Hasselblad unveiled the 70 finalists of Hasselblad Masters 2026, the company's first Masters competition since 2023. It didn't take long for controversy to emerge, including allegations that a finalist used generative AI to create one of their images.
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Hasselblad unveiled the 70 finalists of Hasselblad Masters 2026, the company's first Masters competition since 2023. It didn't take long for controversy to emerge, including allegations that a finalist used generative AI to create one of their images.
JERTIH, April 29 — What began as a routine fishing outing turned into a life-changing moment for a bait trader who is now a millionaire overnight.Muhammad Khalis Zulkifle, 35, from Seberang Jertih here, struck gold after emerging champion in a fishing competition at Kolam Titi Mega, Alor Setar, Kedah last Sunday, walking away with RM1 million in cash.The father of four secured the win after landing a 9.5-kilogram catfish, beating more than 10,000 participants in
JERTIH, April 29 — What began as a routine fishing outing turned into a life-changing moment for a bait trader who is now a millionaire overnight.
Muhammad Khalis Zulkifle, 35, from Seberang Jertih here, struck gold after emerging champion in a fishing competition at Kolam Titi Mega, Alor Setar, Kedah last Sunday, walking away with RM1 million in cash.
The father of four secured the win after landing a 9.5-kilogram catfish, beating more than 10,000 participants in the contest.
Still reeling from the shock, Muhammad Khalis said he could hardly believe his luck when he was announced the grand prize winner.
“I was fishing with just one rod after paying a RM220 entry fee. About 40 minutes into the competition, I managed to catch the catfish and started feeling anxious, wondering if anyone else had caught a heavier fish within the 10kg limit set by the organisers.
“Alhamdulillah, I see this as a blessing in conjunction with my third child’s 10th birthday on the same day. When my name was announced, I was momentarily speechless,” he said when contacted by Bernama.
However, the unexpected windfall also brought new challenges, particularly in ensuring the safe handling of the cash prize.
He said the matter was resolved after taking certain precautions based on the organiser’s advice, but he soon had to deal with an overwhelming response from the public.
“Not less than 1,000 people contacted me through WhatsApp, text messages and social media asking for money, most of whom I do not know,” he said, adding that his previous biggest win was RM30,000 in a fishing competition in Jertih.
Active in fishing competitions across various states for the past four years, Muhammad Khalis also runs a side business selling a special oil mixture for fishing bait.
“The fishing oil is my own recipe, and sometimes my wife helps manage the sales,” he said.
Looking ahead, he plans to use the RM1 million prize to build his own home, expand his wife’s food business, and set aside savings for the future. — Bernama
Hasselblad has announced the 70 finalists of its prestigious Hasselblad Masters 2026 competition, highlighting exceptional photos across seven categories.
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Hasselblad has announced the 70 finalists of its prestigious Hasselblad Masters 2026 competition, highlighting exceptional photos across seven categories.
Evident Scientific, a scientific solutions and microscopic imaging company, has announced the winners of its sixth annual Image of the Year photo contest. The competition celebrates the world's best scientific microscopic imaging, and the photos are as scientifically valuable as they are beautiful.
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Evident Scientific, a scientific solutions and microscopic imaging company, has announced the winners of its sixth annual Image of the Year photo contest. The competition celebrates the world's best scientific microscopic imaging, and the photos are as scientifically valuable as they are beautiful.
The winners of the 2026 Environmental Photography Award have been announced, and photographer Britta Jaschinski has been presented with the grand prize for her image, Handprint on Sea Turtle, which also won the “Changemakers” category.
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The winners of the 2026 Environmental Photography Award have been announced, and photographer Britta Jaschinski has been presented with the grand prize for her image, Handprint on Sea Turtle, which also won the “Changemakers” category.
DJI has announced the winners of the 2025 DJI SkyPixel photo and video competition, which ran from November 27, 2025, to Mar 10, 2026, and offered 53 different awards with prizes totaling almost $200,000.
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DJI has announced the winners of the 2025 DJI SkyPixel photo and video competition, which ran from November 27, 2025, to Mar 10, 2026, and offered 53 different awards with prizes totaling almost $200,000.
You already sense it. The game has tilted toward collaboration as the new face of competition. A small business competing in isolation is like an individual bringing a knife to a gunfight, especially when big corporations have tanks and missiles.In market after market, firms that once fought for inches now build lanes together, then race in them. The giants signpost the shift. Apple and Samsung are dueling for smartphone sales, while Samsung’s component arm supplies the OLED displays that make i
You already sense it. The game has tilted toward collaboration as the new face of competition. A small business competing in isolation is like an individual bringing a knife to a gunfight, especially when big corporations have tanks and missiles.
In market after market, firms that once fought for inches now build lanes together, then race in them. The giants signpost the shift. Apple and Samsung are dueling for smartphone sales, while Samsung’s component arm supplies the OLED displays that make iPhones glow. This summer, they even expanded their partnership, and Samsung now supplies chips from a Texas factory for Apple’s iPhones. Apple and Google wrestle for mobile mindshare, yet Google pays Apple billions each year to be the default search engine on iPhone. The rivals compete in devices and services, while cooperating where both gain reach and revenue.
Automakers offer another lesson. Ford and General Motors jointly developed transmissions to spread costs and accelerate time-to-market, while still going head-to-head in showrooms. BMW and Toyota have partnered on hydrogen systems and even a shared sports car platform, each preserving its identity while pooling the heavy lift.
Even in the entertainment industry (where rivalries are legendary), competitors team up when the infrastructure is heavy and the outside threat is larger than the fight between them. Microsoft and Sony agreed to explore cloud and streaming services together while still slugging it out for players and titles.
This idea has a name with roots in strategy research: coopetition. Coopetition is a blend of "cooperation" and "competition," where competing entities work together toward a common goal while still maintaining competitive interests in other areas. This concept allows businesses to collaborate in certain aspects, such as research and development, while competing in the marketplace for customers and market share.
Small Businesses Can Benefit From Coopetition, Too
If major corporations can alternate between contest and collaboration, what does that mean for the underdog that lives on cash flow and speed? It means advantages. Small firms can trade fixed costs for access and turn local trust into a regional footprint. Crucially, you can do it without dulling your edge. You can protect your absolute advantage and still grow through smart alliances. Think of it like neighbors who decide to share the cost of digging a well. They may still cook their food separately, but sharing water helps both survive.
Big companies embrace this logic because it works. The question is no longer whether cooperation has a place in competitive strategy; the question is how small businesses can use the same playbook to grow faster and reach farther without giving away the crown jewels.
Why Coopetition Should Be a Small Business Default
Why should small businesses embrace coopetition? There are plenty of reasons, the biggest being:
Because demand wants convenience. Customers prefer bundles, one-stop solutions, and fewer handoffs. A florist and a baker who package wedding day services together remove friction. A design studio and a print shop that quote as one provider save a buyer time. Coopetition aligns with the buyer reality that shoppers now have endless choices and convenient options will often win out.
Because platforms compress margins. When discovery and delivery run through a few giant rails, the small player who goes solo often pays the toll twice. Multinationals like Amazon, Walmart, Alibaba, and Jumia (in Africa) can cut prices in ways small shops cannot. If small businesses keep fighting one another, they may all lose to the bigger giants.
Because constraints are real for small businesses. Many small businesses don’t have enough money for marketing, technology, or research. Competing alone drains these scarce resources. Collaboration addresses shortages of cash, capacity, and credibility. For instance, shared kitchens have become an on-ramp for growth companies that need commercial grade space without crushing overhead. Volatility punishes the isolated. Little wonder there are co-working and co-warehousing spaces growing. Companies that might fight for the same shelf space share equipment, know-how, and even suppliers in a neutral space.
Because the cost of differentiation is moving up the stack. Customer experience, story, taste, and trust are uniquely yours. Everything else is infrastructure. Sharing infrastructure lowers cost and increases speed.
Because networks reward interoperability. If your category grows because rivals agree on a standard, you sell more to a bigger market. If you insist on going it alone on every input, you pay more and move slower.
The Concept of Loneliness and Friction Tax
The loneliness tax is the hidden cost you pay when you run your business alone. For example, a small restaurant owner can spend all their savings on marketing but still struggles to fill seats. Right down the street, another restaurant is also struggling. If both teamed up to run a joint food festival, they could attract bigger crowds, share costs, and both make more money. In other words, when you refuse to collaborate, you carry all burdens alone, and your growth is slower.
The friction tax is the cost of fighting your competitors unnecessarily. For example, two small grocery stores in the same neighborhood lower prices every week to outdo each other. Customers enjoy the price war, but the stores are bleeding profit. If they agreed to share delivery or other costs, they might save money. Their constant “fight” created friction that drained them.
How to Collaborate While Still Competing
Think like an owner of a portfolio of bets, not a single bet. In practice, that means you decide, at the level of a function, where you will collaborate and where you will compete. For example, you can share the back office and fight for the front office.
Put your business at the center, then have these 4 partners (your customers, your suppliers, your complementors, and your competitors) surround you. Then, seek opportunities where a joint move could expand the value that flows through the system. Perhaps you and a nearby rival could co-import raw materials to cut freight costs. Perhaps two boutiques could create a shared trunk show calendar that rotates venues and mailing lists. Perhaps three landscaping firms could rotate a specialized machine and collaborate on overflow jobs in peak season. The choice of where to collaborate should be the place where the cost is high or the customer benefit is obvious.
Decide on what is out of bounds before you shake hands. Fixing prices or wages, dividing up markets, and other agreements that dull rivalry cross legal red lines in the United States. Recent enforcement shifts have removed the old comfort of broad safe harbors, so small businesses should formalize purpose, scope, and information barriers, then get counsel when in doubt.
Build the smallest possible experiment and measure real outcomes. This might mean testing a one-season joint bundle for wedding vendors, a three-month pooled procurement of packaging with clear savings targets, or a shared pop-up store through the holidays with agreed staffing and revenue splits.
Choose governance that matches the ambition. For lightweight efforts, a memorandum of understanding and a shared channel will do. For heavier lifts, use a special purpose vehicle, a buying consortium, or even a cooperative with bylaws and member voting.
Protect your edge without starving the partnership. Keep your brand, your customer data, and your secret sauce on your side of the fence. Share only what advances the joint outcome. When tech is involved, set data minimization rules and define who owns improvements. When services are involved, define service levels and escalation paths. When creative work is involved, set credit conventions up front. A cooperative like Stocksy shows how clear rules can protect individual creators while strengthening the shared platform.
Practical Ways for Small Businesses to Practice Coopetition
Bulk Buying Together: Instead of buying stock individually at higher prices, small businesses in the same line (say, salons, retail shops, or farmers) can pool money and buy in bulk at lower prices.
Shared Marketing: Competing fashion designers can organize a joint runway show. Competing tour guides can market one travel package together. Competing restaurants can hold a food festival.
Joint Training and Learning: Several small businesses can contribute to bringing in an expert for a class or workshop, something they couldn’t afford individually.
Cluster Strategy: Just like food trucks, businesses can position themselves close together to attract bigger crowds. A row of bookshops or tech repair shops often brings more customers than one shop standing alone.
Collaborating for Big Contracts: Sometimes, a small business cannot fulfill a large order. Instead of rejecting it, competitors can partner to deliver together. This builds credibility and future opportunities.
Guardrails That Keep You Safe
When small businesses come together, the excitement of new opportunities can make them overlook the fine print. But you shouldn’t dive into a collaboration without rules that keep everyone safe and focused. Think of these rules as the guardrails on a highway (they don’t stop you from moving forward, they keep you from crashing).
Name the purpose in the first sentence of every agreement and read it aloud in the first meeting. If your purpose is to reduce carbon in logistics, you know what information belongs in the room and what does not. If your purpose is to expand access to customers, you will stay far away from pricing talk.
Keep the collaboration proportional. The smaller and more targeted the scope, the easier it is to govern and the harder it is to drift into forbidden territory. When you do scale up, bring counsel early.
Agree on how the partnership ends. Sunset dates prevent zombie alliances. Exit clauses that define who owns the work reduce drama. Postmortems capture the learning so your next partnership starts stronger.
A Closing Challenge for Small Businesses
As a small business owner, ask yourself these 2 questions:
Where am I paying a loneliness tax?
Where am I paying a friction tax?
Every place you answer yes is a candidate for coopetition. If you embrace coopetition with clear eyes and clean boundaries, you will find that collaboration is not the end of competition. It is the way you make competition worth winning.
All About Photo (AAP) has announced the winners of the 2026 All About Photo Awards, marking the 11th anniversary edition of The Mind’s Eye competition. The annual program highlights international photographic work spanning documentary, conceptual, and fine art practices. This year’s selection was judged by acclaimed photographer Steve McCurry.
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All About Photo (AAP) has announced the winners of the 2026 All About Photo Awards, marking the 11th anniversary edition of The Mind’s Eye competition. The annual program highlights international photographic work spanning documentary, conceptual, and fine art practices. This year’s selection was judged by acclaimed photographer Steve McCurry.
World Press Photo has announced the winners of its annual photo competition, celebrating the best and most powerful photojournalism photos from the past year.
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World Press Photo has announced the winners of its annual photo competition, celebrating the best and most powerful photojournalism photos from the past year.
About the Ottawa International Animation Festival
The Ottawa International Animation Festival (OIAF) has provided animation and entertainment since 1976. The second oldest film institute in the world and also the hub of animation in Canada, has a lot to offer. The festival will be held online from September 22 to October 3, 2021.
Ottawa International Animation Festival Shorts Competition 3
Comeback
Photo Credit: Ottawa International Animation Festival
Director: Vladimir Leschiov
The Ottawa International Animation Festival (OIAF) has provided animation and entertainment since 1976. The second oldest film institute in the world and also the hub of animation in Canada, has a lot to offer. The festival will be held online from September 22 to October 3, 2021.
Ottawa International Animation Festival Shorts Competition 3
Comeback
Photo Credit: Ottawa International Animation Festival
Director: Vladimir Leschiov From: Latvia & Lithuania About: It’s never too late for a comeback.
electric +
Photo Credit: Ottawa International Animation Festival
Director: Brandon Blommaert From: Canada About: A slow sensuous dance gives way to a technical barrage of prismatic shards of love.
Papa Zaza
Photo Credit: Ottawa International Animation Festival
Director: Géraldine Charpentier From: Belgium About: Fleur and her brothers’ games are put on hold when their father, Zaza, is taken to the hospital.
World Brain ‘Dance II (Discovery Zone Cover)’
Photo Credit: Ottawa International Animation Festival
Director: Julian Gallese From: Costa Rica & Germany About: A dream computer land inhabited by animals that like to party and frequent museums.
Babičino seksualno življenje (Granny’s Sexual Life)
Photo Credit: Ottawa International Animation Festival
Director: Urška Djukić & Emilie Pigeard From: Slovenia & France About: A trip into grandmother’s youth and the memories of her intimate life illustrate the status of Slovenian women in the first half of the 20th century.
Festivalska špica Animafest Zagreb 2020 (Animafest Zagreb 2020 Festival Trailer)
Photo Credit: Ottawa International Animation Festival
Director: Yoriko Mizushiri From: Croatia About: A trailer for the Animafest Zagreb 2020.
Nichts (Nothing)
Photo Credit: Ottawa International Animation Festival
Director: Paul Hartmann From: Germany About: Since nothing really matters why not change things.
Rites of Spring
Photo Credit: Ottawa International Animation Festival
Director: Yiorgos Tsangaris From: Cyprus About: The Christian Orthodox tradition and traveling theatre troupes with their pagan roots are two seemingly opposite worlds, both mysterious and enchanting.
Dior ‘A New Continent’
Photo Credit: Ottawa International Animation Festival
Director: Bárbara Cerro From: Argentina About: Femininity in the world of animation according to Dior.
Impossible Figures and Other Stories
Photo Credit: Ottawa International Animation Festival
Director: Marta Pajek From: Poland & Canada About: Following an explosion, a mysterious and elegant elderly woman wanders deserted city streets, recalling what was and what could have been.
About the Ottawa International Animation Festival
The Ottawa International Animation Festival (OIAF) has provided animation and entertainment since 1976. The second oldest film institute in the world and also the hub of animation in Canada, has a lot to offer. The festival will be held online from September 22 to October 3, 2021.
Ottawa International Animation Festival Shorts Competition 2
Sleater-Kinney ‘High in the Grass’
Photo Credit: Ottawa International Animation Festival
D
The Ottawa International Animation Festival (OIAF) has provided animation and entertainment since 1976. The second oldest film institute in the world and also the hub of animation in Canada, has a lot to offer. The festival will be held online from September 22 to October 3, 2021.
Ottawa International Animation Festival Shorts Competition 2
Sleater-Kinney ‘High in the Grass’
Photo Credit: Ottawa International Animation Festival
Director: Kelly Sears From: United States About:A fantastic world of radical empathy and ecstatic care. What initially appears as horrific transforms into the euphoric.
The Clearing
Photo Credit: Ottawa International Animation Festival
Director: Daniel Robert Hope From: United Kingdom About: A holiday of a lifetime! Or a final attempt to save a failing marriage. Bill and Deb struggle to see eye to eye, and their last-ditch camping trip takes a sinister turn.
Dogadjaji za zaboraviti (Events Meant to Be Forgotten)
Photo Credit: Ottawa International Animation Festival
Director: Marko Tadic From: Croatia About: Based on a poem by Hans Magnus Enzensberger, forgotten people, their lives and their deeds are recalled.
Zubroffka 2021 Festival Trailer
Photo Credit: Ottawa International Animation Festival
Director: David Stumpf From: Poland About: A promo for the Zubroffka Short Film Festival.
Maalbeek
Photo Credit: Ottawa International Animation Festival
Director: Ismaël Joffroy Chandoutis From: France About: A amnesiac survivor of the attack at Maalbeek metro station in Brussels seeks the missing images of an event of which she has no memory.
Norges blindeforbund ‘Hjelp, vi har en blind pasient’ (Norwegian Association of the Blind and Partially Sighted ‘Help! We have a blind patient’)
Photo Credit: Ottawa International Animation Festival
Director: Robin Jensen From: Norway About: 3 comic films made for the Norwegian Association of the Blind and Partially Sighted.
Space
Photo Credit: Ottawa International Animation Festival
Director:Zhong Xian From: United Kingdom About: Personal space plays an important role in a relationship.
The End Of Stories
Photo Credit: Ottawa International Animation Festival
Director: David OReilly From: Ireland & United States About: A lost generation struggles to understand the present or imagine the future.
Peaches ‘Pussy Mask’
Photo Credit: Ottawa International Animation Festival
Director:Leah Shore From: Germany, United States & Canada About: A music video for the band, Peaches that is absurd and fun.