Lufthansa pilots and cabin crew walked off the job on Thursday, grounding numerous flights across Germany, while Ukrainian skeleton racer Vladyslav Heraskevych was disqualified from the 2026 Winter Olympics for wearing a helmet honoring war-fallen athletes. Meanwhile, xAI revealed details of its product roadmap, Apple delayed its AI-powered Siri revamp, and the developer of the multiplayer shooter "Highguard" laid off most of its staff just weeks after launch.
The Lufthansa strike, affecting both the core brand and cargo division, grounded planes at major German airports from Frankfurt to Munich to Berlin, according to Euronews. The strike, which began at 12:01 AM and was scheduled to last until 11:59 PM, also impacted the regional subsidiary CityLine due to a parallel warning strike by flight attendants, as reported by the Independent Flight Attendants' Organisation (Ufo).
In the world of sports, the International Olympic Committee (IOC) disqualified Ukrainian skeleton racer Vladyslav Heraskevych before his first run at the 2026 Milano-Cortina Winter Olympics. The IOC banned Heraskevych from using his custom-made helmet, which featured portraits of Ukrainian athletes killed in Russia's full-scale invasion since early 2022, Euronews reported. Heraskevych stated, "This is the price of our dignity," upon his disqualification.
In the tech sector, xAI, Elon Musk's AI lab, revealed its product roadmap in a rare public all-hands meeting video. The meeting, which was published on X, detailed the company's progress and plans, including layoffs due to a changing organizational structure, according to TechCrunch. The company was formed just 30 months prior.
Apple's much-anticipated, AI-powered Siri revamp has been delayed again, according to a report from Bloomberg's Mark Gurman, as reported by TechCrunch. The new Siri, initially expected to launch with the upcoming iOS 26.4 update in March, is now expected to roll out more slowly, with some features potentially postponed until the May iOS update or even the release of iOS 27 in September. The delay was reportedly due to issues encountered during software testing.
Finally, Wildlight Entertainment, the developer of the multiplayer shooter "Highguard," laid off most of its staff just over two weeks after the game's launch, The Verge reported. Affected staffers shared the news on LinkedIn.
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