Day: September 17, 2025

Thousands of protesters took to the streets of London on Wednesday to protest against the second state visit of President Donald Trump.
Demonstrators gathered from around 2 p.m., local time, with many holding anti-Trump signs emblazoned with slogans such as “Go away, Trump” and “Stop Trump.” Some protesters could also be seen waving Palestinian flags as they called for an end to the Israel-Hamas war.
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Organized by the Stop Trump Coalition, attendees marched towards the British parliament. The protest had additional support from groups connected to climate activism and gender equality.
The Stop Trump Coalition said that a number of protests would begin around 6 p.m. local time across the rest of the U.K. in cities such as Manchester, Liverpool, Cardiff and Newcastle.
Read More: Trump and King Charles Attend Prestigious Military Ceremony Amid Mass Protests Over State Visit
A number of “Baby Trump” replica balloons were on display amongst the crowd in central London.
“We want our government to show some backbone, and have a little bit of pride and represent that huge feeling of disgust at Donald Trump’s politics in the UK,” Zoe Gardner, one of the protest’s organizers, told the BBC.
“We have heard from people across the political spectrum who will be joining in the protest today, because the majority agree that we should not be rolling out the red carpet for Donald Trump. The large numbers of people marching today are telling [U.K. Prime Minister Keir] Starmer and his government that they must stand up to Trump,” a spokesperson for the Stop Trump Coalition said in a statement to TIME.
Metropolitan Police deployed around 1,600 officers to the protest in London, 500 of whom have come from other departments across the U.K.
Meanwhile, protests have also taken place in Windsor, where Trump and his wife, First Lady Melania, are being hosted by King Charles III and Queen Camilla.
Activist group Led by Donkeys timed large-scale images of Trump and the late convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein to project onto Windsor Castle minutes after the President landed in London on Tuesday night.
Thames Valley Police arrested four people on suspicion of malicious communications in relation to the stunt.
On Monday, protesters unveiled a large banner emblazoned with an image of Trump and Epstein on the lawn outside Windsor Castle. The banner was removed prior to Trump’s arrival.
Courtesy of Walmart
- Walmart is using automated robotics and AI to speed up the distribution of its perishable goods.
- Its distribution centers in South Carolina, Texas, and California are almost completely automated.
- This article is part of “How AI Is Changing Everything: Supply Chain,” a series on innovations in logistics.
For Walmart, it’s a priority to quickly stock store shelves with the freshest food possible.
In doing so, the nation’s largest grocery-store retailer can prevent food waste from eating into its profits, even in an industry known for thin margins.
Yasemin Gunay, a managing director at Boston Consulting Group, told Business Insider that retailers and restaurants have historically planned their inventory levels based on their internal data, mostly based on past sales trend data.
However, advancements in AI algorithms have allowed companies like Walmart to consider external factors, like changes to the weather or major sporting events. By more accurately anticipating demand, retailers can be more strategic with their pricing strategies, employing more targeted promotions based on their stock levels and local sales trends.
“There’s a lot of data in retail and you can monetize it if you can actually take action on it,” said Gunay.
Inside Walmart’s AI-assisted manufacturing facilities
Over the past four years, Walmart has constructed and opened several high-tech grocery distribution centers in states like California, South Carolina, and Texas. Each facility has automated robotics and AI systems that support workers’ ability to process fresh vegetables and perishables more quickly than at traditional facilities without such technologies.
One of those facilities, in Wellford, South Carolina, is a 725,000-square-foot distribution center that autonomously accepts deliveries from vendors and ships out those goods to 180 Walmart stores across five states.
James Bright, the general manager of the Wellford facility, told Business Insider that the distribution center is 98% automated. The site relies on robotics to review and process deliveries of frozen food, dairy goods, deli meats, and other perishables from farmers and food suppliers. The goods are then stored in temperature-controlled environments to keep everything fresh. Another set of autonomous machinery sorts those goods into pallets ready for store delivery.
Bright said that AI helps enable the process of creating the “perfect pallet.” AI algorithms help to determine the optimal pallet placement for each food item, including how many gallons of milk or packs of lettuce are needed in each container, the ideal configuration to fit as many items in a pallet as possible, and take into consideration weight to ensure lighter items like eggs aren’t crushed.
Algorithms can also triangulate data from individual stores’ layouts, placing the items in an order that makes it easier for associates to remove the goods and stock them on the shelves, Bright said.
He added that Walmart also considers feedback from associates. If employees request adjustments, the retailer can tweak the algorithms to make them more accurate.
“A lot of use of AI is in the background as we continue to automate our supply chain,” said Bright.
According to a company blog post, Walmart uses predictive AI in Costa Rica to map out the best delivery routes for pineapples and root vegetables. In Mexico, Walmart has launched an AI-enabled inventory tool that tracks when goods may be at risk of being overstocked and automatically reroutes the food to other stores with less supply.
How AI can sharpen inventory planning
Indira Uppuluri, Walmart’s senior vice president of supply chain technology, said AI is helping the company forecast demand beyond the immediate future. This can help lower costs, because Walmart incurs more costs by housing excess inventory. “You want to reduce the buffer inventory,” said Uppuluri.
Walmart also uses AI to respond to demand fluctuations, according to Parvez Musani, the senior vice president of stores and online pickup and delivery technology. For example, AI models can be trained to send extra shovels to stores in Arizona for an upcoming snowstorm, but won’t increase the stock levels for Walmart’s Maine stores, where snow is far more prevalent.
AI also helps Walmart plan ideal transportation routes for truck drivers delivering to the store and drivers who drop off express-order products that are frequently shipped to shoppers’ homes within an hour, Uppuluri said.
“There are multiple places where today we have generative AI in production being leveraged by our associates,” said Uppuluri. “It’s not just a proof of concept.”
