Matterport Appoints Cloud Industry Executive Natalie Lamb as Managing Director for EMEA

The former IBM veteran brings over 20 years of software experience to scale Matterport’s enterprise business across the region

Natalie Lamb, Matterport Managing Director of EMEA

SUNNYVALE, Calif., Jan. 10, 2023 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Matterport, Inc. (Nasdaq: MTTR) today announced the appointment of Natalie Lamb as Managing Director of EMEA, effective immediately. In this role, Lamb will be responsible for overseeing Matterport’s strategic growth in enterprise and SMB segments and expanding Matterport’s strategic partnerships in EMEA.

“I’m eager to bring Natalie onto the team at such an important time for Matterport’s business in EMEA,” said Jay Remley, Chief Revenue Officer, Matterport. “Natalie brings decades of software leadership experience and deeply understands how to build trusted relationships with customers and partners. We already have great momentum in EMEA and Natalie will accelerate our growth in this fast growing enterprise market for digital twins.”

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Lamb has over 20 years of international experience in the software industry, including a decade working in the B2B cloud application space. After starting her career in a startup, she spent over 12 years at IBM, focused on their Industry Solutions including IoT, Commerce, Supply Chain and Marketing. She has experience working across multiple industries and verticals, including telecommunications, utilities, travel & hospitality, retail and government. After IBM, she led the EMEA and APAC businesses for a privately-backed IBM startup, before most recently serving as chief commercial officer for a B2B SaaS Accounting vendor.

“I’m thrilled to be joining Matterport as it becomes increasingly crucial for companies to take advantage of the cost and productivity benefits of digitization,” said Lamb. “I am ready to use my extensive experience working in EMEA to expand Matterport’s presence in the region as more companies embrace 3D digital twins to transform their businesses and properties.”

About Matterport

Matterport, Inc. (Nasdaq: MTTR) is leading the digital transformation of the built world. Our groundbreaking spatial data platform turns buildings into data to make nearly every space more valuable and accessible. Millions of buildings in more than 177 countries have been transformed into immersive Matterport digital twins to improve every part of the building lifecycle from planning, construction, and operations to documentation, appraisal and marketing. Learn more at Matterport.com and visit our Discover page to browse a collection of digital twins captured by our customers.

©2023 Matterport, Inc. All rights reserved. Matterport is a registered trademark and the Matterport logo is a trademark of Matterport, Inc. All other marks are the property of their respective owners.

A photo accompanying this announcement is available at https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/d04be3bb-18c4-4be5-9ce9-a23cba6355b4

Media Contact:
Steve Lombardi
VP, Communications and Business Affairs
press@matterport.com

Investor Contact:
Mike Knapp
VP, Investor Relations
ir@matterport.com

GlobeNewswire Distribution ID 8726831

Hivelocity Acquires Heficed

Global Presence Expansion Across 6 Continents and New Product Offering for Clients

Hivelocity acquires Heficed

LONDON, Jan. 10, 2023 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — IPXO UK Limited, the world’s biggest fully automated IP lease & monetization platform, announces that its subsidiary Heficed, an established network infrastructure solutions and cloud provider based in the UK, has been acquired by Hivelocity, Inc., one of the world’s leading infrastructure providers.

During the acquisition, Heficed, its customers, select employees and nine data centers will become an integral part of the Hivelocity brand.

According to Vincentas Grinius, Heficed’s co-founder, the sale of the company was carefully planned and strategized: “We were very selective about who would acquire the Heficed platform, and we are confident that Hivelocity was the right fit.”

For Hivelocity, Heficed’s acquisition offers a great opportunity to expand its presence with data centers in more locations – including Brazil, South Africa and Nigeria – and to strengthen its existing positions in the US, UK, Italian and German markets. Hivelocity also intends to fully integrate Heficed’s Virtual Server product and will offer virtual servers alongside its bare metal offerings.

Bare metal cloud giant secures its global presence 

Mike Architetto, CEO and co-founder of Hivelocity, stated that the acquisition provides exciting opportunities for the company’s clients, both current and prospective: “Our infrastructure services will now reach even broader markets combining Heficed’s data center locations with our own worldwide network of data centers and premium bare metal hosting.”

The acquisition will significantly benefit the existing Heficed customers, who will be able to enjoy access to more features and a wider network of data centers spanning across six continents.

The acquisition broadens the horizon of possibilities for both Hivelocity and Heficed 

Heficed actively planned and prepared for the acquisition throughout 2022, but the decision to sell the company solidified in 2021 with the launch of IPXO.

“IPXO emerged from Heficed’s IP Address Market solution and is now expanding into a comprehensive Internet Protocol platform once we witnessed huge gaps in IPv4 shortage and poor IP management,” stated Grinius, CEO at IPXO. “We have gone a long way in developing a completely new industry, in which IPXO plays a major role, as well as managing the Heficed acquisition deal and finally finding an excellent acquisition company.”

The IPXO’s mission is to create a more sustainable internet by developing a platform that delivers solutions around the Internet Protocol to address security, shortage and accountability concerns. In 2022, IPXO transferred 1.7 million IPv4 addresses from Heficed’s IP Address Market to the newly established IPXO Marketplace, making it the world’s largest automated IP lease and monetization platform with over three million IPs in total.

As a carrier-neutral services provider, IPXO aims to build an ecosystem that other infrastructure providers and telcos can benefit from. Ultimately, with focus shifting on evolving into an all-in-one Internet Protocol platform, selling Heficed was a natural strategic decision.

“This is an exciting announcement for us, and we believe the acquisition will yield extensive benefits for our suppliers and customers while ensuring continuous growth and even stronger relationships with business partners,” noted Grinius.

Once the acquisition is complete, Heficed will continue operating as usual, and Hivelocity will continue supporting customers with new features and professional assistance.

Contact Information:
Agne Srebaliute
PR Manager
press@ipxo.com
(370)65630839

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Image 1: Hivelocity acquires Heficed

Heficed, an established network infrastructure solutions and cloud provider based in the UK, has been acquired by Hivelocity, Inc., one of the world’s leading infrastructure providers

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Colliers appoints Luke Dawson to lead Global Capital Markets

TORONTO, Jan. 10, 2023 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Leading diversified professional services and investment management firm Colliers (NASDAQ and TSX: CIGI) announced today the appointment of Luke Dawson as Head of Global Capital Markets. Dawson will set the global strategic agenda for Colliers Capital Markets, which includes advising clients, providing value-added services to accelerate clients’ investment strategies, and connecting capital with opportunities across all asset classes around the world. In addition to his new mandate, he will retain his existing role as Capital Markets leader for EMEA.

The appointment of Dawson marks an important step in accelerating success for clients around the world. For nearly two decades, Dawson has been an enterprising, collaborative, and results-driven leader taking a client-led approach with deep expertise across asset classes and boarders. In 2004, Dawson joined Colliers as Director of Corporate Development with a focus on M&A activity. Dawson then held several leadership roles within the Colliers Capital Markets business including business development, client engagement, investment sales and overall leadership across Central and Eastern European region. Most recently, as Managing Director of Cross Border Capital Markets, he was responsible for executing the regional strategy and driving growth of the Capital Markets service line.

“Building on our success as a leading Capital Markets advisor, our Capital Markets team is constantly growing and attracting top talent all over the world,” said Chris McLernon, Chief Executive Officer, Global Real Estate Services at Colliers. “We are excited for Luke to drive our Global Capital Markets strategy forward, delivering a best-in-class experience for our clients.”

“I am thrilled to be leading our Global Capital Markets platform and support both our clients and people around the world in connecting capital with opportunities that will accelerate success for investors and our business,” said Luke Dawson, Head of Global Capital Markets at Colliers. “With our continued growth, we are well positioned in all major markets, and I look forward to ensuring we remain at the forefront in providing expert knowledge and advice on investments.”

With 1,500 Capital Markets professionals around the world, Colliers has continued to invest to drive results in its Global Capital Markets platform by recruiting world-class talent and strengthening Capital Markets capabilities, including its recent acquisition of Pangea.

Colliers Contact
Andrea Cheung
Global Manager, Communications
Andrea.cheung@colliers.com
416-324-6402

About Colliers
Colliers (NASDAQ, TSX: CIGI) is a leading diversified professional services and investment management company. With operations in 63 countries, our 18,000 enterprising professionals work collaboratively to provide expert real estate and investment advice to clients. For more than 27 years, our experienced leadership with significant inside ownership has delivered compound annual investment returns of approximately 20% for shareholders. With annual revenues of $4.6 billion and $92 billion of assets under management, Colliers maximizes the potential of property and real assets to accelerate the success of our clients, our investors, and our people. Learn more at corporate.colliers.com, Twitter @Colliers or LinkedIn.

GlobeNewswire Distribution ID 8726892

Chinese invasion of Taiwan would fail, but at a high cost for all, CSIS says

A Chinese invasion of Taiwan would not succeed should the U.S. and Japan back Taipei but it would come at a high cost for all parties involved, the influential Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) said.

In the report ‘The First Battle of the Next War: Wargaming a Chinese Invasion of Taiwan’ launched on Monday, CSIS experts warned that the Taiwan-U.S.-Japan alliance could defeat a “conventional amphibious invasion by China” and maintain an autonomous Taiwan but they would lose “dozens of ships, hundreds of aircraft, and tens of thousands of servicemembers.”

Taiwan’s economy would be left shattered and the U.S. global position would also be damaged for many years, the report warned.

However, China would also suffer “high losses” that might destabilize Chinese Communist Party rule.

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Chinese naval warships fire missiles during a live-fire military drill in the waters of the Bohai Sea and Yellow Sea, off China’s east coast, Aug. 7, 2017.  Credit: Reuters/Stringer

War game simulation

Beijing considers Taiwan a Chinese province and “China’s leaders have become increasingly strident” about unifying the island with the mainland, therefore a military invasion is “not out of the question,” the report said.

Some military leaders, such as U.S. Asia-Pacific commander Adm. Philip Davidson, forewarned that a Taiwan invasion would take place by 2027, the year the Chinese People’s Liberation Army celebrates its centenary and China’s paramount leader Xi Jinping comes to the end of his third term.

The CSIS project team developed a wargame for a Chinese amphibious invasion of Taiwan in 2026, using historical data and operational research, as well as analogies with past military operations such as the battles of Normandy, Okinawa, and the Falklands. 

They ran 24 scenarios before coming up with the most likely one, a “base scenario.”

In it, Chinese forces would assault Taiwan from the air, then cross the Taiwan Strait for a landing invasion. That is when the U.S. and Japan could get involved to deter the Chinese amphibious fleet.

Eric Heginbotham, principal research scientist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and one of the authors of the report, said the team had reached two conclusions:

“First, under most circumstances, China is unlikely to succeed in its operational objectives, or to occupy Taipei. Second, the cost of war would be high for all involved, certainly to include the United States.”

In most scenarios run by the CSIS project team, the U.S. Navy lost two aircraft carriers and 10 to 20 large surface combatants, together with approximately 3,200 troops. That’s about half the combined death toll from the Iraq and Afghanistan conflicts.

China however would also suffer heavy losses, with some 10,000 troops killed, and 155 combat aircraft and 138 major ships destroyed.

“Its navy is in shambles, the core of its amphibious forces is broken, and tens of thousands of soldiers are prisoners of war,” the report said.

Japan, too, is likely to lose a hundred of aircraft and dozens of ships.

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Anti-landing spikes in Kinmen County, Taiwan. Credit: RFA

To defeat a Chinese invasion

The report suggested four conditions that need to be met to defeat a Chinese invasion, the first of which was that “Taiwanese forces must hold the line.”

“Taiwan must resist and not capitulate. If Taiwan surrenders before U.S. forces can be brought to bear, the rest is futile.”

The report noted that ground forces must become the center of Taiwan’s defense effort and recommended strengthening them.

The authors also argued that there’s no “Ukraine model” for Taiwan and the island “must start the war with everything it needs” as the second condition because China can blockade and isolate the island to prevent timely involvement from the U.S. and its allies.

“What’s happening in Ukraine should be an absolute wake up call for Taiwan,” said Heginbotham from MIT.

“The Taiwanese army is not the Ukrainian army, it is nowhere near well-prepared,” he added.

The report recommended that the U.S. must provide Taiwan with the weapons it needed and in wartime, “if the United States decides to defend Taiwan, U.S. forces must quickly engage in direct combat.”

The two other conditions needed for a successful defense of Taiwan are: The United States must be able to use its bases in Japan for combat operations, and U.S. forces must be able to strike the Chinese fleet rapidly and en masse from outside the Chinese defensive zone.

However, the report’s authors said that modeling an invasion “does not imply that it is inevitable or even probable.”

“The Chinese leadership might adopt a strategy of diplomatic isolation, gray zone pressure, or economic coercion against Taiwan; even if China opts for military force, this might take the form of a blockade rather than an outright invasion,” they said.

There was no immediate reaction to the report from either Taipei or Beijing, which in recent days has ramped up pressure on Taiwan with regular air incursions and military exercises around the island.

Back in October, Taiwanese defense minister Chiu Kuo-cheng said Taiwan is already preparing for a Chinese invasion.

“We are building up our arsenal and preparing for war according to our own plan,” Chiu told a legislative session.

An opinion poll run by the Taiwanese Public Opinion Foundation (TPOF) in September found that 51.2% of Taiwanese respondents think China would win the war if Beijing decided to invade Taiwan tomorrow and only 29.6% see Taiwan coming out victorious.

Junta troops torch 150 houses in Sagaing region township

An 80-year-old woman is missing after a three-day arson attack on a Sagaing region village, during which junta troops burned down 150 homes, locals told RFA.

Soldiers stormed Myaung township’s Pan Nyo village on Saturday and started shooting, forcing most residents to flee for safety.

Locals said 80-year-old Tin Mi, who is paralyzed, was left behind by her family, who weren’t able to carry her to safety.

When the military column finally left on Monday night, some locals returned to put out fires, remove debris and look for survivors in the remains of their homes. Tin Mi’s house had been burned down and the men couldn’t find her.

One Pan Nyo resident told RFA she saw smoke rising from various parts of the village over the three days the troops were there.

“They burned the village after dividing it into four parts. It’s not like the smoke was coming from a single location. Five locations were smoking,” said the woman, who didn’t want to be named for safety reasons.

“At 5:30 p.m. [Monday], the military column departed. We still haven’t returned. Some men from the village went back to put out the fires. They are looking for people who have gone missing.”

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Fires still burn in Pan Nyo village, Myaung township, Sagaing region on the night of Jan. 9, 2023 following a three-day arson attack by junta troops. Credit: Citizen journalist

Pan Nyo village is home to about 4,000 people, living in around 1,000 homes, according to locals. The majority of residents still haven’t returned and are hiding in nearby woods and mountains.

Myaung township People’s Defense Forces entered the village on Monday morning, fighting a 30-minute battle with the junta troops, a PDF officer told RFA Tuesday.

It’s the second time junta forces have stormed Pan Nyo. In May 2021, they set fire to 14 homes.

Sagaing region junta spokesman and social affairs minister Aye Hlaing has not responded to RFA’s requests for comment on the latest incident. 

In August 2022 a spokesman said junta troops did not burn down villages and blamed local militia.

More than 27,000 houses in Sagaing region have been burned down since the military seized power in a February 2021 coup, according to figures released last month by independent research group Data for Myanmar.

Armed conflict and arson forced more than 794,000 people – 15% of Sagaing’s population – to flee their homes between Feb. 1, 2021 and Dec. 14, 2022, according to the Institute for Strategy and Policy, Myanmar.

Translated by RFA Burmese. Edited by Mike Firn.

Teledyne e2v releases Hydra3D+, the first high resolution ToF sensor to work in all light conditions without motion artefacts

Teledyne e2v’s Hydra3D+

Hydra3D+ is the first ToF CMOS sensor to work in all light conditions without motion artefacts

GRENOBLE, France, Jan. 10, 2023 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Teledyne e2v, a part of Teledyne Technologies [NYSE: TDY] announces the release of its Hydra3D+, a new Time-of-Flight (ToF) CMOS image sensor which incorporates 832 x 600 pixel resolution and is tailored for versatile 3D detection and measurement.

Designed with Teledyne e2v’s proprietary CMOS technology, Hydra3D+ features a brand-new 10 µm three-tap pixel which provides very fast transfer times (starting from 10ns), and displays high sensitivity in the NIR wavelength, alongside excellent demodulation contrast. This precise combination enables the sensor to operate in real-time without motion artefacts (even if there are fast moving objects in the scene) and with excellent temporal noise at short ranges, essential in applications such as pick and place, logistics, factory automation and factory safety. An innovative on-chip multi-system management feature enables the sensor to work alongside multiple active systems without interference which can lead to false measurements.

The excellent sensitivity of Hydra3D+ enables it to effectively manage lighting power and handle a wide range of reflectivity. Its high resolution, with powerful on-chip HDR, featuring an on-the-fly flexible configuration, enables the best trade-off between application-level parameters, such as distance range, object reflectivity, frame rate etc. This makes it ideal for mid, long-range distances and/or outdoor applications such as automated guided vehicles, surveillance, ITS and building construction.

The sensor has been thoughtfully designed for customers seeking real-time and flexible 3D detection with uncompromised 3D performance. It offers large field-of-view scenes captured in both 2D and 3D by a compact sensor which makes the system very cost effective.

Ha Lan Do Thu, Marketing Manager for 3D imaging at Teledyne e2v said, “Today, many Time-of-Flight sensors suffer from motion artefacts and can’t instantly perform in changing operating conditions. With Hydra3D+, our customers can easily achieve reliable 3D measurement with the highest levels of 3D performance, uncompromised image quality in both 2D and 3D modes, and in all distance ranges and conditions even where multiple systems operate or in outdoor environments.”

Documentation, samples, and development tools are now available upon request. In addition, there are several proprietary modelling tools to support customers in their assessment of the operation of Hydra3D+.

About Teledyne e2v
Teledyne e2v innovations lead developments in healthcare, life sciences, space, transportation, defense and security and industrial markets. Teledyne e2v’s unique approach involves listening to the market and application challenges of their customers and partnering with them to provide innovative standard, semi-custom or fully custom imaging solutions, bringing increased value to their systems.
For more information, visit imaging.teledyne-e2v.com

Teledyne e2v media enquiries contact:
Jessica.Broom@teledyne.com

A photo accompanying this announcement is available at https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/47c52b26-5f04-4e0b-be19-6cd4a48961db

GlobeNewswire Distribution ID 8725310