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Halton pride as students bag stunning crop of A-level grades
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Magistrates court: Cases heard in north Essex last week
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A university student s technology concept that would easily help dealers inform customers of their car s progress through service has won the inaugural Keyloop Dealer Tech university automotive technology competition.
Created by computer science student Brian Evans of Exeter University, the web-based platform prototype includes pre-populated messages that can be
quickly issued to a customer, including information regarding additional work that is recommended and the ability for the customer to authorise extra cost.
Evans had considered its integration with existing systems such as video.
In total 180 students from Bath, Exeter, Buckingham, Warwick, Surrey and Southampton universities registered to participate in the competition created by Keyloop (formerly known as CDK Global International).
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Keyloop has announced the individual university winners of the Keyloop Dealer Tech University Automotive Technology Competition.
The competition was created to support future talent, encouraging students to build innovative ideas to help advance automotive retail, while also providing first-hand experience of modern industry challenges.
More than 180 students from Bath, Exeter, Buckingham, Warwick, Surrey and Southampton registered to take part in the inaugural year of the competition, and today one team from each university has been selected to win £3,000 and progress to the national final on May 12. The national winning team will receive a further £10,000 to celebrate their achievement.
This Ash Wednesday, following a note from the Congregation for Divine Worship and the Sacraments, many American parishes did not distribute ashes in the customary way of smudging a cross on the forehead and saying one of two possible formulas to each recipient. Instead, as an ostensible anti-COVID precaution, they sprinkled ashes on the top of the head and said the formula once to the whole congregation.
Today’s guest, Gail Finke, wrote a thought-provoking article, not so much on the appropriateness of changing the usual practice this year because of the pandemic, but on an attitude so often taken in discussing Ash Wednesday every year.
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