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Women's Asia Cup 2025 Schedule: India to open campaign against Thailand
Women's Asia Cup 2025 Schedule: India to open campaign against Thailand

The Hindu

time6 days ago

  • General
  • The Hindu

Women's Asia Cup 2025 Schedule: India to open campaign against Thailand

The Indian women's hockey team will open its Asia Cup campaign against Thailand on September 5 before taking on defending champion Japan and Singapore, Hockey India announced on Wednesday. The Indian team, which claimed the bronze medal in the previous edition, is placed in Pool B along with Japan, Thailand and Singapore while Pool A consists of host China, Korea, Malaysia, and Chinese Taipei. The tournament is set to take place in Hangzhou, China, from September 5 to 14 and the winner will get a direct qualification to the 2026 World Cup. India's second match will be against Japan on September 6, followed by its final Pool B contest against Singapore on September 8. 'Being placed in Pool B alongside defending champions Japan will test our skills and character from the very start. However, facing them in the pool stage will be a great opportunity to measure ourselves early in the tournament,' India captain Salima Tete said. 'Our focus will be on playing smart, disciplined hockey and taking it one match at a time. The ultimate goal is to lift the trophy and earn a direct spot in the 2026 women's FIH Hockey World Cup.' Echoing Salima's sentiments, vice-captain Navneet Kaur said, 'It will be a challenging tournament with Asia's top teams competing with each other, but we see it as a chance to bring out our best right from the first whistle. We've been training with intensity and purpose, and we will aim to execute our plans on the field during the tournament. Playing against Japan in the group stage gives us an early look at high-pressure hockey, which can only help us grow stronger as a unit. We're determined to make this Asia Cup campaign count and make the country proud.' India had won the Asia Cup back in 2017, when it defeated China in the final. According to the format, the top two teams from each pool will advance to the Super 4s Pool, where each team will play one match against each of the other three teams. The top two teams from the Super 4s Pool will qualify for the final, while the third and fourth placed teams will compete in the 3rd/4th place match. The bottom two teams from Pool A and Pool B will play classification matches to determine the 5th to 8th positions in the tournament.

India to open Women's Asia Cup campaign against Thailand
India to open Women's Asia Cup campaign against Thailand

Hindustan Times

time6 days ago

  • General
  • Hindustan Times

India to open Women's Asia Cup campaign against Thailand

New Delhi, The Indian women's hockey team will open its Asia Cup campaign against Thailand on September 5 before taking on defending champions Japan and Singapore, Hockey India announced on Wednesday. The Indian team, which claimed the bronze medal in the previous edition, is placed in Pool B along Japan, Thailand and Singapore while Pool A consists of hosts China, Korea, Malaysia, and Chinese Taipei. The tournament is set to take place in Hangzhou, China, from September 5 to 14 and the winner will get a direct qualification to the 2026 World Cup. India's second match will be against Japan on September 6, followed by final Pool B contest against Singapore on September 8. "Being placed in Pool B alongside defending champions Japan will test our skills and character from the very start. However, facing them in the pool stage will be a great opportunity to measure ourselves early in the tournament," India captain Salima Tete said. "Our focus will be on playing smart, disciplined hockey and taking it one match at a time. The ultimate goal is to lift the trophy and earn a direct spot in the 2026 women's FIH Hockey World Cup." Echoing Salima's sentiments, vice-captain Navneet Kaur said, "It will be a challenging tournament with Asia's top teams competing with each other, but we see it as a chance to bring out our best right from the first whistle." "We've been training with intensity and purpose, and we will aim to execute our plans on the field during the tournament. Playing against Japan in the group stage gives us an early look at high-pressure hockey, which can only help us grow stronger as a unit. We're determined to make this Asia Cup campaign count and make the country proud." India had won the Asia Cup back in 2017, when they defeated China in the final. According to the format, the top two teams from each pool will advance to the Super 4s Pool, where each team will play one match against each of the other three teams. The top two teams from the Super 4s Pool will qualify for the final, while the third and fourth placed teams will compete in the 3rd/4th place match. The bottom two teams from Pool A and Pool B will play classification matches to determine the 5th to 8th positions in the tournament.

Apple is scrambling to catch up in a race it had a headstart in
Apple is scrambling to catch up in a race it had a headstart in

Yahoo

time11-03-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Apple is scrambling to catch up in a race it had a headstart in

Apple was among the first to release a digital assistant when it introduced Siri in 2011. It has struggled to capitalize on the headstart it had. Fresh delays in upgrading Siri have set Apple back at a time when AI assistants are the rage. It was 2011. The newest iPhone on the block was the 4s. And Apple was raring to introduce the world to a major acquisition it had been readying for over a year: Siri. Bought for an undisclosed sum, the "intelligent assistant" meant Apple was among the first to show smartphone users why they would want or need an AI-powered voice companion in their pocket. Fast-forward to 2025, and Apple's promises for Siri look uncertain. The voice assistant that should have given it a headstart in the ChatGPT era is struggling to catch up to a pack of rivals leading with far more powerful AI assistants. In other words, Apple is falling behind in a race it originally led. Last week, Apple confirmed that it was delaying generative AI features for Siri that were first shown off at its Worldwide Developers Conference in June 2024. It's a rare instance in which Apple no longer has a clear release date in sight for a product it has already announced. Jacqueline Roy, an Apple spokesperson, told the unofficial Apple blog Daring Fireball that "it's going to take us longer than we thought to deliver" on upgraded features that transform Siri into a "more natural, more contextually relevant, and more personal" experience. This has all caused some degree of embarrassment for Apple. Its marketing campaigns for a slate of new devices released over the past several months — including iPhones, iPads, and Macs — consistently mentioned their synchronicity with Apple Intelligence, which Siri is a fundamental part of. It helps explain why the company has now made a September ad, which stars the actor Bella Ramsey using a Siri feature that does not yet exist, private on its YouTube channel. "The delay makes a lot of sense," Hamish Low, an analyst at Enders Analysis, told Business Insider. "Apple clearly got ahead of itself with Apple Intelligence with disappointing features, awkward marketing campaigns, and tepid consumer demand. Apple's position here is ultimately defensive, it has much more to lose than to gain from the AI race." Though Apple said it anticipates rolling out the features "in the coming year," its Apple Intelligence upgrade delays — a tool it once pinned its future on — signals how much of an issue Siri has become at a time when rival services are flourishing. As companies have spent more time thinking about how to make generative AI useful to consumers, a series of Siri alternatives that embed powerful features have emerged — all while Apple struggles to deliver on all the promises it made for a generative AI-led Siri. OpenAI and Google have leaned heavily on building AI-powered voice assistants that industry followers say offer a more natural and engaging conversational experience than the one users currently get with Apple. Amazon, another early mover in the virtual assistant space, introduced a revamped version of Alexa last month that's free for Prime subscribers. Prominent Apple followers, such as Bloomberg reporter Mark Gurman, have described it as "ChatGPT Voice Mode on steroids." As he put it on X last month, "It is frightening how far behind Apple is in this space." "Alexa+ is notable for at least claiming to bring much of the advanced functionality that you would want from a real AI assistant," Low said. "We will need to see how far it lives up to this with its public launch later this month, but its ability to plug into a host of APIs, and directly access and interact with websites in the background otherwise, is key." The stakes are high if Apple fails to get Siri right. The generative AI age has introduced consumers to a growing assortment of AI-enabled smartphones that threaten to steal market share by offering AI features that offer more value. Threat to market share has become a key issue for the company in places like China, where it is facing fierce competition from local competitors introducing smartphones with AI capabilities that aim to win over local audiences. Apple's dilemma is clear. It is behind in a race that it entered nearly 15 years ago — with a headstart over many rivals — when it introduced Siri as an integrated feature of the iPhone 4s. Its turnaround plan for Siri has plenty riding on it. Read the original article on Business Insider

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