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Apple Inc AAPL pays some of the highest salaries in Silicon Valley, and for good reason. The Cupertino-based company is rarely thefirst to bring a product to market, but with the help of top-paid talent, Apple just does it better than everyone else.

Setting The Stage: It all started with Steve Jobs.The Apple co-founder didn't just unveilnew products, he would sell the world on Apple's versionbefore anyoneeven knew what he was offering.

Jobs could shape a product presentation into a story that kept audiences anxiously awaiting the next chapter. He would meticulously craft the unveiling, the same way Apple carefully crafts its products.

Apple carries that on today. The company doesn't need to haveits hand in every cookie jar, instead, it focuses on being the best in the areas it decides to touch, and it hires some of the best talent to help make its vision a reality.

Check This Out:Steve Jobs Was The Master Of Unveiling Apple Products: This Was His Secret For Leaving Audiences Awestruck

Taking A Bite Out Of The Apple: Appledoesn't makesalary information public, but the tech giantis required to discloseoffers in work-visa applications submitted to the U.S. Office of Foreign Labor Certification, pera Business Insider report.

The highestbase salary in the pay data was $322,000, offeredto two of the company's software development engineer managers. The lowest offer Applemade was just over$102,000 to a business systems analyst. For comparison, Google offered talent salaries as low as $55,000 and Microsoft made offers as low as $77,000.

The following data doesn't includestock-based compensation and grants that can significantly add to overall pay. It also excludes individualperformance rewards and bonuses.

Here's a look at some of the base salaryranges Apple offered to prospective workersforopenpositions in the first quarter of 2022. Global Supply Manager: $145,000 to $185,000 Engineering Project Manager: $144,912 to $185,203 Architectural/Engineering Manager:$200,750 to$286,874 Software Development Engineer Manager: $178,000 to$322,000 Hardware Development Engineer: $135,000 to $210,000 Software Development Engineer: $138,762 to $216,300 Manufacturing Design Engineer: $124,200 to $203,335 Machine Learning Engineer: $155,000 to $205,000 ASIC Design Engineer: $105,080to $217,680 Systems Design Engineer: $134,307 to $217,990 AR/VR Development Engineer: $127,000 to $230,000 Application Development Engineer: $131,808 to $255,000 Financial Analyst: $110,000 to $181,406 Data Scientist: $119,000 to $186,929 HI Graphics Designer: $140,000 to $201,764 Legal Counsel: $210,000 to 225,000

Read Next:Making Big Bucks At Google: A Look At How Much Alphabet Analysts, Managers And Engineers Get Paid

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Russia accused of escalating hybrid attacks in Europe after Baltic Sea telecoms cables cut

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Russia accused of escalating hybrid attacks in Europe after Baltic Sea telecoms cables cut

Russia has been accused by European governments of escalating hybrid attacks on Ukraine’s Western allies after two fibre-optic telecommunication cables in the Baltic Sea were severed.

Russia is systematically attacking European security architecture,” the foreign ministers of the UK, France, Germany, Italy and Poland said in a joint statement.

“Moscow’s escalating hybrid activities against NATO and EU countries are also unprecedented in their variety and scale, creating significant security risks.”

The statement was not made in direct response to the cutting of the cables, Reuters reported, citing two European security sources.

War latest: Ukraine fires six US long-range missiles at Russia, Moscow says

Germany’s defence minister Boris Pistorius said: “No one believes that these cables were cut accidentally.”

He added: “We also have to assume, without knowing it yet, that it is sabotage.”

Investigations have been launched into the destruction of the cables earlier this week.

One linked Finland and Germany while the other connected Sweden and Lithuania.

Russia has repeatedly denied it has sabotaged European infrastructure and has accused the West of making such claims to damage Russian interests.

Read more:
Is Putin ready to reach for the nuclear button?
Where do Russia and Ukraine stand militarily now?
Why UK missiles would only have marginal effect on Russia

Investigations launched into possible sabotage

One cable was damaged on Sunday morning and the other went out of service on Monday.

The Swedish Prosecution Authority has launched a preliminary criminal investigation into the damaged cables on suspicion of possible sabotage.

The country’s civil defence minister Carl-Oskar Bohlin said its armed forces and coastguard had picked up ship movements corresponding with the damage to the cables.

“We of course take this very seriously against the background of the serious security situation,” he said.

Finland’s National Bureau of Investigation said it had also launched an investigation, but Sweden would lead the probe.

NATO’s Maritime Centre for the Security of Critical Undersea Infrastructure was working closely with allies in the investigation, an official said.

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Baltic Sea infrastructure damaged

It is not the first time such infrastructure has been damaged in the Baltic Sea.

In September 2022, three Nord Stream gas pipelines between Russia and Germany were destroyed seven months after Moscow invaded Ukraine.

No one took responsibility for the blasts and while some Western officials initially blamed Moscow, which the Kremlin denied, US and German media reported pro-Ukrainian actors may have been responsible.

The companies owning the two cables damaged earlier this week have said it was not yet clear what caused the outages.

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Jeremy Clarkson says government should ‘back down’ on farmers’ inheritance tax as he joins protest

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Rays say new stadium unlikely to be ready by ’28

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Rays say new stadium unlikely to be ready by '28

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — A combination of severe hurricane damage to Tropicana Field and political delays on financing means it is highly unlikely the Tampa Bay Rays‘ planned new stadium will be ready for the 2028 season, if at all, the team said Tuesday.

Rays top executives said in a letter to the Pinellas County Commission that the team has already spent $50 million for early work on the new $1.3 billion ballpark and cannot proceed further because of delays in approval of bonds for the public share of the costs.

“The Rays organization is saddened and stunned by this unfortunate turn of events” said the letter, signed by co-presidents Brian Auld and Matt Silverman, who noted that the overall project was previously approved by the County Commission and the City of St. Petersburg.

“As we have made clear at every step of this process, a 2029 ballpark delivery would result in significantly higher costs that we are not able to absorb alone,” the letter added.

The tumultuous series of events came after Hurricane Milton ripped the roof off Tropicana Field on Oct. 9, forcing the Rays to play the 2025 season at the spring training home of the New York Yankees, 11,000-seat Steinbrenner Field in Tampa. Then, the Pinellas County Commission postponed a planned Oct. 29 vote on the bond issue that the Rays said has thrown the new 30,000-seat ballpark timeline off.

The commission was meeting again Tuesday on the bond issue, but its chair suggested a vote could be delayed again.

“We know we’re going to be in Steinbrenner in 2025 and we don’t know much beyond that,” Auld said in an interview.

Asked if Major League Baseball can survive long-term in the Tampa Bay area, Rays Principal Owner Stuart Sternberg said the outlook is “less rosy than it was three weeks ago. We’re going to do all that we can, as we’ve tried for 20 years, to keep the Rays here for generations to come.”

The team’s contract with the city of St. Petersburg requires that the Rays play three more seasons at Tropicana Field assuming it is repaired. The cost of fixing the ballpark in time for the 2026 season is pegged at more than $55 million for a building scheduled to be torn down when the new facility is ready.

Under the original plan, Pinellas County would spend about $312.5 million for the new ballpark and the city of St. Petersburg around $417 million including infrastructure improvements. The Rays and their partner, the Hines development company, would cover the remaining costs including any overruns.

It isn’t just baseball that is affected. The new Rays ballpark is part of a larger urban renovation project known as the Historic Gas Plant District, which refers to a predominantly Black neighborhood that was forced out by construction of Tropicana Field and an interstate highway spur.

The broader $6.5 billion project would transform an 86-acre (34-hectare) tract in the city’s downtown, with plans in the coming years for a Black history museum, affordable housing, a hotel, green space, entertainment venues, and office and retail space. There’s the promise of thousands of jobs as well.

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