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Lifesciences Data Mining and Visualization Market Analysis, Trends, Top Manufacturers, Share, Growth, Statistics, Opportunities & Forecast to 2026…

The Lifesciences Data Mining and Visualization market report provides a detailed analysis of this business space. The market is analyzed in terms of production as well as consumption. Based on the production aspect, the report includes particulars pertaining to the manufacturing processes of the product, alongside revenue and gross margins of the respective manufacturers. The unit cost decided by the producers across various regions during the forecast period is also included in the report.

Additionally, the study comprises of insights regarding the consumption pattern. Information concerning the product consumption volume and product consumption value is mentioned in the document. The individual sale price along with the status of the export and import graphs across various regions are provided. Meanwhile, an in-depth analysis of the production and consumption patterns during the estimated timeframe has been given.

A summary of the geographical landscape:

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An overview of the product landscape:

An outline of the application spectrum:

A gist of the competitive landscape:

In a nutshell, the Lifesciences Data Mining and Visualization market report encompasses details about the equipment, downstream buyers and upstream raw materials. Growth factors impacting this industry vertical in consort with the marketing strategies implemented by the manufacturers have been analyzed and provided in the research report. The Lifesciences Data Mining and Visualization market study report also offers insights regarding the feasibility of new investment projects.

Report Objectives:

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Wizards of Tech: Top Artificial Intelligence Professors in India – Analytics Insight

Here is the list of the top 10 AI professors who help their students excel in technology.

Artificial intelligenceand other disruptive technologies likemachine learning,natural language processing, data analytics, cloud computing, etc. are created by humans to make life easier. They are mostly human-based, which means they resemble or work like us. The trigger behind all the technological developments inartificial intelligence advances and influences speech recognition, visual perception, language identification, decision making, etc. Further, the efforts are turned to machines that we use in our daily life. To scholar disruptive technologies, aspirants need clear people who can provide guidance and help them achieve their goals. That is whatartificial intelligence professorsdo in colleges. Artificial intelligenceprofessors in Indiaand elsewhere elaborate their students on technology and motivate them to achieve big things in life. Analytics Insight has listed the top 10artificial intelligence professorswho offer the right opportunity to students and help them excel in their interested fields.

Balaraman Ravindran is the Mindtree Faculty Fellow and a professor at the Department of Computer Science and Engineering, Indian Institute of Technology, Madras. He also heads the Robert Bosch Centre for Data Science and AI at the IITM. Ravindran holds a PhD in computer science from the University of Massachusetts, Amherst. Currently, his research interests are centred on learning from and through interactions and span the area of data mining, social network analysis, and reinforcement learning. Ravindran has published over 100 papers in journals and conferences, including premier venues such as ICML, AAAI, IJCAI, etc.

LinkedIn-Balaraman Ravindran

Umesh Bellur is the Head of the Department of Computer Science at the Indian Institute of Technology Bombay (IITB). He holds a B.E in Electronics Engineering from Bangalore University and secured his PhD in Computer Engineering from Syracuse University, New York. Bellur is interested in anything distributed around virtualization and cloud computing where he is looking at problems in derivative clouds and serverless computing, VM provisioning, placement, and migration. As an educational professional, he is skilled in distributed systems, Linux, Algorithms, C/C++/Python, and cloud computing.

LinkedIn-Umesh Bellur

Pulak Ghosh is IIMB Chair of Excellence and Professor of Decision Sciences at the Indian Institute of Management, Bangalore (IIMB). Ghosh specializes in intersections of big data, machine learning, artificial intelligence, and its use in economics, finance, policy, and social value creation. Before joining IIMB, he served as Associate Director, Novartis Pharmaceuticals. He also held teaching jobs as Assistant Professor at Georgia State University ad Associate Professor at Emory University, USA. Ghosh also served in the Advisory group of big data at the United Nations (UN) Global Pulse, a big data initiative by the UN and the knowledge commission of UNESCO-MGEIP.

LinkedIn-Pulak Ghosh

Sanjiva Prasad is the professor and head of the Department of Computer Science and Engineering, Indian Institute of Technology Delhi (IITD). He received his B.Tech in Computer Science from IIT Kanpur in 1985 and his MS and PhD in Computer Science from SUNY, Stony Brook, USA. Prasads research interests are in the broad area of formal methods, programming language and their semantics, concurrency theory, verification, proof theory, mobile computation, formal foundations of networks, including IoT and SDN, security. He is specially focused on information flow and formal methods for reconfiguration architecture.

LinkedIn-Sanjiva Prasad

Pushpak Bhattacharyya is a professor of Computer Science and Engineering Department IIT Bombay. His area of research is natural language processing and machine learning. He currently holds the Major Bhagat Singh Rekhi Chair Professorship of IIT Bombay. Before joining IITB, he worked as the director of IIT Patna and served as the President of the Association of Computational Linguistics. Due to his interest in NLP and machine learning, Bhattacharyya has published more than 350 research papers on the topics. He also authored a textbook called Machine Translation.

LinkedIn-Pushpak Bhattacharyya

Suyash P. Awate is the Associate Professor of the Computer Science and Engineering Department, IIT Bombay. His interests are in image analysis, medical image computing, machine learning, computer vision, statistical modelling, and inference. Awate has done research on statistical shape analysis, kernel methods, image classification, image quantification, image reconstruction, statistical analysis of the cemetery of the human brain cortex, image restoration and denoising, image segmentation, and image registration. He has authored and published many papers on image analysis technology.

Chiranjib Bhattacharyya is the Professor and Chair of the Department of Computer Science and Automation at Indian Institute of Science. His interests are centred on machine learning, convex optimization, and bioinformatics. He holds BE and ME degrees, both in Electrical Engineering, from Jadavpur University and the Indian Institute of Science. Bhattacharyya completed his PhD from the Department of Computer Science and Automation, IISc. Before joining IISc, he worked as a postdoctoral fellow at UC Berkeley. Bhattacharyya has authored papers in leading journals and conferences in machine learning.

Susheela Devi is a Principal Research Scientist in the Department of Computer Science and Automation at IISc, Bengaluru. She has a keen interest in the field of pattern recognition, data mining, and soft computing. In her role, she educates students on data structures and algorithms, computational methods of optimization, artificial intelligence, intelligent agents, topic in pattern recognition, data mining for proficiency, algorithms and programming, and soft computing.

LinkedIn- V. Susheela Devi

Sudeept Mohan is the Head of the Department of Computer Science and Information Systems at Birla Institute of Technology and Science, Pilani. His interest centres on intelligent control and robotics. Mohan has spent all his learning years at BITS Pilani. He holds degrees in B.E in Electrical & Electronics, M.Sc in Physics, M.E in Electronics and Control, and PhD in Control of Robot Manipulators, all from BITS Pilani.

Rajeswari Sridhar is the Head of the Department of Computer Science and Engineering at the National Institute of Technology, Trichy. Her area of interest includes data structures and algorithms, compilers, machine learning and deep learning, artificial intelligence, natural language processing, data science and analytics, and cloud computing. Sridhar secured her B.E degree in ECE from Government College of Technology, Coimbatore and M.S in Computer Science from City University, USA. She also holds a PhD in CSE from Anna University, Chennai.

LinkedIn-Rajeswari Sridhar

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Challenge to education – The Statesman

Ayear ago, most stakeholders in the education process were blindsided by the realization that closure of educational institutions were to be for an indefinite period. Accepting that education had to be carried out in the virtual medium, there was overnight a flood of online platforms catering to the newfound necessity of contacting the student community and keeping a semblance of education going under severe socio-economic conditions. The immediate crisis that came to the fore tore across the student community and the proverbial divide between the haves and have-nots was put into the sharpest focus, unseen across generations.

Dependence on the internet and suitable and expensive mobility equipment immediately threw almost half of the nations student population out of the educational system. Compounded by the fact that sudden closure of establishments rendered millions without the basic necessities of existence, it was a foregone conclusion that poverty would push another 30 per cent of the student population out of the reach of educational institutions. Effectively, within a month, the active student population of the country shrunk by 80 per cent and by June 2020 it was a foregone conclusion that most of the dropouts would be unable to return to the fold in the near future.

For a country whose policy makers and stakeholders had been exerting themselves continuously to bring down student drop-outs to single digit percentages, the sudden turn of events annulled decades of painstaking reach-out to bring in inclusive education across the country. Also, the sudden closure of educational institutions and the consequent mass dropouts across the country rendered the newly framed National Educational Policy practically infructuous in the short and medium run. The crisis is not limited to our country with UNESCO figures claiming a total drop-out number of 1.6 billion children on a modest estimate.

Such dropout figures are not limited to south Asia or sub-Saharan Africa but encompass countries as diverse and advanced as the middle-income economies of Brazil, Argentina, Mexico, Spain and Portugal. Clearly, Covids impact on education is not merely universal but is also incomprehensible in its extent, range and depth. In order to frame recovery policies, comprehensive data-mining efforts have been planned and are under various stages of implementation. The chief among them is the UNESCO-UNICEFWorld Bank joint survey on National Educational Response to Covid-19 School Closures and the Covid-19 Global Educational Recovery Tracker, a new tool developed in partnership by Johns Hopkins Universitys e-School+ Initiative, UNICEF and the World Bank.

The primary focus of this global outreach is to monitor school reopening and aid recovery planning efforts in more than 200 countries and territories. Initial data, as of April 2021 reveal that more than 168 million children globally have been shut out of any form of in-person learning for almost an entire year. Alarmingly, this figure does not include the children who have dropped out of school entirely as a result of the pandemic. Covid-induced educational disruptions in India are increasingly bringing out other equally serious manifestations of the harm inflicted by the pandemic on education.

While active involvement of the mobile service providers and equipment manufacturers for communication devices have mitigated the hardship to the student community to a large extent by increasing the coverage of mobile services and availability of cheaper equipment, it is increasingly becoming clear that education and assessment in the virtual medium are exposing their own patterns of disruptions, most of which threaten to expand to life-long cognitive debilities.

In the Indian context, the greatest challenge to education has come from the exclusive but unavoidable reliance on the virtual medium. While personal proximities and close physical monitoring of progress has been the hallmark of our education from time immemorial, virtual teaching has significantly eroded the role of the teaching community from exercising effective control of their instructions, with most teachers still struggling to know the number of students actively participating in the virtual instruction. The scenario with online examinations and evaluation is more precarious.

While we have adopted a blended evaluation mode, closely resembling the western concept of the open-book examination, it is commonly seen that the evaluation has reduced itself to students copying answers at home from books or the web and transferring them to institutions for evaluation. Needless to say, they end up with marks which are at the upper end of the spectrum. Clearly, such evaluation and the inflated marks they carry are not only poor indicators of student proficiency, but may actually turn counterproductive for such students in the long run with the stigma of having been evaluated under such farcical circumstances sticking to them before future employers and institutional job providers.

This is compounded by the huge cognitive and academic deficiencies that the student community is facing with most stakeholders agreeing that effective online instruction is easier said than done. The challenge to the teaching community is no less profound. Within the space of a year, teachers have been burdened not only with managing online classes and evaluation but are constantly weighted down by a constant stream of online teaching products competing for their attention, most being repetitive applications and redundant online methodologies.

Such inane teaching technologies have significantly diverted the energy of the teaching and educational administrative community; such energy could have been better used in augmenting effective instructional and evaluation efforts. Under such challenging circumstances, the need of the hour is to garner a talent pool of stakeholders to steer education at such a critical time. Clearly, conventional policy bureaucratese would serve little purpose. Also, Indian educational contexts and conditions are radically different from international scenarios and we would not have the luxury of adopting foreign strategies which would face strong headwinds in micro-level educational contexts in our country.

Mitigating the severe setback to education and rehabilitating the compromised education of millions of students across the country through appropriate remedies are the only ways in which damage to our student community can be minimized. A year into the pandemic and the long-term impact on education is already threatening an entire generation of our youth through poor skill attainment and compromised instruction. This shall directly impact their ability to attain proficiencies for employability. The talent pool bottleneck this crisis shall create would threaten and choke the services and manufacturing sectors in the long run, thereby impacting the economy as a whole. The earlier this long-term danger is understood and addressed, the better it would be for our community.

(The writer is Assistant Professor of English, Pratilata Waddedar Mahavidyalaya, West Bengal)

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Challenge to education - The Statesman

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Everything We Know About Twitter’s New Premium Service – Tech.co

In earnest, it's far too early to tell whether or not Twitter Blue is going to worth the added cost. Particularly with social media, it's hard to imagine a world in which paying for a free service is worth it, even for the paltry price of $2.99 per month.

However, with social media trending towards paid services, Twitter could be establishing itself on the ground floor of an innovative movement. After all, the platform just launched the Tip Jar feature, alluding to a financially-driven future for the app.

If all goes according to plan, Twitter could set itself up to shirk the infamously unpopular data-mining practices of the industry, particularly with companies like Google and Apple throwing up road blocks to the sketchy methodology for making money.

Paying for social media is going to be a tough barricade to break down after a decade and a half of cost-free scrolling. But hey, maybe it'll be the push some of us need to go outside and enjoy social interactions the old fashioned way again.

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Cryptocurrency Crash: Is It Time to Buy the Dip? – The Motley Fool

It's been a stress-filled month for cryptocurrency investors. Major sell-offs started after Tesla CEO Elon Musk stated that the company would no longer accept Bitcoin (CRYPTO:BTC) as payment for its vehicles, citing environmental concerns about the energy needed to mine tokens. News that China would take steps to discourage mining and prevent businesses in the country from adopting cryptocurrencies triggered additional sell-offs across thespace.

With crypto prices recently seeing a substantial pullback, we put together a panel of three Motley Fool contributors and asked each member if now looks like the right time to buy. Read on for their takes on whether the recent crypto crash has presented a big buying opportunity.

Image source: Getty Images.

Keith Noonan: Elon Musk is clearly an influential figure and has some incredible successes to his name, and it's possible his involvement in the cryptocurrency space provides indicators about long-term adoption trends. However, in my opinion, the market-moving power of Musk's tweets reflects a lack of soundness in crypto as an asset class.

While most cryptocurrencies are decentralized in terms of who controls the individual coin, Musk's comments have apparently been enough to trigger big swings for Bitcoin and the overall crypto market. Many coins are also more "centralized" than some investors think. As Musk himself noted, flooding in China's Xinjiang region resulted in a dramatic reduction of the Bitcoin hash rate. As another example, roughly 100 accounts control the large majority of Dogecoin's (CRYPTO:DOGE) total coin supply.

There are already thousands of cryptocurrencies on the market, and new ones are entering the fray all the time. Many of these tokens are essentially indistinguishable in terms of utility, and there's not much to stop even the more specialized cryptocurrencies from being disrupted by new entrants in the space.

Here's another issue: While the recent sell-offs are significant and surely painful for some investors, they're also not that big in the scheme of things. Ethereum's (CRYPTO:ETH) price has climbed 1,150% over the last year, while Dogecoin has exploded 13,310% across the same stretch. Bitcoin is still up roughly 300% over the last year and stands as the single-best performing asset of the last decade.

On the most basic level, value is subjective. If enough people believe in something and continue to attract new adherents to their way of thinking, that can drive the value of almost anything higher. However, when identifying potential investment candidates, I usually try to look for more objective metrics and trend indicators that paint a picture of why people will be likely to ascribe increasing value to an asset or equity. I struggle to find those characteristics in most cryptocurrencies, and dramatic volatility in the space stemming from seemingly minor catalysts makes me concerned that the overall asset class is still due for a much bigger pullback.

James Brumley: I understand the logic. Cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin and Dogecoin have dished out incredible gains. Just when it looked like they couldn't go any higher, they went higher. Their recent sell-offs seem out of the ordinary.

The problem is, nobody can actually explain why these sell-offs took shape. They just happened without explanation, much the same way cryptos climbed for so long without explanation.

This unexplained volatility underscores the gaping, philosophical flaw of cryptos. That is, although they're being touted as an alternative to fiat (government-issued) currency, they're being treated -- and traded -- like growth investments. It's a recipe for the market turning into a proverbial Wild West, which it has.

Sure, non-fiat currencies are appealing in an environment where governments appear to be losing control of their piece of the global economy. I also recognize physical money is the past while secure, digital money is the future. But at least the world's central banks are able to maintain some semblance of price stability for their respective currencies. Nobody's attempting to hold the prices of cryptos steady; nobody's even in a position to do so. That's why they're not reliable stores of value, which is the whole point of holding a particular currency.

So, buy on this dip if you must; I'd certainly never say you can't make money with them. Just recognize you're only speculating on how other people will arbitrarily feel about cryptocurrencies at some point in the future. That's little more than a coin toss.

Eric Volkman: I don't feel cryptocurrencies are attractive at current rates, no matter how many bargain hunters claim they're oversold (for the record, the crypto of all cryptos -- Bitcoin -- is down a queasy 34% from its mid-May peak; others have also plummeted).

One very good reason to continue staying away is a concern that continues to dog cryptocurrencies: safety and security. Take good old-fashioned hacking. While it's nearly impossible for a team of cyber pirates to raid the ever-lengthening distributed blockchain that undergirds any serious cryptocurrency, other facets of the system are vulnerable to attack.

Remember Mt. Gox? That was the Bitcoin exchange that hackers penetrated in 2014, stealing 850,000 Bitcoins. If the heist were to occur today, that pile would be worth a dizzying $33.5 billion. And at the time, Mt. Gox was the king of the world's Bitcoin exchanges, but that hack made it a future trivia question. Less than four years after its launch, Mt. Gox was a goner.

While security has advanced since then, the crypto exchanges remain vulnerable. Last August, researchers at the Black Hat security conference found not one, not two, but three methods through which hackers could make effective attacks against such platforms. This, despite the billions of dollars and immense brainpower and resources plowed into securing these sites.

Another classic means of separating assets from their owners, phishing, was responsible for the theft of roughly $200 million worth of crypto assets from various exchanges. That scam had been running for two years when it hit the headlines in mid-2020.

While any financial asset is vulnerable to a phishing attempt, the volatility and sky-high dollar prices for certain cryptos make their holders particularly juicy targets these days.

(Phishing, for those unfamiliar, is the method by which a scammer impersonates a person in a position of authority to ask for sensitive information from a victim. Once obtained, that information is used to access valuable property for theft.)

Another security concern is the decentralized nature of cryptocurrencies. This is a key selling point for such assets, as governments, central banks, and other important policy makers can't tinker with them for political or economic advancement.

But the flip side of that is they are subject to worryingly little regulation. The U.S. banking system, for instance, has a clutch of regulatory agencies watching and protecting it, from the federal level on down. To name one, traditional banking accounts held by an individual are automatically insured for up to $250,000 by the Federal Insurance Deposit Corporation (FDIC).

There's no U.S. public agency that insures $250,000 worth of Bitcoin.

So no, I don't think cryptos are a buy on weakness right now. In fact I'm not convinced they're a buy, period.

This article represents the opinion of the writer, who may disagree with the official recommendation position of a Motley Fool premium advisory service. Were motley! Questioning an investing thesis -- even one of our own -- helps us all think critically about investing and make decisions that help us become smarter, happier, and richer.

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Cryptocurrency Crash: Is It Time to Buy the Dip? - The Motley Fool

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Modi govt may set new panel for Cryptocurrency. Will regulation help Bitcoin, Dogecoin and other investors? – The Financial Express

Cryptocurrency India. Representative image

Even as there are a lot of uncertainties around the future of cryptocurrency in India, the crypto industry is happy over reports that the Government of India may soon set up a new panel to decide on Cryptocurrency regulation in India. Until now, the government has not clarified its stand on cryptocurrency while some reports have earlier suggested the government was planning to introduce laws to completely ban cryptocurrency trading in India.

Even on the floors of the Parliament, the governments stand on cryptocurrency has been disappointing for the evolving crypto industry in the country. Amid these, the latest reports on the regulation of the cryptocurrency sector have provided fresh hope to all stakeholders in the crypto sector.

According to Avinash Shekhar, Co-CEO of ZebPay, the government setting up a panel will be a step in the right direction. We believe that the government will consult with all stakeholders and take a calibrated approach in regulating cryptos in India and ensure all investors who have invested in cryptos are protected, Shekhar told FE Online.

Sharat Chandra, Blockchain Expert, IET Future Tech Panel, said Indias crypto ecosystem has denitely come of age. With more than 1.5 crore retail investors holding digital assets worth 15,000 crores, crypto is denitely a force to reckon with.

Also read | Decrypting Cryptocurrency: Is this the right time to invest in Bitcoin and others?

The crypto community has always spoken, in unison, about their willingness to be regulated. In the absence of regulation, the cryptocurrency industry stares at an uncertain future, said Chandra.

Commenting on the recent bloodbath in crypto markets, which spooked many rst time crypto investors and raised concerns about investor protection, Chandra said, Once crypto exchanges start embracing governance and investor protection guidelines, meant for stock exchanges, risks associated with volatility can be fairly addressed.

There has to be a well-dened regulation with respect to cryptocurrencies. Regulation with adequate investor protection and compliance would augur well for the crypto industry. It remains to be seen how the newly constituted government panel views digital currencies- as an asset class, commodity, utility or otherwise, he added.

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Modi govt may set new panel for Cryptocurrency. Will regulation help Bitcoin, Dogecoin and other investors? - The Financial Express

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Bitcoin slumps 7% as investors brace for another bouncy weekend – Aljazeera.com

Digital tokens took a hit on Friday as a growing list of central bankers expressed concerns about their usefulness.

ByLynn Thomasson and Anchalee WorrachateBloomberg

Bitcoin slumped 7% to near $35,500, recalling levels seen in the crypto meltdown last week as traders brace for fresh volatility over the long weekend.

Prices across digital tokens took a hit as Bank of Japan Governor Haruhiko Kuroda joined a growing list of central bankers expressing skepticism about the industrys usefulness in the real world.

Now, retail players are set to dominate the coming trading sessions on typically thin exchange volumes.

Looking at the unrest across the crypto market, there is a chance that we see another hectic weekend trading in Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies, said Ipek Ozkardeskaya, a senior analyst at Swissquote.

Prices spiked 10% last Saturday, only to plunge by 18% the next day.

Most of the trading is speculative and volatility is extraordinarily high, Kuroda said in an interview Thursday. Its barely used as a means of settlement.

All the same, Bitcoin was little changed for the week, after a 44% selloff from the Aprils peak of $63,000.

More broadly, the threat of tougher regulation continues to be a drag on crypto market sentiment. China and Iran have cracked down on Bitcoin mining operations for using too much electricity and theres speculation that the U.S.policymakers may increase financial oversight given the markets growing size and intense volatility.

On a technical level, the key marker is $30,000, said Swissquotes Ozkardeskaya. A break below that level would be further affirmation of an extended bear market, she said.

Volatility has eased this week, but that probably wont last entering a long weekend, Edward Moya, senior market analyst at Oanda Corp., wrote in a note. Bitcoins consolidation phase should continue, but if the $37,000 level breached momentum, it could get ugly fast.

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Bitcoin slumps 7% as investors brace for another bouncy weekend - Aljazeera.com

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In the Battle over Bitcoin, Its Bull vs. Bear in Elon Musks Brain – Barron’s

Illustration by Elias Stein

Text size

What do Cathie Wood, ESG investors, and central bankers have in common? Theyre all involved in the bull and bear debate over Bitcoinand theyre all vying for space in Tesla CEO Elon Musks mind.

Wood is a big Bitcoin bull. Her price target is $500,000, and cryptocurrency brokerage Coinbase is a top 10 holdings in her ARK Innovation exchange-traded fund. Musk, for his part, regularly tweets about crypto. And Tesla holds some $1.5 billion worth of Bitcoin.

ESG investors, however, worry that Bitcoin is feeding global warming. Lots of electricity used to mine Bitcoin comes from burning coal and natural gas. Musk cited climate concerns when he stopped accepting Bitcoin as payment for Tesla cars in May (after accepting it in March).

But Wood still sees Musk as a bull. Elon probably got a few calls from institutions, she told CoinDesk, noting that BlackRock is a big Tesla shareholder, and BlackRock CEO Larry Fink and European Tesla investors are attuned to climate issues. Wood believes demand from crypto mining can provide utilities with cash to invest in renewables and that environmental issues will fade as the grid transforms. As for central bankers, many believe Bitcoin is too volatile to be used globally.

They have a point. Bitcoin closed on Friday, May 21 at just over $35,000. On Friday, May 28, Bitcoin was trading at just over $35,000. In-between, prices rose as high as $42,000 and fell as low as $31,000a 30% swing. If Musk stays sidelined, Bitcoin could struggle. If Wood is right, and Musks Bitcoin bearishness passes, well, that could be a catalyst.

Stocks rose as the new week dawned, and Bitcoin and other cryptos firmed, only to slip again on Tuesday. Meme stocks got traction in midweek as indexes slipped. Initial jobless claims fell to their pandemic low, sparking a rally, and April consumer spending rose 0.5% and prices 0.7%. On the week, the Dow Jones Industrial Average, which celebrated its 125th birthday on Wednesday, rose 0.9%, to 34,529.45; the S&P 500 was up 1.2%, to 4204.11; and the Nasdaq Composite advanced 2.1%, to 13,748.74.

In a much-anticipated Exxon Mobil vote, Engine No. 1 won two board seats, with others still undetermined. The activist had sought four seats and called for Exxon to commit to net-zero carbon emissions by 2050. At Chevron, 61% of shareholders voted to cut emissions, and a Dutch court ordered Shell to cut emissions by 45% by 2030.

The G-7 reached a deal on a global tax rate for corporations after the Biden administration came down from a 21% minimum to 15%. The G-7 hopes to press the proposal quickly through the larger Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, though Brazil has already said it would negotiate separately. The administration, meanwhile, reduced its infrastructure plan to $1.75 trillion from $2.25 trillion, and proposed a $6 trillion budget.

A much-debated theory that the coronavirus evolved in a mine in China and ended up in a Wuhan virology lab sprang to life after The Wall Street Journal reported that three Chinese researchers grew ill in November 2019. China denied the theory, and the White House asked the intelligence community to look into the situation and report back in 90 days.

The president of Belarus, Alexander Lukashenko, allegedly ordered a jet fighter to force a Ryanair jetliner to land in Minsk, where a protest leader was removed and arrested. In response, the European Union imposed sanctions and, with the United Kingdom, banned flights in Belarus airspace.

Amazon.com agreed to buy MGM studios for $8.45 billion, a boon to its streaming business AMC Entertainments largest shareholder, Chinas Dalian Wanda, sold most of its shares in the movie-theater chainGerman publisher Axel Springer is in talks to buy U.S. online-media company Axios for over $400 millionU.S. frackers Cabot Oil & Gas and Cimarex Energy agreed to an all-stock merger to create a $14 billion company run by Cimarex CEO Thomas Jorden HSBC exited U.S. retail banking after 40 years, selling much of its branch network to Citizens Financial and Cathay General Bancorp...SoftBank Group paid WeWork founder Adam Neumann $450 million after forcing him out in 2019...Investing app Acorns will go public in a $2.2 billion SPAC deal.

Write to Al Root at allen.root@dowjones.com

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In the Battle over Bitcoin, Its Bull vs. Bear in Elon Musks Brain - Barron's

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Analyst says reclaiming $37,500 is Bitcoins crucial line in the sand – Cointelegraph

Bitcoin (BTC) price continues to limp lower as traders in the U.S. hit the BBQ to enjoy the upcoming Memorial Day holiday on May 31 and regulated futures and options markets like the CME are closed through the weekend.

Data from Cointelegraph Markets Pro and TradingView shows that after a brief attempt by Bitcoin (BTC) bulls to rally above $37,000 in the early morning hours on May 29, the price has tumbled below $34,000 as the support needed for a move higher failed to manifest.

Price action for Ether (ETH) was nearly identical to that of BTC, with an attempt to break above $2,500 met with stiff resistance that pushed the altcoin's price down to $2,300.

According to analysis from filbfilb, co-founder of Decentrader, Bitcoin's price action is a major source of the market's confusion as it remains a ways away from the 20 Week Moving Average (WMA) which is typically the line between Bitcoin being either in a bull or bear market and as such remains a bearish scenario for Bitcoin.

The analyst went on to further state that if Bitcoin is able to find solid support in the low $30,000s, the 20 WMA could turn into a major resistance zone in any attempt to move higher.

Filbfilbsaid:

At this point, according to filbfilb, it is crucial for BTC to reclaim $37,500 to avoid a retest of weekly support.

Should Bitcoin manage to stage a rally and break above $40,000, filbfilb identified the previous support/resistance zone at $45,500 to $46,500 as the next area of resistance that will need to be overcome.

Ether performed slightly better than BTC after it sold off back to the 61.8% retracement as the price was able to bounce back above the 20 WMA, but was ultimately rejected at the critical pivot price of $3,000 as the recovery momentum faded.

Filbfilbidentified $2,300 as an important area of support for Ether that would need to be held if bulls wanted to gather momentum for an attempt to break above the $3,000 level and retest $3,300, with this scenario be highly dependent upon the strength of Bitcoin.

Overall, the analyst expects that Ether will outperform BTC in any upside move and at least match any bearish movement.

He said,

The views and opinions expressed here are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of Cointelegraph.com. Every investment and trading move involves risk, you should conduct your own research when making a decision.

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When Is Bitcoin’s Reign Going to End? – Analytics Insight

At the moment, there are over 5 million Bitcoin users in the world. Each day, thousands more are joining and all of them are more than open to start trading and making money. And if you are into numbers, heres another one. Some statistics have shown that there may be as many as 100,000 Bitcoin millionaires in the world. All of these people have made their fortune by trading with this cryptocurrency.

While Bitcoin continues to break records in value and rises above any other product or service, many of us question when will Bitcoins reign end. We wanted to take a look at this case and check out one potential year that is set to mark its end. Before we do that, we are going to take a look at its current state.

At the moment, Bitcoin is in a near-perfect state. First of all, it is accepted as a payment method at many global brands. This contributes a lot towards its stability and ensures its prosperity. Some of the names that deserve a mention are Tesla, Expedia, Microsoft, Wikipedia, Starbucks, Overstock, Whole Foods, and Shopify.

While it may boast many advantages as a payment method, the main reason why so many people use it is that it provides them with a chance to make a handsome profit. Bitcoin is currently valued at around $60,000 and everyone is willing to start trading with it and begin their journey towards making money.

Many traders chances of making a profit have been increased recently thanks to the advanced services that some trading sites have. One of those sites is The News Spy, a reputable trading platform that has thousands of registered users from all around the world and has a very high daily profitability rate.

This trading site utilizes an advanced AI system that is able to analyze the market and collect all relevant data about Bitcoin. The data is then used to make accurate predictions on its future fluctuations. After the research is complete, the results are shared with the traders, who have intel on when is the best time to sell their Bitcoins and generate the highest possible revenue.

Many experts believe that not only will Bitcoin maintain its stability, but it will continue to rise. History showed us that Bitcoin reaches its peak value exactly a year and a half after halving events end. Because the last halving event was in May 2020, it is expected that the peak value will be reached in the final quarter of 2021.

There are also several predictions about the potential price that it will reach. The most eye-catching figure is $100,000. Considering the fact that Bitcoins value fluctuates between $50,000 and $60,000 these days, this cryptocurrency may truly have the potential to reach a six-figure value for the first time in its history.

As for the year when Bitcoins reign will supposedly end, it will most likely be 2140. Heres why. At the heart of these claims lies halving events. The next three halving events are set to take place in 2024, 2028, and 2032. Experts believe that by 2032, around 99% of all Bitcoins will be mined.

However, it will take until 2140 for that number to reach 100%. At this point, there will be no other Bitcoins to be created and released into the network. Now, that doesnt mean that Bitcoin will suddenly disappear and make it look like nothing ever happened.

On the contrary, it is believed that in this period, it will finally stabilize and reach an optimal value. In doing so, its volatility rate will be significantly lower and it will not be subject to so many radical changes. Just a reminder, at the moment, Bitcoins price can rise and fall by the thousands with each passing day. That wont be the case in the distant future.

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Analytics Insight is an influential platform dedicated to insights, trends, and opinions from the world of data-driven technologies. It monitors developments, recognition, and achievements made by Artificial Intelligence, Big Data and Analytics companies across the globe.

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When Is Bitcoin's Reign Going to End? - Analytics Insight

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