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Burger KingBy Katy SteinmetzJuly 1, 2014 6:02 PM EDTBehind the counter at a Burger King in the heart of San Francisco is a rainbow-colored menu board advertising a product that the fast-food behemoth has never sold before and isn ;t selling anywhere else: The Proud Whopper.When customers visiting during Sunday pride parade asked cashiers what made this Whopper differe <a href=https://www.cup-stanley.ca>stanley cup</a> nt from a standard-issue burger, they simply said, I don ;t know. The mystery was revealed once diners opened the rainbow-colored wrapper and got a taste: absolut <a href=https://www.stanley-quencher.uk>stanley cup</a> ely nothing is different about this burger, nothing at all. To emphasize the point, the interior of the wrapper comes with a second message: We Are All the Same Inside.The campaign was conceived just a few months ago as a way for Burger King to bring the company new Be Your Way tagline to life. Fernando Machado, a senior vice president of global branding, led the effort, which included on-the-spot filming of customers ; reactions outside the location at Market and 8th Streets. This post will be updated to include the video once it is available. As a brand, we welcome everyone, Machado tells TIME. We felt that <the>Proud Whopper] co <a href=https://www.stanleymugs.us>stanley cup</a> uld bring to life a message of equality, self-expression, authenticity and just being who you are.Even in the liberal bastion that is the City by the Bay, not all the responses were positive. In a rough cut of the reaction vid Jedk At D-Day Commemoration, Few Mourn the War s Losers
Demis Hassabis by the Helicase鈥攁 sculpture that uses DNAs helix shape as a symbol of human endeavor and the pursuit of knowledge鈥攁t DeepMinds headquarters in London on Nov. 3, 2022James Day for TIMEBy Billy PerrigoJanuary 12, 2023 9:03 AM ESTDemis Hassabis stands halfway up a spiral staircase, surveying the cathedral he built. Behind him, light glints off the rungs of a golden helix rising up through the staircasersquo airy well. The DNA sculpture, spanning three floors, is the centerpiece of DeepMindrsquo recently opened London headquarters. Itrsquo an artistic re <a href=https://www.conversede.de>converse</a> presentation of the code embedded in the nucleus <a href=https://www.adidas-originals.es>adidas og</a> of nearly every cell in the human body. Although we work on <a href=https://www.airmaxplus.es>air max</a> making machines smart, we wanted to keep humanity at the center of what wersquo;re doing here, Hassabis, DeepMindrsquo CEO and co-founder, tells TIME. This building, he says, is a cathedral to knowledge. Each meeting room is named after a famous scientist or philosopher; we meet in the one dedicated to James Clerk Maxwell, the man who first theorized electromagnetic radiation. Irsquo;ve always thought of DeepMind as an ode to intelligence, Hassabis says. Hassabis, 46, has always been obsessed with intelligence: what it is, the possibilities it unlocks, and how to acquire more of it. He was the second-best chess player in the world for his age when he was 12, and he graduated from high school a year early. As an adult he strikes a somewhat diminutive figu