Archives March 2026

Fusion Signage achieves SOC 2 Type II attestation and launches Trust Centre

BRISBANE, March 17– In a major achievement Fusion Signage, often referred to as Australia’s user-friendliest digital signage software, has officially achieved SOC 2 Type II attestation. The new SOC 2 Type II attestation is very highly regarded and critical to all users of digital signage software. The company’s SOC 2 Type II audit was completed by Sensiba, an independent organisation known for thorough, transparent audits.

Fusion Signage MD James Ingram explained, “This attestation is not just policies on paper, but a rigorous, independent, months‑long audit proving our controls aren’t only well‑designed, they’re operating effectively, day in and day out across the whole business. A SOC 2 Type II attestation digs into how we operate over time, not at a single moment. It’s an in‑depth audit against the AICPA Trust Services Criteria for Security. It is the gold standard proving our systems are protected and your security practices are actually working.”

Fusion Signage achieves SOC 2 Type II attestation and launches Trust Centre

Fusion Signage MD James Ingram

Fusion Signage’s SOC 2 Type II attestation is a significant achievement as it confirms the company’s access controls work exactly as designed, their monitoring and alerting are accurate and reliable, their processes around risk, incidents and change control are “real-world” and their platform and operations are run with consistency, discipline and transparency.

Fusion Signage achieves SOC 2 Type II attestation and launches Trust Centre

Ingram added, “Our SOC 2 Type II attestation is independent proof that Fusion Signage operates the way we say it does – not just in policy documents, but in real life. This matters a lot to procurement teams, CISOs, CTOs and anyone doing vendor due diligence. Protecting customer data has always been part of who we are and as an Australian team supporting organisations across every industry, we’ve always believed security shouldn’t be a box‑ticking exercise. It should be something you can feel confident in without ever thinking about it.”

Sensiba’s SOC 2 Type II audit of Fusion Signage also included a thorough and comprehensive evaluation of the company’s infrastructure, how they build and ship software and how they store and process customer data.

It also covers internal governance and access controls, monitoring and incident response and day‑to‑day operations across the entire team.

Ingram said, “It’s a holistic look at Fusion Signage – something we wanted and requested. Security shouldn’t live in one corner of the company, it should be everywhere. As a result, now, with this attestation, Fusion Signage users get independent assurance we’re running with strong, consistently‑applied controls. Their IT and security teams can also be 100% confident when doing vendor risk assessments which leads to smoother procurement, as SOC 2 Type II is a very common requirement.”

Fusion Signage has always prided itself and been known as a platform users can trust, built by a team that invests in doing things the right way for its customers.

James Ingram concluded, “Our SOC 2 Type II attestation is our new baseline. Security isn’t a feature we add, it’s part of how Fusion Signage works, grows and evolves. As we roll out new capabilities and support more organisations, security remains a core design principle – not an afterthought.”

To watch a video on what Fusion Signage achieving SOC 2 Type II attestation means for the company, its customers and users click here or go to:  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7Y1sGJj_57c 

In another first customers can now also access Fusion Signage’s Trust Centre, its simple, self-service portal where users can explore the company’s security standards at any time, from any connected device, anywhere.

The Trust Centre is an always‑available single and trusted source to see how Fusion Signage approach security and security information and where you can request their SOC 2 Type II report directly.

Spring travel: physicians urge travelers to understand their DVT risks on trips longer than four hours

Expert tips for recognizing symptoms and reducing blood clot risk during extended sitting

GREENBELT, Md. — With spring travel ramping up, Center for Vein Restoration (CVR) is reminding the public that anyone traveling more than four hours by air, car, bus or train can be at risk for potentially deadly blood clots, particularly people with additional risk factors.

The CDC notes that venous thromboembolism (VTE), which includes DVT and pulmonary embolism (PE), may affect as many as 900,000 people each year in the U.S. DVT is a serious medical condition where a blood clot (thrombus) forms in a deep vein, most commonly in the legs or pelvis. A PE occurs when a blood clot gets stuck in an artery in the lung, blocking blood flow to part of the lung.

“Sitting for extended periods of time slows the blood flow out of the legs,” said Laura Kelsey, MD, lead vein physician at CVR vein clinics in Grand Rapids and Muskegon, Michigan. “For patients with additional risk factors, travel can be the tipping point for a potentially dangerous blood clot. Talk to your clinician before your next trip, not after.” 

Who should be extra cautious?

CDC-identified risk factors include prior blood clots, family history, known clotting disorders, recent surgery or hospitalization, pregnancy, estrogen-containing birth control or hormone replacement therapy, cancer or cancer treatment, older age and obesity.

What to watch for after travel

Seek immediate medical care for any of the following:

  • DVT symptoms can include leg swelling, pain or tenderness, warmth and redness or discoloration.
  • PE symptoms can include difficulty breathing, chest pain, irregular heartbeat, coughing up blood, lightheadedness or fainting.

Simple movement reminders for long trips

The CDC encourages travelers to move their legs frequently and walk around every one to two hours when possible, know symptoms and discuss prevention with a clinician if at risk.

Swiftbuild.ai accelerates disaster recovery for coastal communities

AI-powered permitting platform helps local governments rebuild faster, reduce backlogs and support resilient infrastructure

TAMPA, Fla. – Swiftbuild.ai is helping coastal communities recover from disaster damage faster by modernizing the planning and permitting processes that often slow reconstruction. Its AI-powered SwiftGov® platform allows municipalities to process development applications quickly while maintaining compliance with local codes and environmental standards.

Following natural disasters, from hurricanes to wildfires, governments often face a surge of rebuilding projects. Traditional permitting systems can create bottlenecks that delay repairs, frustrate residents and increase costs for builders. SwiftGov provides an AI-native workflow that flags compliance requirements, organizes submissions and generates actionable insights for staff. Planners, engineers and officials retain full decision-making authority while completing reviews faster and more accurately.

Florida communities using SwiftGov have seen dramatic improvements:

  • Hernando County reduced single-family zoning review times from 30 days to under two hours.
  • The City of Titusville has processed over 162 permits, including residential, commercial, subdivision and industrial plans, with some reviews completed in under an hour.
  • Walton County standardized permitting, cut review times to eight days on average, achieved 100% accuracy on townhome reviews, 88% on single-family homes and improved consistency on sensitive coastal projects.
  • Jacksonville launched an Express Lane Permitting initiative with SwiftGov as its AI partner to shorten approval cycles, strengthen consistency and support affordable housing.

Sabrina Dugan, co-founder of Swiftbuild.ai, said, “After a disaster, every week a permit sits in review is another week a family isn’t home. We built SwiftGov so local governments can move at the speed their residents need, without cutting corners on code compliance or environmental protections.”

Swiftbuild.ai’s approach combines AI-driven efficiency with human oversight and community engagement. The platform helps governments restore neighborhoods faster, support small businesses and maintain resilient infrastructure in the face of increasing natural disasters.

Taylor Communications’ Proprietary GEO Methodology Takes Client from AI Search Invisibility to Ranking #1 on Multiple LLMs in Three Weeks

Combination of persona-based GEO content architecture with Passage Optimization Protocol (POP) delivers AI search visibility

CLEVELAND—March 16 —Taylor Communications, LLC (TC), a content creation and strategy firm, today announced that its proprietary generative engine optimization (GEO) methodology has enabled a client to go from complete invisibility in LLM search to ranking #1 on multiple platforms in just three weeks. TC’s approach to GEO is persona-driven. It combines deep insights into search intent with content architecture and TC’s Passage Optimization ProtocolTM (POP) process to achieve visibility for numerous prompts on ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Gemini.

“We should not let our fixation on technology distract us from the fact that search is an intensely human activity,” explained Hugh Taylor, CEO of Taylor Communications. “The searcher has wants, needs, and fears. Understanding that persona and connecting the human being to meaningful prompts should yield results. Our success with this client shows how well the process can work.”

TC’s client, Comms Factory, was flatlining in AI search. It was as if the company didn’t exist. Working with the iGEO.ai toolset, TC developed a compelling, relevant set of prompts and grouped them into core subjects that became the content of “hub” pages in a “hub and spoke” content architecture. 

Within three weeks, the campaign was delivering results. The client had earned 64 mentions on ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Gemini. Of those, 40% were #1 ranked. They  achieved a 12% share of voice and ranked in third place behind significantly larger and more established competitors.

Read the CASE STUDY 

U.S. headquartered ScienceLogic Opens New Office in Nanakramguda, Hyderabad, India

HYDERABAD – ScienceLogic, a United States-based technology company whose agentic AI platform powers modern IT environments, today announced its entrance into India with the opening of a new office in Nanakramguda, Hyderabad. Located at Sohini Tech Park in the Nanakramguda Financial District, the company is marking the opening with a small ceremony at the new office, which represents a strategic investment in one of the world’s fastest-growing technology markets and reinforces the company’s commitment to supporting customers across the Asia-Pacific region.

 
This expansion builds on ScienceLogic’s existing global presence in Reston, Virginia near Washington D.C., London, Sydney, Taiwan, and Singapore, and enhances its ability to serve enterprises and government organizations navigating increasingly complex, distributed IT environments. India’s rapidly growing digital economy, expanding cloud adoption, and rising demand for AI-powered operations make it a key growth market for the company. 

“We are thrilled to open our first India location in the Nanakramguda Financial District,” said Dave Link, CEO and Co-founder of ScienceLogic. “As enterprise IT environments grow more distributed and complex, IT teams now face a sometimes insurmountable number of alerts, telemetry, and tickets spread across siloed systems. By establishing a presence in Nanakramguda, we will be able to much more rapidly meet the needs of our India-based customers who rely on the ScienceLogic AI Platform to consolidate fragmented tools and deliver complete observability.”

“Hyderabad is one of India’s premier technology corridors, with a strong ecosystem of enterprise innovation and technical expertise,” said Vamsi Krishna Ivaturi, Director, India at ScienceLogic. “With the India observability market forecasted to see a double-digit compound annual growth rate (CAGR) throughout this decade, this expansion positions ScienceLogic to partner more closely with customers as they modernize infrastructure, consolidate tools, and adopt AI to drive operational resilience.” 

ScienceLogic delivers intelligence that accelerates outcomes through service-centric observability, AI-driven operations, and intelligent automation. Its flagship ScienceLogic AI Platform and Skylar AI suite — including Skylar One™ (formerly SL1), Skylar Automation™Skylar Compliance™, and Skylar Analytics™ — enable organizations to unify monitoring, automate workflows, ensure compliance, and gain deeper operational insight across hybrid and multi-cloud environments.

This Tiny Cellular Portal Could Open Vast Possibilities for Medicine

Inside each of your cells, there lies the nucleus, its master command center. Protected inside each nucleus are your chromosomes, containing all the genetic instructions for making proteins. To keep the body operating smoothly, proteins, RNA molecules, and molecular signals must constantly flow in and out of this cellular HQ, mediating which genetic instructions are used when.  

Nearly all of that two-way traffic passes through the same gateway: the nuclear pore complex.   

The nuclear pore complex, or NPC, is far more complex than a simple doorway. Hundreds of individual proteins come together to form the NPC, which acts as an active player in controlling how genetic information is used. When it doesn’t function right, some cellular messages don’t make it to their final destinations. The consequences can range from cancer to neurodegeneration to life-threatening viral infections. 

Michael Rout, the George and Ruby deStevens Professor and head of the Laboratory of Cellular and Structural Biology at Rockefeller University, has spent his career parsing the inner workings of the NPC. We spoke with him about what makes this molecular machine so remarkable and how this work could open a new frontier in medicine.

You’ve been studying the nuclear pore complex for several decades. How has the field’s thinking about the importance of the NPC changed in that time?

When I started, the prevailing view was that the NPC was like a Swiss watch—an enormously complex, precisely tuned machine where if you damaged any part of it, the whole thing would simply shut down. But when we actually started taking it apart, we found the opposite was true. You could delete the genes for many of its components and cells kept growing. It turned out to be tremendously redundant and resilient. That changed our thinking completely. We now know that the NPC can tolerate partial disruption and keep functioning. 

The downside of that resiliency is that diseases can exploit it. Hundreds of diseases—cancers, neurological disorders, viral infections—are now known to be associated with defects in nuclear transport or the NPC itself.  

At the same time, it has emerged that the NPC is really a nexus for a lot of crucial processes. It doesn’t just passively sit there and allow nuclear transport, but rather acts as an organizer for this whole assembly line that’s in place to keep our cells alive. This infinitesimal portal is what maintains communication between the genetic material in the nucleus and the entire rest of an organism.

How do you study something this small and complex?

It requires the ability to make sense of a staggering amount of data. The approach we’ve taken is to gather and combine as much information as possible about the NPC, using many different complementary methods,  and integrating all of that into a single, comprehensive picture. Early on, that meant isolating the NPC and using mass spectrometry to identify every protein it’s made of. From there, we could start asking where each piece sits within the structure. 

Over the years the technology available to do this work has become extraordinary. With cryo-electron microscopy, we can now flash-freeze the NPC and visualize it at near-atomic resolution, which was simply unthinkable when I started. More recently, we’ve been able to watch the NPC in action in real time, at millisecond resolution. When we get all this data, we put it together into computational models that let us simulate how the whole system behaves.

Your lab proposed a model called the “virtual gate” to explain how the NPC controls what passes through. What does that mean in plain terms?

For a long time, people assumed the NPC must work like a physical gate, either dilating and contracting like an iris, or using motor proteins to actively pull cargo through. When we identified all the NPC’s components and found no motor proteins, we had to fundamentally reevaluate the science—nature was making it made clear that our previous ideas were wrong. What we found instead was that the central channel is packed with flexible, constantly moving protein chains—so dense and so mobile that they create a barrier without being a physical wall. 

We called it a virtual gate because whether it’s open or closed depends entirely on whether you can bind to those protein chains. If you’re carrying the right molecular signal, you get through. If not, you’re excluded. It’s like a crowded dance floor where only those with the right partner can move.  

What we’ve discovered more recently is that transport factors don’t just pass through. They continuously reshape those protein chains, making the barrier even more dynamic than we first thought.

How is the NPC linked to disease?

Many diseases gain a foothold by disrupting the flow of molecular messages in and out of the nucleus. What’s really interesting is that different cancers and viruses keep targeting the same small subset of NPC components to do it. 

Pretty much every virus that’s been sufficiently studied seems to have evolved to target the NPC of human cells very early in infection. The viruses hijack the transport machinery so that the cell’s innate immune response can’t kick into action and produce new proteins to fight the viruses.  

With cancer, the picture is similar. Normally, cells produce proteins that can trigger the cells to self-destruct if they begin growing too quickly and aggressively. Often, cancer cells subvert this by ramping up nuclear export, hustling those protective proteins out of the nucleus before they can act. Selinexor, an FDA-approved drug for certain blood cancers, works by blocking that excess export through the NPC, keeping those protective proteins inside the nucleus where they can do their job. Because we now know that the NPC can be targeted therapeutically, this could represent a major untapped area for future medicine in multiple diseases.

You’ve been building increasingly detailed computational models of how the NPC works. For a while now, scientists have dreamed of creating a virtual model of an entire cell, which could dramatically accelerate all kinds of discoveries. Do you see your work contributing to that larger quest?

Because the NPC sits at the crossroads of so many cellular systems, a complete enough model of it could let us begin to simulate how all those systems work together. That’s the dream of the virtual cell: a computational model of a living cell detailed enough that you could test, for example, how a disease mutation changes the flow of molecules in and out of the nucleus, or screen potential drugs without ever stepping into a wet lab. We’re not there yet, but the NPC is a remarkable place to start because so much has to pass through it. Understanding this one machine in full detail gets you surprisingly far toward understanding the whole cell.

What’s the biggest open question you’re still trying to answer?

We still don’t fully understand the details of how the virtual gate actually works at the molecular level. The protein chains that fill the channel aren’t the same all over; there appear to be different zones with different behaviors, possibly even separate lanes for different types of cargo. Figuring out that internal organization is where a lot of our energy is focused right now. I think getting that worked out could be the key to being able to control the flow of traffic through the NPC for therapeutic purposes.  

I think this field is a perfect example of how studying the fundamental machinery that keeps our cells running yields discoveries that can offer powerful new insights into human disease.

Lizol Enters Bathroom Cleaning Category with the Launch of Lizol Fresh and Clean Bathroom Cleaner

Business Wire India

  • Aims to lead the growing branded bathroom cleaner’s category across metros and non-metros.

  • Launches campaign that raises the expectations of evolving Indians from their bathroom cleaners.

 

Lizol, India’s leading surface cleaning brand, has expanded its hygiene portfolio by entering India’s fast-growing bathroom cleaning category. With the launch of Lizol Fresh & Clean Bathroom Cleaner, Lizol extends its expertise in superior cleaning and long-lasting fragrance beyond floors and surfaces, strengthening Reckitt’s presence in the home hygiene segment.

 

Homes of aspirational Indians have become more modern and aesthetic, bathrooms have also evolved from purely functional spaces into a freshness zone. With heightened hygiene awareness post-pandemic, consumers today expect bathrooms to look and feel clean. Traditionally, many households relied on detergents and phenyls, solutions that fell short on cleaning as well as lasting freshness. The hygiene gap created by such unspecialized products is driving a move towards branded, purpose-built solutions that better align with modern lifestyles, where cleanliness and freshness influence mood, confidence, and everyday living.

 

The launch comes at a time when the Indian household cleaning products market is seeing growth, driven by rising urbanization, premiumization, and a stronger focus on hygiene. According to industry estimates~, valued at USD 8.09 billion in 2024, the market is projected to reach USD 11.95 billion by 2033.

 

Designed to Address Modern Consumer Needs

 

Riding on the back of Reckitt DNA of deep innovation and effective formulation, Lizol Fresh & Clean Bathroom Cleaner has been developed to bring together effective cleaning and long-lasting freshness in the bathroom cleaning category. It delivers 10X better cleaning# compared to detergents and phenyls, removes 99.9% bacteria**, and is powered by a pleasant fragrance that lasts up to 12 hours^, ensuring bathrooms stay clean and fresh throughout the day. Its thick formulation clings better to surfaces, offering superior coverage and enabling more effective cleaning with long-lasting results. By combining superior cleaning, protection, and enduring fragrance, Lizol Fresh & Clean Bathroom Cleaner offers a purpose-built solution for modern bathrooms.

 

Speaking on the launch, Gautam Rishi, Marketing Director, Hygiene, Reckitt – South Asia, said, “Bathrooms are no longer just functional spaces—they influence how clean and fresh a home feel. Backed by Reckitt’s culture of continuous innovation and science‑led formulation, with Lizol Fresh & Clean Bathroom Cleaner, we are raising expectations from the category by combining effective cleaning, trusted germ protection**, and a freshness that lasts up to 12 hours. It is designed for today’s fast‑paced lifestyles where consumers want solutions that work well and make everyday cleaning effortless.”

 

The launch of Lizol Fresh & Clean Bathroom Cleaner reinforces Lizol’s commitment to providing clean and fragrant homes, encouraging consumers to move beyond traditional detergents and phenyls towards more effective, purpose-built cleaning solutions. For Lizol, the entry marks a strategic entry into bathroom category. This portfolio expansion is aligned with growth opportunities in the household hygiene space.

 

Product Availability

 

Lizol Fresh & Clean Bathroom Cleaner is now available pan-India across leading general trade and modern retail outlets, as well as e-commerce and quick-commerce platforms, ensuring easy access for consumers across markets.

 

Link to TVC – https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fkmGcWUpOrQ

 

#vs ordinary phenyls & detergents when tested under lab condition on selected stain and surface
**As per invitro testing, as tested against indicator bacteria on neat
^as per lab testing data on neat

Salaam Bombay Foundation Showcases Creative Power of Resource-Challenged Students

The annual culmination event showcased dance, art, theatre, storytelling and more

Mumbai, March 16: Salaam Bombay Foundation hosted ‘Katha’ at the YB Chavan Auditorium in Mumbai, creating a vibrant platform for students from resource-challenged backgrounds to showcase their talents through professional-level performances and creative presentations in the arts and media.

The event brought together students from government and government-aided schools who have spent the year developing their skills across multiple creative disciplines through Salaam Bombay Foundation’s Academy of the Arts and Media Academy. The showcase was attended by visitors across various age groups, offering young artists the opportunity to present their work before a wider audience and experience the confidence and recognition of performing on a professional stage.

Salaam Bombay Foundation Showcases Creative Power of Resource-Challenged Students

 

Drawing inspiration from the timeless character of Sindbad the Sailor—whose voyages reflect courage, resilience, curiosity, and leadership in the face of challenges—the theme resonated strongly with the journeys of Salaam Bombay Foundation students. Much like Sindbad navigating unknown seas, these young learners navigate their own challenges, discover new possibilities, and build the confidence and life skills needed to shape their futures.

Through dance, music, theatre, photography, creative arts, podcasts, puppetry, and storytelling, students brought the theme to life through performances and installations that reflected their imagination, perspectives, and lived experiences. The venue transformed into a vibrant storytelling space where each showcase offered a glimpse into the journeys of young creators discovering their voices through arts and media.

Salaam Bombay Foundation Showcases Creative Power of Resource-Challenged Students

 

Celebrated industry voices came on board to mentor the students this year, including Uday Sabnis, well-known Indian actor and voice artist; Rashmi Varang, Radio Jockey with Akashvani FM Gold; Priyanka Babbar, Sumukha Prasad theatre directors; and renowned photographers Hridgandha Mistry, Aslam Saiyad, and Prashant Nakwe.

The event also saw prominent personalities in attendance including Padma Shri Waman Kendre, theatre director and former Director of the National School of Drama; Phulwa Khamkar, dance director; Oorvzhi Irani, independent filmmaker and film educator; Prateek Kothari, film director; Abhishek Karangutkar, writer-director and filmmaker; Akhilesh Pandey, CSR Head, RGA; Ishita Vishwakarma, singer and winner of Sa Re Ga Ma Pa 2019 and first runner-up of India’s Got Talent; Rohan Joshi, producer, News18 Lokmat; Mr. Dhronaya and Gaurav Ahuja, writers and instructors; Tanvi Barve, Marathi industry actress; and Mayuresh Kholte, actor, mime artist, and theatre artist, among others.

Speaking about the event, Rajashree Kadam, Chief Sustainability Officer and Sr. VP – Arts & Media, Salaam Bombay Foundation, said, “When students from resource-challenged backgrounds are given opportunities to express themselves through art and storytelling, they begin to see their own potential differently. Platforms like Katha help them build confidence while nurturing creative skills that can lead to meaningful career pathways. Through arts and media, students develop creativity, critical thinking, communication, and leadership—skills that not only shape their aspirations but also open possibilities to earn through their talents and move closer to breaking the cycle of poverty.”

Through its Academy of the Arts and Media Academy, Salaam Bombay Foundation works with resource-challenged adolescents from Std. 7–9 in government and government-aided schools, helping them build confidence, creativity, and career-relevant skills. Since its inception, over 27,000 creative voices have been amplified through the Academy of the Arts and the Media Academy.

Platforms like Katha give students the opportunity to showcase their talents, gain exposure, and experience the transformative power of creative expression. Salaam Bombay Foundation continues to empower young people to reshape their futures and move closer to breaking the cycle of limited opportunity.

 

Manchester, Dubai and Channel Islands based firms achieve CISI Chartered Firm™ status

Showcasing its global breadth, the Chartered Institute for Securities & Investment (CISI) is delighted to confirm Manchester based Depledge Strategic Wealth Management, Jersey and Guernsey based Titan Wealth (CI) and Dubai based Abacus Financial Consultants LLC have all achieved CISI Chartered Firm™ status.

CISI Chartered Firm™ status is awarded when a financial services firm demonstrates commitment to the highest levels of professionalism. Firms must meet rigorous criteria to achieve the prestigious accreditation, including having a professional development programme that aligns with the CISI’s continuing professional development (CPD) requirements.

Manchester, Dubai and Channel Islands based firms  achieve CISI Chartered Firm™ status

 

Chartered status plays a powerful role in fostering high standards of professionalism and trust. Helping firms and professionals adapt and firms grow in financial services is vital, particularly as opportunities in the sector increasingly become trans-national.

Andrew Day CFP™ Chartered FCSI, founder of Depledge Strategic Wealth Management (left) said: “Achieving CISI Chartered Firm™ status is a significant part of our journey to build a firm that is synonymous with high level financial planning advice and service. This is the accumulation of many years of hard work and the result of all the team at Depledge believing in our ethos to strive to be the best and to do so with our clients at the very centre of our endeavours. Four of our team have qualified at the CFP™ level and two others are working on the qualification which exceeds the minimum qualification level to be a CISI Chartered Firm™. This is important to us as we all feel that obtaining CISI qualifications has made us better financial planners which benefits our existing and new clients.”

Mark Bousfield Chartered FCSI, Managing Director, Titan Wealth (CI) (left) said: “Becoming a CISI Chartered Firm™ marks an important achievement for Titan Wealth in the Channel Islands and reflects the sustained effort our team has made over many years to uphold the highest professional standards.

“This recognition demonstrates our commitment to acting in the best interests of our clients and reinforces our dedication to delivering expert advice, integrity, and exceptional client service. It provides clients with the reassurance that they are supported by a firm committed to excellence throughout their financial journey.”

Con Lillis Chartered MCSI, Chief Executive Officer (right) of Abacus Financial Consultants, said: “Being recognised as a CISI Chartered Firm™ by the CISI is a proud moment for our entire team. It reflects the culture we have built at Abacus – one centred on professionalism, transparency, and putting clients first. Our advisers are committed to maintaining the highest standards in the industry, and this recognition demonstrates the strength of that commitment.

“As we continue to grow, maintaining these standards will remain central to our strategy, ensuring our clients benefit from trusted expertise and forward-thinking financial guidance.”

Tracy Vegro OBE, CISI chief executive, said: “We are delighted to welcome Depledge Strategic Wealth Management, Titan Wealth and Abacus Financial Consultants to our select group of organisations holding CISI Chartered Firm™ status. We are delighted to welcome each of them to our global CISI community.”

HyperLight Demonstrates Low-Power 1.6T-DR8 TFLN-based Reference Transceiver Assembled by TFC

Business Wire India

HyperLight Corporation (“HyperLight”) today announced a major milestone in low-power optical networking with the demonstration of a 1.6T-DR8 optical transceiver leveraging HyperLight’s TFLN Chiplet™ Platform.

 

The reference module was demonstrated with engineering and manufacturing support from Suzhou TFC Optical Communication Co., Ltd. (SZSE: 300394, or “TFC”). The reference design achieves 20W power consumption in a fully retimed 1.6T-DR8 module, representing approximately 20% lower module-level power compared to alternative technologies. The reduction is achieved through a simple drop-in transmitter implementation based on a single thin-film lithium niobate photonic integrated circuit (TFLN PIC).

 

 

The TFLN transmitter enables the module to operate using a single continuous-wave (CW) laser, compared to the two to four lasers typically required in conventional implementations. Additional energy savings are achieved through the ability to operate directly from the native low-swing electrical output of the DSP, enabled by the low drive voltage of TFLN modulators.

 

 

“TFLN is a key technology for future 400Gbps-per-lane optical systems,” said Mian Zhang, CEO of HyperLight. “What we are demonstrating today is that even at the current 200Gbps-per-lane generation, TFLN can already deliver massive power savings. At the scale of modern AI data centers, that translates into megawatts of potential energy reduction. Our work with TFC demonstrates how readily HyperLight’s technology can integrate into existing optical module ecosystems.”

 

 

HyperLight will demonstrate the module live at OFC 2026, taking place March 16–18 in Los Angeles, California.

 

 

About HyperLight

 

 

HyperLight delivers high-performance integrated photonics solutions based on thin-film lithium niobate technology. The company combines the electro-optic advantages of TFLN with scalable manufacturing, test, and integration to enable next-generation optical engines for AI data centers, telecom and metro networks, and emerging photonics markets.

 

 

Website: https://www.hyperlightcorp.com