Tech
Klaasmeyer Construction taps Render Networks for quicker buildout | Computer Weekly

Looking to help its customers deploy networks to market faster while improving cost control and driving stronger service adoption, telecom and utility construction firm Klaasmeyer Construction has adopted Render Networks’ artificial intelligence (AI)-powered platform to accelerate customer speed to market.
Just weeks away from its 53rd anniversary after starting with one cable plough, one backhoe and five employees, privately owned and operated Klaasmeyer Construction has grown to become a $70m+ business with approximately 220 employees and a large number of subcontractors in the US’s South-Central region.
In its early years, Klaasmeyer Construction brought the first telephone service to several rural communities in Arkansas. The focus today is high-speed fibre optic service to homes and businesses. Klaasmeyer Construction also provides response to rebuilding after infrastructure damage caused by hurricanes, ice storms, floods and tornadoes.
Another key business line is pipeline construction, where Klaasmeyer crews provide pipeline construction, installation and maintenance for residential, commercial and rural utilities. These pipelines are regarded as critical for reliable and consistent transmission.
It has installed telephone cable and equipment for Level 3, AT&T, Verizon, CenturyTel, Desoto Gathering and other independent companies in the telecommunications contracting industry. The company’s client portfolio spans 12 states, currently working crews in four states. Klaasmeyer Construction is the master contractor for Windstream, and also works for AT&T, Ritter, Zayo, FECC, AR Telephone, Yelcot, Uniti and Conway Corp, as well as other independent companies in the region.
In this move, the investment in Render Networks is said to be about taking advantage of technology to maximise automation, speed and accuracy across field and office operations.
“Over 50 years ago, we found our first customer,” said Klaasmeyer Construction CEO Corey Klaasmeyer. “We have served them ever since – mastering networks the hard way. Render will allow us to honour that legacy and elevate it with analytics-ready, real-time data easily digested and leveraged by AI. With Render, we can accelerate speed to market for our customers and expand critical connectivity for the communities we serve.”
With its platform, Render Networks says Klaasmeyer Construction is building a more agile, data-driven model that empowers its workforce and boosts customer success. It added that as fibre deployments grow and complexity, the collaboration between the firms will demonstrate the impact of combining automation and field execution to deliver networks faster with greater market adoption.
The Render Networks platform is said to be designed to deliver real-time visibility into projects, streamline construction workflows from design through to completion, and create a scalable model for efficiency and predictability. It is also attributed with “uniquely” combining advanced automation with field-first execution, transforming design data into fully scoped, construction-ready plans.
By eliminating manual processes and empowering both field and office teams with built-in intelligence, Render assured that Klaasmeyer can shorten deployment cycles, improve cost control and increase service uptake rates for customers.
“Klaasmeyer Construction is redefining what it means to lead with AI in fibre network deployment,” said Render Networks CEO Stephen Rose. “They’re not just keeping up; they’re setting the standard, bringing broadband to more communities faster than ever before.”
Tech
Inside Stargate AI’s massive Texas data center campus, with 5 more sites announced

The Stargate Project has brought the global artificial intelligence race to the West Texas desert.
And on Sept. 23, it also brought a flock of industry leaders, U.S. congressmen, other policymakers and a gaggle of regional and news outlets.
All eyes are on the collaboration between OpenAI, Oracle and SoftBank to construct data centers and other infrastructure to support the artificial intelligence boom. On Sept. 23, Stargate also announced it would also be building five additional data center sites across the country.
There are plans to build more capacity near the flagship Abilene site, as well as sites in two other Texas counties, Shackelford County and Milam County. Other locations include Doña Ana County, New Mexico, Lordstown, Ohio, and another soon-to-be-disclosed location in the Midwest.
The joint venture was first announced at the White House in January with President Donald Trump, as part of a broader push for investment in American AI infrastructure.
As the high-stakes international competition to develop and deploy the technology escalates, the companies are betting big on the $500 billion program, with AI kingpin NVIDIA recently joining the fray by investing $100 billion in OpenAI, it announced.
Locals chat about the data centers over their morning coffee downtown―and anyone who’s paying attention to anything relatively tied to the AI industry at least knows about Stargate, even if they can’t point Abilene out on a map.
“Texas is ground zero for AI,” U.S. Center Ted Cruz told a crowd. He praised the state’s availability of low-cost energy, open-for-business environment with low taxes and low regulations, and the way the state lionizes entrepreneurs.
“So in my view, Texas and tech and AI are a perfect match,” Cruz said.
Over 1,000 acres of high-tech
The campus, about 180 miles from Dallas, is on track to provide OpenAI with the world’s largest supercluster when fully built, according to Oracle.
The 1,100-acre campus will have eight near-identical buildings, totaling up to 4 million square feet and is expected to be fully completed around this time next year.
The buildings house servers filled with graphics processing units (GPUs). There are numerous metal boxes with blinking lights and wires of various sizes and color.
Fiber is being installed both below ground and above, tubes are designed to pump a cooling liquid using a closed-loop system. A lot of pieces work together to support the highly technical compute needs.
A portion of the campus is already operating on Oracle Cloud Infrastructure after Oracle began delivering the first NVIDIA GB200 racks in June. NVIDIA’s deal with OpenAI will build and deploy at least 10 gigawatts of AI data centers.
It’s surrounded by rugged scenery: red dirt kicked up by gusts of wind, rocky terrain and short trees. The Abilene skyline is visible through a few miles of hazy air. There are roadways throughout the campus, including a makeshift six-lane “highway,” to ease the traffic from roughly 6,400 workers traveling on and off the site alongside semi-trucks.
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman said the Abilene campus is a fraction of what the partnership is building.
Even then, more infrastructure will still be needed to serve the demand of ChatGPT.
“We’ve got to make this investment,” Altman said. With global competition heating up between the U.S. and other major powers, ” … we cannot fall behind in the need to put the infrastructure together to make this revolution happen.”
Commitment to Abilene
The data centers being built at the new locations, which were selected among 300 proposals from more than 30 states, drive Stargate ahead of schedule to secure a full $500 billion, 10 gigawatt commitment by the end of the year.
“We’re really focused on enabling AI to have all the compute capacity needs,” new co-CEO of Oracle, Clay Magouyrk said.
Abilene Mayor Clay Weldon Hurt said his city is steeped in tradition, and acknowledged there is a mix of feelings among local residents. However, the town is open to progress, he added.
“I have a commitment to our citizens of Abilene to make Abilene a better place, and we have that commitment to grow,” Hurt said.
“So, even though we’re very proud of our heritage, and we’re always going to be proud of that heritage, we’re always going to be open [for business], and we’re so excited that this opportunity has come to Abilene, and we welcome it.”
Sen. Cruz called Stargate an impressive start, but encouraged more building and hiring.
“This is the beginning of a long-term effort to invest in American jobs, supply the additional power needed for AI, and deliver products and services that will benefit all Americans,” he said.
2025 The Dallas Morning News. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.
Citation:
Inside Stargate AI’s massive Texas data center campus, with 5 more sites announced (2025, September 24)
retrieved 24 September 2025
from https://techxplore.com/news/2025-09-stargate-ai-massive-texas-center.html
This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no
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Tech
Amazon Actually Sells Fantastic Bedding

Comparing Our Favorite Sheets on Amazon
Honorable Mentions
Boll & Branch Signature Sheets for $259: I love this brand’s flannel, and this signature sheet set is a solid choice as well (though pricey compared to other cotton sheet sets I prefer).
Buffy Eucalyptus Lyocell Sheet Set for $200: This set uses lyocell made from eucalyptus trees for a similar feel to bamboo sheets—silky and chilly to the touch. It’s another unique cooling option, and great for folks who love soft bedding.
Cariloha Classic Bamboo Sheet Set for $239: For being Cariloha’s cheapest set, it still feels fantastic to sleep on and delivers on the softness and comfort you want in a good bamboo sheet. Upgrade to Cariloha’s Retreat Sheets ($289) if you want a securing strap, which is handy for silky bamboo.
Coyuchi Organic Crinkled Percale Sheet Set for $189: I love a few different sets from Coyuchi, but none of the ones we’ve tested are available on Amazon. Still, it’s a good organic brand, so swinging for the crinkled percale and classic sateen ($178) will likely leave you satisfied.
Cozy Earth Bamboo Sheet Set for $330: This is a big favorite in the bamboo world for the super-cozy, silky soft feel. It’s unlike any other bamboo set I’ve tried. It’s a splurge, but truly worth it if you love a cozy-soft feel and want sheets that feel cool to the touch at the same time (but warm up nicely as you sleep).
Ettitude Signature Sateen Bamboo Sheets for $333: These are an impressively decorated set of bamboo sheets, with certifications from Oeko-Tex, the Forest Stewardship Council, Eco-Cert, and B-Corp. Bamboo doesn’t have the same organic certifications yet that you can find on linen and cotton, but this is the closest combo you’ll get. These sheets are also super soft yet still very breathable, and my favorite bamboo for hot sleepers and organic shoppers.
Sheets to Skip
Amazon Basics Microfiber Sheet Set for $20: We wanted to like these cheap sheets made by Amazon, but this set is a major skip. This set both felt and sounded like the paper robes you wear at the doctor’s office, and our testers hardly managed sleeping on these for a single night.
Coop Comphy Cool+ Sheet Set for $219: This set promises cooling properties, but I found myself waking up sweating after sleeping on these, which isn’t a huge surprise after seeing they’re made of nylon, polyester, and spandex, none of which are as breathable as simple linen or cotton.
Rest Evercool+ Cooling Starter Sheet Set for $299: These are supposed to be cooling sheets, but I found myself waking up feeling moisture trapped around me. Whatever’s in Rest’s proprietary cooling fabric didn’t work for me at all.
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Tech
WhatsApp, Twitch among sites that could face Australia under-16s social media ban

Tech companies including WhatsApp and Reddit as well as streaming giant Twitch and gaming firm Roblox could be among more than a dozen sites added to Australia’s social media ban for under-16s, the country’s regulator said Wednesday.
Platforms such as Facebook, Snapchat, TikTok and YouTube were already included in the ban—a world-first.
But the head of Australia’s eSafety Commissioner, Julie Inman Grant, has written to 16 more companies to “self-assess” whether they fall under the ban’s remit.
The list also included Pinterest as well as Lego Play, streaming company Kick and gaming platform Steam.
Companies will need to make a case if they believe their platform should be exempt from the ban, the national broadcaster ABC said.
Inman Grant told the network that while some cases were “pretty clear,” the regulator would “give them the due diligence process.”
“We need to hear them all out,” she said.
The regulator said it will initially focus on platforms with the greatest number of users, where there are higher risks of harm.
A Roblox spokesperson insisted the platform was not a social media company and therefore did not qualify for the ban.
“We prohibit users from uploading real-world photos or video, or re-sharing news, and we do not offer social media feeds within experiences in Australia,” the spokesperson told AFP.
“We completed the self-assessment process and communicated to eSafety that our position remains that we are an exempted online gaming platform,” they added.
‘Vague’ regulations
Australia has been a leader in global efforts to prevent internet harm, but current legislation offers almost no details on how the ban will be enforced—prompting concern among experts that it will simply be a symbolic piece of unenforceable legislation.
The eSafety Commission will be able to fine social media companies up to Aus$49.5 million ($32.6 million) for failing to comply with the rules.
Social media companies have described the laws as “vague,” “problematic” and “rushed.”
Canberra has struggled to pin down how precisely platforms will verify the ages of their users.
This month, Communications Minister Anika Wells conceded that firms would need to self-regulate.
An independent study ordered by the Australian government found this month that age checking can be done “privately, efficiently and effectively,” though it admitted no single solution would fit all contexts.
The regulator has also introduced a number of rules taking effect in Australia in the coming months to protect children from “lawful but awful” content, including online pornography and AI chatbots capable of sexually explicit conversations.
This month, Roblox agreed to curb the risk of adults grooming children on its platform in Australia.
© 2025 AFP
Citation:
WhatsApp, Twitch among sites that could face Australia under-16s social media ban (2025, September 24)
retrieved 24 September 2025
from https://techxplore.com/news/2025-09-whatsapp-twitch-sites-australia-16s.html
This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no
part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.
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