New digital chat tool to improve Bournemouth beach water quality
Litter Free Dorset, in its latest campaign, is encouraging beachgoers to delve into water quality issues, find new resources, share their concerns and ask questions.
The group wants people to join the conversation by completing an online survey or interacting with the new digital engagement platform powered by Hello Lamp Post.
The chat function uses a knowledge bank filled with information from Litter Free Dorset, supplemented by an AI digital assistant, to guide users through a live conversation about water quality and the work of organisations such as BCP Council, the Environment Agency and Wessex Water.
The survey and digital chat tool, accessible online and via QR code, have been launched in conjunction with Wessex Water's efforts to monitor seawater quality in near real-time.
Wessex Water has deployed advanced seawater quality monitoring buoys at Bournemouth and Boscombe beaches.
These buoys collect data capable of indicating bacteria levels in the water using AI technology, which can then be shared with partners and the public.
Ruth Barden, director of environmental solutions at Wessex Water, said: "While Bournemouth's beautiful coastal bathing sites are all rated excellent by the Environment Agency, we know that numerous factors can have an impact on water quality —from wildlife to high rainfall.
"It's exciting to be able to use our recently deployed water quality buoys to help train the AI platform and provide real-time information."
With this campaign, Litter Free Dorset aims to raise awareness about water quality issues, promote a variety of water quality resources, and help the public feel better informed about Bournemouth's bathing water quality.
Emma Teasdale, Litter Free Dorset coordinator, said: "It is important that beachgoers are able to access water quality information about their local beach, and this engagement project will help us to identify what information people want and what they already know about the factors that can impact water quality."
Litter Free Dorset will be present at Bournemouth Pier on Saturday, July 5, during the Pier-to-Pier Swim event to talk to people about water quality.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
34 minutes ago
- Yahoo
How school run led CEO to 'coffee roulette' with staff and billion pound vision
Lyndon Stickley tries to 'scare a lot of people away' when he oversees first interviews for roles at cloud-accounting start-up iplicit. Yet Stickley, who bills himself as a go-to-market evangelist after successfully scaling and selling six previous companies, is far from your ruthless CEO. For the zest in which he describes his involvement with iplicit and why he won't be exiting a business for a seventh time – one of his previous projects includes London's largest graveyard – makes him a particularly charismatic leader. Hampshire-based Stickley is aiming to take the remote-first firm — he takes part in daily 'coffee roulette' mornings with employees — to unicorn status by 2030, by making it the "on-premises salvation" for mid-market businesses and their 'outdated' finance systems. Read More: Meet Britain's 'king of billboards' who sold his business for £1bn Launched in 2019, iplicit gained a top 20 place among UK firms in the FT1000 list of Europe's fastest growing businesses. Last year, the firm was one of the Sunday Times' medium business top places to work. So, to those job interviews. 'I say it might not be for you and tell them that this is a place for really passionate, slightly unhinged mountain climbers,' says Stickley, who built and sold his first company, an ISDN tech firm, for £40m before turning 30. 'If you say we are off on a mountain climb which will take three months and you might lose a finger to frostbite but we will stick a flag at the top, we are looking at the one person who will lean in where the other 19 won't.' The fact he is even discussing iplicit's marketplace rise is, he says, down to luck. 'Happenstance has been the foundation of everything,' he adds. Stickley tells the story of how Ian Andrews, an engineer by heart, spent 20 years running a company called Concept Software and becoming one of the UK's leading implementation consultancies for the likes of Oracle. He had been introduced by a friend on the school run who said he should look at Andrews' accounting software business. Shortly afterwards, Andrews spent two hours explaining to Stickley about large scale enterprise resource planning (ERP) – an area in which the serial entrepreneur had no experience. Once vendors had concluded software deals, Andrews would place people on site for up to two years and charge hundreds of thousands of pounds for implementation work. 'It was a world that blew my mind,' says Stickley. 'After 20 years, he told me, he realised he was part of the machine that was stacked against the customer, who was also getting mugged rather than it being implemented out of the box,' Stickley recalls of their first meeting. Read More: The boss who has found 'nature's answer to plastic' 'He said to me that he decided to build a better system by investing £1.5m of family savings and a friend who did the same. They carved off some engineers and created an accounting solution [iplicit] which could be deployed in days and compile reports in hours not weeks, with low disruption.' Stickley asked how many customers iplicit had, to which Andrews replied none. It was, however, the start of an unlikely relationship, given that Stickley would usually have refrained from any reckless decisions in previous investments. Having promised his friend, Stickley made some calls and was told to give it a wide berth. One final network call to a co-founder of legacy finance firm Exchequer, who he knew over 20 years previously, changed the direction. After looking at the software, he was left enthused by its power and low touch. With Stickley investing £1m into Andrews' business, iplicit swelled to around 20 staff, went to market in 2019 and immediately started winning top accountancy awards they hadn't entered. Iplicit's plan had been how to overcome the issue of customers buying finance software off an unknown player in the market. COVID not only levelled the playing field, with video meetings and iplicit's shorter implementation times, but also propelled the appeal from mounting customers who had non-cloud system issues. Iplicit realised that it could serve 100,000 sites, often multi-company locations, with a 25% market share goal and a £500m a year business. 'We couldn't have possibly contrived that [accounting software giant] Sage would drop a royal ball and not have something for the vast majority of its base,' says Stickley. The industry had also taken notice. Stickley was told by Oystein Moan – the executive chairman of Visma who took the company to unicorn status – that iplicit was a multi-million pound opportunity in the UK alone. Last year, Moan and Nic Humphries, one of the biggest private equity players in the business-to-business software space, joined iplicit's advisory board. Read More: 'Why we set up a sustainable mobile operator to save people money' Stickley's entrepreneurial spirit had been gained from his father, who had a chicken farm at 16, ran a nightclub in his twenties and worked with artists like Lulu and the Rolling Stones. Aged 17, Stickley junior took Wednesdays off sixth form college to sell kitchenware at the local market, earning £200. At university, he ran five club nights across Portsmouth in the late 1980s before his penchant for scaling businesses. 'The worst and the best I have been involved in is the most human connected and impactful business,' Stickley says of Kemnal Park, which he describes as the UK's first cemetery to celebrate life and built for people to return. 'The 'thank yous' were non stop,' he says, 'when you can see week in, week out people come back and be inspired by the place where they have buried a loved one.' Stickley met Andrews as the former was leaving the cemetery business, with iplicit planning for two years before launch. From 2006 to 2022, Stickley worked part-time three days a week. He took the helm as CEO when he realised that the business wouldn't be sold and is now working as if 'back in my twenties'. The firm has one office in Poole, Dorset with 25 employees, and around 135 working remotely. Stickley says iplicit's growth has been down to lifting the barriers of geography and has U-turned on seeing recruitment agencies as 'the enemy'. 'Getting a good recruitment pipeline means you have talent on tap when you need it,' Stickley adds. 'There's no way you can grow fast like this and do the recruitment function as you can't afford mediocrity to creep into the camp.' Iplicit's goal, he says, is to become the de facto standard in the UK before any entrance into the US. It currently serves over 43,000 daily users in over 3,000 organisations. 'We have the best tech, team and trajectory and an advantage that no one else has in the market right now,' he adds. All thanks to that school run chat and Andrews being a few months shy of running out of money before meeting iplicit's future CEO. 'What doesn't make him bonkers is he didn't go bust, so now he's a genius, right? Because he really was," says Stickley. "But if it had gone bust, he was bonkers. It was a fine line.' Coffee roulette and remote-first You value the relationships more when you don't have them on a plate every day. We get together six times a year and we all hug across 150 people as we aren't in the office getting bored with each other. The video efficiency is unbelievable. I can have 15 meetings in a day and include coffee roulette in that, which was invented by one of our techies where a random name generator pairs two people to have 20 minutes together. I found it so insightful I now have around 25 coffee roulettes a month virtually across the country. It takes the drudge out of the work and makes meetings more concise. We don't recruit younger people typically; they deserve a right of passage in an office. We are heavily biased towards over 35s as we suit the young families and older, experienced employees and appeal to an audience who don't want to commute. We measure trust by measuring outputs, not by checking in on people. Read more: The life lesson behind a 335-year-old funeral business? 'Never sleep on an argument' Meet the company that finds 'must-haves' to make everyday life easier Impossibrew CEO says Dragons' Den failure sparked alcohol-free brand's riseSign in to access your portfolio
Yahoo
39 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Better Artificial Intelligence Stock: Nvidia vs. Meta Platforms
Nvidia has become the go-to provider for chips to support AI, which has resulted in explosive sales and earnings growth for the tech giant. Meta is pouring billions of dollars into AI research and aims to be a leader in the field. 10 stocks we like better than Nvidia › Artificial intelligence (AI) stocks have proven to be big winners for investors lately -- particularly last year, when some leading players in the space delivered double- and even triple-digit percentage gains. Though these high-growth companies' share prices tumbled earlier this year due to concerns about President Donald Trump's tariff plans, investors have recently returned to this compelling story. Trump's trade talks and tentative agreements on the frameworks of deals with the U.K. and China have boosted optimism that his tariffs won't result in drastically higher costs for U.S. consumers or major earnings pressure on U.S. companies -- in contrast to the worst-case scenario that many had feared. As a result, investors feel more comfortable investing in companies that rely on a strong economic environment to thrive -- such as AI sector players. This means that many investors are once again asking themselves which AI players look like the best buys today. Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA) and Meta Platforms (NASDAQ: META) are both aiming to reshape the future with their aggressive AI plans. If you could only buy one, which would be the better AI bet now? Nvidia already has scored many AI victories. The company has built an empire of hardware and services that make it the go-to provider for any organization creating an AI platform or program. But the crown jewels of its portfolio are its graphics processing units (GPUs). It offers the top-performing parallel processors, and thanks to both its ecosystem and manufacturing lead, they're also by far the best-sellers in their class. With demand from cloud infrastructure giants and other tech sector players still outstripping supply, Nvidia has been growing its sales at double- and triple-digit percentage rates, and setting new revenue records quarter after quarter. In its fiscal 2025, which ended Jan. 26, Nvidia booked a 114% revenue gain to a record level of $130 billion. And the company isn't just growing its top line -- its net income surged by 145% to almost $73 billion as it continued to generate high levels of profitability on those sales. Nvidia's clients today rely heavily on its hardware to power their projects, as its GPUs are some of the best chips available for the training of large language models (LLMs), as well as for inferencing -- the technical term for when those trained models are used to process real data to solve actual problems or make predictions. And Nvidia is helping customers with so much more -- from the design of AI agents to the powering of autonomous vehicle systems and drug-discovery platforms. Nvidia also is innovating steadily to stay ahead of rivals. It recently shifted to an accelerated schedule that will have it releasing chips based on new and improved architectures every year; previously, it rolled out new architectures about once every two years. So this company is likely to keep playing a major role in the evolution of AI throughout its next chapters. You will know Meta best as an owner of social media apps, some of which you probably use every day -- its core "family of apps" includes Facebook, Messenger, WhatsApp, and Instagram. And the sales of advertising space across those platforms have provided billions of dollars in revenue and profits for the company. But today, Meta's big focus is on AI. The company has built its own LLM, Llama, and made it open source so that anyone can contribute to its development. The open-source model can result in the faster creation of a better-quality product -- and in this case, it could help Meta emerge as a leader in the field. The company has put its money where its mouth is: It plans as much as $72 billion in capital spending this year to boost its AI presence. And just recently, Meta has been hiring up a storm in its efforts to staff its newly launched Meta Superintelligence Labs. That business unit will work on foundation models like Llama as well as other AI research projects. In a memo to employees regarding the new AI unit, Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg highlighted why it's well positioned to lead in AI development: "We have a strong business that supports building out significantly more compute than smaller labs. We have deeper experience building and growing products that reach billions of people," he said. Those points are true, and they could help Meta reach its goals -- and deliver big wins to investors over time. From a valuation perspective, you might choose Meta, as the stock is cheaper in relation to forward earnings estimates than Nvidia -- a condition that has generally been the case. But a closer look shows that while Nvidia's valuation is down since the start of the year, Meta's actually has climbed. With that in mind, Nvidia looks like a more appealing buying opportunity, especially considering the company's ongoing strong growth and its involvement in every area of AI development and application in real-world situations. Meta also could emerge as a major AI winner down the road, and the stock is still reasonably priced today in spite of its gains in valuation. But Nvidia remains the key player in this space -- and at today's valuation, it's the better buy. Before you buy stock in Nvidia, consider this: The Motley Fool Stock Advisor analyst team just identified what they believe are the for investors to buy now… and Nvidia wasn't one of them. The 10 stocks that made the cut could produce monster returns in the coming years. Consider when Netflix made this list on December 17, 2004... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you'd have $699,558!* Or when Nvidia made this list on April 15, 2005... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you'd have $976,677!* Now, it's worth noting Stock Advisor's total average return is 1,060% — a market-crushing outperformance compared to 180% for the S&P 500. Don't miss out on the latest top 10 list, available when you join . See the 10 stocks » *Stock Advisor returns as of June 30, 2025 Randi Zuckerberg, a former director of market development and spokeswoman for Facebook and sister to Meta Platforms CEO Mark Zuckerberg, is a member of The Motley Fool's board of directors. Adria Cimino has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Meta Platforms and Nvidia. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. Better Artificial Intelligence Stock: Nvidia vs. Meta Platforms was originally published by The Motley Fool Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data


Bloomberg
2 hours ago
- Bloomberg
Octopus Energy Eyes Demerger of Tech Arm Kraken, Sky Says
The UK's largest electricity supplier, Octopus Energy Group Ltd., is planning to separate its Kraken Technologies Ltd. business, Sky News reported, citing people familiar with the matter. The firm is close to hiring bankers to separate Kraken, which licenses an operating system to utilities. The unit could be valued as much as $14 billion, Sky reported, citing one of the people.