Wednesday 29-04-2026 8:11pm

Grabbing the herd by the collar

It's enough to make Henry Lawson weep according to Jared Lynch in today's The Australian. Agtech unicorn Halter is launching Elon Musk's Starlink technology directly onto smart cattle collars — a breakthrough that is set to transform droving and farming across vast properties. Valued at $2.8bln and branded the "Nvidia of agriculture", Halter has partnered with Mr Musk's low earth orbit satellite service to allow farmers to control and monitor their herd's health with a swipe on a smartphone app. Craig Piggott founded the company 10 years ago in New Zealand after watching his parents, both farmers, work 90-plus-hour weeks. Halter's new direct-to-satellite connectivity with Startlink removes the need for costly on-farm transmission towers. This had previously been the biggest barrier to virtual fencing for large and remote operations. Mr Piggott said the new system would work "anywhere you see a sky. There's a huge portion of the market in agriculture that has struggled with connectivity to both the phone and to collars and needing towers. And the more vast you are, obviously, the more mountainous, the more of a barrier that was," Mr Piggott said from Colorado. "Direct-to-satellite removes that. We already have crazy demand in Australia and in the US, and you know, this will accelerate that." It comes after Halter raised $314.5m last month from investors including Australia's biggest venture capital fund Blackbird. This valued the company at $US2bln and followed it raising $155m last June in a separate round. Its smart collars use GPS, subtle vibrations, and audio cues to train cattle to respect virtual boundaries. This core technology ∼ which is set to shake up Australia's $33.8bn livestock market ∼ has long promised a revolution in livestock management; traditional terrestrial infrastructure limited its effectiveness.


 SPORT:

Like minded sponsors head for the Knights

First it was a fashion business, now it’s a well-known local real estate reports The Newcastle Herald this morning. [click to read more]

Max McKinney and Renee Valentine report the Newcastle Knights' NRLW team is attracting sponsors in is own right, as brands see increasing value in supporting women’s sport.

Merewether-based Salt Property has linked with the Knights for the next two years, taking up a sponsorship space on the NRLW side’s playing shorts.

Salt property is just over four years old now. It’s an all-female team, Salt Property director Lyndall Allan said. There’s 22 of us. It all started out with a dream for myself in the front room of my house. It’s just grown and grown, and we're all about supporting other women and backing ourselves. It was a perfect alignment with the Knights.

The sponsorship announcement on Tuesday came a few weeks after the Knights secured The Iconic, an online fashion business, as a new dedicated NRLW sponsor.

It also came ahead of the opening women’s State of Origin match in Newcastle on Thursday, and a week before the Knights' NRLW squad begins pre-season training.

For Novocastrian Olivia Higgins, it’s an exciting time of the year.

She'll come off the bench for NSW in the Origin game, and then begin training with her Knights teammates next week ahead of their first match on July 2.

Having both Salt Property and The Iconic shows that they see where the game is heading in the NRLW, Higgins, who has represented her state and country and debuted in 2021, said.

They see the value and the potential of what us girls can bring. It also gives us opportunities off the field as well.

There’s a lot of support being thrown behind the NRLW now.

Allan said her business supported a host of community sports teams but this was their first foray into professional sport.

A big thing for me is showing other women that if I can do it, you can do it too, she said.


 STOCKMARKET:

Awaiting the heavies reports

U.S. stocks closed lower on Tuesday, backing away from record closing highs as renewed concerns over the artificial intelligence boom weighed on technology stocks days before five of the sector’s most high-profile companies were due to post quarterly results, Reuters updated on today's website. [click to continue reading]

Semiconductor shares, which have surged over 40% so far this year, weighed particularly heavily on the Nasdaq, which suffered its biggest daily percentage loss in a month.

OpenAI for weekly users and revenue, raising concerns over the AI heavyweight’s ability to support its massive spending on data centers, according to a report from the Wall Street Journal.

Shares of Oracle, whose reliance on OpenAI for its cloud computing ambitions has been under scrutiny, fell 4.1%.

Chip stocks also dropped, with Nvidia, AMD and Broadcom down between 1.6% and 4.4%. Nvidia-backed CoreWeave slid 5.8%.

(OpenAI) is giving investors more food for thought, whether the growth is slowing and what that means for capex spending, said Chuck Carlson, chief executive officer at Horizon Investment Services in Hammond, Indiana. You've got major hyperscalers coming out with results tomorrow, which probably gives investors even more reason to take a few chips off the table.

First-quarter earnings season shifts into overdrive this week, with five of the companies in the Magnificent Seven group of AI-related megacap firms expected to post results. On Wednesday, Alphabet, Amazon, Meta Platforms and Microsoft are slated to report, with Apple on deck for tomorrow.

The companies expected to report this week account for about 44% of the S&P 500’s total market capitalization, according to Raymond James.

General Motors advanced 1.3% after the automaker beat quarterly profit estimates and lifted its full-year earnings forecast, boosted by a resilient U.S. car market and an expected tariff refund.

United Parcel Service shares dropped 4.0% after the package delivery company reiterated its full-year revenue target as spiking fuel costs offset underlying business improvement.

Coca-Cola rose 3.9% following its better-than-expected quarterly report. The beverage giant played down the impact of high oil prices and raised its annual earnings target.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 25.86 points, or 0.05%, to 49,141.93, the S&P 500 35.11 points, or 0.49%, to 7,138.80 and the Nasdaq Composite lost 223.30 points, or 0.90%, to 24,663.80.

Of the 11 major sectors in the S&P 500, tech shares were down the most, while energy enjoyed the biggest percentage gain.

The U.S. Federal Reserve has convened for what is likely to be Jerome Powell’s last monetary policy meeting as chair of the central bank. While the Fed is likely to leave its key interest rate unchanged on Wednesday, the accompanying statement and Powell’s subsequent press conference will be parsed for policymakers' views on inflation risk related to the war-related energy price spike.

We know that the Fed is effectively on hold, said Oliver Pursche, senior vice president at Wealthspire Advisors, in New York. If oil prices remain elevated, does that create an environment where energy-related inflation is not being viewed as transitory any longer, but rather as something that has a very much longer-term impact and might therefore force the Fed to raise rates "

U.S. President Donald Trump said he is unhappy with Iran’s latest peace proposal because it would delay negotiations on the nuclear issue, dampening optimism that the conflict, which has rattled world markets and sent energy prices soaring, could be close to resolution.

In another blow to oil-exporting countries, the United Arab Emirates announced on Tuesday it was withdrawing from OPEC.

Crude prices spiked, reviving inflation worries and contributing to risk-off sentiment.

Declining issues outnumbered advancers by a 1.66-to-1 ratio on the NYSE. There were 179 new highs and 42 new lows on the NYSE.

On the Nasdaq, 1,707 stocks rose and 3,004 fell as declining issues outnumbered advancers by a 1.76-to-1 ratio.

The S&P 500 posted three new 52-week highs and 14 new lows while the Nasdaq Composite recorded 104 new highs and 95 new lows.

Volume on U.S. exchanges was 15.48 billion shares, compared with the 18.11 billion average for the full session over the last 20 trading days.


 NEWS:

🐗 A pig
win in
the budget?

As Australia’s feral pig problem spirals out of control, the Albanese government is poised to axe funding for programs tackling the scourge, prompting warnings of a new wave of devastation to agriculture and the environment, reports The Australian today's website. [click to read more]

It is feared the May 12 federal budget will not renew the $60m Supporting Communities Manage Pest Animals and Weeds Program, the flagship scheme tackling pigs and other feral pests.

As well, the $224.5m Saving Native Species Fund, which has funded some feral pig and other invasive species programs, is under a cloud.

Experts and farmers are appealing for a rethink, with feral pigs ∼ now outnumbering humans in Australia ∼ spreading to new areas, including the NSW Riverina and South Australia’s Flinders Ranges, and wreaking havoc in all states and territories, across almost half the nation’s landmass.

I'm really concerned that we're facing a perfect storm in terms of managing invasive species in Australia right now, Invasive Species Council chief executive Jack Gough told The Australian.

“Numbers are high, and in large parts of the country we're in drought-like conditions, which means the impacts are higher.

“At the same time, budgets are tight and governments are either cutting or not expanding their investment in invasive species management. On top of that, the fuel crisis means you've got increased aviation fuel costs, which makes feral animal control even more expensive.

So right now, we could be going into a situation where we start to see booming feral animals and reduced government control measures.

The federal programs facing a funding cliff have supported feral pig and other invasive species control projects in all states and territories.

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 LOCAL CHATTER:

If nothing else comes up at least the weekend will have the Nundle Dog Races on. The beautiful little town used to have lots of great events but with the aging population and covid the events have been curtailed. The gates open at 9:30. Unfortunately the PR does not tell you when the first race is.
♦♦♦♦

 NEWS:

📤 NSW turns
the tap
on gas

NSW has ended a decade-long ban on gas exploration by opening two massive Far West regions to drillers amid urgent warnings of looming energy supply gaps, the Daily Telegraph newspaper today reports. [click to read more]

In a bid to secure the state’s power grid and bolster the manufacturing sector, two massive new regions in the Far West will be thrown open to drillers for the first time in more than ten years.

The move comes as the Australian Energy Market Operator sounds the alarm on supply gaps across the east coast.

With the state’s electricity grid under pressure as it transitions to renewables, the government is betting on gas to firm the system, providing the on-demand power needed to keep the lights on.

The government will begin taking expressions of interest over three months for gas petroleum exploration licences from May 1 for two areas in the state’s Far West — the Bancannia and Pondie Range Troughs.

The change marks a major shift in the government’s energy policy, reversing statewide restrictions on making new applications for gas exploration licenses that have been in place since 2014.

In 2021, the former Coalition government locked in the freeze in its Future of Gas statement, carving out a singular exemption for the Santos Narrabri gas project.

Despite the energy regulators warnings of impending gas shortages down the east coast in the coming years, any projects resulting from the new licences would take at least a decade to produce usable gas.

The NSW government has vowed that any gas that is eventually produced by any approved projects would be for domestic use only and would not be exported.

In addition the government has committed to releasing an updated Future of Gas Strategy before the March election next year.

In an effort to entice private interest, application fees for gas exploration licenses will be reduced from $50,000 down to $1000.





🛌 Thanks Albo.
There goes
another
Aussie icon

A beloved family-owned Australian business has collapsed into voluntary administration after 126 years of business, reports the news.com.au website today. [click to read more]

Peter Lucas and Damien Lau, from P.A Lucas & Co, have been appointed joint administrators of the A.H. Beard, according to a published notice.

The Daily Telegraph reports A.H. Beard chairman Garry Beard was in tears as he informed staff at the company’s southwest Sydney factory on Tuesday that the company was being forced to restructure, leaving its future uncertain.

The move is being put down to a drop in discretionary household spending, rising manufacturing costs and a shift towards cheaper imported mattresses.

It was a sad day for the industry chief executive of the Australian Bedding Stewardship Council Kylie Roberts-Frost told the Tele.

The scheme of getting manufacturers on board with voluntary green measures ∼ using recyclable materials and getting beds out of landfills at the end of its life cycle ∼ would not exist were it not for the voluntary efforts of A.H. Beard, Ms Roberts-Frost said.

“Today’s news about A.H. Beard is deeply saddening, both for me personally, for my team and for our industry.

What makes this so difficult to sit with is that A.H. Beard was doing the right thing. They were investing in sustainability, supporting a stewardship scheme, and taking responsibility for end-of-life at a time when many in the industry are not.

The company has operated under Garry Beard, his brother Allyn and Garry’s son Matthew who is CEO.

By mid-2025, the company estimated they had likely sold over 10m beds throughout its existence.

They have been a major supplier to the hotel industry and even sold a particular type of mattress in the Chinese market for more than $100,000.

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🎪 The girl
can't
help it!

One Nation outperforms the Coalition for the first time, while the rightwing populist party’s leader has a positive rating among all age groups, reports the The Guardian website. [click to read more].

A majority of surveyed Australians approve of Pauline Hanson’s leadership of One Nation, giving her a higher job approval rating than Anthony Albanese and Angus Taylor, as the Guardian Essential poll finds the rightwing populist party is outperforming the Coalition for the first time.

The results come as Australians are becoming more pessimistic about the country and the economy, with the majority of respondents saying they expected things to get worse in coming months.

The latest Guardian Essential poll, of 1067 Australians conducted last week, found 23% of respondents strongly approved of the job Hanson is doing as leader of One Nation, with another 29% saying they approved. Only 11% said they disapproved and 23% strongly disapproved, giving a total of 52% approving and 34% disapproving.

Hanson had a positive rating among all age groups, including 18-34-year-olds (48% approve, 35% disapprove), 35-54s (50-34%) and 55+ (58-34%), as well as among all men (56-34%) and all women (49-35%).

Hanson also received approval from 33% of Labor voters, 61% of Coalition voters and 21% of Greens voters, as well as 97% of One Nation voters.

The One Nation leader’s highest approval was in Queensland (59-30%), then South Australia (53-32%), NSW (52-34%) and Victoria (50-38%).

Hanson’s approval outstripped Albanese and Taylor. Asked about the job Albanese is doing as prime minister, a total of 41% approved and 51% disapproved. That included 10% strongly approving and another 31% approving, with 22% disapproving and 29% strongly disapproving.

Asked about the job Taylor is doing as leader of the opposition, 34% each said approve and disapprove. That included 7% strongly approving and 28% approving, as well as 21% disapproving and 13% strongly disapproving.

The Essential poll and other published polls have continued to show rising support for One Nation since at least October, despite mounting controversies — including the party’s decision to employ convicted rapist Sean Black until this month, Hanson’s inflammatory comments about Muslims, her stunt of wearing a burqa in the Senate, and scrutiny about transparency and her relationship with billionaire Gina Rinehart.

For the first time in the Essential poll, One Nation this month edged marginally ahead of the Coalition on primary votes. This trend has been seen in other published polls, including Newspoll.

In Essential’s primary plus metric, which allows people to remain undecided, Labor leads on 30% of primary votes, with One Nation into second with 25%. The Coalition attracted 24% of the primary vote, with the Greens on 11%, independents 5%, and don't know also 5%.

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 COMMENT:

Murrurundi Times news site with items covering national news and Upper Hunter region including the township of Murrurundi
Chris Bowen has claimed oil drilling decisions should be based on economics and engineering, despite his government creating barriers that Vikki Campion says make new projects impossible writes Vikki Campion in Daily Telegraph yesterday. [click to read more]

Drilling for oil in Australian territory is the equivalent of dropping every last dollar into the dusty arcade claw machine while the entire Labor cabinet cheers go for it!, knowing the whole game is rigged.

When Climate Change Minister Chris Bowen this week said that decisions about whether to drill should be based on the economics and the engineering and if it meets the environmental approvals, then it can happen and should happen, it was as if he had had nothing to do with the economics or the environmental approvals.

Look at the first budget of the Albanese government, which cancelled a swag of grants announced for diesel storage and petroleum drilling and instead decided to fund the Environmental Defenders Office, which then took Beetaloo drilling projects approved by former Resources Minister Keith Pitt to the NT Supreme Court.

A new anti drilling bureaucracy

Last year, they brought in reforms so that businesses need to deliver a net gain for biodiversity, a new bureaucracy in a federal Environmental Protection Agency with the power to issue stop-work orders, and forced abatement of carbon emissions under the guise of a carbon tax masquerading as the Safeguard Mechanism.

Bowen and the rest of the Albanese government, who went on to spend the next four years talking about reducing emissions, know the system has been gamed so much, with everything stacked against any new proponent, only a fool would try.

Bowen blames engineering as the issue. Any drilling must pass those economics and engineering tests, he says. But it wasn't too hard for them to drill in the 1970s in the Bass Strait, one of the world’s most dangerous stretches of water, home to the roaring forties and shipwrecks galore, and its oil production softened Australia’s exposure to the last global petroleum crisis.

Just too difficult in Oz

But, now in 2026, Mr Bowen wants us to believe that drilling is just too difficult in Australia.

Australia’s oceans are apparently scarier than they were 50 years ago. More terrifying than Russian icy seas or the deep swell off the Gulf of Mexico, where some of the deepest oil rigs produce millions of barrels of oil.

In the 1970s, we produced 70% of our own petroleum from local oil and refineries.

Now we rely on imports and there’s no guarantee we'll have fuel past mid-May.

The government measures fuel security by counting empty service stations, even though these aren't the main suppliers for big buyers like farmers or miners.

Zelots making sure we don't drill

It has everything to do with the government, which forced existing wells to be capped, who armed those who oppose petroleum on ideological grounds with taxpayer-funded court cases and who provide minimal transparency in relation to activist groups masquerading as charities.

Zealots staff environmental departments, industry super funds are forced to buy politically correct investments, and geologists find themselves busier with paperwork than getting dirty, forced to deal with both state and federal departments to handle what is a state resource.

Australia’s oil is both attainable and comparable to the best reserves in the world. The biggest impediment is not sub-arctic temperatures or deep oceans, but the government itself. No investor is going to sink billions into the Albanese claw machine for drilling, knowing that they will never win.

One-eyed passion

Bowen insists projects need to stack up environmentally, while disregarding foreign companies dynamiting pristine forests for wind turbines or NSW’s EnergyCo, in its one-eyed passion for building transmission towers spanning thousands of kilometres, no matter how much biodiversity goes under the bulldozer.

The game works for them — they get the prize. If we eased environmental approvals, as we do for transmission lines, sped up payments and granted landowners underground rights, we could produce Australian oil within six months.

Mr Bowen says any development needs to stack up economically but one must ask the question: with crude oil prices surging toward $144 a barrel and domestic fuel security evaporating, how exactly does refusing to develop our own resources make good economic sense?

The game was never meant to be won. It has been rigged to ensure the only people walking away with any plush toy from behind the glass are the ones Mr Bowen has already decided should win.

We have skills, technology and the guts to claim the prize for oil. The only thing we don't have is a government that’s prepared to let us play a fair game.

It’s easier to see the bite in the small towns, on the quieter streets, because when the shop shuts, it doesn't reopen; darkened windows sit as an empty reminder of what used to bring people together between the post office and the IGA.

Another day older and deeper in debt!

Over the coffee machine in one cafe, the owner confides that he thinks his business is done because he can't sell enough lattes and eggs to pay the four-figure power bill; even with the crowd out front, and the line at the till, with good staff and good food, every month he goes deeper into debt.

You see it in statistics from the Australian Securities & Investments Commission which show that 14,722 businesses entered insolvency in the 2025 financial year.

Statistics from the Australian Energy Regulator released this week show that more than 6200 electricity customers were disconnected in the last quarter, with the average account holder owing $2600 at the time of disconnection.

Thousands of businesses are going insolvent, and thousands of people are being disconnected from power.

And they tell us it's betting cheaper

Yet the same bureaucrats tell us power is getting cheaper and assure us renewables will send bills down. Just not before we go out of business.

The smart ones try to get out quickly, listening to their heads rather than their entrepreneurial hearts. They watch their plans fall apart — how they turned a shabby old house into a lively spot for coffee and tea, a place where the lonely or elderly could meet and talk, a bit of sophistication in a town where the only other choice is the pub.


Murrurundi Times news site with items covering national news and Upper Hunter region including the township of Murrurundi
At dawn in the high summer of 413BC, when the Peloponnesian War was in its 18th year, two trophies faced each other across the narrow strait at the mouth of the Corinthian Gulf. The day before, a Corinthian fleet had met an Athenian squadron and for the first time had struck the Athenians more forcefully than they could strike back, Henry Ergas writes in the The Australian today. [click to read more]

The Corinthians knew the Athenians' larger fleet and masterly seamanship gave them a crushing advantage. To counter it, they modified their ships' prows, making them shorter and stouter to withstand ramming. Having neutralised their adversaries' superiority by departing from the conventional Greek ship design, they raised their victory trophy at Erineus on the Achaean shore.

But despite extensive damage, the Athenians held the water at the fighting’s end, recovered the wrecks and the dead and, according to traditional standards, were the victors. In the hours that followed, they rowed across the Gulf and planted a counter-trophy at Molycrian Rhion, on the Aetolian side.

By the early morning light the two trophies therefore came clearly into view only three kilometres apart. Longstanding rules, that awarded victory to one side or the other, had been breached; but it was something far deeper that lay broken at Erineus.

German intellectual historian Hans Blumenberg ∼ who had experienced the rise of Nazism ∼ put it best. Human beings, he argued, are constitutionally incapable of living in unfiltered contact with reality, exposed to the overwhelming, undifferentiated threat of a world that offers no given orientation, no protection. We therefore connect ourselves to it through the mediating tissue of myth and ritual, metaphor and story.

These do not give us access to the world as it is; they render it intelligible by investing events with significance and placing them within a widely understood frame. And what makes a society viable is sufficient overlap between its members' mental maps to allow them to manage their differences.

When the common repertoire of memories, symbols and words breaks down, that connective tissue is not merely strained; it is torn apart. The result is what Thucydides called stasis: a condition in which conflict can no longer be contained by the civic order, driving society towards rupture.

The war, as Erineus revealed, had shredded the Greek world’s shared frame of significance — undermining ritual, dissolving trust and corroding alliances once deemed secure.

However, the process ran not only between poleis but within them. And nowhere was the descent into stasis more disastrous than in Thucydides' beloved Athens.

Against stasis, Athens had, at the war’s outset, one extraordinary bulwark: the city as Pericles had taught his generation to see it. What distinguished the Athenians, Pericles said in the Funeral Oration, was that they loved life and lived it fully, yet were ready to die for their city, precisely because the city gave them so much.

But claiming love of, and loyalty to, the city was easy when both were without cost. Once the plague descended on Athens in 430BC, bringing sudden and unpredictable death, Athenians began to live for the moment, placing present appetite above future concerns.

Soon after, with Pericles dying while the plague raged, his demagogic successors devoted their specious rhetoric to inflaming division rather than fostering collective purpose.

It was, however, the war that consummated the rupture into opposing camps. War, Thucydides writes, filches away the easy provision of the everyday. The civic decencies proved dependent on peace and plenty; when citizens were forced to bear even the slightest hardship, the thinness of the civic compact was exposed.

By then, dialogue had collapsed and the factions were hermetically enclosed in their own myths, entrenching the hatreds between them. The war had come home. It was only a matter of time before external enemies administered the coup de grace to a body that had already lost its capacity to cohere. Thucydides' formula is terse: the Athenians did not succumb to Sparta; they succumbed to one another.

Thucydides, with what Nietzsche praised as his courage in the face of reality, diagnosed the disease as its victim lay dying. But he did far more than that. His history is itself a compensatory act of significance-making in the face of significance’s dissolution.

By giving the war a shape, a language, a set of themes that still organise political thought, Thucydides produced a ktêma es aiei, a possession for all time. He wrote, he tells us, so that future men, when they see similar tragedies looming ∼ and the nature of human affairs makes their recurrence inevitable ∼ may recognise the risks and act accordingly.

Two and a half millennia later, his warning resonates. Once again, we are in a war marred not only by the clash of arms but by a cacophony of contradictory claims.

War, by its nature, shrouds gains and losses in secrecy, deception and misrepresentation. Worse still, assessments of its likely course are vitiated by the inherent unpredictability of action and reaction: what Thucydides called to astathmëton — the irreducible contingency of a world that can be acted upon but never fully mastered.

But despite those factors, which urge caution, there is an extraordinary rush to judgment, pronouncing outcomes and anointing victors, before they are decided. And no less extraordinary is the vehemence with which opposing views are held, assigning all success (and tactical shrewdness) to one side and all failure (and strategic folly) to the other.

The barely disguised schadenfreude of Donald Trump’s haters and the matching ire of his supporters, are, no doubt, part of the explanation. They are, however, symptoms rather than causes, visible manifestations of the stasis Thucydides acutely analysed: the withering, here as throughout the West, of the common repertoire of values and practices through which contending arguments can be advanced, differences addressed, tensions however imperfectly contained.

And yet the crowds at the Anzac Day dawn service ∼ one of the few occasions on which Australians still gather the frayed threads of historical significance ∼ show the longing for a shared framework of meaning persists.

Inaugurated in another time of bitter division, after the searing antagonisms of the conscription referendums, the dawn service’s ritual centre, with its They shall grow not old, as we that are left grow old, says nothing of the dead’s relation to eternity; it speaks instead of the living’s relation to the dead, conferring enduring meaning on events that unfolded more than a century ago in war’s all-enveloping fog.

The Last Post is sounded into the dark; the silence is kept; the Rouse follows as the sky begins to brighten. Between the two lies a held breath in which the nation briefly becomes, once more, a community.

That is a pause, not a cure. But if, in those few moments, we can resolve to remember not only the fallen but the achievements, now so often derided, of the nation for which they fought and died; to refuse the continued perversion of truth and the escalation of hatred; and to renew the capacity ∼ when the reckoning comes, as it will ∼ to stand-to at dawn beside those who stand with us, then this will be a country that has merited their sacrifice.



 OVERSEAS:

Choe Sang-Hun writes in The New York Times in the world's fastest aging society, artificial intelligence is being used to make care calls to older adults who live alone and to fight dementia. Chung Yun-hee awoke to a body in revolt. Drenched in sweat and wracked with pain, the septuagenarian crawled into the bathroom of her small, quiet apartment on the outskirts of Seoul. She was still hunched over the toilet, vomiting, when her smartphone rang. A bright, articulate female voice asked how she was doing. Ms. Chung managed a few strained words ∼ too sick to talk ∼ and hung up. Help arrived anyway. The caller, an A.I. chatbot nicknamed "Talking Buddy," immediately alerted a social worker. Within hours, Ms. Chung was in surgery for an acute hernia. "Doctors said I could have been in serious trouble had I arrived any later," Ms. Chung, 77, recalled of the episode in late 2024. "They said A.I. saved me." South Korea is aging faster than any other nation. In a mere 15 years, the number of people over 65 has doubled to more than a fifth of the population. The country does not have enough doctors, social workers or family caregivers to support its elderly. Artificial intelligence is helping fill some of that gap. Talking Buddy, a care call service developed by Naver Cloud and adopted by cities and counties across the country, checks on tens of thousands of seniors living alone in isolation or poverty. It holds tailored conversations that are two to five minutes long and designed to ease loneliness, detect emergencies and stimulate cognitive function to stave off dementia. On a recent morning, the bot noted the fine weather and suggested that a walk would lift Ms. Chung's spirits. When she mentioned planting flowers, the bot reminisced about "pink and white cosmos with a yellow center," as if conjuring a memory. The technology remains a work in progress. It occasionally cuts off a user midsentence or hallucinates unauthorized promises — like the time it impulsively offered to send bags of rice to a cash-strapped resident. Yet users have embraced it with a warmth that has surprised even its creators. One woman confessed her depression to the bot, saying her dog ran away and never came back. Another played the piano for it; others invited it over for lunch, knowing full well it couldn't come, according to social workers. "It makes me feel that I am not forgotten, that someone is paying attention to me," Ms. Chung said. In Seongnam, a city just outside Seoul, another septuagenarian sat in the Roa Neurology Clinic, her fingers hovering nervously over a tablet. Diagnosed with mild cognitive impairment ∼ the stage between normal aging and dementia ∼ she was learning to use SuperBrain. An A.I.-powered digital therapeutics program developed with government funding, it offers personalized exercises designed to slow cognitive decline. Images of a tiger and other animals appeared on the tablet's screen, each paired with a number. Then, only the animals remained and she was asked to recall their numbers. She leaned forward, concentrating hard. This was more than a game — it was a fight for her independence. The bot has become a genuine helper, flagging hundreds of emergencies. In one instance, social workers said, it reached a woman with mild dementia who had wandered off and lost her bearings; she answered the bot's scheduled call, allowing officials to locate her.






The Murrurundi Times is owned, compiled and written by Des Dugan. Email