
Meet our regional rising stars: London
Inside the 2,000 square foot kitchen, a team of 15 painstakingly constructs the patties from scratch. From rolling out the pastry dough 20 times to achieve the perfect flaky texture, to slow cooking the filling, it's a hive of activity. When The Times visits, head chef Kenrick is in a side kitchen, pouring the chicken filling for 400 patties into large flat pans to help it cool.
The team barely bat an eyelid when Williams, 34, shows journalists and camera crews around. They've grown used to the limelight, as Williams and his father, Paul, his co-founder in Flake Bake, were the stars in April last year of a Channel 4 television show called Aldi's Next Big Thing, where food and drinks makers competed to get their products on the shelves of the supermarket.
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The Independent
24 minutes ago
- The Independent
Scotland will be at ‘forefront of UK's technological revolution', says Murray
Scotland is in line for billions of pounds of investment, the UK Government said as it announced plans to site an AI Growth Zone north of the border. Scottish Secretary Ian Murray said the move will help put the country at the 'forefront of the UK's technological revolution'. It was announced as part of the UK Government's Compute Roadmap, which promises £1 billion to expand the country's AI research resource 20-fold over the next five years. It is understood several promising sites for the AI Growth Zone – which ministers hope will speed up the rollout of vital infrastructure like data centres – have already been identified in Scotland. It is hoped researchers and businesses at the centres will be able to process huge amounts of data to deliver the next generation of breakthroughs and innovations – including potentially finding new ways to treat and beat diseases, speeding up how we can diagnose conditions like cancer, and even using AI to help in the fight against climate change. Confirmation of an AI Growth Zone for Scotland comes after the UK Government announced £750 million of funding to build the UK's new national supercomputer at the University of Edinburgh. As part of the Compute Roadmap, ministers have now also confirmed the capital will be home to the UK's first National Supercomputing Centre. This will be a dedicated centre of expertise, with individual sites hosting everything from large data sets to cutting-edge processing power. Science, Innovation and Technology Secretary Peter Kyle said: 'From the shipyards of the Clyde to developments in steam engine technology, Scottish trailblazers were central to the industrial revolution. 'AI is this generation's next great industrial leap, so who better to help drive that change than a nation with innovation hardwired in its DNA.'We've set out an ambitious plan to cement our position as a global leader in AI, with Scotland set to play a key role – unlocking fresh investment and new opportunities. That's how we're putting our Plan for Change into action.' Mr Murray said: 'This is a landmark moment and will place Scotland at the forefront of the UK's technological revolution. 'The up to £750 million investment in Edinburgh's new supercomputer also places Scotland at the cutting edge of computing power globally. 'This will see Scotland playing a leading role in creating breakthroughs that have a global benefit – such as new medicines, health advances, and climate change solutions. 'This is the Plan for Change – delivering real opportunities and economic growth for communities across Scotland.' Scottish Government business minister Richard Lochhead said: 'With our world-renowned talent for research, innovation and ingenuity, Scotland is perfectly placed to capitalise on AI's rapid growth and be a supplier of this transformational technology, not just a consumer. 'We are also home to vital supporting and enabling infrastructure – from good-quality digital connectivity to the abundant renewable energy supplies needed to power the huge demand from computer processing in a sustainable way. 'The UK Government's confirmation that an AI Growth Zone and National Supercomputing Centre will be established in Scotland is welcome. 'It will help unlock new opportunities for businesses, researchers, citizens and communities — supporting high-quality jobs through economic growth and boosting productivity.'


The Independent
24 minutes ago
- The Independent
UK and Germany sign key deal as part of Brexit ‘reset'
Sir Keir Starmer and German leader Friedrich Merz signed the Kensington Treaty, the most significant UK-German co-operation deal since the Second World War. The treaty focuses on enhanced collaboration in migration, trade, and security, marking a notable improvement in Anglo-German relations. Key provisions include Germany closing a loophole to allow police to seize small boats used by migrants, and visa-free travel for German school trips to the UK by year-end. British visitors will gain access to German passport e-gates by the end of August, initially for frequent travellers, as part of Sir Keir's wider Brexit 'reset'. Despite the new agreement, Mr Merz expressed his personal regret over Brexit, while recent polls indicate a majority in Germany and other EU nations would welcome the UK back into the bloc.


BBC News
25 minutes ago
- BBC News
UK's most powerful supercomputer Isambard-AI comes online
A supercomputer that is the most powerful in the UK has been made fully operational in Secretary Peter Kyle "flicked the switch" on the Isambard-AI machine as the government unveiled fresh artificial intelligence computer will become part of the UK's public AI computing capacity along with a machine in Cambridge called aim is to use the supercomputer for public projects such as bringing down NHS waiting lists and developing new tools to tackle climate change - although AI is notoriously energy-hungry. In addition, the government announced that Scotland and Wales will be in line for billions of investment in so-called AI Growth of the Isambard-AI computer was being used in January for a medical project to develop vaccines, but it has now been turned on the name suggests, a supercomputer has more processing power and can complete more tasks more quickly than a less powerful processes data in the same binary format as regular computers but uses thousands more processing units to analyse more data at faster speeds. 'Huge advances' Along with Dawn, the supercomputers will form the UK's "AI Research Resource" and will be available for public projects, although they won't combine computing resource, which may in future include other supercomputers, will be expanded 20-fold over the next five years, the government said. Speaking to BBC News, Kyle said AI would enable "huge, unimaginable advances in the cure of disease"."But it's also going to change the workplace. In order to benefit from that, you have to be prepared."The government is preparing and training a million students in AI, and 7.5 million people will be trained in the broad economy in the coming months and said he understood that people may be "anxious about the future" in terms of how AI would affect their jobs, but the UK was "already seeing huge improvements in productivity" due to the technology."AI is going to happen to Britain," he said. "What we can do, and what we have a choice over, is how it happens in Britain." Isambard-AI uses more than 5,400 Nvidia GH200 Grace Hopper Superchips, with Hewlett-Packard technology, while Dawn, at the University of Cambridge, uses more than 1,000 Intel chips, along with Dell supercomputer was built by the University of Bristol, but paid for using public money. David Hogan, Nvidia's European vice president, said Isambard-AI was a "truly transformational machine" but that it was "just a starting point".To support the government's plans, researchers, academics and tech bosses have been brought together to develop an AI strategy to be published in the group includes Google DeepMind vice president Pushmeet Kohli, vice president of the Royal Society, Alison Noble, and chairwoman of the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council, Charlotte Deane. The UK government has claimed that more investment in and scaling up of British supercomputers will help it fulfil its plans for growth and "position the country as an AI maker rather than an AI taker".Companies around the world are currently vying to acquire the best talent and hardware in the sector to try and cement their dominance in Bristol supercomputer recently ranked 11th in the latest list of the world's top 500 most powerful, commercially available computers.