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Entertainment

Olivia Newton John Death: Watch Olivia Newton-John’s final performance at Fire Fight Australia

Olivia Newton-John‘s selfless nature was something known by her fans and loved ones – and her final performance, which saw her take the stage in Sydney to raise money for bushfire relieftruly exemplified that fact.

It was February 2020, and Australia had been devastated by the Black Summer bushfires for months. Newton-John, meanwhile, had been diagnosed with breast cancer for a third time three years priorand although she had undergone radiation to shrink a tumor in her breast, the cancer had spread to the base of her spine and caused a fracture, meaning she required a wheelchair and had to learn to walk again.

That did not stop her from performing, however, and she joined a slew of Aussie and international legends – including What in (fronted by adam lambert), Delta Goodrem, Guy Sebastian, to name a few – on the stage at Fire Fight Australia on February 16, 2020, in what, unknownst to the audience at the time, would be her final performance. Watch above.

READMORE: How Olivia Newton-John met the love of her life at 59

Olivia Newton-John’s performance at Fire Fight Australia was, unknownst to all, her final performance ever. (Getty)

In front of a crowd of thousands at Accor Stadium in Sydney Olympic Park – and even more watching the broadcast at home – Newton-John sang ‘Two Strong Hearts’ with John Farnhamdazzling the crowd in a wide-sleeved floral top from Camilla and jeans.

The concert, which was hosted by comedian Celeste Barber and raised $9 millionwas held three months after Newton-John was named a dame of the Order of the British Empire for her services to singing, acting, and her charity work, a fact Farnham celebrated – loudly and proudly – ​​when he introduced her to the cheering crowd.

Newton-John was unfazed by Farnham’s fanfare over her personal achievements, however, saying a quick thanks with a kiss on the cheek before turning her attention to the audience and greeting them with a big smile and wave.

“It’s amazing, what an amazing night,” Newton-John said on stage. “I’m so proud to be a part of this and to be singing with [Farnham] again.”

READMORE: John Travolta’s touching tribute to Olivia

Olivia Newton-John: Her extraordinary life remembered

READMORE: Olivia Newton-John’s daughter Chloe Lattanzi shares tribute after her death

The duo then performed an energized rendition of their 1998 hit ‘Two Strong Hearts,’ smiling and embracing as they did so.

At the conclusion of the song, as the audience cheered, Newton-John gave Farnham her hand, which he grasped with his own and then kissed.

They later sung his 1986 hit ‘You’re the Voice’ alongside Queen with Adam Lambert, the artists joined by firefighters and first responders on stage.

READMORE: Tributes flow for Olivia Newton-John as she loses battle with breast cancer

Although Newton-John was fighting stage four metastatic breast cancer for the third time, she was actively touring the United States in 2017 – but slowed down in 2018, taking a six-month break between shows from March to September of that year.

Following her show at Melbourne’s Her Majesty’s Theater on September 14, 2018, Newton-John did not perform again for over a year, only taking the stage once again in Florida in December 2019 before her brief appearance at Fire Fight Australia in 2020, her final performance.

Opening up about her most recent cancer battle – she was first diagnosed in 1992 – to The Mirror nine months after her last performance, Newton-John did say she was feeling better and stronger than she had in the previous few years, but, like any person, she sometimes fell into bouts of melancholy when thinking about her health.

IN PICTURES: Olivia Newton-John’s extraordinary life remembered

John Farnham celebrated Olivia Newton-John’s recent damehood when he introduced her to the crowd. (Getty)

“I’m human. I have had moments of fear, and all those things, just like everybody. But I talk myself round. There’s no way around pain. You have to go through it, but you’ll come out the other side if you believe strongly enough that it is just temporary,” Newton-John told the publication in November 2020.

“I’ve been dealing with this for a very long time, so I know how important the mind is in your journey. I really believe in that, in positive thinking, and reinforcing, talking to my body, and thanking it. It’s all up to that.”

After a 30-year battle with breast cancer, Newton-John passed away on August 8 at the age of 73surrounded by family and friends.

“My dearest Olivia, you made all of our lives so much better,” her friend and grease co-star John Travolta wrote in tribute. “Your impact was incredible. I love you so much. We will see you down the road and we will all be together again. Yours from the first moment I saw you and forever! Your Danny, your John!”

Newton-John’s daughter Chloe Lattanzi, meanwhile, shared a heartbreaking post full of photos of herself with her mother.

Three days before Newton-John’s death, Lattanzi also wrote: “I worship this woman. My mother. My best friend.”

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Olivia Newton-John and John Travolta star in Grease.

The cast of Grease: Then and now

Categories
Sports

A-League: Slovakian international Robert Mak joins Sydney FC

Sydney FC’s measured and patient approach to returning to the A-League summit has stepped up a gear with the signing of former Manchester City winger Robert Mak.

Capped 73 times for Slovakia, Mak has joined the Sky Blues on a two-year deal after winning back-to-back Hungarian top-flight titles with Ferencváros.

“We took our time because there’s a specific type of player we want,” Sydney FC coach Steve Corica said.

“We’ve got a few more to come in as well, but to have the first one done is great.

“We’re two months out from the start of the (A-League) season which gives us plenty of time to work with Robert and to get him ready.”

The most successful club in A-League history with five championships, the Sky Blues finished a disappointing eighth last season.

“We had to have a good look at where we were and what kind of players and what formation we wanted to look at if we wanted to change things,” Corica said.

“It’s probably the best time right now to do it.”

Mak’s ability to play on either wing and also in a central attacking role if required made him an attractive target for Sydney.

“He has two great feet and can play on either side of the pitch. He likes to take on defenders and will create and score goals for us as well,” Corica said.

“To play that many times for your country is no mean feat and I think he will really stand out this season.”

Having joined Manchester City’s academy at 13, Mak stayed there for six years before leaving in 2010 to join German club Nurnberg.

From there he went to Greek club Paok in 2014 and also had spells in Russia (Zenit St Petersburg) and Turkey (Konyaspor) before his move to Hungary.

“I’ve been part of a few championships and cup wins in my career, so I know what it takes and want to bring my experience, personality and a few goals and assists to help us this season,” said Mak, who has made more than 30 game appearances in the UEFA Champions League and the Europa League.

“This is going to be a fantastic challenge for me, and it’s a real honor to be signing for Australia’s biggest and most successful club.”

The Sky Blues continue their Australia Cup campaign on Wednesday night with a round-of-16 clash against NPL Victoria outfit Bentleigh Greens in Melbourne.

In Wednesday night’s other Cup round-of-16 battle, South Australian state league club Modbury Jets host Macarthur FC at Gepps Cross.

Read related topics:sydney

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Categories
Australia

Tunnel plan for Brisbane’s northside as congestion, development bites

Brisbane Lord Mayor Adrian Schrinner will release further details on Tuesday but the research and proposals have already been discussed by civic cabinet and development along the corridor has been ruled out.

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The extensive documentation, including a business case, has also been provided to Infrastructure Australia and the Queensland government.

While Schrinner has yet to comment on the research, or proposals, he announced more Brisbane Metro vehicles on Monday and said: “I am now more confident than ever that we can look towards expanding the Metro network to other areas of our city.”

Former Labor state governments had planned extra bus lanes for the corridor and possible western bypass tunnels under the original Western Brisbane Transport Network strategy in 2009.

The latest research also flagged another possible tunnel south from Everton Park to Toowong, similar to one examined by a former Labor state government. It would link up with the Western Freeway and Legacy Way.

Brisbane's CBD from the lookout on top of the Chermside Hill Reserve.

Brisbane’s CBD from the lookout on top of the Chermside Hill Reserve.Credit:Tony Moore

Brisbane City Council infrastructure committee chair Andrew Wines said escalating congestion costs and environmental issues meant there was no option but to go underground.

“This study shows the economic cost of north Brisbane’s congestion will be a staggering $1.5 million a day within a decade, which is totally unacceptable,” Wines told BrisbaneTimes.

“Brisbane is the fastest-growing capital city in the country and our northern neighbors in Moreton Bay – who are investigating options for alternatives to the Bruce Highway – are also growing quickly.

“This study must start a conversation between all levels of government – and the private sector – about options to ensure northside commuters get home sooner and safer.”

The preserved corridor between Gympie Road at Carseldine and Shand Street at Alderley was identified in the 1980s and has remained largely free of houses since then.

However, the research found many threatened and endangered species in parks along the original Trouts Road route from Stafford to Carseldine: the large Chermside Hills Reserve, the Downfall Creek Bush Reserve, Mine Hill Reserve and Sparkes Hill Reserve at Alderley.

Environmental issues identified in Chermside Hills Reserves and linked parks

Flora

  • Chermside Hills Reserve is considered a high-risk trigger area.
  • There are approximately 21 threatened plant species recorded within the vicinity of the corridor.
  • This includes endangered eucalypt woodland and open forest community
  • It is significant conservation value, only found in the Chermside Hills Reserve area. The ecosystem cannot be offset in another location.

Fauna

  • The identified threatened and vulnerable species are powerful owls, gray headed flying foxes and tusked frogs, in addition to sugar and squirrel gliders.
  • Koalas are regularly spotted in the Chermside Hills Reserve. Evidence of their presence was detected during environmental investigations undertaken as part of the development of the business case.

cultural heritage

  • The study found it has a “rich Aboriginal peoples’ history”.
  • Examples include artefact scatters, marked trees, earthen features, pathways, stone arrangements, story places and campsites.
  • “A future detailed business case will be important to confirm the presence of Aboriginal cultural heritage values ​​in the study area and strategies to manage potential impacts.”

Those environmental concerns rule out the original plan – first considered in the 1960s – to transform Trouts Road into a four-lane highway between Alderley and Carseldine.

Community concern over the prospect of a highway running between bushland and housing estates, and altering local traffic flows, had seen the future of the corridor debated in recent federal, state and council election campaigns.

Looking towards Brisbane CBD down Old Northern Road from Everton Hills.

Looking towards Brisbane CBD down Old Northern Road from Everton Hills.Credit:Tony Moore

The research shows the proposed underground motorway would reduce traffic on Transurban’s existing Airport Link and Legacy Way toll tunnels by between 11 and 31 per cent by 2041.

However, it reduces traffic on major northside arterial roads; including Gympie Road (35 per cent less traffic by 2041) and Wardell Street (down 23 per cent by 2041).

The long-term plan is to increase bus lanes on those arterial roads.

The RACQ’s 2021 congestion report released in February 2022 shows Stafford, Old Northern, South Pine, Rode and Hamilton roads slowing to mid 30km/h during peak periods, adding minutes to trips.

Categories
US

California lookout among 4 killed in blaze

Categories
Business

Pizza giant Domino’s enters the BURGER market with a twist

Pizza giant Domino’s launches a new BURGER range – here’s how to try one of the new creations

  • Domino’s Australia has announced their new exclusive Burger Joint Pizza Range
  • New pizzas include Burger Joint Hamburger ($18.95) and Cheeseburger ($10.95)
  • The pizzas are made with 100% Aussie beef, American cheese, butter pickles
  • The Burger Joint Pizza Range is available via the Domino’s App from August 8

Domino’s has just announced its new venture into the ‘burger market’ – but there’s an unexpected twist.

Domino’s Burger Joint Pizza Range offers a fresh, new take on the beloved cheeseburgers and hamburgers with four new pizzas available from August 8.

The exclusive range can be ordered via the Domino’s App and include the Burger Joint Cheeseburger ($10.95) to the Burger Joint Hamburger ($18.95).

Australia's largest pizza company has just announced their new venture into the burger market

Australia’s largest pizza company has just announced their new venture into the burger market

Domino's Burger Joint Pizza Range offers a fresh, new take on the beloved cheeseburgers and hamburgers with four exciting new pizzas available from August 8

Domino’s Burger Joint Pizza Range offers a fresh, new take on the beloved cheeseburgers and hamburgers with four exciting new pizzas available from August 8

Domino’s ANZ CEO David Burness also spoke highly of the quality of their food after being delivered in comparison to other restaurants.

‘We have taken almost 40 years of experience and developed a burger specifically for the delivery generation,’ said Burness.

He added, ‘No more soggy bread rolls and limp lettuce. Domino’s is bringing home the burger – on a pizza!’

The pizzas are loaded with premium burger ingredients like 100% Aussie beef burger pieces, authentic American burger cheese, butter pickles, and special burger sauce.

Domino's ANZ CEO David Burness spoke highly of the quality of their food after being delivered in comparison to other restaurants

Domino’s ANZ CEO David Burness spoke highly of the quality of their food after being delivered in comparison to other restaurants

The range can be ordered via the Domino's App and prices range from the Burger Joint Cheeseburger ($10.95) to the Burger Joint Hamburger ($18.95)

The pizzas are loaded with premium burger ingredients like 100% Aussie beef burger pieces, authentic American burger cheese, butter pickles

The exclusive range can be ordered via the Domino’s App and prices range from the Burger Joint Cheeseburger ($10.95) to the Burger Joint Hamburger ($18.95)

Domino’s Culinary Innovation & Development Chef Michael Treacy revealed that while it was not the first time pizza and burger had stepped out together, Domino’s four new Burger Joint pizzas were ‘a whole new burger experience.’

‘We live in the Golden Age of Delivery and burgers have yet to ketchup,’ said Treacy.

He added, ‘They’re often cold or falling apart by the time they reach your door because they were simply never designed to be delivered.’

‘What makes our Burger Joint pizzas so incredible is that our premium ingredients were carefully chosen for maximum burger goodness, while ensuring they could be delivered hot and fresh just like a Domino’s pizza.

Domino's Culinary Innovation & Development Chef Michael Treacy revealed that while it was not the first time pizza and burger had stepped out together, Domino's four new Burger Joint pizzas were 'a whole new burger experience'

Domino’s Culinary Innovation & Development Chef Michael Treacy revealed that while it was not the first time pizza and burger had stepped out together, Domino’s four new Burger Joint pizzas were ‘a whole new burger experience’

Domino’s Burger Joint Pizza Range

  • Burger Joint Cheeseburger – loaded with 100% all beef burger pieces, American cheese slices, mozzarella and butter pickles topped with special burger sauce.
  • Burger Joint Bacon Cheeseburger – loaded with 100% all beef burger pieces, American burger cheese slices, mozzarella, butter pickles and crispy bacon topped with special burger sauce.
  • Burger Joint Hamburger – loaded with 100% all beef burger pieces, American burger cheese slices, red onion, fresh tomato, mozzarella and butter pickles finished with mayonnaise and tomato ketchup.
  • Burger Joint Bacon Hamburger – loaded with 100% all beef burger pieces, American burger cheese slices, red onion, fresh tomato, mozzarella, butter pickles and crispy bacon finished with mayonnaise and tomato ketchup.

Thousands flooded the pizza chain’s Instagram with excitement.

‘Oh my GOD,’ said one man. ‘I never knew I needed this.’

‘This looks absolutely amazing, I can’t wait to try it.’

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Entertainment

Richard Marx pays tribute to Aussie icon

Music legend Richard Marx has shared some of his favorite memories about his long-time friend, Olivia Newton-John.

The 58-year-old singer revealed to Today Extra when he heard of Olivia’s passing he couldn’t believe it.

“We always stayed in touch, we were friends for 40 years – I just can’t believe it,” Marx said.

You can sign up for the Today newsletter here.
You can sign up for the Today newsletter here. (Today)
Richard Marx and Olivia Newton-John
Richard Marx professed his love to Olivia Newton-John when he was in his 20s and she “handled” it like a pro. (Supplied/Today)

READMORE: Richard Wilkins breaks down remembering Olivia Newton-John

Marx said he first met Olivia while performing back-up vocals for her when he was just 19-years-old and he was “madly in love with her”.

“We had already been friends for almost a year and she took me out to a fancy dinner that I could not have afforded for my 20th birthday,” he said.

Around that time, Marx revealed he actually professed his love to Olivia – who was in a relationship and 15 years his senior.

“I have never told anybody this except my wife,” he revealed.

Richard Marx Olivia Newton-John tribute
Richard Marx said he still can’t believe his friend of four decades Olivia Newton-John has died. (Today)

READMORE: David Campbell pays tribute to friend Olivia Newton-John

“I wrote her a letter, we were friendly but I had such a crush on her. I just thought I have to put it out there.”

But in true style, Marx said Olivia “handled it” and didn’t feel weird about the confession.

“She handled it like I’m sure she did with everyone because I was not unique in that way,” he said.

“To her credit – she carried on and said: ‘That makes me feel so happy’. She handled everything with grace and elegance and that really began our deep friendship.”

Watch Richard Marx”s touching tribute to Olivia Newton-John above

Join the Today show family and give yourself the chance to win great prizes by signing up to our weekly newsletter, delivered straight to your inbox every Wednesday with a special message from Karl and Ally. You can sign up for free here.

Categories
Australia

Crime scene declared as north Queensland house fire leaves couple hospitalized with burns

Two people are fighting for their lives and a crime scene has been declared after a house fire in Queensland’s north.

A 47-year-old woman and 65-year-old man suffered severe burns in the blaze, which gutted the home in the rural town of Ayr early this morning.

They were flown to a Townsville hospital in a critical condition and are receiving treatment.

Acting Chief Superintendent Chris Lawson said police officers and paramedics had attended the property only hours before the fire to respond to mental health concerns.

“Police received a call in relation to some comments that were made at the residence, so they went and attended and spoke to both residents that were there at the time,” he said.

A burnt-out house surrounded by police tape with an officer sitting under a tent
Police attended the Ayr home only hours before the fire began.(ABC North Qld: Baz Ruddick)

Neighbors raised the alarm about three hours later just after 5:30am when they spotted flames coming from the house.

“Queensland Police Service and Queensland Ambulance Service responded to two people who were very severely burned, so there’s obviously graphic scenes around that,” Acting Chief Superintendent Lawson said.

A man in his 20s who tried to help was taken to hospital in a stable condition suffering from smoke inhalation.

Couple known to police

Acting Chief Superintendent Lawson said a crime scene had been established and investigations were underway.

“We haven’t established the actual cause of the fire at this point, so until we can actually sign up exactly what’s occurred, then we’re not going to speculate as to how the fire started,” he said.

“We’re in constant contact with Queensland Health in relation to the condition of both parties, so as soon as we’re able to, we’ll speak to both parties.”

A house blackened and gutted by fire
The Ayr home was gutted in the blaze. (ABC North Qld: Baz Ruddick)

Police said the man and woman were in a relationship.

“It’s not the first time the police have had dealings with this couple,” he said.

Queensland Ambulance Service Assistant Commissioner Matthew Green said it was a confronting incident for first responders.

“[It’s] a fairly tragic situation as far as I’m concerned and at the moment we’re just looking after the welfare of our staff that have had to attend that event,” he said.

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Categories
US

Trump didn’t want ‘wounded’ soldiers in military parade spectacle: ‘Doesn’t look good for me’

Former president Donald Trump once ordered US military officials to exclude combat-wounded soldiers from the Soviet-style military parade he wanted held during his term in the White House, according to a new book by two veteran Washington reporters.

In an excerpt from their forthcoming chronicle of Mr Trump’s presidency, The Divider, Journalists Peter Baker and Susan Glasser reveal that Mr Trump got the idea for a military parade when he witnessed Bastille Day festivities during a 2017 visit to France.

The authors reported that Pentagon officials were not enthused with the idea, which one general said was more akin to the dictatorship he fled as a child than the government he had spent a lifetime serving as an adult.

But Mr Trump pressed on with the idea to replicate France’s annual parade, save for one feature he disliked.

According to Mr Baker and Ms Glasser, Mr Trump told US defense officials: “Look, I don’t want any wounded guys in the parade — this doesn’t look good for me”.

(AFP via Getty Images)

His then-chief of staff, retired Marine General John Kelly, tried telling him that wounded veterans were “the heroes.”

“In our society, there’s only one group of people who are more heroic than they are — and they are buried over in Arlington,” said Mr Kelly, whose own son was among those buried across the river at the country’s most hallowed military cemetery.

But Mr Trump was not moved.

“I don’t want them. It doesn’t look good for me,” he said.

Categories
Business

AusSuper thinks about stake in retirement living group GemLife

Aware Super was another big superannuation player understood to have had an early look, while Macquarie Asset Management and Brookfield were among a long list of parties said to have been targeted.

GemLife was pitched with a portfolio of more than 11,000 land lease homes across 43 locations across Queensland, NSW and Victoria, which makes it about twice as big as the $1.86 billion ASX-listed Lifestyle Communities Ltd.

Sources said the Puljich family, from Queensland, were looking at offering a “material stake” to large Australian listed real estate groups and others circling over-50s estate owners, to realize some of their investment and help with succession planning.

The process wasn’t everyone’s liking. The big property managers like special treatment, and some noses were put out of joint by the structure.

The Puljichs’ play started in 1982 with Peter Puljich and one site owned by his family company, Living Gems. It increased its footprint steadily in Queensland, before the family set up GemLife in 2016 alongside Thakral Capital, a financial investor and subsidiary of Singapore’s Thakral Corporation.

Living Gems and GemLife agreed to a deal to merge over summer, and continue under the GemLife name. The combined group has sites along Australia’s east coast, including on the Sunshine Coast, Gold Coast and at Lennox Head, and is run by two of Peter Puljich’s sons: Adrian Puljich (CEO) and Vlad Puljich (COO).

Categories
Technology

ASX Tech Stocks: International holographic teleportation, and Megaport says cloud adoption is critical

  • The Western Institute for Space Exploration has conducted the first international holoport
  • Megaport chairman says cloud adoption critical to grow and scale businesses
  • Accounting software player Reckon plans to invest in and launch new cloud products

Like something straight out of Space Trek, researchers at the University of Western Ontario recently completed the world’s first-ever international holographic teleportation.

A combination of hologram and teleport, the technology is called holoport and allows you to instantly beam the hologram of a person to a far-off location.

Microsoft has been working on its HoloLens for a while now to bring in mixed reality for business and gaming applications and Aexa Aerospace provides the software that enables a special camera to create holographic images of the subject and their environment, which can be seen using the HoloLens .

last year, NASA holoported flight surgeon Dr Josef Schmid using Aexa Aerospace technology and now researchers at the Western Institute for Space Exploration have successfully conducted the first international holographic teleportation from Alabama to London, Ontario.

“Wouldn’t it be nice if you’re on a three-month deployment to the Space Station, and you could come down and sit in the room (at home) for a family dinner,” Western Space faculty member Dr Adam Sirek said .

The team is now working on the medical applications of the technology to facilitate medical examinations in remote areas and believes this could be a game-changer for rural healthcare.

Who’s got tech news out today?

MEGAPORT (ASX:MP1)

The Network-as-a-Service (NaaS) player says its monthly recurring revenue is up 43% of the year – at $10.7m at 30 June 2022 compared to $7.5m at 30 June 2021.

Ace Stockhead’s eddy sunarto explained recently, some experts say MRR is the most important measure of a company’s success as it reflects money already in the bag.

Annual Recurring Revenue (ARR) is also a vital metric to keep an eye on and Megaport has plenty of that too, with ARR also up 43% at $128.3m as of 30 June 2022.

Chairman and executive director Bevan Slattery says it all comes down to cloud adoption as a critical means of growing and scaling businesses.

“With the continued migration of enterprise workloads from siloed, on-premise infrastructure to hybrid and multicloud architectures, cloud is now an undeniable force in almost everything we do,” he said.

“The question of whether a business will adopt cloud is no longer up for debate; it’s now a question of how many clouds they will adopt.

“This massive growth in cloud adoption is fueling an ever-increasing dependence on critical communications infrastructure as data traverses between end users and public and private cloud locations.

“Megaport was built to solve this problem and founded at the junction where network infrastructure and operations meets next generation software and automation.

“Our industry leading Network as a Service platform was built for scalability – with global multi-terabit capacity that reaches 25 countries.”

RECKON (ASX:RKN)

Accounting software company Reckon has reported bottom line normalized Net Profit After Tax (NPAT) of $6m, up 5% on the previous corresponding period (pcp).

Annual recurring revenues (ARR) of $36m, marked a 5% increase on the pcp and the fully franked interim dividend was 3c per share.

“Operational highlights for the first half 2022 were led by the $100m all-cash sale of the Accountants Group division, along with consistently strong results from the group’s continuous operations,” CEO Sam Allert said.

“With an established market footprint for our Small Business payroll solutions and Practice Management platform for legal services, Reckon has built a platform for sustainable growth underpinned by a strong balance street and subscription-based revenue model.”

The plan is to invest in and launch new cloud products and other cross-selling opportunities.

DXN (ASX:DXN)

The infrastructure-as-a-service (IaaS) player has launched its $2.125 million placement to fund its working capital position until it wraps up the Flow2Edge Australia transition.

The company is selling all its business assets and subsidiaries to Flow2Edge Australia – a digital infrastructure provider – for A$26m.

The transaction is subject to approval by both the Foreign Investment Review Board (FIRB) and shareholders.

MP1, RKN and DXN share prices today:


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