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UST Announces the Global Winners of D3CODE Hackathon 2024

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Global Hackathon held in five countries – India, USA, UK, Mexico, and Malaysia.Achieved an exceptional response with over 7000 registrations and 800+ idea submissions globally.Winners received $10,000, while regional hackathon winners won $5000 as prize money.

PENANG, Malaysia, Oct. 17, 2024 /PRNewswire/ — UST, a leading digital transformation solutions company, has announced the winners of its fourth edition of D3CODE, a hackathon event for participants in five countries – India, the USA, the UK, Mexico, and Malaysia. The competition witnessed overwhelming participation, with over 7,000 registrations and 800 ideas submitted across locations.

This year’s theme, ‘Scale,’ called for scalable solutions to create a positive impact by addressing issues of social impact such as education, health, poverty, and environmental sustainability. Each country initially held the hackathons, and the winning teams from each nation advanced to compete in the Grand Finale. A rigorous judging process evaluated the entries based on their originality, potential social impact, scalability of the solution, and user experience, among other factors. Each region qualified five winning teams for the final round, from which we selected one global winner and regional winners.

The winning team received $10,000, while regional hackathon winners will win $5000. UST awarded $2400 each to the teams that received honorary mentions. UST will felicitate the global hackathon winner at its annual global technology conference, D3 (Dream, Develop, and Disrupt), in India. Additionally, the winners may qualify for seed funding to help bring their ideas to the market, backed by UST’s extensive expertise and network.

Speaking on this global initiative, Manu Gopinath, Chief Operating Officer, UST, said, “The purpose of D3CODE is to serve as a platform for innovators in technology to showcase their forward-thinking ideas in creating groundbreaking solutions to address real-world problems with scalable solutions. This year’s hackathon focused not just on the technical prowess of the participants but also on cultivating social responsibility and creating meaningful impacts on society. I congratulate all the winners for their outstanding performances. As we continue to push the boundaries of technological advancements, events like D3CODE remind us of the limitless potential of young minds and their role in shaping a better, more sustainable future.”

The following teams were declared winners of the D3CODE Hackathon 2024:

Global Winner: Leon Kipkoech from Florida National University, Miami, Florida, for ‘Dynamic ASL transcription for Video Platforms’.

India Region Winners:
First Prize: Khusbu Rai and Team from Guru Gobind Singh Indraprastha University New Delhi for ‘Recycle Radar: Turning Waste into Opportunity’.
Second Prize: Akash Jadhav and Team from Savitribai Phule Pune University, Pune, Maharashtra for ‘AI-Driven Crop Disease Prediction and Management System’.
Third Prize: Roshin R and team from College of Engineering, Thiruvananthapuram, Kerala for ‘Employment Portal and Marketplace for Unorganized Workers and Small-Scale Producers’.
Honorary mention: Omkar Deshpande and Team from Savitribai Phule Pune University, Pune, Maharashtra, for ‘Camera-Based Navigation of Autonomous Mobile Robots (AMRs)’.

UK Region Winners: 
First Prize: Salman Fatahillah and Sainsna Demizike from the University of Birmingham, London, UK for ‘SMS-based AI and Behavioral Science-Informed Messaging for Underserved Communities’.

Mexico Region Winners: 
First Prize: Pablo Esteban Murillo Mata and Team from Universidad Tecnológica de León, León, Guanajuato, México for ‘AquaHub’.
Second Prize: Alan Arana Carrillo and Team from Universidad La Salle Bajio for ‘QuantumSim’.
Third Prize: Uriel Mendoza Rodríguez and Team from La Salle Bajío for ‘EcoCity’.

Malaysia Region Winners:
First Prize: Muhammad Shahril Nizam Bin Abdullah and Team from Multimedia University, Kuala Lumpur, for ‘Sentinel AI: Real-Time Violence Detection for Safer Community’.
Second Prize: Muhammad Zul Iman Bin Zul Wizaratain from University Malaysia Pahang Al-Sultan Abddullah, Tasek Gelugor, Penang, for ‘Smart Waste Sorting System with Capacity Monitoring’.
Third Prize: Nawal Izzah Binti Azhar and Team from Universiti teknikal malaysia melaka George Town, Penang for ‘Razzbotics RetroBot: A versatile retrofit kit that transforms any trolley or cart into an autonomous solution’.

D3CODE is one of many exciting events for UST’s D3, a week-long conference with a technology expo. On October 17, 2024, UST’s D3 will take place at the Travancore International Convention Centre in Thiruvananthapuram. It will include a full-day conference featuring renowned speakers and a keynote speech from Krishna Sudheendra, Chief Executive Officer, UST. Other esteemed speakers include Chris Heemskerk, CEO, The Innovation Alliance; T Koshy, MD & CEO, Open Network for Digital Commerce; Dhanniya Venkatasalapathy, Executive Director, Cloud Solutions, Microsoft India; Paul Gladigau, CTO, Equifax; Simon Lister, CIO, Capital One UK; Balaji Narayana, SVP, Technology and Innovation, Chief Technology Officer, CarynHealth; Niranjan Ram, CTO, UST; Andy Morin, Chief Solutions, Architect, UST; Sripathi Jagannathan, Head of Data Engineering, UST.

About UST:

Since 1999, UST has worked side by side with the world’s best companies to make a powerful impact through transformation. Powered by technology, inspired by people, and led by our purpose, we partner with our clients from design to operation. Our digital solutions, proprietary platforms, engineering expertise, and innovation ecosystem turn core challenges into impactful, disruptive solutions. With deep industry knowledge and a future-ready mindset, we infuse innovation and agility into our clients’ organizations–delivering measurable value and positive lasting change for them, their customers, and communities around the world. Together, with 30,000+ employees in 30+ countries, we build for boundless impact–touching billions of lives in the process. Visit us at www.UST.com

Media Contacts, UST:

Tinu Cherian Abraham
+1 (949) 415-9857

Merrick Laravea
+1 (949) 416-6212

Neha Misri
+44-7341787926

Roshini Das K
+91-7736795557
media.relations@ust.com 

Media Contacts, India.:

Adfactors PR
ust@adfactorspr.com

Media Contacts, U.S.:

S & C PR
+1-646.941.9139
media@scprgroup.com 

Makovsky
ust@makovsky.com 

Media Contacts, U.K.:

FTI Consulting
UST@fticonsulting.com 

 

 

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JK Tech Brings Agentic AI to the Forefront at Two Major Industry Events

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NEW YORK, May 12, 2026 /CNW/ — JK Tech, a global AI and Data solutions provider has announced its participation in two premier U.S. industry forums- HFS Spring Summit and Datos Regional Property & Casualty Insurance Forum, underscoring its commitment to helping U.S. enterprises accelerate AI-led transformation with measurable business outcomes. The company will showcase how its AI-first portfolio is enabling enterprises across industries to move beyond experimentation and operationalize intelligence at scale.

As U.S. businesses grapple with growing complexity, disconnected systems, and mounting pressure to do more with less, JK Tech is stepping in with a clear message: intelligence shouldn’t sit in silos- it should be adaptable and agile.

At the HFS Spring Summit, the spotlight falls on JIVA, JK Tech’s enterprise-ready Agentic AI platform, alongside its Enterprise Ontology framework. Together, these solutions help organizations build AI systems that are contextual, governed, and explainable — not just powerful. The goal is faster decisions, modernized service delivery, and meaningful transformation across enterprise operations. Retail and commerce leaders will also get a look at Orbiee, JK Tech’s conversational commerce platform, which brings intent-aware, emotionally intelligent engagement to customer interactions, driving more personalized experiences, stronger loyalty, and better conversion outcomes.

At Datos Insights, JK Tech shifts focus to the insurance sector, showing how the same AI-led approach can help insurers modernize underwriting, claims, customer service, and core operations. The emphasis is on contextual intelligence, responsible AI, and automation that delivers real, measurable results, not just technological novelty.

Across both events, JK Tech’s core argument is consistent: the future of enterprise AI isn’t about isolated pilots. It’s about systems that work together, at scale, in the real world.

“U.S. enterprises are no longer looking for AI that simply informs, they need AI that acts,” said Deepak Srinivasan, Chief Solutions Officer at JK Tech. “We’re helping organizations move from disconnected experimentation to intelligent, outcome-driven execution by combining agentic AI, trusted enterprise data, and domain context into systems that deliver measurable business value.”

By participating in both forums, JK Tech is reinforcing its role as a reliable transformation partner for U.S. enterprises.

About JK Tech

JK Tech is a GenAI-focused data and AI services organization empowering enterprises across Retail, CPG, and Insurance. Through deep expertise in data platforms, AI orchestration, and enterprise transformation and flagship solutions such as JIVA, its Gen AI Orchestrator, and Orbiee, its conversational commerce platform, JK Tech helps global organizations unlock actionable insights, operational excellence, and sustainable growth. To learn more, visit www.jktech.com. Find JK Tech on X, LinkedIn.

Logo: https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/2088130/JK_Tech_Logo.jpg

 

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Instacart Joins Collaborative for Healthy Rural America (CHRA) to Expand Access to Nutrition and Essential Goods

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The collaboration supports states advancing CMS Rural Health Transformation initiatives with technology-enabled implementation, AI-driven virtual primary care, and integrated access to food and community-based services

WASHINGTON, May 12, 2026 /PRNewswire/ — The Collaborative for Healthy Rural America (CHRA) today announced that Instacart has joined the collaborative, expanding its ability to help states address chronic disease and improve health outcomes by integrating access to nutritious food and essential goods into coordinated care delivery models. The addition of Instacart further enhances the collective approach to longitudinal, AI-enabled primary care and community engagement advanced by Deloitte Consulting LLP, Lumeris, Nuna, Teladoc Health, and Unite Us.

Instacart joins CHRA to help rural communities address chronic disease through better nutrition access.

The addition of Instacart comes as states begin implementing new Rural Health Transformation (RHT) initiatives with funding from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS). State teams are pivoting from outlining five year plans to operationalizing and demonstrating near term progress.

“Expanding access to nutritious food is one of the most powerful things we can do to improve health outcomes,” said Sarah Mastrorocco, Vice President and General Manager of Health at Instacart. “Through Instacart Health, we’re working to use delivery of nutritious groceries as a tool to help Americans prevent and manage chronic conditions. By joining CHRA, we have an opportunity to integrate our capabilities into care delivery models further, helping states address the root causes of disease while improving access, engagement, and outcomes in rural communities.”

With approximately $10 billion in first-year RHT funding awarded nationally, states are advancing implementation within defined timelines while strengthening workforce capacity, governance structures, and performance management capabilities required under CMS cooperative agreements. As Year 2 funding decisions are informed by Year 1’s progress, states are focused on demonstrating early implementation while building durable systems designed to be sustained beyond federal funding.

The CHRA was formed to support state-directed implementation of CMS’s RHT program. CHRA brings together private sector experience and proven, interoperable technology to help states move rapidly from planning to execution. By combining advanced analytics, virtual care, interoperable data platforms, and closed-loop referrals for community-based service integration, CHRA enables states to operationalize complex rural health transformation initiatives at scale, reducing the need for each state to build new capabilities from scratch.

CHRA’s founding collaborators include Deloitte, Lumeris, Nuna, Teladoc Health, and Unite Us. The addition of Instacart to the collaborative helps states expand access to nutritious foods and everyday essentials to address chronic disease and related needs. Together, CHRA represents a comprehensive operating model that is intentionally aligned with CMS expectations, reducing the need for health systems to assemble and manage disparate components independently

Built Around State-Identified Challenges

CHRA conducted a detailed review of publicly available state RHT plans to understand the challenges states themselves have identified as most urgent. While needs vary by geography, four themes consistently emerged across plans.

1. Infrastructure Misalignment in Rural Health Systems

States across the country describe a structural mismatch between legacy rural health infrastructure, declining populations, and fee-for-service payment models. The State of Wyoming notes that rural hospitals face “high fixed costs and low patient volume,” while still needing to maintain emergency capacity. Vermont reports that more than half of hospitals operate at a loss due to low volume, workforce shortages, aging infrastructure, and high fixed operating costs. Illinois highlights large inpatient facilities that are rarely fully occupied, undermining financial viability. Across the country, rural health transformation plans converge on the need for alternative payment models, redesigned delivery systems, flexible workforce strategies, and technology-enabled care to create sustainable models of care.

How CHRA can help states:
CHRA supports states in exploring and operationalizing redesigned care delivery models better suited to low volume, high fixed cost environments such as those intended to be addressed by RHT initiatives. At the core of this approach is the transformation of primary care from episodic, site-based care to continuous, coordinated, and population-driven models that better meet the needs of rural communities.

Through interoperable service models, built to complement existing EHR and HIE systems, CHRA has the opportunity to support beneficiary identification, outreach, virtual and in-person care, care coordination, and outcomes tracking. For instance, CHRA member Lumeris, powered by Tom™, enables primary care teams to operate with greater reach and efficiency—proactively managing patient populations, closing care gaps, and extending care beyond traditional settings.

These supports, alongside virtual care delivery through Teladoc Health’s network of providers and Nuna’s AI-native patient engagement mobile app, introduce a more scalable, prevention-oriented primary care model that aligns payment, workforce capacity, and service delivery with population needs while relieving rural facilities of the burden of sustaining underutilized infrastructure on their own.

2. Gaps in Preventive Care Delivery

States report persistent barriers to preventive services. The State of Iowa cites gaps in early detection and prevention. The State of Maine highlights limited capacity for population-level screening and outreach. Workforce shortages, transportation challenges, and infrastructure constraints limit consistent access to preventive care.

How CHRA can help states:
CHRA leverages population data, predictive analytics, and AI-supported outreach to help states identify priority populations and close preventive care gaps. Unite Us’ Self Sufficiency Score establishes a benchmark, connecting rural residents to medical, behavioral, and community support services via an integrated closed-loop referral and payment platform.

Utilizing the Tom™ platform, CHRA extends prevention beyond episodic care by continuously monitoring patient needs, proactively identifying rising risks, and engaging individuals between visits through timely, personalized outreach. By orchestrating interventions across care teams and community resources, Tom helps ensure preventive actions happen earlier, before conditions escalate, enabling more consistent care, improving health outcomes, and reducing downstream costs associated with avoidable complications.

3. High Burden of Chronic Disease

Chronic disease management is a central concern across state plans. The State of Nevada identifies heart disease, cancer, and chronic lower respiratory disease as leading causes of death. The State of New Jersey emphasizes the need to modernize identification and access to treatment. The State of New Mexico calls for expanded specialty access and evidence-based models, while the Commonwealth of Virginia highlights access to nutrition as a root cause of poor health.

How CHRA can help states:
CHRA helps states more effectively prevent and slow chronic disease by enabling continuous, data-driven management of patient populations. Tom identifies rising-risk individuals, closes care gaps, and proactively engages patients between visits—supporting adherence, surfacing unmet needs, and coordinating timely interventions across care teams. Through CHRA, partners like Teladoc Health that integrate Instacart Health tools, will extend this model by enabling interventions that deliver personalized, clinically aligned nutrition support directly to patients, addressing key drivers of chronic conditions. Using Instacart Health Fresh Funds, stipends for nutritious food, and Care Carts, which allow organizations to order groceries on behalf of others, partners can build programs that address the needs of rural communities. Together, this approach tackles root causes, improves long-term disease management, and reduces avoidable emergency utilization.

4. Workforce Shortages and Provider Access

States consistently cite challenges with recruiting and retaining providers. The State of Ohio reports service lines at risk due to workforce shortages. The State of Nevada ranks near the bottom nationally in physician availability. The State of Georgia reports that most counties are facing a shortage of OBGYNs or pediatricians. Nationally, more than 190 rural hospitals have closed since 2005, with hundreds more at risk, according to the North Carolina Rural Health Research Program.

How CHRA can help states:
CHRA supports Primary Care as a Service (PCaaS) models using solutions like Lumeris’ Tom™ platform, which provides the backbone technology that extends provider capacity through AI-assisted triage, virtual care, and team-based workflows. Deloitte provides cross-platform interoperability and data integration services, grounded in decades of experience supporting states. And Teladoc Health has the largest nationwide network of virtual care providers including licensed clinicians, therapists, and health coaches, and can help patients access care quickly amid shortages or barriers to care. These approaches aim to expand access while keeping local providers at the center of care and reducing burnout. 

Looking Ahead

States will report Year 1 progress to CMS in October 2026. Those that demonstrate measurable improvements in access, utilization, and sustainability will be positioned for continued funding. CHRA’s role is to support states in achieving early momentum while building sustainable rural health systems.

About CHRA

The Collaborative for Healthy Rural America (CHRA) is a coalition of organizations supporting state led rural health transformation initiatives through coordinated, implementation focused support across care delivery, data, community integration, and sustainability.

Learn more: https://healthyruralamerica.org

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Branford Castle-Backed Lafayette Instrument Acquires Sutter Instrument Corp.

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Significantly Expands Its Life Sciences Instrumentation Product Offerings

NEW YORK and BOCA RATON, Fla., May 12, 2026 /PRNewswire/ — Lafayette Instrument, LLC, a leading global manufacturer of scientific instrumentation equipment for the life sciences, polygraph and human evaluation markets, today announced that it has acquired Sutter Instrument Corp. Terms of the transaction were not disclosed.

Lafayette is a portfolio company of North American-focused private equity firm Branford Castle Partners. Sutter marks the fifth bolt-on investment for Lafayette since being acquired by Branford Castle’s Fund II in 2021.

With the acquisition of Sutter, Lafayette reinforces its commitment to provide unparalleled support to the life science research community through experiment-focused software and instrumentation. Sutter is a leading provider of precision scientific instruments used by universities and research institutions globally for electrophysiology, neuroscience, and other related life sciences research.

Benjamin Mangrich, CEO of Lafayette Instrument, said, “Sutter Instrument has been a global leader in instrumentation supporting cellular research and electrophysiology for over 50 years. The company’s strong product portfolio, deep technical expertise, and commitment to customer success make them a natural complement to Lafayette Instrument’s Life Science portfolio.”

Ceon Francis, Managing Director at Branford Castle, stated, “This acquisition strengthens Lafayette’s platform and broadens its product offering to better serve a growing base of life sciences customers who demand the latest tools and technology. We are excited to collaborate with management as we continue to build on the company’s momentum and drive long-term growth.”

Branford Castle was advised by its legal counsel Akerman LLP, and RSM served as its accounting/tax advisor. EC M&A acted as financial advisor and Donahue Fitzgerald LLP acted as legal advisor to Sutter. Byline Bank is providing senior debt financing and Brookside Capital Partners is providing mezzanine debt financing for the transaction.

ABOUT BRANFORD CASTLE PARTNERS
Branford Castle is a private market investor focused on lower middle-market investments, with more than 35 years of helping to grow businesses. The Firm typically makes control investments in companies with up to $15 million of EBITDA and a leadership position in a niche industry. Branford Castle prides itself on the strong relationships it develops with its portfolio company managers. Branford Castle has particular expertise in industrials/specialty manufacturing, consumer products, business services and logistics.

ABOUT LAFAYETTE INSTRUMENT
Lafayette Instrument Company has over 75 years of experience engineering and manufacturing high-quality scientific instrumentation and data acquisition equipment for disciplines such as biology, neuroscience, pharmaceutical and medical research, physical therapy and rehabilitation, security, and law enforcement. Lafayette is positioned at the forefront of neuroscientific discovery, human evaluation, and credibility assessment.

Media Contact:
LLYC
Jennifer Hurson
Jennifer.hurson@llyc.global
Or
Joanne Lessner
Joanne.lessner@llyc.global

 

View original content:https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/branford-castle-backed-lafayette-instrument-acquires-sutter-instrument-corp-302769068.html

SOURCE Branford Castle Partners

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