Albertsons Companies' Seattle Division Works Toward Cleaner and More Efficient Distribution Center Operations

Albertsons Companies’ Seattle Division is finding a cleaner and more efficient way of moving equipment around our Auburn, WA Distribution Center, all while keeping the health of King County community in mind.

Funding for this project provided by the US EPA and the Washington State Department of Ecology has helped the team to incorporate two new electric yard switch engines. These electric switch engines replaced two diesel operated switch engines previously used at the facility, reducing our emissions, reducing overall noise levels, and supporting the health of our community.

“Switchers” or “spotters” use these electric switch engines to move trailers to and from our dock doors. These trailers are filled with Albertsons Companies’ freshest frozen, grocery, meat and produce products and then delivered throughout Washington state to local Safeway and Albertsons stores.

With the help of Puget Sound Clean Air Agency, we are excited to continue our efforts on transitioning to an entirely electric switch engine fleet. 

See original post on LinkedIn and read more about Albertsons Companies and our Recipe for Change on our website.

Astria Learning Marks 15 Years of Pioneering Edtech Solutions Around the World

TAMPA, Fla.–(BUSINESS WIRE)–This month, Astria Learning celebrates 15 years of innovation in global education, having empowered over 1.2 million educators and learners. Through its cutting-edge platforms, Astria has significantly advanced higher education accessibility under the motto “Education for everyone under the stars.” Dr. Jeff Bordes, CEO of Astria Learning, shared, “Our journey has been marked by relentless innovation and a deep commitment to educational excellence. From launching th

Boosting Education and Employment for Young Women in India

Jyoti turns her sewing skills into her own tailoring business with support from Udhyam Learning Foundation and Accion’s Ovante program

Authors: Tannaz Daruwalla, Shweta Pereira

During a recent visit to Panchkula, Haryana, located in northern India, we had the pleasure of meeting 22-year-old Jyoti, a budding entrepreneur and clothing designer. Jyoti dropped out of high school after completing her 8th standard, as her father lost his vision and suddenly had to rely on the income from his children. She supported her family during this challenging time; however, given her limited education level and social restrictions preventing her from traveling beyond her village, she opted to stay home rather than look for a job.

In India, about 37 percent of youth between the ages of 15 and 29 entered the workforce during 2021 and 2022, according to findings from the Periodic Labour Force Survey. However, many young women like Jyoti are left out of India’s growing workforce due to limited education, lack of skills, and social restrictions.

Three years had passed since she left school when Jyoti learned about Udhyam Learning Foundation and its work with government-run Industrial Training Institutes (ITI). Udhyam offers students the opportunity to learn trade skills and foster an entrepreneurial mindset, equipping them with the skills to turn their trade into a business. Encouraged by her parents and three brothers, Jyoti decided to pursue tailoring courses at Udhyam and learn to design and sew clothing. With instruction from Udhyam, she also built the soft skills necessary to become a successful entrepreneur, enabling her to turn her passion for sewing into a successful business.

Now, she runs her own tailoring business from home, assisted by her cousin, aunt, and mother. Every day, she wakes at 6:30 to clean her sewing machine and begin her projects for the day. She visits a local boutique run by another family member where she sells her designs, which include wedding dresses and traditional garments like lehnga choli for Indian festivals.

Read more about how Jyoti is supported by Accion and FedEx here.

Dermabrasion and Microneedling Market Size to Grow USD 684.4 Million by 2031 at a CAGR of 5.1% | Valuates Reports

BANGALORE, India, April 30, 2024 /PRNewswire/ — Dermabrasion and Microneedling Market is Segmented By Procedure (Dermabrasion, Microneedling), By Gender (Female, Male), By Application (Scar, Fine line and Wrinkle, Others), By End User (Specialty and Dermatology Clinics, Hospitals,…

Deterra Honored As Silver Stevie Award Winner in 2024 American Business Awards

Deterra® Drug Deactivation System Wins Silver Stevie for Products in the Area of Sustainability & Climate Protection MINNEAPOLIS, April 30, 2024 /PRNewswire/ — Verde Environmental Technologies, Inc.’s Deterra® Drug Deactivation and Disposal System was named a winner of a Silver Stevie®…

Dow and Procter & Gamble To Develop a New Proprietary Recycling Technology Targeting Hard-To-Recycle Plastic Waste

Vision is to recover polyethylene from hard-to-recycle waste for reuse in consumer packaging.Partnership brings together both companies’ intellectual property to create a novel process with low greenhouse gas emissions footprint.

MIDLAND, Mich. and CINCINNATI, April 30, 2024 /3BL/ – Dow (NYSE: DOW) and the Procter & Gamble Company (NYSE: PG) announced a joint development agreement (JDA) to create a new recycling technology. The vision is to enable efficient conversion of hard-to-recycle plastic packaging into recycled polyethylene with near-virgin quality and a low greenhouse gas emissions footprint.

To create the new technology, the companies will combine their patented technologies and know-how in the dissolution process. The development program will focus on using dissolution technology to recycle a broad range of plastic materials with a focus on polyethylene and targeting post-household plastic waste (especially rigids, flexible and multi-layer packaging, which are harder to recycle).

The technology aims to deliver high quality post-consumer recycled (PCR) polymer with a lower greenhouse gas emissions footprint than fossil-based polyethylene. P&G anticipates using this PCR polymer in their packaging, thereby enabling a path to circularity which helps maximize resource utility and reduces materials treated as waste.

The global partnership between Dow and P&G begins immediately and is expected to run until commercialization.

In addition to the patented technologies, both Dow and P&G bring decades of expertise in materials science, manufacturing capabilities and large-scale supply chain management. These areas of expertise will be important in the development of this new recycling technology that can be deployed at commercial manufacturing scale.

“Dow is committed to transforming plastic waste into circular solutions that can be made into high quality resins demanded by our customers while helping to accelerate a circular economy. We are excited to work with P&G who has similar sustainability goals and commitment to innovation,” said Dave Parrillo, vice president for Research & Development, Dow Packaging & Specialty Plastics and Hydrocarbons.

“Our partnership with Dow helps P&G advance our objective to scale industry solutions as we help create a circular future where materials are recycled and remade instead of becoming waste,” added Lee Ellen Drechsler, senior vice president of Corporate Research and Development at Procter & Gamble.

Both Dow and P&G have bold ambitions to accelerate circularity. Dow has a sustainability target to Transform the Waste and commercialize three million metric tons of circular and renewable solutions by 2030, and P&G’s vision is to use 100% consumer packaging designed to be recycled or reusable by 2030.

About Procter & Gamble

P&G serves consumers around the world with one of the strongest portfolios of trusted, quality, leadership brands, including Always®, Ambi Pur®, Ariel®, Bounty®, Charmin®, Crest®, Dawn®, Downy®, Fairy®, Febreze®, Gain®, Gillette®, Head & Shoulders®, Lenor®, Olay®, Oral-B®, Pampers®, Pantene®, SK-II®, Tide®, Vicks®, and Whisper®. The P&G community includes operations in approximately 70 countries worldwide. Please visit https://www.pg.com for the latest news and information about P&G and its brands. For other P&G news, visit us at https://www.pg.com/news.

About Dow

Dow (NYSE: DOW) is one of the world’s leading materials science companies, serving customers in high-growth markets such as packaging, infrastructure, mobility and consumer applications. Our global breadth, asset integration and scale, focused innovation, leading business positions and commitment to sustainability enable us to achieve profitable growth and help deliver a sustainable future. We operate manufacturing sites in 31 countries and employ approximately 35,900 people. Dow delivered sales of approximately $45 billion in 2023. References to Dow or the Company mean Dow Inc. and its subsidiaries. Learn more about us and our ambition to be the most innovative, customer-centric, inclusive and sustainable materials science company in the world by visiting www.dow.com.

For further information, please contact:

Sarah Young
Dow
+1.989.638.6871
syoung3@dow.com

Tracey Long
P&G
513-238-6710
long.tl@pg.com

Tetragon Financial Group Limited Announcement of Dividend

LONDON, April 30, 2024 /PRNewswire/ — Dividend Announcement: On 30 April 2024, the Board of Directors of Tetragon declared a dividend of U.S.$ 0.11 (11.00 cents) per share in respect of the first quarter of 2024. The ex-dividend date is 2 May 2024. The record date is 3 May 2024. Payment…

Six Carnegie Mellon Alumni Nominated for 11 Tony Awards

PITTSBURGH, April 30, 2024 /PRNewswire/ — The spotlight will shine brightly on several Carnegie Mellon University alumni at the Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts in New York at The 77th Annual Tony Awards® on Sunday, June 16. Carnegie Mellon Alumna and Tony Award Winner Renée Elise…

Tetragon Financial Group Limited March 2024 Monthly Factsheet

LONDON, April 30, 2024 /PRNewswire/ — Tetragon has released its Monthly Factsheet for March 2024. – Net Asset Value: $ 2,830m – Fully Diluted NAV Per Share: $31.05 – Share Price (TFG NA): $9.88 – Monthly NAV per share total return: 0.7% – Monthly Return on Equity: 1.2% – Most recent…

HARMAN: Designing With Purpose Is a Team Sport

Originally published on HARMAN Newsroom

Collaboration is more than a buzzword. It’s a transformative practice that breeds innovation and creativity, turning design processes into opportunities for ideation and problem-solving.

Collaborative design is a best practice employed across a breadth of businesses that use in-house design firms so multiple project stakeholders can share real-time perspectives and feedback through all stages of the design process. By adopting this model, the audio industry has made generational leaps — designing speakers, headphones and innovative products that are the realization of dynamic teamwork.

“Integration means we, as product designers, have the chance to work on building brands rather than just single products. We always try to see the bigger picture when we make design decisions,” said Jonas Ceppa, a senior industrial designer at Huemen — the integrated design arm of HARMAN.

Teamwork Makes the Dream Work

Ceppa understands first-hand the importance and game-changing advantages collaboration offers to the product development process. Responsible for leading the next generation of design for JBL portable party loudspeakers, Ceppa’s team’s vision was to create a one-of-a-kind product — the PartyBox Ultimate. To achieve this goal, collaborative design was essential.

“Huemen designers are part of the process from the very early stage of developing the product concept. At the same time, we collaborate with our mechanical and acoustic engineering team to ensure the product vision can be realized,” Ceppa explained.

Drawing on a passionate and talented global team, Ceppa took a holistic approach to the product development process. The result was the PartyBox Ultimate — the most powerful party speaker from JBL, with JBL Pro sound and bass integrated into a futuristic enclosure that transcends the typical speaker audio experience.

“With PartyBox Ultimate, we launched a new generation of PartyBoxes, where we have defined several ingredients that are going to have a huge impact on all upcoming products in the line,” said Ceppa.

The JBL PartyBox Ultimate presents an alluring lightshow display that sweeps from the front elegantly around the sides of the product with an innovative dynamic edge, creating a distinct outline around its striking front-facing subwoofers, which accentuates its distinctive silhouette even in low-light conditions. The groundbreaking PartyBox Ultimate stimulates both aural and optical senses to create an immersive audiovisual experience.

From starry night to strobe effects, it is a speaker design that can transform any space into a spirited lightshow and awaken all the senses. It’s the ultimate party in a box.

Behind the Music

For the HARMAN product team to create a loudspeaker that would take the audio experience to new heights, it had to deliver another dimension in addition to superior sonic ability.

A consumer survey conducted by HARMAN revealed that 84% of respondents believe feeling immersed in the sound enhances the intensity of emotions, and 83% claim to feel a higher emotional effect with a better sound quality. So, how could the team magnify this feeling and further elevate the value of sound? The answer was in the design.

In the same survey, 64% claimed that design creates an immersive and elaborate audio experience.

“For this category of party loudspeakers, we have a very clear target group,” Ceppa explained. “They are young, energetic, share their favorite music and want to inspire others. This is an important factor that will go into the design creation from the beginning.”

Creating an Audio Icon

During the PartyBox design journey, Ceppa revealed several challenges from which moments of inspiration “combined to become part of the design language.”

A rich resource of engineering, manufacturing, and design teams helped Ceppa overcome hurdles and push boundaries with collaborative, problem-solving solutions.

“These different teams bring in their knowledge to push our ideas even further by sharing new material exploration, manufacturing techniques and acoustic prototypes.”

Ceppa described the moment they discovered the unique metal grille design that could be applied to the new generation of the PartyBoxes: “After several trials, even including new manufacturing technologies, we couldn’t find a satisfying pattern. We tried different shapes, forms and repetitions … I realized sitting in front of the prototype that we had a very unique shape we could use all along — the figure eight.”

Such moments of serendipity also helped shape the PartyBox’s signature lightshow feature. As Ceppa revealed, influences from other design-led industries were the genesis for his inspired “lightbulb moment.”

“The initial idea for the lightshow was simple: We wanted to create something new, outstanding and a visible improvement to the previous generation. Inspiration came from sci-fi movies, concept cars and automotive light design. But one of the key moments happened when we decided to not only incorporate the light on the front of the speaker but also the side. This created a more three-dimensional lightshow effect and described the outer shape of the speaker just with light.”

Thanks to a synergy of ID, UI, UX, packaging engineering, graphic design and digital art teams, the PartyBox Ultimate has a strong brand presence and an iconic silhouette. Illuminated by the innovative lightshow, the powerful bass and acoustic performance stirs emotion.

“Being able to develop a design in great detail and guide it until it reaches the market is very important,” Ceppa said. “You want to ensure that the initial design vision is kept along the way without major compromise.”

A Symphony of Minds

At every stage, functional and design teams at HARMAN and Huemen combined and contributed to play a pivotal role in designing with purpose. The early collaboration between industrial designers and acoustic engineering teams ensured that the initial design vision was not only preserved but enhanced through shared expertise.

Another key advantage of collaborative design is the ability to provide immediate feedback and iterate on designs swiftly. This iterative refinement ensures that the final product aligns closely with the initial design vision.

“For physical products, it is important to experience the size, volume, material, and functional features, especially in the early development phase,” Ceppa highlighted. “We build all our designs in 3D software, but to judge the size and shape it is important to experience the physical object. When we review the first mock-ups or prototypes, we can give immediate feedback or revise our design to improve the product.”

After sketching and building the initial design for weeks, the excitement when seeing the first full-scale physical prototype was a memorable experience for Ceppa and his team.

“Receiving the first cosmetic mock-ups and prototypes feels like unwrapping Christmas presents because you are so excited to see what’s inside the box. We could tell instantly that just from the overall size and volume of the first prototype, PartyBox Ultimate will be perceived as the most powerful party speaker,” he said.

“It was worth the wait. The new lightshow elements with its precise light lines and dynamic movement looked amazing and topped everything that we had seen before on a party speaker.”

The dynamism and efficiency of working across integrated teams led the project to evolve from Ceppa’s inspired sketches to boundary-pushing technological development, engineering, and, ultimately, a successful delivery.

From creative minds shaping the external aesthetics to engineers refining the internal acoustics, the PartyBox Ultimate is a prime example of how the collaboration of diverse talents on different teams can result in a product that is both aesthetically pleasing and acoustically superior, setting the tone for the future — literally.