Saturday's technology stories

Big tech is thriving despite the layoffs
In tech, 2024 started the way 2023 did — with a wave of layoffs — even though the U.S. economy is booming and the industry is thriving.
Why it matters: Layoffs can be devastating if you're involved, but in the roiling world of tech, regular job cuts are also part of the landscape.

The search for quantum algorithms
New quantum algorithms and AI approaches are testing the possibilities for quantum computing.
The big picture: Quantum computers promise to solve some problems more efficiently than classical computers, but delivering on that promise requires developing new algorithms that take advantage of quantum computers' unique abilities.

SolarWinds hackers are making a comeback
The Russian hackers behind the SolarWinds cyber espionage campaign are believed to have hacked several companies in recent months, Microsoft warned Thursday.
Driving the news: Microsoft said in a blog post that it has started notifying other organizations that it believes the Russian hacking group Midnight Blizzard targeted recently.

Schools use surveillance tech to punish vaping
High schools across the country are using advanced technology to monitor whether students are vaping — and they're sometimes handing down severe punishments when someone gets caught.
The big picture: Districts have set up sensors and surveillance cameras to detect vaping, often without informing students.

Ivanti flaws could hurt defense contractors
Weeks into the mass exploitation of security flaws in some Ivanti VPN products, defense and intelligence officials are still trying to piece together whether hackers are burrowing into military contractors' networks.
Why it matters: Nation-state spies and cybercriminals are continuing to exploit unpatched flaws in Ivanti software that the Department of Defense and many of its contractors use in their systems.

Science taps blockchains to understand origins of life on Earth
Of all the potential use cases for crypto technology, you seldom hear the phrase: "helping to understand the origins of life."
Why it matters: A shoutout to blockchains from the scientific community is a win for the industry, helping to validate the technology's wide range of application possibilities.
Axios Finish Line: Lead like IMAX CEO Rich Gelfond
Rich Gelfond is the 68-year-old CEO of IMAX — best known for designing theater projection systems for some of the largest video resolution formats in the world. The company also manufactures digital and film camera equipment.
Why he matters: Gelfond, a former lawyer and investment banker, bought IMAX with a partner in 1994.
- Over the past nearly 30 years as co-CEO and then CEO, he has steered the company through several crises, including near-bankruptcy, and has grown IMAX from a museum-focused service with 110 locations to about 1,700 theaters globally.
- And while box offices continue to struggle to rebound, the IMAX format has been driving an increasing share of growth.
Hope King talked with Gelfond at his office in Manhattan in December. Here's Part 1 of their interview.
1. Christopher Nolan has been arguably the highest-profile champion for the IMAX film format (his "Oppenheimer" drove IMAX to a near-record year). Who's the next director that you see taking up the mantle?
- Denis Villeneuve, director of "Dune"; Jordan Peele, director of "Nope"; Cary Joji Fukunaga, director of the 25th Bond title "No Time to Die"; Todd Phillips, director of the "Joker" series, as well as Hoyte van Hoytema, a cinematographer who worked with Peele and collaborates frequently with Nolan.
2. What was the first IMAX film you ever watched?
- "To Fly" during Presidents Day weekend in 1993.
- When Gelfond got back to work, there was a booklet on his desk pitching the sale of the company.
- "It was like some kind of karma in the world."
3. You often cite "It's never as good as it looks, or as bad as it seems" as your motto. How does that describe your leadership style?
- "I try and be levelheaded … because it's very easy to lose perspective," he said.
- When "Oppenheimer" soared at the box office, he reined in the company's exuberance by reminding the team that they had "a lot of movies," and that "it's a long year."
- When other movies flopped or when the company's stock was 55 cents, he had to stand up in front of "employees looking like they were going to a funeral" and say, "Tomorrow's another day."
4. How much of IMAX is Richard, and how much of IMAX is going to be IMAX after Richard? (The average tenure of public company CEOs is about 7 years.)
- "I've thought a lot about that question. … I think our brand is so well known [globally] that I think IMAX will do just fine and probably really great after I'm no longer here."
5. Why haven't you left?
- "I have a mission and I haven't fulfilled it. … I'm [also] intensely loyal to the people who work for me here. And they're intensely loyal to me. At some level, and maybe I'm crazy, I would think it would be a betrayal to leave before we accomplished our mission."
- His dream for IMAX — which he sees as "a platform for awe-inspiring content" — has been for people to "wake up and say, 'I'm not doing anything today. I want to go to the IMAX theater — what's going on there?'" rather than, "Oh, Dune 2 is out — I want to go see it in IMAX."
🎞️ 1 fun thing: Where do you sit in the Lincoln Square IMAX?
- "In the back row, in the center of the theater" because it's more convenient to get to during public screenings.
- Gelfond also agreed with Hope, though, that the center of theater, two-thirds back from the screen "is probably the ideal seat."
- "When we first bought the company, and I looked at rough cuts of movies, I'd walk around the theater [during the movie] to look at it from different perspectives, just to see if it worked as well from different seats."
Subscribe to Axios Closer to read Part 2 of the interview.
This story is from an Axios Finish Line interview series on leadership. ... More from the series: Robinhood CEO Vlad Tenev ... Brooks Brothers CEO Ken Ohashi ... Recent Walgreens CEO Roz Brewer ... Accenture CEO Julie Sweet.




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