Wanting to avoid fires in Oviedo, the cleaners have encountered another problem: the Civil War

If we believed that Spain had already cataloged every last vestige of the Civil War, bad news. Artillery corners still pop up like mushrooms in autumn. Scars of a territory that reminds us of a broken country. Imagine the look on the faces of the city hall’s cleaning professionals when they put the brushcutter where it didn’t belong. Imagine the face of the municipal crew of Oviedo: cleaning any path in the municipality of El Campón in the middle of July, the machine trips over reinforced concrete and an embrasure from 1937, hidden under the ferns for 89 years. Anyone who knows Mount Naranco is not surprised. Those who only follow guided routes, tourist plates and school manuals, will be amazed. A front under the bushes. The archives say that Oviedo endured a republican siege in 1936 which ended up breaking towards October. So, Naranco was filled with trenches to watch the steps towards Grado. In El Rebollal they counted thirteen positions: two for machine gun, eleven for rifle. Campo Cimero has thirty-one, distributed in four arches towards the northwest, the largest defensive complex in Asturias. To cite an example, in Ayones the nest preserves its original geometry: seven sides on the outside, cylinder on the inside, built in 1937 by the Republicans. And of course, the undergrowth does not erase these structures, rather it preserves and contours them. And except for the nationalist constructions of Pando, almost everything preserved in this area—Rebollal, Campo Cimero, Fitoria, Ayones—is republican. Spain’s wounds. Although no one has the exact figure, the BunkerAtlas portal has registered and geolocated 192 positions. It is more of a sample than an official census, of course. Madrid concentrates almost 19% of what is catalogued; Catalonia is around 16%; Navarra 12%; Aragon 11%. And almost six out of every ten registered structures were built during the Civil War, by both sides. Only in Madrid have they documented more than 2,000 fortifications in a hundred municipalities, about 500 concrete; The capital already has 531 inventory tokens between Casa de Campo, El Pardo and Ciudad Universitaria. In the Pyrenees, the Franco regime designed Line P: ten thousand bunkers planned along 500 kilometers of border. Luckily the work stopped with less than half built, about 4,000, and became obsolete around 1980. Multiply that by each front—Ebro, Jarama, the Oviedo fence itself—and the real figure is surely around tens of thousands. Most remain under brambles, awaiting clearing. Who decides what is saved. Spain catalogs this heritage since the Historical Memory Law of 2007, expanded by the Democratic Memory Law 2022—revised March 2026—. Both require identifying and protecting these remains, and in some cases opening them to the public. The problem, as always, is one of resources: inventorying thousands of kilometers of trench costs money that does not always arrive, and each recovered nest depends on a city council, a memory association or a forestry crew that stumbles upon it. Present over past, as always. Let’s think about The Carmen of the Martyrsthe most beautiful garden around the Alhambra, which stands above the old Corral de los Cautivos, where Christian prisoners spent the night in Arab dungeons. After the Civil War it served as a residence for young people. In 1970, a hotel project razed a good part of the historic forest, until neighborhood protests stopped the work. Or the Turó de la Rovira. Everyone knows it as the Carmel Bunkers, although the name is a historical error: there was never a bunker or underground shelter there. What the Republic installed in 1938 was an open-air anti-aircraft battery, four 105 mm Vickers cannons, to stop the bombing by Italian aviation over Barcelona. When the war ended, the Republican army disabled the pieces and withdrew, leaving the concrete empty. Today is the most photographed sunset in Barcelona, ​​a nest of tiktokers. The other urgency: summer rules. The reality is that the vestige found in El Campón responds to a key action and none of this should stop the clearing. On the contrary. The summer of 2026 is already the worst start in the historical series: June closed with 90% more burned area than the average of the last twenty years, and quadrupled the data for the same month in 2025. The Almería fire devastated nearly 6,600 hectares, with projections that are close to 7,000. The European Union launched its largest historical firefighting deployment and it is not easy to suspect that it is still insufficient. Perimeter clearing responds to the law. Although the hoax that environmental regulations prohibit cleaning the mountain circulates every July; Neither the 2030 Agenda, nor the European Green Deal, nor the Forestry Law prohibit clearing. They demand it, with an annual plan. Memory and prevention do not compete. All you have to do is notify Heritage, let the nest breathe for a while in the sun and then decide what to do with it. The Civil War remains buried in half of Spain; chainsaw is just what is needed to clear brush and clean up against the spread of fires. Image | Flickr (Diego Valera) In Xataka | In 1938 Spain was divided in two. So two “Gordos” were delivered from the Christmas Lottery

discounts of up to 70% on technology

We are halfway through July and, while some are already on vacation, others are eagerly awaiting them. If you are thinking of renewing some of your electronic devices this summer, today (July 15) we have found some technology offers that may interest you. These are some of the best deals today on Amazon. Lefant Robot Vacuum Cleaner and Floor Mop with dToF Laser Navigation and M2 App The price could vary. We earn commission from these links Wireless Android Auto and CarPlay adapter Ancvet by 29.99 euros: with Dual WiFi and Bluetooth connectivity. solar surveillance camera Tapo C615G by 89.99 euros: with 4G LTE connectivity and solar panel. Smart TV Hisense 55E7S Pro by 469 euros: 55-inch QLED with 144 Hz. Robot vacuum cleaner Lefant M2 by 99.99 euros: with 6,000 Pa of power and autonomy of up to 160 minutes. ceiling fan Mellerware Brizy Bright Rattan Sand by 99.99 euros: with LED lamp and winter function. Ancvet Android Auto and CarPlay wireless adapter This wireless adapter for CarPlay and Android Auto It is one of those perfect gadgets for those who will spend their holidays traveling by car. It is the best seller on Amazon at the moment and has a 70% discountremaining available for 29.99 euros. It is Plug & Play type and has dual WiFi and Bluetooth connectivity. It is perfect if you are one of those who hate having to plug in your cell phone via cable every time you get in the car. Ancvet Wireless CarPlay and Android Auto Adapter The price could vary. We earn commission from these links Tapo C615G Solar Surveillance Camera If you are going on vacation and want to have your home under control, this surveillance camera from the Tapo firm is one of those bargains that are worth it on Amazon today (now it costs 89.99 euros). It has 4G LTE connectivity and works with a SIM card (making it ideal for second homes). His battery is charged through solar panel and offers coverage of up to 360º horizontally and up to 134º vertically. In addition, it has IP65 certification, so it is resistant to dust, rain and heat. Tapo C615G Kit – 4G LTE Solar Security Camera with Pan/Tilt 360° The price could vary. We earn commission from these links Hisense 55E7S Pro Smart TV For video game lovers looking to get the most out of their PS5 either Xbox Series X without spending a fortune, this 55-inch Hisense 55E7S Pro is one of the smart purchases of the moment, since it has a discount of almost 200 euros and you can get it for 469 euros. It is a QLED TV with a native refresh rate of 144 Hz, HDMI 2.1 ports and Dolby Vision IQ technology to adapt the image to the light in your living room in real time. Hisense 55E7S Pro – Hi-QLED Smart TV 55 Inch The price could vary. We earn commission from these links Lefant M2 Robot Vacuum Cleaner Another device that has a 70% discount on Amazon today is this one robot vacuum cleaner from the Lefant firm, which now costs 99.99 euros. It is a very complete model for its price and it offers a suction power of 6,000 Pa and, in addition to vacuuming, it sweeps, scrubs and mops. You can control it through the app and its battery offers a range of up to 160 minutes. Lefant Robot Vacuum Cleaner and Floor Mop with dToF Laser Navigation and M2 App The price could vary. We earn commission from these links Mellerware Brizy Bright Rattan Sand Ceiling Fan We cannot close our compilation with one of the star devices of summer: a ceiling fan. This model from the Mellerware brand is a bargain now on Amazon. It used to cost 150 euros, but now you can get it for 99.99 euros. It is a vsilent ceiling fan with retractable blades, reverse spin function and integrated LED lamp. Mellerware – Ceiling Fan with Light and Lamp Brizy Bright Rattan Sand The price could vary. We earn commission from these links Some of the links in this article are affiliated and may provide a benefit to Xataka. In case of non-availability, offers may vary. Images | Mellerware, Lefant, Hisense, Tapo and Ancvet In Xataka | Best Amazon Fire TV. Which one to buy and recommended models to convert your TV into a smart TV depending on use In Xataka | Best televisions in quality price. Which one to buy and seven recommended 4K smart TVs

“Cinema is vital and essential, and continues to transform”

Matt Damon left the filming of ‘The Odyssey‘ with the feeling of having done something that will no longer be repeated. Christopher Nolan, its director, believes that this pessimism is unfounded. And in fact, the easiest way to refute it is with the box office data of the last few weeks. Significantly, the most classic and traditional of today’s directors are not afraid of AI. What Matt Damon said. While promoting the film, Damon said that I had a feeling of nostalgia while filming itbecause it looked like the movies from when he started working, and he admitted that he knew that that type of cinema is ending. He went so far as to say that this was his last chance to make a film like this, and that he does not believe that the industry will have the resources to film this way for much longer. Nolan’s response. Nolan does not share that diagnosis, and he began to comment on the controversial topic of artificial intelligence. In an interviewthe director noted that he has never seen “a technology so successfully adopted by Wall Street, investors and technology companies, and at the same time so rejected by the public.” He aimed squarely at the younger generation: it was they, he said, who coined the term “AI slop” to describe the content generated by AI that has flooded the networks, and those who “show more disdain” towards everything related to this technology. No, but. Nolan doesn’t reject AI entirely. He believes it can provide useful tools for working with images, but states that “the idea that AI will completely replace humans and their creativity is, in my opinion, nonsense.” Your opinionbasically, is that the creativity of cinema is stronger: “Cinema is vital and essential, and it continues to transform.” We are with the people. To justify his words, Nolan defends the attitude of younger viewers and cites, for example, two hits of the season as proof that the twenty-year-old public has not lost interest in films made with real cameras and locations: ‘Backrooms’ and ‘Obsession’. That is to say, they are indisputable box office hits that, in his opinion, dismantle another idea that has bothered him for a long time, that of young audiences no longer having the attention span for a three-hour epic film. Nolan defended that the films that succeed among that generation are mysterious and reflective, and even compared some parts of ‘Backrooms’ with the most enigmatic cinema of David Lynch. The ‘Oppenheimer’ precedent. This isn’t the first time Nolan has brought AI into the public conversation. Already in 2023with the premiere of ‘Oppenheimer’, said that he saw very strong parallels between the physicist’s calls for nuclear containment and the warnings of AI experts who asked to slow the development of the technology, citing among them Geoffrey Hinton, the researcher who left Google to speak more freely about the existential risk posed by advanced AI. Already then he insisted that AI can end up being a powerful tool, but that the responsibility cannot fall solely on technology. Header | HellaCinema In Xataka | Nolan has a reputation for being one of the directors who takes the most care of his films. But the IMAX format of ‘The Odyssey’ raises doubts

that parents stop kidnapping their own children

Anastasiya Minkova returned from a trip and found the house empty: her husband had left with his two year old son. In many countries the scene could immediately trigger an investigation for parental abduction. In Japan, for decades, it could become the game that decided who would keep the child. Japan knocks down a perverse advantage. Until last April, the Japanese system established that, after divorce, only one of the parents could retain legal authority over the children. The courts tended to favor the person who lived with the child and had assumed the role of primary caregiver during the process. That created an incentive hard to ignore: Taking the child before initiating the divorce could put the other parent in a position that was practically impossible to overcome. Lawyers advising the “abduction”. The logic of the system converted a behavior considered parental abduction in other countries into a tolerated family strategy de facto. According to the lawyer Masanori Tanabewho leaves the home with the children begins to appear before the court as their usual caregiver, decisively strengthening their position. John Gomez, founder of Kizuna Child-Parent Reunionsums it up still cruder: Some family lawyers directly advised their clients to take the children because the matter was treated as a civil dispute, not as a crime. The courts were late. time played in favor of the parent who had taken the child. By the time a court heard the case months later, the child may have been living in a new home for a long period of time, attending another school, and maintaining limited or no contact with the parent left behind. Breaking this situation could be interpreted as an alteration of the stability of the minor, which ended up consolidating precisely the advantage obtained through his transfer. Reform and shared parental authority. Now Japan has modified its Civil Code to allow the so-called kyodo shinken, a regime in which both parents can retain legal capacity over important decisions after divorce. The Ministry of Justice hopes that the change force parents to think about the interest of the minor and to maintain adequate participation in his or her upbringing. Furthermore, unilaterally taking the child and refusing to cooperate may be taken into account against anyone who aspires to obtain their legal authority. Sharing decisions is not sharing children. The reform, in addition, has a decisive limitation: kyodo shinken is more accurately translated as shared parental authority, not necessarily shared custody or cohabitation. Both parents could intervene in issues such as education or medical care without there being a mandatory distribution of the time they spend with the child. Lawyer Masami Kittaka warns on CNN that the new system also does not guarantee that old cases are reviewed or that estranged parents automatically regain lost contact. The problem of foreign parents. Yes, because language barriers, lack of information and insufficient legal representation make many foreigners react when the situation is already consolidated. Examples like Emily Sato’swho said that she returned home and found that her husband had taken her daughter, removed much of the furniture, and removed her from the list of people authorized to pick her up from school. When the case came to court, exclusive cohabitation with the father was already discussed as a stable environment that should be preserved. Separations that last longer than childhood. Jeffery Morehouse wears 16 years without seeing his sontransferred from the United States to Japan when he was six and a half years old despite the fact that he had primary custody. He obtained Japanese court rulings validating his US order, but claims he never got them effectively executed. His last farewell was Father’s Day 2010and since then he avoids family celebrations and places where other children can remind him of how old his son was when he disappeared from his life. Protection against abuse. Shared parental authority also cannot applied indiscriminately. Some associations fear that it will force people who have suffered domestic violence to remain linked to their aggressor, although the reform allows contact to be restricted in cases of mistreatment or child abuse. The challenge will be to differentiate situations of legitimate protection from those in which one of the parents uses the child to gain advantage in a conflictive breakup. Japan still has not eliminated the incentive. There is no doubt, the reform represents a historic break with a model that favored exclusive custody and could turn a flight into a judicial advantage. However, experts they point out that the same problem will continue to exist as long as there are no clear consequences for whoever takes the minor, guarantees of contact and mechanisms capable of executing court decisions. Japan has finally recognized that allowing a parent to disappear with their own child was part of the problembut now he must show that changing the law can also give children back the relationship they lost. Image | Chris Rimmer, Jenny Webber In Xataka | Japan no longer knows what to do to make Japanese people have children. So he’s putting free daycare all over the country In Xataka | Japan’s problem is not that it is stopping having babies at a record speed. It’s just that he did it 17 years earlier than he should have.

In South Korea they offered $14,000 to young people in exchange for them getting married. The young people didn’t care

With $14,000 you can plug holes, take a few months off to travel the world or invest in that business that has been on your mind for years. What you won’t be able to do is pair two South Koreans to get married, start a home, and have children with whom to help the country get out of the crisis. deep crisis birth rate in which it has been immersed for years. We know this because in Korea there are administrations that already they have pulled the checkbook and reached those figures (more than 10,000 dollars) in their efforts to act as matchmakers. All without success. What’s more, this effort by administrations to encourage couples is having a peculiar effect: it has made singleness a real business. A matter of love… and money. In its efforts to get out of the demographic slump in which South Korea has been mired for some time, it has not hesitated to draw on its checkbook. Their reasoning is simple: if the birth rate can be encouraged with money, the Government is willing to put it on the table. In recent months, the country’s authorities have proposed handing over large ‘baby checks’ to its citizens, offer tax incentives to families with children, expand the parental leave or even guarantee that new mothers have access to select food. Another of the country’s great bets has been to match its young people. And that has been so much to create dating programs specifically designed for singles to find love and make it easy for them financially, offering them money so that the cost of a romantic dinner is not an obstacle. It may sound exaggerated, but there is one fact that explains it: in South Korea couples and birth rates go hand in hand. So much so that less than 5% of babies are born out of wedlock. How much money are we talking about? Very much. Many of South Korea’s matchmaking programs come from regional organizations, so photography can vary from one area of ​​the country to another; But it comes with taking a quick look at Google to see news about cities or districts that are trying to raise their birth rate with very expensive matchmaking programs. Recently we were talking to you of the case of Seoul, where the Metropolitan Government was studying giving 700 euros to couples who get married there. It’s a lot. Although not as much as in other cities. In Busan, one of the main metropolitan areas of South Korea and which is suffering the effects of the demographic crisis in a way particularly hardhave gone a step further by blessing new couples with hundreds of dollars. What does that translate into? In which money stops being an obstacle to finding a girlfriend (or boyfriend). In June Korea Herald informed that one of Busan’s districts, Saha-gu, was planning a pilot project with local singles born between 1981 and 2001, offering them $360 (to spend on dates) just to ‘make match’ with someone That is, each couple that left the event holding hands and with plans to see each other again would add $700 to their romance. One figure: $14,000. Those $360 per person to enjoy as a couple were just the first part of Saha-gu’s program. The idea was to increase support as the relationship progressed until reaching the big wedding gift: 20 million won in advance for couples who say ‘I do’, about $13,600. The district was even willing to offer newlyweds a larger deposit if they decided to buy a house or help them with rent. Such a bet is better understood in light of the demographic tables of the metropolitan city of Busan: if at the beginning of the 90s it exceeded 3.8 million inhabitantsin 2010 it was at 3.4 million. The trend does not clash with that of the country as a whole, which at the end of 2024 became a “super-aged society”, with 20% of its population over 65 years of age. Do these aids work? That was the big question that was left hanging… and it just answered The Wall Street Journal (TWSJ) with a report in which the title is almost a sentence: “Not even a $14,000 government aid can get South Korean singles to get married.” Despite the promise of a $14,000 wedding gift, Saha-gu’s program was not very successful. TWSJ assures that no participant demanded that reward. And Saha-gu is just one of the aids that couples can qualify for. TWSJ recalls that not all support comes from the administrations and that there are also companies or religious organizations that are trying to reverse the country’s demographic crisis. Two examples are the construction company Booyoung Group, which offered $75,000 to employees who have a child; and the Yoido Full Gospel Churchwhich grants its members almost $1,400. The big question. With such incentives the question is obvious. Why don’t South Koreans get married? Why does your birth rate continue? far below from years ago? Part of the answer is social and cultural changes. TWSJ cite a survey recent study that shows that three-fifths of employed South Koreans do not see the slightest problem in not going through the altar, a factor to which are added other economic factors, such as long working hoursthe increase of cost of living or how burdensome it is the upbringing of children in a society characterized by its level of demand and competitiveness. Another key is the difficulties that women encounter when re-entering the labor market after becoming mothers. In fact, there are dating programs that have ended up being suspended precisely because they could not bring together a sufficient number of interested women. Other young people rule out registering simply because of the heavy bureaucracy that accompanies this type of initiative. “It’s more problematic than you imagine,” recognize one to TWSJ. Is the Government a good matchmaker? That is the other big question, especially if you take into account that programs like Seoul or … Read more

The argument of job creation has been the great asset to build data centers. It would be nice if it were true

data centers they consume a lot of electricitymaking raise the electricity bill, they pollute the air and sometimes water too. There are more and more arguments against them, while the arguments in favor for those who live near one of these mastodons are basically reduced to one: they generate many jobs. Sure? What is happening. The United States concentrates a third of all data centers in the world. They count in Futurism that there are states competing to attract big technology companies, offering resources and tax exemptions in exchange for them generating jobs and helping to develop their communities. However, it is increasingly clear that the creation of stable and lasting employment is an unfulfilled promise. Billions for a handful of jobs. In Cedar Rapids, Iowa, there are two projects underway for two data centers from QTS and Google respectively. As reflected in the Cedar Rapids Economic Development Centerto encourage the construction of these infrastructures, the city has offered them a 70% exemption from property taxes for 20 years, in addition to returning 75% of electricity rates (a municipal surcharge that is applied to the bill). Google and QTS are going to spend 1.3 billion on their data centers, but it is estimated that they will save more than 580 million on taxes and municipal fees. And you will say how many jobs are they going to create? Under the contract, they are only required to create 61 permanent jobs. Why is it important. Data centers have become the engine of the American economy, but one thing is the wild investment of big tech to build them and the impact on local employment is quite another. They are enormous infrastructures, which cost a lot of money, but once launched they operate practically on autopilot. The tasks that really need human intervention are very few compared to their magnitude. In Aragon too. This situation is not exclusive to the United States, the same thing is also happening in Aragon. We recently learned the employment figures that Amazon will generate in Villanueva del Gállegowhere they are building six data centers. The company had spoken of up to 29,900 full-time positions linked to the project, but they were counting indirect and induced employment, such as suppliers and associated services. The reality is that between six data centers, they are going to hire only 180 permanent people who will work in shifts so that they can operate 24 hours a day, 365 days a year. Once again, the narrative of mass employment is leaking everywhere. Employment yes, but temporary. To build data centers of that magnitude, many companies from different sectors must move, which indirectly does generate a lot of employment. In the case of Cedar Rapids, the city boasts that the projects will create “thousands of construction and trades jobs,” the problem is what will happen to all of them when the data center comes online. According to a recent report by Turner & Townsend echoed in Futurism, the urgency to build new data centers has caused prices to rise in other projects such as housing construction, in addition to monopolizing specialized labor in construction areas. Image | Xataka with Magnific In Xataka | While most oppose AI data centers, there is one group enthusiastic about them: merchandise thieves

OpenAI wants its own Alexa, but on steroids. Its first device seeks to change the relationship with AI, according to Bloomberg

Home assistants have been operating for years around a simple logic: we give an order, the device executes a task and the relationship usually ends there. The bet that OpenAI would be working on aims precisely to break that limit and give artificial intelligence a more continuous role within the home. It wouldn’t just be about answering questions or activating services, but about learning from the user and offering help before they have to ask for it. The OpenAI device. According to BloombergOpenAI is working on a screenless home device, similar in general appearance to a speaker, but designed to be moved around the house thanks to a rechargeable battery. The company would like to make it the physical embodiment of ChatGPTcapable of responding to messages, playing content, controlling connected devices and helping with different tasks. It should be noted that the company has not presented it and there is no official information yet. Jony Ive, Apple’s former design chief, is also behind the project. OpenAI paid $6.5 billion in 2025 for io Productsthe company he had co-founded, while his studio LoveFrom participates in the design of this new family of devices. The team also brings together numerous former Apple designers and engineers responsible for products like the iPhone and Mac, a concentration of talent that helps understand both the ambition of the project and the legal conflict surrounding it. Your own Alexa, but with another ambition. The entry of the firm led by Sam Altman in the home it would put it in front of Amazon, Google and Apple, companies that have been building their own ecosystems of speakers, assistants and connected devices for years. According to the aforementioned medium, the difference would be in a more personalized and proactive experience, capable of learning from the user and offering information without always waiting for an order. OpenAI would describe it internally not as a simple smart speaker, but as a computer conceived from the beginning to work with artificial intelligence. The difference would be in its ability to interpret what is happening around it using a camera, several sensors and more advanced models than those available in conventional home assistants. Instead of processing an isolated instruction, the system could take into account the environment and the specific moment to determine what information is useful and how to respond. New voice model. Much of that experience would depend on GPT-Livea more advanced version of ChatGPT’s voice mode that OpenAI launched in July 2026. The idea is that you can listen and speak at the same time, adapting more naturally during conversations and processing information quickly. The device would also incorporate mechanical elements capable of moving on their own. With this, the company would try to reinforce the personality of the device and generate the feeling that “it is alive.” To anticipate, you will have to know us. OpenAI would like the device to become a kind of expert on its user over time, capable of identifying what information may be useful at any given moment. Bloomberg notes that to achieve this, it could turn to personal information, such as emails, and use it to better understand its owner. This personalization would be one of its main arguments, but it would also force us to decide to what extent we are willing to open our digital lives. Apple’s lawsuit. The project is also moving forward under pressure from a Apple lawsuitwhich accuses OpenAI of having used trade secrets to accelerate the development of its devices. OpenAI maintains that it knows of no evidence to support those accusations, although Apple has requested a court order that could delay its commercialization. According to Bloomberg, the company aims to present the product during 2026 and launch it in 2027, as long as the technical and legal process allows it. The final bet is to turn ChatGPT into a physical presence that we live with daily. Images | OpenAI/LoveFrom In Xataka | Alexa+ arrives in Spain with the ambition of understanding real conversations: we have seen it in action and everything changes there

Airbus leaves its aircraft engines in the hands of others. With hydrogen he has decided to enter that business

Airbus has built some of the world’s most important commercial aircraft for decades, but its engines have always come from outside. Rolls-Royce, GE Aerospace, Pratt & Whitney and CFM International have occupied that specialized space, while the European manufacturer concentrated on design, integrate and assemble the aircraft. That separation has been one of the unwritten rules of the industry. Now, the search for a hydrogen-powered plane has led the group to cross a border that until today it had preferred to keep intact. The movement will take shape, if it overcomes the pending steps, in a joint venture between Airbus and MTU Aero Engines. Its objective will be to bring together in a single organization the development, testing, certification and commercialization of a fully electric propulsion system powered by hydrogen fuel cells. For now, both companies have signed a non-binding agreement and the operation remains subject to regulatory authorizations and the corresponding labor consultation processes. The forecast is that the new company will begin operating in 2027. Airbus wants to manufacture the heart of its future hydrogen plane The operation represents Airbus’s first foray into the manufacture of complete aeronautical engines. The step breaks with a model in which manufacturers define and integrate the aircraft, but leave the propulsion in the hands of specialized companies. The European firm does not intend to compete with them in the conventional engines that its models currently use. Its entry will be limited, at least for now, to a technology still in development that Airbus and MTU want to transform into an industrialized and certifiable system. The two partners come to the project from complementary positions. Airbus brings its knowledge of commercial aviation programs and its experience in fuel cell and liquid hydrogen propulsion; MTU adds capabilities in engine design, integration, validation, certification and maintenance. The final terms of the future partnership are still being negotiated. The Financial Times maintainsbased on two sources close to the talks, that the European manufacturer would have close to 75%, that the valuation could exceed 1.2 billion euros and that both parties are inclined to install it in Germany. Recreation of the ZEROe turboprop concept presented by Airbus in 2020 The initiative also reflects how ZEROe has changed since its launch in 2020. Airbus initially aspired to introduce a hydrogen aircraft around 2035, but ended up recognizing that the technology and the necessary ecosystem would not advance in time to meet that horizon. The British newspaper now places the launch in the 2040s and claims that the readjustment included a budget reduction and the reassignment of staff. After reviewing the program, the group decided to prioritize an all-electric architecture based on fuel cells. The prioritized architecture would not burn hydrogen inside a turbine. The fuel, stored in a liquid state, would power fuel cell systems that would electrochemically combine it with oxygen to produce electricity; That energy would later reach the electric motors responsible for moving the propellers. It should not be confused with the direct combustion demonstrator that Airbus and CFM International had planned to test on an A380. That was a different technological path. The system would not produce direct CO₂ emissions during the flight and would have water as a byproduct of the reaction. The announcement does not immediately bring a hydrogen plane closer to airports. As we say, the future society must still be established, convert the research and results of the demonstrators into an industrialized and certifiable system, and face obstacles ranging from weight and cooling to fuel supply. There is also no assigned model nor a confirmed commercial calendar. Images | Airbus In Xataka | Spain promised them very happy with the European hunting megaproject. Until a rival appeared out of nowhere: Italy

Carles Porta premieres a new season of ‘Crimes’ today on Movistar Plus

He true crime It has a strong presence on almost all streaming platforms. Logical: it has more and more followers. If we talk about national production, one of the figures that stands out the most among this genre is Carles Portawho is not resting or on vacation. Today, July 14, new season of ‘Crímenes’ premieres on Movistar Plus: you can see it in full for just 4.99 euros per month. Monthly subscription to Movistar Plus The price could vary. We earn commission from these links More quality true crime comes to Movistar Plus It’s one more reason to give this streaming platform a chance. This production comes to the Movistar Plus Free Plan with films and series, which has a very affordable price. As with the other plan that includes sports (which costs 9.99 euros per month), it does not have any type of permanence. Furthermore, we can share the account with a friend or family member without any kind of problem. Of all the true crime that Movistar Plus has, Carles Porta is one of the highlights in its catalog. There are already many of his productions on this platform, such as ‘Mátalo ya’, ‘Tor’ or ‘Peregrina’. Today this new season of ‘Crimes’ premieres with a case called ‘The pandemic killer‘ which promises to maintain the same level of quality true crime of Porta. This premiere joins a very powerful list of movies that will arrive on the platform in the next few days, such as ‘The Black Ball’, ‘Anaconda’ or ‘Vida Privada’ among others. We remind you that you can download what you want from Movistar Plus and watch it offlinewhich can be great for these holidays to make those dead moments between flights or train trips more enjoyable. Some of the links in this article are affiliated and may provide a benefit to Xataka. In case of non-availability, offers may vary. Images | Movistar Plus In Xataka | Movistar Plus activates its Free Plan with complete programs and a lot of content, regardless of which operator you are In Xataka | Less than five euros per month and without permanence: this is the new Movistar Plus plan that you can even share with a friend

Intel just put 5 billion and an asterisk on the table

Europe has been trying for years gain weight on the world map of semiconductors. It is not just about manufacturing more chips, but about reducing dependence on supply chains concentrated outside the continent and regaining ground in the most advanced processes. The United States pursues a similar objective and has reinforced its efforts to attract investmentsfactories and jobs linked to strategic technologies. This industrial race has left a striking scene: one of the largest American companies in the sector has decided to bet billions on expanding its production on European soil. That company is Intel, that has announced an investment of 5,000 million euros to expand and modernize its Leixlip complex, in Ireland. The goal is to increase production of Xeon 6 processors and certain upcoming Xeon products made with Intel 3, the most advanced process the company currently produces in Europe. The move, however, comes after the manufacturer canceled its industrial projects in Germany and Poland. The European Union reinforces its production, but the fine print forces us to clarify how far this victory really goes. More capacity in Ireland, but a European chain still incomplete The core of the plan is not to build a new factory or expand the clean room, but to better equip Fab 34, Upgrade your facilities and extend your automated network that moves the wafers during the numerous stages of the production process. This infrastructure will allow the different modules of the campus to be integrated more fluidly and increase the efficiency of the whole. Intel began rolling out the program in early 2026, although it has not detailed when it will complete the improvements. The expected result is a greater volume manufactured with Intel 3 taking advantage of the existing space. Fab 34 began full-scale production in 2023 and turned Leixlip into Intel’s large European advanced manufacturing center. The installation was born working with Intel 4, used in the first Core Ultra, and later incorporated Intel 3 for the Xeon processors. Both technologies use extreme ultraviolet lithography, known as EUV, to print smaller, more complex structures on wafers. When it began its activity, Fab 34 became the first European factory to use this technique in high-volume production. Main entrance to the Robert N. Noyce Building, Intel headquarters in Santa Clara, California The expected increase responds, according to Intel, to greater demand for server processors and infrastructure linked to artificial intelligence. Although GPUs and accelerators attract much of the attention, data centers still need CPU to run general loadsmanage resources and maintain the platforms on which these specialized systems work. The Xeons occupy precisely that space within their catalog. Expanding the volume of Intel 3 would allow us to better supply that market without waiting for a new plant to be ready. The disbursement also comes after a major financial pivot around Fab 34. In 2024, Apollo contributed $11.2 billion and acquired 49% of a joint venture tied to the facility’s production, although Intel maintained ownership and operational control of the factory. The company repurchased that stake in April 2026 for $14.2 billion. Three months later, it again commits capital to the Irish infrastructure after recovering 100% of that company. Intel’s European bet had been much more ambitious. The company introduced Fab 34 as one piece of a future chain that would combine wafer production in Ireland with two new advanced factories in Magdeburg, Germany, and an assembly and testing facility in Wrocław, Poland. That deployment was to cover within the Union several of the main stages necessary to convert a wafer into a finished processor. The projects were postponed in 2024 and definitively abandoned a year later, when Intel decided to adjust its investments to expected demand. The 5,000 million asterisk appears there. Europe will be able to manufacture a greater volume of advanced wafers, but it will still not have the complete framework that Intel had promised to build within the EU. The company maintains its main assembly and testing operations in the United States and Asia, after canceling the Polish facility that was to cover those stages. Leixlip reduces some of the external dependence, although it does not by itself convert Xeon production into a fully European chain. Images | Intel In Xataka | SK Hynix is ​​betting that the memory cycle is dead. He proves it by doing just what always killed him.

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