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Luke Richardson was fired as coach of the Chicago Blackhawks on Thursday, the NHL club announced, after the team stumbled to the league's worst record so far this season. Swede Anders Sorensen, coach of the Blackhawks' top developmental club, was named interim coach for the NHL squad. Richardson, a 55-year-old Canadian, went 57-118 with 15 overtime losses in three seasons with Chicago. The Blackhawks are 8-16 with two overtime losses this season for a league-low 18 points after going 19-54-9 last season, second-worst in the NHL, and 26-49-7 in 2022-23, third-worst in the league. "Today I made the difficult decision to move on from Luke as our head coach," Blackhawks general manager Kyle Davidson said. "As we have begun to take steps forward in our rebuilding process, we felt that the results did not match our expectations for a higher level of execution this season and ultimately came to the decision that a change was necessary." More from this section The Blackhawks are on a four-game losing streak and 3-9-1 in their past 13 starts with 2.42 goals a game this season, second worst in the NHL. They have reached the Stanley Cup playoffs only once over the past seven seasons. "I fully support Kyle's decision in making this change as he continues to do what is needed to move our team forward," Blackhawks chairman and chief executive Danny Wirtz said. "I have the utmost confidence in him and the rest of our hockey operations team as they begin their search for the next head coach of the Chicago Blackhawks." Richardson became the third NHL coach fired this season after Boston dumped Jim Montgomery last month. He was hired five days later by St. Louis after the Blues fired Drew Bannister. js/bbNoneNvidia CEO says global cooperation in tech will continue under Trump administration HONG KONG: Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang said on Saturday that global cooperation in technology will continue even if the incoming US administration imposes stricter export controls on advanced computing products. US President-elect Donald Trump, in his first term in office, imposed restrictions on the sale of US technology to China citing national security -- a policy continued under President Joe Biden. The curbs forced Nvidia, the world’s leading maker of chips used for artificial intelligence applications, to change its product lineup in China. “Open science in global collaboration, cooperation across math and science has been around for a very long time. It is the foundation of social advancement and scientific advancement,” Huang told media during a visit to Hong Kong. Cooperation is “going to continue. I don’t know what’s going to happen in the new administration, but whatever happens, we’ll balance simultaneously compliance with laws and policies, continue to advance our technology and support and serve customers all over the world.” The head of the world’s most valuable company was speaking in the financial hub after receiving an honorary doctorate in engineering from the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology. During the visit, Huang participated in a fireside chat with the university’s Council Chairman Harry Sham in front of an audience of students and academics. Asked about the huge energy requirements of graphics processing units -- chips behind artificial intelligence -- Huang said, “If the world uses more energy to power the AI factories of the world, we are a better world when that happens”. Huang said “the goal of AI is not for training, the goal of AI is for inference”. He said AI can discover, for instance, new ways to store carbon dioxide in reservoirs, new wind turbine designs and new materials for storing electricity. He said people should start thinking about placing AI supercomputers slightly off the power grid and let them use sustainable energy and in places away from populations. “My hopes and dreams is that in the end, what we all see is that using energy for intelligence is the best use of energy we can imagine,” Huang said. Earlier on Saturday, Huang told graduates that “the age of AI has started” in a speech after receiving the honorary degree. “A new computing era that will impact every industry and every field of science.” Huang, 61, also told graduates that he wished he had started his career at this time. “The whole world is reset. You’re at the starting lines with everybody else. An industry is being reinvented. You now have the instruments, the instruments necessary to advance science in so many different fields,” Huang said. “The greatest challenges of our time, unimaginable challenges to overcome in the past, all of a sudden seem possible to tackle.”
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