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🌍 Arm's $40 billion Nvidia deal collapses

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Plus: The Oscars could get superpowered. Sponsored by Good morning, Quartz readers! Was this newslet

Plus: The Oscars could get superpowered. [Quartz]( Sponsored by Good morning, Quartz readers! Was this newsletter forwarded to you? [Sign up here](. Forward to the friend who [tops their ice cream]( with a sprinkling of geopolitics. Here’s what you need to know SoftBank’s $40 billion sale of Arm to Nvidia collapsed. The tech takeover was announced in 2020, but has faced [insurmountable regulatory hurdles](. The Japanese conglomerate now plans to take Arm public. BP posted its biggest profits for eight years. The energy giant made [$12.8 billion in 2021](, including $4 billion in the last quarter alone, thanks to a sudden rise in oil and gas prices. Joe Biden threatened to block gas supplies if Russia attacks Ukraine. Meeting German chancellor Olaf Scholz at the White House, the US president said they could “[bring an end](” to the Nord Stream 2 Russia-to-Germany pipeline. Amazon raised its salary cap. The company [will more than double]( its maximum base wage from $160,000 to $350,000, citing a competitive labor market. A Matrix producer is suing Warner Bros over the movie’s streaming release. It came out simultaneously on HBO Max and in theaters, which Village Roadshow Entertainment Group says is a [breach of contract](. Warner described the lawsuit as “frivolous.” Peter Thiel is stepping down from Meta’s board. The billionaire investor is [reportedly focusing]( on Republican politics. Peng Shuai watched Eileen Gu win gold in Beijing. The [tennis player]( and [freestyle skier](, who both represent China, are under different kinds of scrutiny during the Winter Games. Sponsor content by Deloitte Innovation has an image problem. The 'i-word' is invoked so often, and by so many, that it has come to mean at once everything, and as a result, nothing at all. Yet, with Deloitte’s inaugural Innovation Study, we hope to clarify what this business-critical concept means to business and technology leaders working in the trenches today. To this end, Deloitte surveyed and interviewed more than 400 business, technology, and innovation leaders across six industries in the United States on the topic of innovation, and how they are moving beyond the buzzword toward a new and improved understanding of the state of corporate innovation programs. [Propel your innovation]( What to watch for The nominations for the 94th Oscars are announced today, and will most likely include some predictable favorites along with some major surprises. Will the Academy recognize superhero movies? Specifically, Spider-Man: No Way Home, which has been angling for an inclusion in the best picture group. The film is on track to take the place of James Cameron’s Avatar as the [third highest grossing]( domestic film behind Avengers: Endgame and Star Wars: Episode VII – The Force Awakens. Although venerated directors like Martin Scorsese and Jane Campion are [vocal skeptics](, superhero blockbusters are becoming increasingly difficult for the Academy to ignore. An Oscar win in March could tear down the velvet rope keeping them from the cinema VIP club. Two wrongs don’t make a right [A table showing the Wall Street Journal's 2021 airline scorecard, with Frontier and Spirit among the lowest consistently in each category, including on-time arrivals, canceled flights, extreme delays, and complaints.] [Two of the worst airlines in the US]( are merging to create the country’s “most competitive ultra-low fare airline.” Frontier has agreed to buy Spirit for $2.9 billion, in a deal valued at more than $6 billion. The two airlines currently offer some of the cheapest fares in the business, and the merger makes clear they’re trying to establish themselves as a more formidable competitor against rivals that now offer similar economy pricing. One giant ultra-low fare airline may be an exciting prospect, but high fees currently make the two airlines among the least cost-effective options, according to [a Feb. 3 NerdWallet analysis](. The robots are coming [Humanoid Robot Pepper is unveiled at the World of Me: Store of the near future installation in London] Reuters/Hannah McKay Autonomous robots have long been part of an aspirational future, but recent advances in AI are accelerating that development. Think beyond helpful bots running preprogrammed motions; these are robots that can see, learn, think, and react to their surroundings. While we may not always be able to see these robots, we’ll rely on them constantly. [Here’s how they’ll make our world a better place](. 🔮 Our [Next 10 Years series]( explores how industries marked by rapid change are adapting and evolving. Quartz announcement 🖼 Do you have opinions on Quartz's visual media and style? We'd love to hear them! Take this [five-minute survey]( to tell us what you think and how we can improve. Handpicked Quartz 🎶 [Shah Rukh Khan’s tribute to Lata Mangeshkar has turned iconic]( 🔎 [What Spotify’s CEO was really telling employees in his memo about Joe Rogan]( 📈 [Retail investors’ exposure to Indian companies touches an all-time high]( 👯‍♂️ [Which global business leader most closely shares your views on crypto and Big Tech?]( 🏆 [How much will the winners of the Africa Cup of Nations receive?]( 📄 [Being overqualified for a job impacts women and men differently]( Sponsor content by Deloitte Innovation has an image problem. The 'i-word' is invoked so often, and by so many, that it has come to mean at once everything, and as a result, nothing at all. Yet, with Deloitte’s inaugural Innovation Study, we hope to clarify what this business-critical concept means to business and technology leaders working in the trenches today. To this end, Deloitte surveyed and interviewed more than 400 business, technology, and innovation leaders across six industries in the United States on the topic of innovation, and how they are moving beyond the buzzword toward a new and improved understanding of the state of corporate innovation programs. [Propel your innovation]( Surprising discoveries Chimpanzees use insects as a salve. But there’s a lot [scientists don’t get]( about the bug medicine. For the first time, a person with a severed spinal cord walked. The ability was restored with the help of [an electrical implant](. Some microbes have learned to eat plastic. It could be a win for our [massive waste problem](. The Pacific Island of Palau got its first digital residents. Their [welcome email]( had some serious [Matt-Damon-in-that-crypto-commercial]( vibes. The puffer coat hit a milestone in 1973. What happens when Norma Kamali and a sleeping bag meet? Find out in the latest episode of the [Quartz Obsession podcast](. 🎧 Listen on: [Apple Podcasts]( | [Spotify]( | [Google]( | [Stitcher]( SPREAD THE WORD Over 500k readers and counting. You already know why half a million people read the Daily Brief, so why not spread the word? [Share the Daily Brief today]( and get rewarded. Our best wishes for a productive day. Send any news, comments, insect cures, and island residencies to hi@qz.com. Get the most out of Quartz by [downloading our iOS app]( and [becoming a member](. Today’s Daily Brief was brought to you by Hasit Shah, Adario Strange, Courtney Vinopal, Susan Howson, and Morgan Haefner. [facebook]( [twitter]( [external-link]( Enjoying Quartz Daily Brief? Forward it to a friend! They can [click here]( to sign up. If you’re looking to unsubscribe, [click here](. Quartz | 675 Avenue of the Americas, 4th Fl | New York, NY 10010 | United States Copyright © 2022 Quartz, All rights reserved.

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