Latest news with #bootcamp


Arab News
a day ago
- Business
- Arab News
AI boot camp to develop national talent
RIYADH: A 'Building AI Agents' boot camp, run by the Saudi Data and AI Authority in partnership with American AI hardware company Groq, aims to empower participants in the use of the technology through a hands-on experience culminating in an applied project. Organizers said the event will combine real-time reasoning and smart-monitoring systems, as participants design voice- and text-based AI agents and create high-performance AI applications using Groq's advanced architecture. The SDAIA said the event is part of its efforts to enhance national AI capabilities and promote the adoption of advanced technology, the Saudi Press Agency reported on Monday. The boot camp aims to build on ongoing efforts to develop national talent and provide future-ready tools in support of the Saudi Vision 2030 plan for national development and diversification, it added, and help reinforce the Kingdom's position as a global data and AI hub. The boot camp, which features three in-person training days, begins on Sept. 7. Register at by Aug. 19.

RNZ News
08-08-2025
- RNZ News
Military style boot camps finish 12 month pilot
Only one of the teen boys who went through the government's controversial military-style boot camp trial hasn't reoffended. Despite this, the agency and minister in charge are trumpeting its success, as the 12-month pilot finishes. Critics though said the boys should have had better support growing up, and the reoffending rate proves boot camps are a failure. Tuwhenuaroa Natanahira reports. Tags: To embed this content on your own webpage, cut and paste the following: See terms of use.


CBS News
08-08-2025
- CBS News
Nearly 10 years later, Midlothian still seeks justice for Missy Bevers, fitness instructor murdered at church
Nearly a decade ago, Missy Bevers' life was taken. The person responsible has never been caught, but that hasn't stopped the community from pushing for answers. Ahead of what would have been her 55th birthday, the pursuit for justice continues. "She was a good person," Renae Rodden said. "She was humble. She was dedicated to teaching people fitness and healthy eating habits to make a difference." Rodden met Bevers in 2015 when they were both working for a clothing company. "She was one of the people who had the inventory, and so I went to her house every week for an entire year," she said. The friendship grew quickly, but a year later, the unthinkable occurred. Surveillance video captured Bevers preparing to host an early morning boot camp class at Creekside Church of Christ in Midlothian when someone dressed in tactical gear entered the building. "She's not aware that they're there," Rodden said. "She met with them and within minutes, she's brutally murdered." The circumstances surrounding Bevers' death have remained a mystery. This Saturday, she would have turned 55. To honor her life, a community tip drive was held at Kimmel Park. Organizers have put up signs in the neighborhood and say the event is about keeping Bevers' story alive and maintaining pressure on the case. "It's very frustrating to know that it hasn't been solved," Rodden said. Midlothian police say new leads are continuing to come in, both locally and from out of town. They say the tips "look promising," but cannot go into further detail.


Zawya
08-08-2025
- Business
- Zawya
Octa broker's coding bootcamp in Malaysia: Stage 1 completed
KUALA LUMPUR, MALAYSIA - Media OutReach Newswire - 8 August 2025 - Sponsored by Octa broker, the second instalment of the STATUS 200 coding bootcamp is held on-site in Kuala Lumpur. Stage 1 is already over—28 students out of 34 successfully completed their test assignments and proceeded to Stage 2. This second part of the bootcamp will be challenging and exciting for the participants as they dive deeper into coding across 240 hours of intense learning. Octa's coding bootcamp 2025 This summer, for the second year in a row, Octa broker teamed up with Ideas International to carry out a free coding bootcamp in Malaysia. Back in 2024, the STATUS 200 bootcamp received great feedback from both teachers and participants, so the continuation was really due. This year, the STATUS 200 2.0 bootcamp is held exclusively on-site in Kuala Lumpur, in two stages. While the first stage offered an introductory HTML & CSS basics course, the second one is much longer and much more intense. Stretching throughout July and August, it consists of a whopping 240 study hours over six weeks, with sessions running eight hours per day, five days a week. The Stage 2 agenda focuses on JavaScript, and AI-powered development tools. Out of 34 initial participants, 28 were selected for Stage 2 based on their attendance and test assignment results. Given that the bootcamp doesn't require a coding background, the agenda looks very ambitious: students who complete Stage 2 will acquire the coding skills sufficient for a junior developer-level position. As in 2024, Octa's partner for this charity project is Ideas International. It's a Kuala Lumpur-based inclusive secondary school that focuses on promoting affordable education among underprivileged, UNHCR (The Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees), foreign, and Malaysian students. Bootcamp's goals In accordance with its long-term charity mission, Octa broker believes in creating educational and personal development opportunities in various regions. Octa chose coding as the focus area of its bootcamp because it is a merit-based field where background is much less important than hard work. In this respect, coding creates new career and life opportunities—as does trading in the financial markets. Some students even see coding and trading as complementary disciplines. In the words of one of this year's bootcamp participants, 'I'm serious about using code to improve my trading and ready to put in the time and effort to make it happen. For me, every challenge is a chance to learn and grow. That is exactly what makes coding so exciting'. As the sponsor and driving force behind the bootcamp, Octa broker looks forward to students successfully completing the second stage. Octa believes the 2025 graduates will receive a career and motivation boost through their newly acquired coding skills and networking experience. Disclaimer: This press release does not contain or constitute investment advice or recommendations and does not consider your investment objectives, financial situation, or needs. Any actions taken based on this content are at your sole discretion and risk—Octa does not accept any liability for any resulting losses or consequences. Hashtag: #Octa The issuer is solely responsible for the content of this announcement. Octa Broker Octa is an international CFD broker that has been providing online trading services worldwide since 2011. It offers commission-free access to financial markets and various services used by clients from 180 countries who have opened more than 52 million trading accounts. To help its clients reach their investment goals, Octa offers free educational webinars, articles, and analytical tools. The company is involved in a comprehensive network of charitable and humanitarian initiatives, including improving educational infrastructure and funding short-notice relief projects to support local communities. In Southeast Asia, Octa received the 'Best Trading Platform Malaysia 2024' and the 'Most Reliable Broker Asia 2023' awards from Brands and Business Magazine and International Global Forex Awards, respectively. Octa Broker


Daily Mail
28-07-2025
- Health
- Daily Mail
I died for 17 minutes while I was working out at the gym - this is what I saw as medics frantically revived me
A 'fit and healthy' woman who lay dead on the floor of her local gym after suffering a cardiac arrest has shared her near death experience. Victoria Thomas, now 41, collapsed while taking part in a bootcamp class and was technically dead for 17 minutes. But while many people who 'cross over' to the other side and come back share stories of feeling peaceful and seeing a tunnel of bright, soothing light, Ms Thomas tells a totally different tale. She told the Mirror: 'When it happened, it went black and there was nothing, then I became aware of looking down on my body. 'I was floating near the roof and was looking down at myself on the gym floor. My first thought was that my legs looked really fat.' But rather than this being a strange hallucination, it actually adds weight to Ms Thomas' out of body experience. She added: 'When I looked at a photo of myself taken just minutes before I collapsed, I could see that my legs were actually swollen. 'I didn't see a light, or feel peaceful, I was just watching myself, and I could see some yellow machines around me.' There was no warning that Ms Thomas was about to fall ill, apart from a general feeling of malaise which she shared with a friend. She said: 'I said to my friend that I didn't feel like I had any power or energy, like it had just drained from my body. 'I was also feeling slightly dizzy. I'd only just said it when I suddenly collapsed on the floor.' Staff tried to revive her but to no avail, and within minutes paramedics arrived at the gym and began working on restarting her heart, a process which took 17 minutes. 'They never gave up on me. The minutes ticked by, but they refused to stop trying,' she said. 'I was so young, fit and healthy and it had come completely out of the blue.' Ms Thomas was rushed to Bristol Royal Infirmary, where she spent three days in a coma and was fitted with a defibrillator to restart her heart in the event her body went into cardiac arrest again—and it did. In the following months, her heart stopped several times, only to be promptly kicked back into rhythm, including when she was back on the court playing netball. She said: 'I went back to playing netball three weeks after it happened, with my defibrillator. 'It was a shock whenever it went off, but it allowed me to carry on living my normal life, which I was so grateful for.' In February 2021, Ms Thomas discovered that she was pregnant, which put her heart under more strain. At the 24-weeks mark, Ms Thomas discovered the root cause of her heart issues was a rare genetic disorder, which came as a huge surprise as her family doesn't have a history of heart disease, or any sort of heart problems. Specialists diagnosed her as having Danon disease, a rare genetic disorder which affects less than a million people worldwide. It is caused by a problem with the LAMP 2 gene, which produces an enzyme that is responsible for a process that keeps cells clean and healthy. Incredibly, life expectancy for people living with the disease is 19 for men and 24 for women. Tests revealed that neither Tommy, now three, nor Victoria's other relatives have Danon disease, much to her relief. WHAT IS A CARDIAC ARREST? A cardiac arrest occurs when the heart suddenly stops pumping blood around the body, which is usually due to a problem with electrical signals in the organ. This causes the brain to be starved of oxygen, which results in sufferers not breathing and losing consciousness. In the UK, more than 30,000 cardiac arrests occur a year outside of hospital, compared to over 356,000 in the US. Cardiac arrests are different to heart attacks, with the latter occurring when blood supply to the heart muscle is cut off due to a clot in one of the coronary arteries. Common causes include heart attacks, heart disease and heart muscle inflammation. Drug overdose and losing a large amount of blood can also be to blame. Giving an electric shock through the chest wall via a defibrillator can start the heart again. In the meantime, CPR can keep oxygen circulating around the body. 'When I read the letter from the genetics team telling me what I had, I was 24 weeks pregnant with Tommy and I was so shocked, I couldn't take it in. 'The doctors wanted to deliver Tommy at just 24 weeks, but I persuaded them to let me hang on a few more weeks. If he had been born at 24 weeks then he may not have survived. 'But by the time I was 30 weeks I couldn't breathe properly because of the fluid build up around my body, so I had to have an emergency caesarean.' Pregnancy wasn't the only cause of strain on Ms Thomas' body, motherhood also took its toll—just six months after giving birth, she struggled to get up the stairs. In April 2022, a hospital check-up found her heart was functioning at just 11 per cent, which is categorised as end-of-life heart failure. She said: 'I asked the doctors how long I had left and they told me I had just another couple of months. 'It was devastating. All I could think of was Tommy. I vowed I wouldn't leave him.' The distraught new mum was placed on the urgent donor register and forced to remain in hospital, counting down the minutes until her sisters brought her baby to the ward for cuddles. She recalled: 'I would cuddle him and cherish every moment I had with him. 'Time was running out for me, and I had to pray that they were going to find me a heart in time. Two hearts were found – but further tests revealed they weren't suitable.' Victoria, who now lives in Gloucester, says: 'It was devastating. Each time I'd get my hopes up thinking this was it, that I was going to be saved. 'And then I was told that the operation couldn't go ahead. I didn't know if they were ever going to find a heart in time. I'd given up all hope.' Thankfully in April 2023 a suitable, and usable, heart was found and after undergoing a transplant at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Birmingham, she was allowed home in May. She is now back to full strength, playing netball four times a week, and she is due to compete in both volleyball and basketball at the World Transplant Games in Germany next month—and remains grateful to her donor and their family. She said: 'I'd been in hospital since Tommy's first birthday in October and now I was finally home with him. I couldn't believe it. 'I'm spending time as a mum with my son and I'm back playing the sport that I love. I feel like I've been given a second chance at life, and to be a mum. 'It's the greatest gift I could ever have asked for.'