boeing planes crashed, killing 346 people. boeing said that the allegations were thoroughly investigated and that it analysis determined there were no safety concerns. the firm said it's reviewing the newly released documents and will thoroughly investigate any new plane. turning to the chip industry, shares of micron have fallen by around 7% in extended trading in new york. the firm beat revenue estimates for the fiscal third quarter, powered by the artificial intelligence boom. however, its forecasts were weaker than what analysts expected. some analysts expected. a lot of attention in the industry has been on chip giant nvidia. its shares have also struggled recently, although it briefly overtook microsoft last week as the world's most valuable company. technology industry analyst bob o'donnell explained the market reaction. you're starting to get some unrealistic expectations. i think that's been triggering some of the moves of nvidia and macron and others. i think people have gotten a little thought mike they want to take advantage of it. there's a little bit of a paranoia how long this can last and other people are just like, well, we've got will be caught, let's dive in and take what we can get. the fundamental story hasn't changed. they're and one of the suppliers what's called hbm three. it's a critical part of nvidia cars that go into the surface, so they have said they were sold out for 2024 in 2025, and yet you get this kind of reaction. i think it's more of a psychological thing than an actual change, and sometimes when it moves this quickly it will trigger these reactions and. ~ ., ., and. was turned to nvidia. the 've and. was turned to nvidia. they've had _ and. was turned to nvidia. they've had the _ and. was turned to nvidia. they've had the recent - and. was turned to nvidia. - they've had the recent meeting. anything come out of that the reassure you that things have been on course for al?- been on course for al? they very much — been on course for al? they very much are, _ been on course for al? they very much are, and - been on course for al? they very much are, and their. been on course for al? they| very much are, and their ceo answered questions about quantum computing. they're quantum computing. they�* re doing quantum computing. they're doing that, but some of their software 's will be eventually used for that down the road. they made the comment about reported widely that blackwell was going to be the most popular product as all. so, nothing really new came out of it. ithink it nothing really new came out of it. i think it was things that the company had set in the past and just that they're very confident, and we continue to see that businesses all over the world in every single industry are interested in generative ai. staying with artificial intelligence, market valuation of over $2 trillion. and this put the e—commerce giant in the same club as tech heavyweights nvidia, microsoft, apple and alphabet. investors bought into technology shares on wall street on wednesday, pushing amazon to close 4% higher. us presidentjoe biden and donald trump are set to square off in the first debate of this year's presidential election. the state of georgia could be key to the outcome of the vote in november. president biden will be touting his economic programme, a big part of which has been using government investment to create new manufacturing jobs. but as the bbc�*s michelle fleury found, creating jobs isn't necessarily winning votes. welcome tojoe biden�*s economy, a korean company spending billions of its own and the us government's dollars to build a new factory for a new industry — a key part of the president's pitch to voters. watch this cell type. you're going to get about 20 or 30. he's been 20... solar panel maker qcells is spending $2.5 billion to triple the size of its current capacity, employing 4,000 people by year's end in a district being left behind. thanks to the biden administration's inflation reduction act, or ira as it's known, wafers mainly made in china will soon be made in america. we're currently the only facility that's going to be making cells and wafers, and that's what qcells building in cartersville, but that's the only such facility like it that's under construction in the united states. so the ira has been really successful at generating new investment, but our industry needs a lot more investment. so, you think without it, it would have taken longer to get to this point? or it might not have happened at all. president biden boasts his approach has created nearly 800,000 manufacturing jobs, something these qcell workers are grateful for. the company has given me a great opportunity to start from a very entry—level to move to a engineering spot, which for me, you know, it's something that i'm thankful for. we're also one of the largest facilities in i the western hemisphere, and wars— something that can be proud of. it's like, "oh, we have this here where mostl people don't anywhere else in the united states". - but while qcells jobs may be green, this district is deep red. dalton is in donald trump country, home to marjorie taylor greene, in one of the most bitterly contested states in this year's election. democrats hope that by creating clean energyjobs here, they may create more biden voters come november. here's what they used to make in dalton — carpet. it once claimed to be the world's carpet capital. one of the small carpet firms in town belongs to yan, a democrat. nobody cares about clean energy, not around here. that is the type of stuff that i would call them the latte liberals care about in the big city. he doesn't think the inflation reduction act will do much forjoe biden�*s re—election chances — not in dalton. in the business community, there is a resentment against that company because they got breaks from the government leaving the local guys wondering whether the government yet again is picking winners and losers. pancake, banana pancake. at the 0akwood cafe in dalton, the food is hearty, the conversation flows, but you won't hear much talk of greenjobs. who had the omelet? 0wner casey carpenter, who was the local republican representative, explains why his party doesn't like the democrats economic strategy. the problem with the republican turn off has always been it's kind of shoved down their throat with subsidies instead of letting it naturally evolve. for years, republicans have been against solar panels, but i think there's a place for it. i think diversification and energy independence, those things are republican words. the biden administration is pouring billions into red districts in the hopes of ensuring a green and prosperous future is made in america. the presidential debate is an opportunity for him to claim credit. so far, it's not clear he will reap the benefit come november. michelle fleury, bbc news, dalton, georgia. a new report, commissioned by brazil, is proposing to levy an annual tax of at least 2% on the wealth of each of the world's 3,000 billionaires. it's part of increasing calls worldwide to tax the mega wealthy, the billionaires who are criticised for not paying their fair share of taxes. the plan could give governments up to 250 billion dollars a year in extra revenue. the report's author gabriel zucman told me how it could be put into practice. first of all, the wealth of billy and ours is not so hard to capture. about half of it is in shares of companies for which you have readily available market values. the other half is mostly shares in big private companies, which you can value by looking at how the stock market values similar companies. the second big issue is indeed what to do in some countries when they refuse to apply attacks on billionaires. here, you can build on what has been done for multinational firms. what's important is to have a kind of tax collector of last resort michael —isms —— mechanisms where this would be allowed to tax the under tax billionaires of nonparticipating countries. that's how it works from internationals and how we can do that with the billionaires. i'll be back in the next hour. you can alsojoin me on newsday coming up tomorrow and right here on bbc news. welcome along. here's what's coming up. dream land to the debutantes. georgia through to the last 16 at the european championship. there is booing for belgium, although they still qualify at ukraine's expense. anthonyjoshua gets expense. anthony joshua gets another shot expense. anthonyjoshua gets another shot of the world title, fighting for the ibf belt in september. welcome along. the european championship is now down to the last 16. we've had the final games in the group stage, and georgia have made history. their 2—0 win overformer champions portugal coupled with czech republic's 2—1 defeat to turkey sees them qualify for the knockout stage in third place in group f in what is their first major tournament. group e was the tightest, all four nations finishing level on points, but it's romania and belgium who progress, as well as slovakia, who will play england on sunday. joe lynskey reports. it's their first major tournament, they're ranked 74th in the world, but georgia in each match take the same approach. in portugal, they faced a team of superstars, but this growing football nation has one of its own. kvaratskhelia for georgia! his fans at club and country call him kvaradona. for khvicha kvaratskhelia, this was a childhood dream. his ambition was to play against cristiano ronaldo. now, his team were keeping the 39—year—old restricted. and as belief ran through georgia, they got a chance from the spot. a win that takes them through, one of the euros' great upsets. portugal and turkey willjoin them in the knock—outs. in hamburg, turkey made sure theyjoined them in the knockouts. they joined them in the knockouts.— they joined them in the knockouts. , , , , , they face austria next. in group e, there was deadlock. all four teams would start the last match on three points. slovakia were first to make a break for the summit, but romania drew level — and for these teams, that suited. a 1—1 draw put both nations through and means slovakia will face england next. that result left ukraine as the team who had to win. they came this close against belgium, but with a 0—0 draw, this group was poised like none before. all four teams had finished on four points.