of 2025. Malaysia's natural gas output fell by 2.1%, according…
Chinese seaport cities saw the added value of their port economy hit 7 trillion yuan ($1.03 trillion) in 2025, according to a report released by an institute under the Ministry of Transport.
Algorithms promised infinite variety. A new AI study finds they're producing "visual elevator music" instead, and that's only half the monoculture problem.
Korea Herald correspondent Choi Jeong-yoon SAN FRANCISCO, US — Inside what used to be a warehouse along San Francisco's waterfront, hundreds of technology companies, filmmakers, designers, creators and AI startups gathered this week to discuss what many believe is the next chapter of artificial intelligence. As generative artificial intelligence rapidly expands to individuals and enterprises, Upscale Conference focused on a future in which AI is no longer simply a tool for generating images, vid
A race to dig rare earths and metals in the mineral-rich mountains of eastern Myanmar is polluting waterways that millions of people living downstream depend on after a new tungsten mine reportedly began operations near the Thai border, according to environmental groups. Myanmar is among the top three producing nations of rare earths and other critical minerals used to make magnets and other components that power products ranging from smartphones to electric vehicles, with most of its output...
US president accused of ‘putting polluters first’ by invoking Defense Production Act to prop up coal output Donald Trump is to use a wartime presidential authority to hand $700m to coal-fired power plants in the US, the latest move by the president to bolster what he calls “beautiful clean coal” despite it being the dirtiest of fossil fuels. Trump is using the Defense Production Act, a cold war-era statute used to accelerate American industrial output in times of national need, to provide grants to more than a dozen existing coal plants across the US, including facilities capable of exporting coal. Continue reading...
As the Pentagon’s 2027 ban on Chinese-origin rare earth materials moves closer, REalloys (NASDAQ: ALOY) is locking down exclusive control of the biggest heavy rare earth metallization systems outside of China. The company says its $20.6 million investment into the Saskatchewan Research Council’s (SRC) rare earth processing facility in Saskatoon secures exclusive preferred rights to up to 80% of expanded production capacity — including commercial-scale NdPr, dysprosium, and terbium output that “no other Western company has…
Russia's crude oil production has declined since the beginning of the year as a number of local refineries are under unscheduled repairs and maintenance, Russia's Deputy Prime Minister Alexander Novak said on Thursday, in the first public acknowledgement from Moscow that its output is flailing. “Currently, Russia’s oil production is indeed lower compared to the beginning of 2026,” Novak told reporters on the sidelines of the St Petersburg International Economic Forum. “We have a number of refineries under unscheduled repairs.…
North Korean leader Kim Jong Un called for an “exponential” expansion of the country’s atomic arsenal during a visit to a newly operational nuclear material production factory, state media agency KCNA said on Thursday. Kim said production capacity for weapons-grade nuclear material had reached more than double its previous level over the past five years and instructed officials to further increase output to meet long-term strategic goals. During the visit, he was briefed on new production processes incorporating more advanced technology and reviewed current output targets and future plans, KCNA reported. Photographs published by state media showed Kim walking between rows of cylinder-shaped equipment inside the facility, which some analysts said could indicate the location is at the country’s main nuclear complex in Yongbyon. Kim said the expansion was necessary given what he called worsening security threats and long-term confrontation with “the most ferocious enemies” and reaffirmed the country’s policy of increasing its nuclear deterrence. KCNA said a key consultative meeting on bolstering nuclear forces was held the same day, at which Kim outlined guidelines for accelerating both the qualitative and quantitative expansion of North Korea’s nuclear arsenal. The country has set out the sequence and safeguards for executing an “ambitious future plan designed to beef up our states nuclear forces at an exponential rate,” KCNA quoted Kim as saying. This is a “historic event that has set up an epochal milestone in rapidly upgrading our nuclear capabilities,” he added. Potential Xi visit to Pyongyang The nuclear facility North Korea unveiled on Thursday was a uranium-enrichment site, an official at South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff said at a briefing in Seoul. Analysts said Kim’s visit appeared aimed at reinforcing North Korea’s negotiating position ahead of potential diplomatic engagement while justifying an acceleration of its nuclear build-up. Chad OCarroll, founder of North Korea-focused website NK News, said the site visit could be linked to a potential trip by Chinese President Xi Jinping to Pyongyang, noting that before travelling to Beijing in September 2025, Kim inspected plans for a new intercontinental ballistic missile, the “Hwasong-20”. “The logic would be to demonstrate absolutely that denuclearisation is not possible, right on the eve of contact with the PRC (People’s Republic of China),” OCarroll said. Lim Eul-chul, a professor at South Koreas Kyungnam University’s Institute for Far Eastern Studies, also linked Kim’s latest visit to Seoul’s pursuit of a nuclear-powered submarine and its talks with Washington over uranium enrichment rights, which he said Pyongyang may be using to justify accelerating its weapons programme. “Even if South Korea does not proceed, the North will follow its own path, but such developments provide a convenient pretext to push its nuclear build-up faster and on a larger scale,” Lim said. North Korea is estimated to possess around 50 nuclear warheads, according to international assessments, though it has never disclosed the size of its arsenal.
The measure, first introduced in August 2025, supports copper producers whose processing operations are disrupted by technical challenges, repair work at major smelting facilities
Kuwait Petroleum Company expects it will take considerably longer to restore oil production than many traders appear to assume if the Strait of Hormuz reopens in the coming days. Speaking at the S&P Global Energy Middle East Petroleum and Gas Conference, the company’s managing director for international marketing, Shaikh Khaled Ahmad Al-Sabah, said Kuwait would need six to eight weeks to recover roughly 70% of normal production levels after Hormuz reopens, with the remaining 30% requiring about another month. Refining operations…
Iraq has restarted production at some of its most important oil fields, including West Qurna 1, Majnoon and Fauqi, lifting national output back to roughly 1.5-1.6 million barrels per day after the collapse triggered by the Hormuz crisis, according to IraqiNews. Iraq has spent the past three months confronting a dangerous economic oil dependency caused by the closure of the Strait of Hormuz, and the rebound still keeps Iraq far below the more than 4 million bpd Iraq was producing before the regional war disrupted Gulf shipping routes and forced…
The University of Nairobi ranked 1,425th globally, retains Kenya's top status amid rising competition; excels in research output and graduate employability.
The decline in output volumes was the third in recent months, while the pace of contraction accelerated to the sharpest level since September 2025
National milk output has topped two billion kilograms for the first time.
AS the government prepares the budget for FY27, Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s meeting with the country’s leading businessmen on Monday offered a glimpse of the wide gap that exists between the two sides’ perception of Pakistan’s economic recovery. While the businessmen pressed their case for tax relief, faster refunds and deeper economic reforms, Mr Sharif boasted of the stability his government had pulled off and his intention of converting recovery into growth. The government’s narrative is simple. After saving Pakistan from a likely sovereign default, restoring macroeconomic stability, reducing inflation and complying with the IMF programme, officialdom believes the foundation for sustained recovery has been laid. PM Sharif argued that the next phase would focus on growth. He did not say when. But the businessmen’s proposals suggest that much of the private sector is unconvinced that the investment climate has improved. Their proposals focused on familiar but unresolved concerns: higher taxes, stuck-up refunds, excessive compliance burdens, policy unpredictability and absence of reforms to encourage investment and exports. These concerns are not new. By repeating them, the business leaders once again laid bare the mismatch in perceptions. For the government, the economy may be more stable now than it was three years ago, but for manufacturers and exporters, it is still difficult to do business. Credit conditions remain restrictive despite monetary easing, industrial output is subdued and private investment has yet to recover. Businesses argue that the stabilisation strategy, while necessary, has extracted a heavy toll in terms of growth and export competitiveness. To ease pressure on the business community, Mr Sharif instructed the FBR to clear all pending tax refunds by June 15. Similarly, he decided to maintain the export refinance scheme rate at 4.5pc until June 2027 to provide certainty to exporters navigating a tight financing environment. But these measures are not likely to restore business confidence, encourage private investment, make exports competitive or boost growth. Likewise, the business community’s supportive tone during the meeting should not be taken as an expression of their satisfaction with the existing economic conditions. While the larger business community acknowledges that it was essential to restore macroeconomic stability, it is already asking when the economy will start to grow. The PM’s emphasis on SMEs, housing, privatisation and e-vehicle manufacturing suggests he recognises the need for a growth narrative beyond fiscal consolidation. But his hands remain tied. Chances of his government pushing growth under the IMF appear dim. The upcoming budget will, therefore, be an austere document like before. And the problems that business leaders have asked the PM to address will remain unresolved even next year. This is how mismanaged economies generate crises. Published in Dawn, June 3rd, 2026
Inspire-se neste conteúdo e procure o Atendimento Corporativo do Senac São Paulo Divulgação Os nascidos na década de 70 devem se lembrar das transições e crises econômicas, mudanças culturais e o prenúncio de profundas transformações tecnológicas, o mundo testemunhou o início da vida digitalizada que hoje conhecemos. Naquele tempo, o futuro era fortemente moldado pelo imaginário da série norte-americana, The Jetsons. Criada nos anos 60, mas emblemática na transição dos anos 70, a série prometia carros voadores, cidades suspensas, robôs humanoides e jornadas de trabalho mínimas, um conforto absoluto mediado pela tecnologia. “Chegamos a 2026, se traçarmos um paralelo, os criadores da antológica série acertaram no conceito, mas erraram no formato físico das soluções. No quesito mobilidade, falharam nos carros voadores, mas acertaram na automação e inteligência do transporte. Na automação, não se concretizou o robô humanoide, mas a substituição do trabalho humano por máquinas, sobretudo no campo intelectual e na indústria. Na comunicação, o acerto na conectividade e nas telas subestimou a miniaturização e ubiquidade da tecnologia”, avalia João Carlos Goia, Gerente do Atendimento Corporativo do Senac São Paulo. Segundo Goia, o erro mais crucial e o foco desta análise, contudo, reside no trabalho, pois subestimaram a capacidade de reinvenção da força de trabalho. A reflexão ganha urgência diante de dados concretos. “Ao analisarmos o relatório ‘Future of Jobs 2025’ do Fórum Econômico Mundial, em Davos, na Suíça, ele projeta um cenário claro até 2030: 170 milhões de novos empregos serão criados globalmente, impulsionados pela tecnologia, em especial pela Inteligência Artificial, enquanto 92 milhões de postos serão eliminados pela automação”, observa o executivo. Apesar desta exclusão, o saldo é expressivamente positivo: cerca de 78 milhões de novos postos de trabalho serão criados. “Então, por que o avanço tecnológico e a digitalização, virtualização do trabalho ainda geram tanto receio?”, questiona. A resposta, de acordo com o executivo, reside na incompreensão. O mundo do trabalho não será apenas diferente, será profundamente reconfigurado por uma força silenciosa e exponencial: a IA. Ela está reescrevendo o que significa ser competente, exigindo uma nova consciência sobre os estágios do desenvolvimento humano. Tradicionalmente, a competência se divide em quatro níveis: Incompetente Inconsciente: Não sabe que não sabe. Incompetente Consciente: Reconhece sua limitação. Competente Consciente: Executa com esforço e atenção. Competente Inconsciente: Age com maestria natural. “Curiosamente, o estágio mais perigoso nesse processo é o da Incompetência Inconsciente. Aquele que acredita já dominar o suficiente corre o risco de se tornar obsoleto sem perceber. Por outro lado, quem assume a Incompetência Consciente como ponto de partida tem maior chance de evolução. A humildade intelectual se configura como uma vantagem competitiva inestimável”. Goia destaca que este desconforto não é um retrocesso, mas um convite à reinvenção. As competências do futuro estarão menos ligadas à execução e mais à orquestração. O "saber fazer" será menos valioso do que o "saber direcionar". O novo paradigma exige um conjunto de habilidades que valorizam o diálogo humano com a máquina como um parceiro estratégico. As competências essenciais passam a ser: Pensamento Crítico Ampliado: Filtrar e questionar os outputs da IA. Curadoria de Informações e Leitura de Contexto: Dar sentido estratégico aos dados processados. Ética Digital: Navegar pelas implicações morais e sociais da tecnologia. Capacidade de Dialogar com Máquinas: Atuar como estrategista, não como mero usuário. “A alfabetização em IA se tornará tão fundamental quanto a leitura e a escrita. Não se trata apenas de novos cargos, mas de novas formas de pensar o trabalho”, avalia. Para o Gerente do Atendimento Corporativo do Senac São Paulo, à medida que avançamos, o ritmo é de "aprender, desaprender e reaprender" em ciclos cada vez mais curtos. “A maestria deixa de ser um destino final para se tornar um estado transitório. A grande transformação não está na tecnologia, mas na consciência. Se as máquinas aprendem cada vez mais rápido, a verdadeira vantagem humana será continuar aprendendo também, com intenção, humildade, coragem e paixão para receber o futuro, não o fictício dos Jetsons, mas o real, que está à nossa frente, aqui e agora”, finaliza. O Senac São Paulo O Atendimento Corporativo do Senac São Paulo atende empresas públicas, privadas e do terceiro setor com o desenvolvimento de soluções educacionais customizadas e alinhadas aos objetivos estratégicos de cada uma delas, em diferentes modalidades, por meio de cursos, em diferentes níveis de ensino, workshops, oficinas e palestras, além do Programa Senac de Aprendizagem, que é gratuito para empresas e está presente em todo o Estado de São Paulo. Saiba mais aqui.