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Elegoo Launches Nexprint Million-Dollar Creator Fund to Reward Original Content
Elegoo Launches Nexprint Million-Dollar Creator Fund to Reward Original Content

Associated Press

time13 hours ago

  • Business
  • Associated Press

Elegoo Launches Nexprint Million-Dollar Creator Fund to Reward Original Content

This is the first seven-digit fund to help creators earn from original 3D model designs. SHENZHEN, China, Aug. 8, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- Elegoo, a rapidly developing brand in global smart manufacturing, today launches a $ 1 Million creator fund to encourage and reward outstanding original creators who share exceptional content in Nexprint. The fund will be distributed over one year to grant Nexprint creators who submit their original designs to the platform. It also includes alliance reward which is aimed for those who help invite submissions to the platform. Each month, we will invest in a reward pool to grant $ 5 to each approved submission. There is no exclusivity capped on the design. Exceptional designs will be rewarded with an extra $ 5 each and featured for priority exposure in Nexprint. There is no restriction on the number of monthly submissions by an individual creator. For outstanding creators, we can offer long-term collaborations. For alliance reward, creators can receive additional tiered invitation bonuses by inviting other creators to join and upload models, with a maximum of $100 per month. The reward is granted monthly on a first-come-first-served basis with the first phase starting from August 9 to August 31. The left amount available in each month will be updated live on Starting from September, the total available reward amount will be renewed on the first day of each month. 'This fund shows our commitment to delivering the best user experience to Nexprint community by hosting a tremendous amount of 3D models accessible to everyone " said Chris Hong, CEO at Elegoo.' We greatly value originality in this industry. Nexprint will be a perfect platform to showcase creators' original ideas. We believe in here every design will pay off.' Nexprint, newly launched on August 4, is an open-source community designed to connect makers worldwide by enabling seamless sharing and downloading of 3D models. For more information on how to join and win the reward, please visit About Elegoo Founded in 2015, Elegoo is a rapidly developing brand in the global smart manufacturing industry, specializing in R&D, manufacturing, and sales of consumer-grade 3D printers, laser engravers, STEM kits, and other smart technology products. Located in Shenzhen, the Silicon Valley of China, the company has sold millions of products across more than 100 countries and regions. In 2024, the company's total sales revenue surpassed 220 million USD, with more than 1000 employees and nearly 30,000 square meters of office and manufacturing area. With a focus on programming and 3D printing technology, Elegoo provides unique and smart creation spaces for diverse consumers to enhance personalized experiences. PR Contact: Ryan Wang [email protected] View original content to download multimedia: SOURCE Elegoo

Haunting 'dolls house' that takes you room-by-room through Bryan Kohberger's student slaughter
Haunting 'dolls house' that takes you room-by-room through Bryan Kohberger's student slaughter

Daily Mail​

time5 days ago

  • Daily Mail​

Haunting 'dolls house' that takes you room-by-room through Bryan Kohberger's student slaughter

The home where four University of Idaho students were slaughtered by mass killer Bryan Kohberger has been frozen in time in a 3D model built by state prosecutors. The three-story property at 1122 King Road in Moscow, Idaho, was once a place of youthful fun where five young women were enjoying college life with their friends. On November 13, 2022, the house was transformed into a horror crime scene when Kohberger broke in and stabbed to death Kaylee Goncalves, Madison Mogen, Xana Kernodle and Ethan Chapin. One year later in December 2023, the home was demolished to rid the college town of the painful visual reminder of what had taken place - against some of the victims' families wishes. 'It is the grim reminder of the heinous act that took place there,' University of Idaho President Scott Green said at the time. 'While we appreciate the emotional connection some family members of the victims may have to this house, it is time for its removal and to allow the collective healing of our community to continue.' Now, days after Kohberger was sentenced to life in prison for the murders, photos of a 3D reconstruction of the home have been released by Latah County Prosecutor Bill Thompson's office, giving a glimpse inside every room of the home. The images show the interior and exterior of the home, detailing the layout of the rooms belonging to the victims and survivors. The model house is not furnished as it was when the murders took place. It was built by the prosecutor's office to be used as a demonstrative aid at Kohberger's capital murder trial. The 30-year-old criminology PhD student's defense team had objected to the so-called 'doll house' being presented to the jury, arguing that it was not to scale. Prosecutors argued a 'to-scale' model was not necessary for the structure's purpose to show jurors the floor plan layout and be a helpful tool for witnesses when explaining their testimony. Judge Steven Hippler ruled that prosecutors could use the model house during trial, but only for demonstrative purposes - and not as evidence. But on July 2, Kohberger changed his plea, pleading guilty to four counts of first-degree murder and one count of burglary. The bombshell plea hearing came after he struck a controversial deal with prosecutors to take the death penalty off the table. He was sentenced to life without the possibility of parole in an emotional hearing in Ada County Courthouse in Boise, Idaho, on July 23. Kohberger also waived his right to appeal. Kohberger is now being held in solitary confinement inside the Idaho Maximum Security Institution where he will see out his dying days. With the trial no longer going ahead, a broad gag order has been lifted and investigators and officials connected to the case have released never-before-seen evidence and records. In an interview with the Idaho Statesman, Thompson revealed for the first time that Kohberger collected creepy trophies from women in his past life. At the time of his arrest, Kohberger was in possession of 'ID-type cards' belonging to two women he knew years before the murders. At least one of the women was the killer's former colleague at the Pleasant Valley School District in Pennsylvania. Kohberger attended Pleasant Valley School District schools growing up, graduating from the high school in 2013. He then worked part time as a security officer for the district from 2016 through 2021, while pursuing his studies in psychology and criminology. Kohberger's parents also worked for the district, Michael as a maintenance worker and MaryAnn a special needs paraprofessional. The IDs were found hidden inside a glove inside a box during a search executed at Kohberger's family home in Albrightsville, Pennsylvania, following his December 30, 2022, arrest. The prosecutor - whose decision to strike a plea deal with the mass killer divided the victims' families - said the discovery came as a surprise to both women. Neither of the women had been 'harmed or threatened,' Thompson said. As well as sharing new information about evidence in the case, Thompson revealed for the first time which of Kohberger's family members would have testified against him at trial. Prosecutors previously revealed plans to call some of Kohberger's immediate family members - his parents and two older sisters Amanda and Melissa - as witnesses for the state. Which family members and why remained a mystery, with the details kept under seal. Thompson told the Idaho Statesman the plan had been to call Kohberger's sister Amanda and either his mother or father if the case went to trial. He did not divulge the exact reasoning for this. But, as the trial date loomed, the state decided against calling any of the Kohberger family because they weren't the 'best witnesses' and they had not shared anything 'substantively incriminating' during police interviews. Moscow Police have also released a trove of 314 records from the investigation that ultimately led to Kohberger's arrest. The records include details of eerie encounters the students had at 1122 King Road before they were murdered. Goncalves had told friends she had seen a man watching her in the trees around the home and the roommates had come home to find the front door open one day. The home at 1122 King Road in Moscow, Idaho, on November 20, 2022 - one week on from the murders It is not clear if these incidents are related to Kohberger but cell phone evidence does indicate he was surveilling the home months before the murders. Other documents reveal that, following Kohberger's arrest, several women came forward to police about creepy interactions they had with Kohberger. One unidentified woman claimed to have matched with Kohberger on Tinder in September or October 2022 - just weeks before the murders. The woman broke contact with Kohberger after he allegedly asked her a chilling question: what did she think would be the worst way to die? She told police that when she told him by knife, he responded with an eerie comment to the effect of, 'like a Ka-Bar?' Around one month later, Kohberger is believed to have used a Ka-Bar knife to slaughter his victims. Despite the flurry of new information released and Kohberger's guilty plea, many unanswered questions remain, including Kohberger's motive, who his intended target was and why he chose his victims. Kohberger refused to shed any light on the murders or provide any answers at his sentencing.

WAIC Shanghai: Tencent, SenseTime launch new AI models to stir up industry rivalry
WAIC Shanghai: Tencent, SenseTime launch new AI models to stir up industry rivalry

South China Morning Post

time27-07-2025

  • Business
  • South China Morning Post

WAIC Shanghai: Tencent, SenseTime launch new AI models to stir up industry rivalry

Tencent Holdings and SenseTime launched new artificial intelligence (AI) models at the World Artificial Intelligence Conference (WAIC) in Shanghai on Sunday as Chinese Big Tech companies stepped up their rivalry in the field. Shenzhen-based social media and gaming powerhouse Tencent unveiled its Hunyuan 3D World Model 1.0, an open-source AI model capable of generating detailed three-dimensional environments, according to a statement. SenseTime, an AI pioneer in China, launched SenseNova V6.5, a new generation of its proprietary AI model series. Tencent said its latest Hunyuan model could create interactive, 360-degree virtual 3D scenes using natural language prompts or image inputs, thus significantly simplifying the production process for virtual reality experiences and video games. Tencent said Hunyuan was the industry's first open-source 3D world-generation AI fully compatible with 'CG pipelines' – the standard workflow used for creating 3D graphics and animations in film production, gaming and visual effects. An image generated by Tencent's Hunyuan3D World Model 1.0, unveiled at the World Artificial Intelligence Conference in Shanghai on July 27, 2025. Photo: Handout Meanwhile, SenseTime claimed SenseNova V6.5 had outperformed some of its US peers such as Google's Gemini 2.5 Pro and Anthropic's Claude 4-Sonnet. Its unveiling marked the Hong Kong-listed firm's latest efforts to double down on multimodal AI models, chairman and CEO Xu Li said at the WAIC venue. The introduction followed months after it launched the previous version called SenseNova V6, a multimodal model released in April that had outperformed OpenAI's GPT-4o across several metrics.

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