Being Good
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Initial release | Japan |
---|---|
Directors | Mipo O |
Story by | Hatsue Nakawaki |
Cinematography | Yuta Tsukinaga |
Screenplay | Ryô Takada |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 2945008 |
About Being Good
A new primary school teacher struggles to deal with his new students and their over-protective parents. When he learns that one of his pupils is being abused, he decides to do something about it.
David Bowie: Candid pictures of singer on tour go on display

... " Being Good friends helped get those candid photos...
Police access to passport photos 'risks public trust'

... " " The state has large collections of good quality photographs of a significant proportion of the population - drivers and passport holders Being Good examples - which were originally required and given as a condition of, say, driving and international travel, " he said...
Is the UK a bad place for tech firms?

... Britain has a long history of Being Good at tech innovation...
Happy Valley's Ryan: Rhys Connah on starring in hit TV drama then and now

... But because he saw Tommy Being Good in prison and not being a violent person, that s caused this opinion of Tommy to change in Ryan s head...
Shakira and Miley: Writing a perfect break-up song

... You could strike a hopeful note, like Adele: Or take the Beyoncé route: Or follow Taylor Swift s decisiveness: Tears dripping down the page As well as Being Good to listen to, a break-up song can be helpful for the people writing them...
Train cancellations: 'Some days I spend more on travel than I earn'

... He apologised for performance not Being Good enough, and insisted the operators do employ enough train drivers; something their union Aslef disputes...
Paul Newman: Hollywood legend was so insecure, says daughter

... " Always anxious At one point in the book, Newman says he is " always anxious" about " not Being Good enough"...
Queen Elizabeth II: The Queue and the Cumbria expert who helped plan it

... The Queue is remarkable for mostly Being Good humoured...
Is the UK a bad place for tech firms?
By Zoe KleinmanTechnology editor
Microsoft is seething.
Despite months of lobbying and negotiation, the UK's competition regulator ruled yesterday That the tech firm should not complete its proposed multi-billion dollar purchase of The Games maker Activision Blizzard . It would have cemented Microsoft's status as a video game uber-giant.
If the UK, US and EU don't All approve The Deal , it is very unlikely to be able to go ahead.
Neither Microsoft nor Activision have pulled any punches in their responses, with the former branding the decision " bad for Britain" and the latter saying " the UK is clearly closed for business".
Are they right?
The CMA doesn't think so - it says protecting the interests of businesses in Britain is intrinsic to its ruling.
The government would also say Absolutely Not .
Prime Minister Rishi Sunak recently spoke of " Unicorn Kingdom" - a unicorn is a firm worth More Than $1bn without being listed on the Stock Exchange - and talked of an ad campaign targeting Silicon Valley investors.
I received a flurry of virtual raised eyebrows from various contacts About That - But fundamentally Sunak's vision of a prosperous UK has tech at The Heart of it.
The Body Tech Nation - which ironically lost its government funding in January after 10 Years as a UK tech sector Champion - valued UK tech firms at $1trillion, collectively, at the start of the year. Only the US and China have exceeded this milestone, it said.
Britain has a long history of Being Good at tech innovation. Radio, The Telephone , The Enigma World War 2 code-breaking machine, Dolby surround sound, The World Wide Web - All UK-based inventions.
So where, then, is our Apple, our Google, our OpenAI?
I've been to the unkindly nicknamed Silicon Roundabout tech hub in East London , and the beautifully titled Silicon Glen in Scotland.
We have a handful of big successes - look at semiconductor firm Graphcore - and plenty of much smaller ones. But We Are seriously lacking Silicon-Valley scale corporations which are also household names.
The UK had a considerable asset in the Cambridge-based chip designer Arm, But it now belongs to the Japanese firm Softbank, and this year will no longer be listed on the London Stock Exchange .
Deepmind, the hugely successful AI firm, is still UK-based But now belongs to Google.
I've interviewed countless tech start-ups here in the UK over The Years . And often, although never on the record, I'll hear a similar ambition: they hope to get bought up by a US tech giant waving a huge cheque.
Some of them manage it. Sometimes The Giant in question only actually wants a small part of The Firm 's intellectual property and winds the rest of it down at the earliest opportunity. That is of course not unique to either tech or the UK.
Everyone has a price, as the saying goes. But also, scaling up is hard.
Numerous entrepreneurs have told me That growing a company is a fragile time, because even though it appears to be doing Well - There 's more scrutiny, regulation, tax rules, workers are stretched, There may not be The Immediate cashflow to balance The Extra work and facilities having to be bought in.
On top of That , Brexit brought about the introduction of a new layer of operational issues to be navigated by All businesses, and the long anticipated Online Safety Bill comes with strict new rules for tech firms in That space, and large penalties for non-compliance.
One investor told me That while Britain is a good place to start, it's a much harder place to scale up.
Of course to an extent the same is true worldwide. For every Meta, There are thousands, maybe even millions of failed start-ups which burned through their funding and couldn't make it work.
You do also have to remember There is simply a lot more money in the US and, rightly or wrongly, less Red Tape .
Lots of people I speak to genuinely believe the UK has a chance to really punch above its weight in the rapidly accelerating AI revolution.
The government has introduced fairly light regulation for AI So Far - stricter than the US But less strict than Europe - in The Hope of allowing businesses to thrive.
There are currently More Than 3,000 AI companies in the UK with a combined revenue of $10bn in 2022, according to official figures.
One idea doing the rounds in the UK tech scene is creating a " Britbot" - a British answer to OpenAI's viral AI chatbot ChatGPT and Google's Bard.
A faintly comical name, maybe, But the idea behind it is absolutely serious: perhaps There is an opportunity here for the UK to position itself with those at The Front The Race ?
Just don't expect Microsoft to race to invest in it.
Related TopicsSource of news: bbc.com