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Kenton Shafer – Dominion Post

Kenton Dale Shafer, 85, of Dale City, Virginia, passed away on October 10, 2021.

Kenton was born in Lowesville on February 27, 1936, to Jesse and Opal Shafer. He attended Morgantown High School. He married Theresa on June 19, 1960 in Morgantown. He worked as a subcontractor administrator for Hughes Aircraft. He served in the United States Air Force and worked as a manager for engine equipment maintenance. During his service he was awarded the Good Conduct Medal. He was a member of the Buckhall United Methodist Church in Manassas, Virginia. Kenton was also heavily involved in the Optimists Club and the Fairfax Rod and Gun Club.

Kenton leaves behind his 61-year-old loving wife, Theresa Ann Shafer; his son, Kenton Shafer II; and his grandsons Nathan Dean Shafer and Jesse Ryan Shafer.

Services for Kenton will be held at Buckhall United Methodist Church, 10251 Moore Drive, Manassas, VA 20111, Sunday October 17. A memorial service will be held from 2:00 p.m. to 3:00 p.m., with a memorial service starting at 3:00 p.m. All are welcome to attend the services for refreshments and fellowship.

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Man charged with sexually assaulting Chantilly High School students

A man is charged after allegedly entering Chantilly High School in Virginia on Sept. 27 and sexually assaulting a student there – and Fairfax County Police are looking for other possible victims.

A man is charged after allegedly entering Chantilly High School in Virginia on Sept. 27 and sexually assaulting a student there – and Fairfax County Police are investigating the possibility of other victims.

Galata Bekele Bengessa, 22, has been charged with violent kidnapping, sexual harassment and trespassing, according to the Fairfax County Police Department. The investigation has uncovered two other possible victims who reported similar incidents involving Bekele Bengessa that occurred outside of school grounds.

On the morning of September 27th, police said that Bekele Bengessa, wearing a mask, entered Chantilly High School with students. He approached the female victim who said she believed he was a different student. According to the police, Bekele Bengessa started a conversation with the girl and then touched her illegally.

Police said she escaped when other students approached and contacted her mother, who called the police.

Officers then searched the area around the school and found Bekele Bengessa walking near Route 50 and the Fairfax County Parkway. During the arrest, he made statements that caused the officers to worry about his welfare, so he was taken to a hospital for treatment.

When Fairfax County Police learned on Wednesday that Bekele Bengessa had been released and was back home, they arrested him for the September 27 incident and took him to an adult detention center.

Police ask anyone with information about the incident or who may have had inappropriate contact with the suspect to call the Major Crimes Bureau at 703-246-7800, Option 3.

Tips can also be given anonymously by calling 1-866-411-TIPS (866-411-8477), by SMS – enter “FCCS” plus tip to 847411 – or online by clicking here.

Anonymous tipsters are eligible for cash rewards ranging from $ 100 to $ 1,000 if their information results in an arrest.

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Senate Federal Credit Union opens new headquarters in Alexandria

Credit union opens headquarters and branch in the building near Braddock Road underground station

Released

October 14, 2021



from

Katherine Schulte


From left: Justin Wilson, Alexandria City Mayor, USSFCU Chairman Jay Moore, USSFCU Board Meeting and Guest of Honor Bertie H. Bowman, and USSFCU President and CEO Timothy L. Anderson

The U.S. Senate Federal Credit Union (USSFCU) celebrated an opening ceremony for its corporate headquarters and retail facility at Braddock Station in Alexandria on Wednesday.

In 2018, the USSFCU selected 1310 Braddock Place, which was previously the headquarters of National Industries for the Blind. The new Bowman Branch on the first floor replaces the credit union location on Eisenhower Avenue. It was opened to the public on Tuesday. The credit union’s headquarters were also on Eisenhower Avenue, but in a different building.

When the USSFCU was founded in 1935, its headquarters were in the basement of the Russell Senate Office Building. It moved to the Hart Senate Office Building in 1983, then to a stand-alone facility in Alexandria in the 1990s.

The USSFCU named the building after Bertie H. Bowman, its longest-serving board member. Bowman served on the board for 46 years, including two terms as chairman. Bowman also served the U.S. Senate for more than 65 years. Under his leadership, the union rose from a few million assets to more than $ 1 billion, according to a press release.

“We are celebrating an incredibly significant time in the history of the USSFCU,” said Tim Anderson, President and CEO of the USSFCU, in a statement. “Our mission is to improve the financial wellbeing of our members by integrating sustainability, security and service into every solution. This purpose is physically embodied in our new home. “

USSFCU serves the US Senate and Capitol Hill boroughs. It has $ 1.2 billion in net worth.

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Bears-Arlington partnership “makes too much sense to perkily fire”

from

As the only one of ten members of the Illinois Racing Board (IRB) directly concerned with the impending closure of Arlington International Racecourse and the devastating impact on the state’s racetrack, Commissioner Alan Henry said at Thursday’s monthly meeting that a losing bidder The circuit sale is still working behind the scenes to work out a deal to keep racing alive alongside a new football stadium on the 326 acre property.

Back on September 29, Churchill Downs, Inc. (CDI), the gaming group that owns Arlington, announced that it had signed a $ 197.2 million purchase and sale agreement that would become the crown jewel of Illinois racing for the The planned construction of a new stadium and mixed-use development would be transferred to the Chicago Bears.

With Arlington out of the equation for 2022, the Chicago metropolitan thoroughbred mines will stunt down to just 76 programs with two seasonal get-togethers at Hawthorne Race Course, which also hosts 75 Standardbred races next year.

The day after the Arlington sale was announced, the Senate Executive Gaming Committee met to discuss the future of horse racing in Illinois. Henry said at the October 14th IRB meeting that he “got off with a bad feeling” after listening to the hearing.

“I understand it looks grim,” Henry went on. “But 30-year-old Marine Corps veteran Roy Arnold, the front man of the underbidding, made it clear to the subcommittee that he was not going to retire.”

Arnold previously worked for CDI as President of Arlington, starting in 2006 and resigning in 2010. When the track went up for sale earlier this year, he worked with a group of developers and investors to try and buy the property. This group’s offer was the only known offer to keep racing at Arlington.

When the bears won the bidding process, Arnold said at the Senate hearing the next day that he was ready to either work with the new owners to keep the 125 acres track operational, or step in and pursue the purchase if the Soccer team withdrew.

Henry said that a sales and purchase agreement “is not proof of a deal. There are still many variables out there. Just one of them is that Chicago’s mayor might throw some serious cards on the table at any moment [regarding a counter-proposal to keep the Bears in their current downtown home] now that the bears have called it a bluff. “

Henry continued, “Sure, the final closure of Arlington Park is likely, but it is not inevitable. Why? Because a partnership between Bears and Arlington Park makes too much sense to be carelessly dismissed. And because when the bears withdraw [Arnold’s group] is available.”

Henry said that, as everyone in the industry knows, the 2022 racing calendar is a stopgap solution that is likely to be unsustainable beyond next year. Half a season for both races is just not enough. “

One idea that has been circulated is to build a beaten track on the site of a former state mental health facility in the village of Tinley Park, about 30 miles southwest of Chicago. This would allow Hawthorne to switch to full-time thoroughbred racing, and each breed would have their own year-round racetrack.

“The consensus among riders is that building a harness racing track in Tinley Park is an integral part of the solution and should be treated as a priority. But it just doesn’t happen right now, ”said Henry.

“I’ve heard some Thoroughbred coaches are now considering moving to Florida, Louisiana and Arkansas at the end of the current Hawthorne meeting and not going back in late winter,” said Henry. “Some are also looking to Minnesota, Iowa, Indiana, and other states for 2022, as stalls will have to close next summer.”

Henry continued, “Then there is the reality that prepaid betting platforms are rapidly taking up increasing percentages of the betting account. That means getting more and more money from that [horsemen’s] already miserable purses. The laws that regulate this division must be rewritten to better ensure a healthy industry. “

Henry also noted that while Racinos have been legal in the state since June 2019, they are not in use at Hawthorne or FanDuel Sportsbook and Horse Racing (the renamed Fairmount Park), so gaming revenue does not add to the wallets.

Henry suggested that Hawthorne and FanDuel should have a fixed item on every IRB agenda going forward to update their progress on building Racinos and also to “address the harness trace situation”.

But apart from one commissioner who thanked Henry for his “particularly interesting” comments, no other IRB members expressed support for Henry’s proposal on the standing agenda item. And none of them interfered with the subject of “comment comments” on the agenda about the condition of the circuit.

This “elephant-in-the-room” pattern of largely ignoring the state’s worst and most pressing racing problem has continued at IRB meetings for much of 2021. With the exception of Henry, who has spoken out on Arlington’s imminent closure six times in a row since CDI declared the property would not be sold for horse racing, the other nine IRB commissioners have for the most part held a breathtaking silence over the IRB Chicago racing collapse preserved.

What other topics did the IRB take up on Thursday? The procedure was almost entirely official.

With 10-0 votes, the IRB approved the licensing of an outrider and an entry clerk for Hawthorne’s upcoming harness meeting, paid Quarter Horse purses to FanDuel for the four races that were carded last season, and signed the grant of a par- Mutuel tax credit for track and off-track betting licensees.

The IRB also had to pull back and ratify its schedule for 2022 from last month as the way it was elected did not comply with state law on open meetings. This required the commissioners to electronically sign the related documentation and the meeting stalled briefly when several commissioners could not figure out how to do it.

The IRB also spent time during Thursday’s public session congratulating an employee on running a marathon and discussing the upcoming move to new office space, which has been described as a more modern “new playground”.

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Now shipped worldwide: SenseGlove Nova, haptic force feedback gloves for professional VR / AR training and research | news

DELFT, Netherlands, October 14, 2021 / PRNewswire-PRWeb / – SenseGlove, a leading developer of force and haptic feedback gloves, today announced the start of global shipping of SenseGlove Nova, a new version of haptic force feedback gloves designed specifically for professional VR -Training and research purposes have been developed. Originally unveiled as a prototype at CES 2021, the SenseGlove Nova features an updated flexible form factor combined with unparalleled haptic technologies and smooth hand tracking that allows users to visualize shapes, textures, stiffness, shock and resistance in virtual reality more easily than ever to feel beforehand. Available for purchase on the SenseGlove website, Nova’s ease of use and touch-enable technology help enhance all kinds of VR training programs such as testing physical prototypes. Use cases include VR training, virtual prototyping, research and telerobotics, and marketing. Watch a short video of SenseGlove Nova in action here.

“Easy-to-use and accessible haptic gloves represent a huge step forward for the VR training industry,” said Gijs the butter, CEO of SenseGlove. “The ease of use of the gloves is just as important as their technical properties, as they allow natural interaction and the opportunity to expand the training process. That’s why the SenseGlove Nova is lightweight, wireless, compatible with standalone headsets, and easy to put on and take off. “

SenseGlove Nova features and specifications include:

  • An improved material that increases durability and comfort that consists of two main parts: the soft gloves, which are made from a smart textile material that contains antibacterial fabric, and an electronic part that is attached to the soft gloves and is injection-molded.
  • Available in three different sizes, the gloves can be easily detached from the electronics and washed if necessary.
  • Retail for $ 5,000 for a set of two gloves. Bulk orders of 10 or more Nova gloves are available at a discounted price of $ 3,500 per set of gloves.
  • A quick start guide, glove charger, tracker mounts, and attachment tools are also included. Oculus Quest and HTC Vive headset users must install their controllers / trackers onto the gloves using the mounts from the Nova box. The controllers and trackers are used for hand recognition and must be installed in this way due to the limited access to the API of the headsets.

This is how SenseGlove Force Feedback technology works.

SenseGlove’s proprietary force feedback technology enables lifelike interactions, which is vital for training complex tasks. The SenseGlove exoskeleton is inspired by the human tendon muscle system. By applying resistance from its magnetic friction brakes, SenseGlove emulates the feeling of object density and size. The SenseGlove Nova has four brakes that are assigned to each finger from the thumb to the ring finger. Each brake delivers a force of up to 20 N, which corresponds to the weight of a 2 kg (4.4 lbs) stone on each finger, and provides unparalleled force feedback. The varying force transmitted to the fingertips by mechanical wires enables SenseGlove to enhance training simulations with a variety of virtual objects, from sturdy motors to fragile lightbulbs.

For the vibrotactile feedback of the SenseGlove Nova, SenseGlove has embedded advanced voice coil actuator technology that enables the Nova to reproduce the feeling of realistic button clicks and impact simulations, which are crucial for virtual reality training with tools and dashboards. Both the thumb and forefinger have their own vibrotactile actuator, while the voice coil actuator is located in the hub of the glove. The unique force and vibrotactile feedback is integrated into a user-friendly flexible glove. Haptic functions, advanced motion tracking and compatibility with the latest standalone headsets and scalable prices make SenseGlove Nova the new standard for professional VR interactions.

Since his first debut in January 2021 At the CES, the production prototype from Nova was tested and checked by over 200 XR experts and has already been used in professional training solutions. The Royal Dutch Army’s Ministry of Defense simulation center was one of the first to begin testing the SenseGlove Nova, using its force feedback haptics to create a natural response to complex machines being assembled. Captain Ewoud, Research and Development Officer at the Royal Netherlands Army’s Simulation Center, said: “Using normal controllers in VR is an artificial way of interacting, nobody pushes the button with their fist. Usually you press a button with your finger and move things must be as natural as possible. Adding haptics is the next step in simulated training, and I firmly believe SenseGlove Nova is a good first step in that direction. “

Corporate customers have been using SenseGlove in VR training, research and telerobotics since 2018. The previous version of SenseGlove (DK1) was bought and used by more than 150 companies and institutions, including Volkswagen, Airbus, Scania, Honda, Procter & Gamble, Siemens, the Cambridge University and Fraunhofer. With precise tracking and strong force feedback, the DK1 is now used for VR research and telerobotics, while SenseGlove Nova is used for training and enterprise solutions.

About SenseGlove

SenseGlove develops force and haptic feedback gloves that enable professionals to feel and interact with virtual objects for VR training and research purposes. Every time you interact with the SenseGlove, virtual reality feels like a physical, real environment. Today, SenseGlove products are used to increase the effectiveness of VR / AR research (SenseGlove DK1) or for training and business solutions (SenseGlove Nova) for customers such as Volkswagen, Airbus, Scania, Honda, Cambridge University, TNO, Fraunhofer, Siemens, The Royal Dutch Army and others. Founded in 2017 and headquartered at YES! Delft Tech Incubator in the Netherlands, SenseGlove is a privately held company supported by Forward.one and Value Creation Capital. Follow us on LinkedIn and Twitter or learn more at https://www.senseglove.com.

Media contact

Mindy M. Hull, Mercury Global Partners for SenseGlove, +1 415-889-9977, senseglove@wearemgp.com

SOURCE SenseGlove

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Cynthia Oake’s obituary (2021) – Hamden, CT

Cynthia Oakes
Cynthia Miller Oakes of Hamden died on October 10, 2021; she slept and in peace. Cynthia was the loving wife of Abner Oakes, who died before her in May. Born in Lewiston, ME, she was the daughter of Doris Eyre and Carlton Pierce Miller. She lived with Abner in Hamden for over 50 years.
She attended Melrose (MA) High School and graduated from Westbrook Junior (ME) College in 1954. She and Abner met at the Newagen Seaside Inn in Southport, ME, when she was working in Boothbay Harbor and Abner was stationed at Naval Air Station in Braunschweig. They married in February 1959.
She and Abner lived in Hanover, NH from 1960 to 1970, where she was involved in various community activities. In winter she was a ski instructor for the Ford Sayre ski program, often seen on the slopes in her long raccoon coat. When she and Abner moved to Hamden in 1970, she was moved by the untimely death of her younger brother Tony, a Navy pilot during the Vietnam War. To raise awareness of Prisoners of War and Missing Soldiers (POWs / MIAs), she used her role as Chair of the Veterans Committee of the Hamden Junior Women’s Club to influence the city to plant a freedom tree in a park across from Hamden City Hall to Prisoners of war and this MIA should be further highlighted.
Cynthia was an entrepreneur before the word became fashionable. In Hanover she had a huge garden and sent her sons through the neighborhood to sell zucchini and tomatoes from a Radio Flyer car. She and Abner bred and sold pocket beagles and when they moved to Hamden they had a litter of puppies and their mother in the back of the station wagon. In Hamden, she opened a craft store on Whitney Avenue, the Craft Fair, and had three ovens in the basement of her house to burn her clay creations. On the weekends, she and Abner sold their wares at craft fairs in New England.
Particularly special for Cynthia was her family time in Little Neck, a beach community in Ipswich, MA. Her father built a cottage there in the late 1940s, and she and her boys lived in or rented one in the cottage during the summers while her husband was working. She fished with her sons, pulled lobster pots, dug clams and swam in the cold Ipswich River.
Cynthia leaves behind three sons, Abner IV (Laura Jewett) of Bethesda, MD, Jeffrey (Margaret) of Manassas, VA, and David (Nancy) of North Haven; her sisters Susan Henry of North Conway, NH and Judith Ward of York, ME; seven grandchildren; and a great grandson.
Relatives and friends are invited to visit family on Friday, October 29, 9:00 am to 11:00 am at the Beecher and Bennett Funeral Home, 2300 Whitney Avenue, Hamden. The funeral will follow at 11:00 a.m. She is buried in Centerville Cemetery. Those interested in honoring Cynthia’s legacy can donate to the Dementia Society of America at https://www.dementiasociety.org/donate. To offer their condolences to their families, please visit www.beecherandbennett.com.

Published by The New Haven Register on October 14, 2021.

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Lee Highway, Lee-Jackson Highway renaming Feedback wanted

FAIRFAX COUNTY, VA – Fairfax County’s Confederate Names Task Force is receiving public feedback on the Lee Highway and Lee-Jackson Memorial Highway.

The task force was set up in July by the board of directors to decide whether the two highways should be renamed. In 2020, the board asked the History Commission to prepare an inventory report listing Confederate monuments, street names, and locations in Fairfax County. The report found at least 157 locations within the county with Confederate monuments, names, and locations.

The two highways considered for renaming were the main highways with the Confederate names on the list. Both highway names are associated with Confederate General Robert E. Lee. The Lee-Jackson Memorial Highway references Confederate General Stonewall Jackson. Both highways were named or renamed for the Confederate generals between 1919 and 1922.

US Route 29 in Virginia is called the Lee Highway for the most part, except in the City of Falls Church, where it is Washington Street. Arlington County’s board of directors voted to rename its portion of the Lee Highway Langston Boulevard, but there have been no sign changes yet. The Route 309 section of the Lee Highway / Old Lee Highway is already being considered for renaming to Arlington in November.

Lee Highway sign in Arlington County. Emily Leayman / Patch

US Route 50 in Virginia has sections called the Lee-Jackson Memorial Highway and John Mosby Highway, both of which have Confederate references. Route 50 in Fairfax City is known as Fairfax Boulevard and is known as Arlington Boulevard east of Fairfax City in Fairfax County and Arlington County.

The Fairfax County’s task force is asked to make a recommendation to rename the two highways by the end of 2021. If the task force recommends a name change, it would make recommendations on alternative names. The task force has been in session since August and consists of residents and representatives from civic organizations, homeowner associations, religious groups, historical groups and business.

The final decision on the renaming of the motorways lies with the board of directors.

Contributions can be made available to the task force until November 12th. A survey is available online in several languages ​​and from Fairfax County’s libraries and county offices. Comments can also be emailed to DOTConfederateNamesTaskForce@fairfaxcounty.gov; Mail to Fairfax County Department of Transportation, 4050 Legato Road, Suite 400, Fairfax, VA 22033; or by calling the Fairfax County Department of Transportation at 703-877-5600.

A number of listening sessions will take place in the coming days to collect more input:

  • Thursday, October 28, 2021, 7:00 p.m.-8: 30 p.m. Providence Community Center, 3001 Vaden Drive, Fairfax, VA 22031
  • Saturday, October 30, 2021, 10 a.m. – 11:30 a.m. Fairfax County Government Center, Board Auditorium 12000 Government Center Pkwy, Fairfax, VA 22030
  • Monday, November 1, 2021, 7-8.30 p.m. WebEx Virtual Community Listening Meeting: https://fairfax.webex.com/fairfax/onstage/g.php?MTID=e0c5594bc080cc6ce62b19b3f6f9cfc3a, or call 1-844 -621 -3956 (toll free) with access code 2339 357 4472
  • Thursday, November 4, 2021, 7:00 p.m.-8: 30 p.m. Sully District Governmental Center, 4900 Stonecroft Blvd, Chantilly, VA 20151

For more information and past meetings, see the Confederate Names Task Force website.

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3 Alexandria School Campus Closed Due to Anonymous Threat – NBC4 Washington

Three school buildings in Alexandria were locked down Thursday due to an anonymous threat, school officials say.

Alexandria City High School, including the King Street and Minnie Howard campuses, was closed first, Alexandria City public schools announced before 8 a.m.

The school district announced after 10 a.m. that Francis C. Hammond Middle School was also closed. The school district announced that this lock was lifted at 10:45 a.m.

Police said they received a call about a middle school shooting around 9:30 am.

“The officers ransacked the school and found that the call was unfounded. A student was taken to the hospital after suffering a medical incident while raiding the school, ”police said.

The high school will have an asynchronous study day on October 14, according to an announcement on its website.

Alexandria police are investigating the threat to determine its credibility, school officials said.

Alexandria City High School was locked down a little over a week ago, on October 6, after a student was found with a gun, the school said. Sources told News4 that it was a fully loaded gun.

The second lockdown comes a day after Alexandria City Council voted to temporarily reinstate school resource officers in middle and high schools after hours of heated debates that frustrated the city’s mayor. The council voted 4 to 3 to send the uniformed police back to schools by the end of the school year.

A decision last spring removed SROs from schools this school year. Funding has been reallocated to mental health programs. Some parents and educators successfully argued that fall that officials in schools were indispensable.

Stay with NBC Washington for more information on this developing story.

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Arlington County Launches New Website

The Arlington County Government is launching a new website, the first major refresh to the county’s online presence in more than seven years. The site will launch on Monday October 18th. Users can still access the site by visiting www.arlingtonva.us.

The updated website brings the necessary improvements to the overall stability, security, and performance of the website. Improvements have also been made to the website with a light design update and navigation updates to better meet the community’s digital needs.

“The county website is the first, and sometimes only, place for many of our residents to find important information about Arlington,” said County Board Chairman Matt de Ferranti. “This upgrade will help make the website an easily accessible, safe, and reliable resource for our residents and businesses to contact their government.”

Today more than ever, people rely on the county’s website for news and information covering almost every area of ​​their life in Arlington, whether it be a public health announcement, getting a permit, watching a meeting of the County board or paying taxes online. This upgrade will ensure that residents, businesses, and visitors alike have a positive and productive online experience with the county government and can safely and securely access the information they need.

Some new site benefits that users will experience:

  • A new, slightly refreshed look and feel
  • Extended search function
  • Tile design for easier one-click access
  • Strategic content layout for improved site navigation based on analytics and the most popular content
  • Newly designed “News & Events” area for easier access
  • Improved maps, including a new What’s Near Me? Feature that allows the public to search for facilities and amenities with any address.

Use the new site

The URL for the county website (www.arlingtonva.us) is retained, but with added functionality to make it easier for users to get to the most requested services, programs, news, meetings, information, and more.

Here are some tips to help you navigate your new website easily.

  1. Start from the new homepage. The home page provides quick links to the county’s most requested services and programs, information about upcoming events, the latest news, and more.
  2. Check out the improved search! The new search bar at the top of the website has a prediction feature that can help users better find the content they need.
  3. Use the new website navigation. The main navigation bar on the right side of the site was developed using community feedback on how you would find content.
  4. Update website bookmarks. Links from the previous site may not work. Take a minute to go to the webpage you want and create a new bookmark.
  5. Try it What’s near me? Specialty. This new feature allows you to search based on your location. Find county facilities, parks, polling stations, fire stations, and more!
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Solana hackathon winner Nova Finance raises $ 3 million

Edinburgh, Scotland, October 14, 2021 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) – Nova is a programmable asset framework that enables people to access DeFi without learning complex financial management skills. Within the product, users can create a portfolio of assets that automatically generate returns through return strategies while executing investment strategies such as dollar cost averaging, profit taking, and more.

This new breed of synthetic asset enables cryptocurrency experts to program assets to follow complex investment strategies and create portfolios that less experienced users can follow and invest in.

Tom Sichel, one of the key contributors to the Nova Finance Protocol, says: “We are committed to working with investors who could add significant value through their capital, knowledge and networks. I am pleased to say that we have succeeded in this, because Nova undoubtedly has a diverse and experienced group of investors. Your support will drive adoption and utility of Nova’s programmable asset framework. “

Adam Greenberg, another contributor to the Nova Finance Protocol, says, “This funding allows us to grow our team and increase the functionality of our programmable asset framework. In particular, it allows us to continue to focus on collaboration and integration with other DeFi protocols within the Solana ecosystem and beyond. “

Charles Read, co-founder of Rarestone Capital, added, “Rarestone is delighted to have incubated Nova Finance from the start. It has been a privilege to work with the founders in all areas of product architecture, token engineering, system design, go-to-market and marketing. All in all, we believe Nova’s novel and simplified approach to portfolio management and crypto asset investing will serve to attract a new generation of users, which will have a positive impact on this new and emerging asset class as a whole. “

The Solana Hackathon winners will conduct an IDO early in the fourth quarter to launch their governance token. Shortly afterwards, the Nova Finance Protocol is started in the Solana Mainnet. Nova Governance tokens allow users to match and prioritize portfolios for different investment groups and receive rewards for doing so. More details will follow soon.

Media contact: Adam Greenberg, team@novafinance.app

Website: https://novafinance.app/#/
Medium: https://medium.com/novafinancedefi
Project overview: https://medium.com/novafinancedefi/introducing-nova-finance-5284f117460d
Twitter: https://twitter.com/NovaFinance_