6 top tips to succeed in your next job search
Hays’ Amanda Whicher offers her top tips for those looking for their next tech job opportunity – and dispels some common job search myths.
Computers Tech Games Crypto Music and More
Hays’ Amanda Whicher offers her top tips for those looking for their next tech job opportunity – and dispels some common job search myths.
Hays’ Amanda Whicher offers her top tips for those looking for their next tech job opportunity – and dispels some common job search myths.
Ubisoft has shed more light on its game subscription program, Ubisoft +, including why the company believes the Xbox version can succeed on its own as opposed to being bundled with Game Pass. Ubisoft+ director Philippe Tremblay told GI.biz that the game subscription market isn’t maxed out yet, and Ubisoft is trying to secure its own piece of the pie.
“We haven’t necessarily seen that this market has reached the maximum opportunity here,” Tremblay said. “It’s still fairly new across the board that we have subscription offers, even from Xbox or other partners out there.”
Another high-profile publisher, EA, worked out a deal with Microsoft to include EA Play within Xbox Game Pass Ultimate. Although Ubisoft+ is not bundled with Game Pass, Microsoft is presumably taking some kind of fee from Ubisoft as the platform-holder.
RISHI Sunak’s small boat law must block rulings from the European Court of Human Rights to succeed, legal experts say.
If not, it will leave attempts to deport migrants wide open to legal challenges, they believe.
Rishi Sunak is setting out legislation that means migrants entering the UK illegally via The Channel has no right to stay[/caption]
The PM is preparing to reveal legislation so that anyone who comes to Britain via small boat will have no rights to stay.
It is expected to give Home Secretary Suella Braverman a new legal duty to remove people who come here illegally.
Policy Exchange think tank experts say the law must make it clear that coming here on small boats is not an option for migrants.
But it will work only if it specifically states that parts of the Human Rights and Modern Slavery Acts will not apply.
And it must make clear it will ignore rulings from Strasbourg on the issue and push on with the strategy regardless.
Oxford University Professor Richard Ekins KC, who co-wrote the report, said that if the law did not do so, it was at risk of being pulled apart by both British and European courts.
“The Government and Parliament can and should choose otherwise,” the professor added.
A spokesman for the Government insisted: “We are going to introduce new laws which will make sure that those people arriving in the UK illegally are detained and swiftly removed to another country.”