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top.646 Algert Global LLC lifted its holdings in shares of Upstart Holdings, Inc. ( NASDAQ:UPST – Free Report ) by 75.8% in the third quarter, according to its most recent disclosure with the Securities and Exchange Commission. The fund owned 19,010 shares of the company’s stock after acquiring an additional 8,194 shares during the quarter. Algert Global LLC’s holdings in Upstart were worth $761,000 at the end of the most recent quarter. A number of other hedge funds have also bought and sold shares of the business. Atomi Financial Group Inc. increased its position in shares of Upstart by 0.7% during the 2nd quarter. Atomi Financial Group Inc. now owns 59,009 shares of the company’s stock valued at $1,392,000 after purchasing an additional 406 shares during the last quarter. Daiwa Securities Group Inc. increased its holdings in Upstart by 18.2% during the second quarter. Daiwa Securities Group Inc. now owns 2,657 shares of the company’s stock worth $63,000 after buying an additional 409 shares during the last quarter. Principal Financial Group Inc. raised its position in Upstart by 4.2% in the second quarter. Principal Financial Group Inc. now owns 10,405 shares of the company’s stock worth $245,000 after acquiring an additional 422 shares during the period. Inspire Advisors LLC boosted its stake in Upstart by 3.0% in the second quarter. Inspire Advisors LLC now owns 16,623 shares of the company’s stock valued at $392,000 after acquiring an additional 480 shares during the last quarter. Finally, Blue Trust Inc. grew its position in shares of Upstart by 125.3% during the 3rd quarter. Blue Trust Inc. now owns 989 shares of the company’s stock valued at $40,000 after acquiring an additional 550 shares during the period. 63.01% of the stock is currently owned by institutional investors. Insider Buying and Selling at Upstart In other news, Chief Legal Officer Scott Darling sold 7,190 shares of Upstart stock in a transaction dated Friday, September 6th. The stock was sold at an average price of $39.15, for a total transaction of $281,464.77. Following the completion of the sale, the insider now owns 176,870 shares in the company, valued at approximately $6,923,876.83. This trade represents a 3.91 % decrease in their position. The sale was disclosed in a legal filing with the SEC, which can be accessed through this link . Also, CFO Sanjay Datta sold 1,500 shares of the business’s stock in a transaction dated Tuesday, September 3rd. The stock was sold at an average price of $41.77, for a total value of $62,655.00. Following the transaction, the chief financial officer now directly owns 346,093 shares of the company’s stock, valued at $14,456,304.61. The trade was a 0.43 % decrease in their position. The disclosure for this sale can be found here . Insiders sold a total of 502,939 shares of company stock valued at $28,887,725 in the last three months. Company insiders own 18.06% of the company’s stock. Analysts Set New Price Targets Check Out Our Latest Analysis on UPST Upstart Trading Up 0.5 % Shares of NASDAQ:UPST opened at $78.79 on Friday. The company has a 50 day moving average of $55.46 and a 200 day moving average of $38.53. The stock has a market cap of $7.19 billion, a P/E ratio of -40.82 and a beta of 1.97. Upstart Holdings, Inc. has a 12 month low of $20.60 and a 12 month high of $86.07. About Upstart ( Free Report ) Upstart Holdings, Inc, together with its subsidiaries, operates a cloud-based artificial intelligence (AI) lending platform in the United States. Its platform includes personal loans, automotive retail and refinance loans, home equity lines of credit, and small dollar loans that connects consumer demand for loans to its to bank and credit unions. Featured Articles Want to see what other hedge funds are holding UPST? Visit HoldingsChannel.com to get the latest 13F filings and insider trades for Upstart Holdings, Inc. ( NASDAQ:UPST – Free Report ). Receive News & Ratings for Upstart Daily - Enter your email address below to receive a concise daily summary of the latest news and analysts' ratings for Upstart and related companies with MarketBeat.com's FREE daily email newsletter .Carnatic music is somewhat of a late entrant to archiving. Beyond a few isolated instances, books and periodicals, audio, and video records are available in plenty but very poorly stored, imperfectly curated, and most often, inaccessible. In recent years, technology has come to the rescue and has enabled archiving in various ways. We have some repositories abroad such as the Harvard and Wesleyan Universities that have done this. In India, while digitising and uploading on public platforms do happen, several questions with regard to artistes’ rights and copyrights remain unresolved. This article deals with the experience of digitisation and archiving at The Music Academy in Chennai. Digitising a repository The Music Academy in its 97 years has also served as a repository. There are firstly its own publications. Secondly, the Academy has a truly enviable library dedicated to the arts, with over 6,000 books. Thirdly, there is the recorded archive, sadly not comprehensive, but still sizeable. In an effort to make all of this more easily accessible, the Music Academy has in the past three years or so, embarked on a digitisation initiative. Progress has been slow but steady, and hopefully, in the years to come there will be a substantial, well-curated collection online, though whether for a fee or for free remains a matter of debate. Academy publications The Academy’s print collection comprises books, newspaper clips and photographs. Its annual journals and souvenirs have been published from its inception. While the former is valued for its scholarly articles and detailed reporting of the proceedings of the Academy’s annual conferences, the latter is much sought after for its musician profiles, detailed song lists and historical content – by way of snippets on the Academy’s growth and also advertisements that serve as a record of the corporate, retail and entertainment world of the past. Both of these have suffered from repeated handling, by Academy staffers, researchers and during shifts of the library across the campus. To prevent any further damage, these have been entirely digitised and made available for download on the Music Academy’s website. Rare books in the library CHENNAI, TAMIL NADU, 26/11/2024 : Music Academy TAG Digital Archive in Chennai on Tuesday. Photo: R. Ravindran | Photo Credit: Ravindran_R The KR Sundaram Aiyar Memorial Library of the Music Academy has in its vast collection several rare books. These include the oldest surviving Carnatic music book -- the Sangita Sarvartha Sara Sangrahamu of Veena Ramanuja, dating to the mid-nineteenth century. There are also several first editions of the late 19th and 20th centuries. The Academy acquired the collection of books of Sangita Kalanidhis Embar Vijayaraghavachariar, Prof P. Sambamoorthy and Dwaram Venkataswami Naidu. The collection of Vinjamuri Varadaraja Iyengar was donated by his daughter Sandhya Vinjamuri Giri to the Academy. In recent times, more donations have come in. A digitisation exercise was embarked upon with the help of the Roja Muthiah Research Library and around 300 rare books were identified for it. These are now available for research in-house in electronic form, thereby preventing the necessity to touch/access the originals. Photograph archive Likewise, the photograph collection of the Music Academy has over 5,000 prints. These range from a single photograph of the 1927 conference to several of those in the 1980s. All of these have been digitised and labelled, with as many of the people present as possible being identified. The focus is now to retrieve photographs from the 1990s, which are in CD format and transfer them to cloud storage and catalogue them. The digitised photos are available on request for free in low resolution format and for a payment in high resolution. In the digitisation of books and photos, the Academy has benefited hugely from the assistance provided by its consulting librarian, Mysore K. Jagadish. Seeing what has been done by the Academy, families of some musicians and scholars have come forward to share their book collection as well as in some instances memorabilia. The Academy has now worked out an acquisition policy and accepts what is in conformance to its principles. Building a music archive The archiving of music has been more challenging. The Academy has been recording concerts and academic sessions held under its auspices since the 1950s -- sporadically in the initial years and regularly since the 1980s at least. Unfortunately, storage at the Academy was quite porous and over the years, many of its records were lost – some of them are now up on YouTube, uploaded by music lovers acknowledging that these are Academy performances! Serious work on archiving began in 2008 when R.T. Chari, industrialist and noted patron, and then committee member and later vice president at the Academy, underwrote the setting up of the Music Academy-TAG archive with a listening centre as well. He also donated his collection of music. With other collections including those of G. Narasimhan of The Hindu , music stored in spools, cassettes and CDs began to be digitised. As a matter of policy the Academy focuses on concerts and events held under its auspices and avoids collections comprising branded labels. A sizeable archive has also been built up in audio and video of Academy performances since 2005. These are not available in the public domain. Digitising performances Even as the digitisation progressed, it was overtaken by technology. YouTube and other platforms proliferated and as a result, footfalls at the listening centre dwindled. Focus shifted thereafter to cataloguing and preserving music, with curation of content. Many of the spools had no details of what they contained, and those that did had many errors. A team under musician and archivist Savita Narasimhan got on with the task. With inputs from scholars such as Ritha Rajan, R.S. Jayalakshmi, Sriram Parasuram and Kanakam Devaguptapu and technical inputs from a young team comprising Harini Rangan and Lakshman, as well as Academy staffers, the work on music is more or less complete, with attention now shifting to dance. Building a platform for listening It was during the process of digitisation that the Academy got valuable help from V. Suresh, a technical expert. A full platform was built especially for the Academy archive with Entermedia, an international communication media agency. While this did help, the inherent requirements of Carnatic music and classical dance when it came to classifying, exposed limitations, and it was decided that the Academy, with help from Suresh would be better off building its own platform. A pilot was presented in the annual conference of 2023 and since then work has rapidly progressed. The institution has not yet arrived at a conclusion on how its recordings can be shared with a larger public. There are questions of copyright, etc, which need resolution. Hopefully these should be ironed out before the collection is made accessible to all. Published - November 30, 2024 03:37 pm IST Copy link Email Facebook Twitter Telegram LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Chennai Margazhi Season / Friday Review

OQ Base Industries kicks off its roadshow meetings across Oman

The 49ers shored up their suddenly thin running back corps on Tuesday by claiming Israel Abanikanda off waivers from the New York Jets. In a corresponding move, the Niners placed Christian McCaffrey on injured reserve after he suffered a right knee injury in Sunday night’s 35-10 loss to the Bills . Coach Kyle Shanahan on Monday said backup running back Jordan Mason would “most likely” join McCaffrey on IR, but the 49ers did not place him on that list just yet after he sprained his ankle Sunday. Abanikanda, 22, is in his second year as a pro after the Jets picked him in the fifth round of the 2023 draft out of Pittsburgh. He was waived Monday to make room for Kene Nwangwu, who had a 99-yard kick return touchdown and forced a fumble as a practice-squad elevation in New York’s loss Sunday to the Seahawks. Abanikanda has been inactive for all 12 of the Jets’ games this season. Last year, he had 22 carries for 70 yards in six games, adding seven catches for 43 yards. The 49ers also signed maligned wide receiver Ronnie Bell to the practice squad. Bell, whom the 49ers waived last week, was drafted by San Francisco last year in the seventh round out of Michigan and has eight catches for 90 yards in 26 career games.

JPMorgan agrees to drop lawsuit against Tesla over stock warrants

, the billionaire entrepreneur known for his ventures with and Tesla, has once again taken to social media to share a cheeky joke, this time about potentially purchasing MSNBC. The joke comes after Comcast, the parent company of MSNBC, announced plans to spin off its cable channels into a new company. In typical fashion, the 53-year-old took to Twitter to share a racy meme that humorously commented on the situation. The meme showed a priest resisting temptation, with the text " trying not to buy" placed over his image. The MSNBC logo was humorously inserted over the exposed bottom of the woman in the meme. "And lead us not into temptation ..." Musk posted under the image. Is the future of MSNBC under threat? The possibility of purchasing MSNBC began to gain traction after Comcast revealed plans to spin off its cable channels, including CNBC, Syfy, Oxygen, and E!, into a new company named SpinCo. This restructuring has raised questions about MSNBC's future, leading to speculation about whether it could be sold. Inside sources at MSNBC have reported that employees are nervous about the uncertainty surrounding the network's future. As the news of the potential sale circulated, prominent figures like and weighed in. Trump Jr. jokingly suggested that Musk should purchase MSNBC, to which Musk replied that the idea was "most entertaining." Rogan also got in on the fun, offering to take over 's role if made the purchase, to which Musk responded, "Deal." While 's comments appear to be in good humor, his track record suggests that he doesn't always joke about major business moves. famously joked about buying Twitter for years before he actually completed the 44-billion-dollar deal in 2022. With his wealth-an estimated 348 billion dollars, according to Bloomberg, the idea of purchasing MSNBC is not as far-fetched as it may seem, even if the comments are mostly playful for now.

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