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Beyond work from home: Why ‘digital nomads’ think they’re the future of remote life – CNBC

The Tulum, Mexico, location of Outsite, a co-living and co-working start-up that has become popular with digital nomads, and is betting that work-life balance will become work-tourism-life balance amid the massive shift to remote work caused by Covid-19.

Outsite

With much of the professionalworld shifting to remote work and widespread acceptance of the concept among previously skeptical corporate management, the traditional idea of work-life balance is being pushed in new directions, including a concept of remote work-life-tourism never before imagined.

Drew Sing, a fully remote growth product manager at a technology start-up, has been living and working from Lisbon, Portugal, since the beginning of March, after a few months in London. He had planned to fly back to the U.S. in May, and had even booked three flights back, each with a 24-cancellation policy, but when he looked at the Covid-19 trends in the U.S. versus Europe, "each day I spent here I said, 'I think I will stay.' I think this is a safe placeto stay during these unprecedented times.'"

Sing is not new to the digital nomad lifestyle. He left the Bay Area in 2018 to live a remote life, and bought a home outside Seattle which he rents out, but where he maintains a basement apartment for himself and a sleeper van in which he can travel within North America and work remotely when he is there.

"I realized that I could work from co-working spaces, and live the nomadic lifestyle," said Sing, who just published a book on how to work a remote job from anywhere, titled, "Work From Abroad."

"There are lots of books on traveling and exploring the world on a budget, but not on continuing a career and being a productive employee while living from anywhere," he said.

Despite international travel limitations, Emmanuel Guisset's start-up Outsite which offers professionals co-living and co-working spaces around the world in locations including Hawaii, Mexico, Portugal, Bali and the U.S. West Coast is betting that what is called the "digital nomad" lifestyle is bound for mass adoption in a post-Covid-19 world.

"Before the pandemic, we were fitting a niche of people ... nomads, freelancers, tech workers. Because they can work remotely, they choose to live a different lifestyle," said Guisset, who is founder and CEO of Outsite. But now his business is discovering more individuals looking for a long-term stay.

Opportunities to work remotely from anywhere in the world are currently limited. Within the U.S., cities and states have banned short stays in vacation rentals, including in Tahoe and Hawaii, areas where Outsite has locations. In many European and other international destinations, a U.S. passport has transitioned from long-time advantage to handicap. And there are many mandatory quarantines around the world once a traveler arrives at a destination.

Outsite's Bali location is closed because there is no local tourism for it, and its Costa Rica location has only a few locals from the capital city of San Jose, as well as American ex-pats. But the European locations, especially the coastal ones (Ericeira and Biarritz), "are full with Europeans and a couple American ex-pats," Guisset said.

Some countries are encouraging foreigners, including Americans, to come on special visas to spur their local economies, such as Barbados, Estonia and the the country of Georgia. And people already are traveling within the pandemic limitations wherever possible, Guisset said. The quarantines, in fact, are leading to longer stays. "Travelling now is much more difficult so people want to stay longer to make it worthwhile," he said.

Outsite is seeing professionals breaking leases in U.S. locations, spurring demand for longer stays in outdoor-oriented and beach locations like Tahoe, Santa Cruz and San Diego. "They want to live in cheaper, smaller cities, closer to the nature," he said.

Digital nomad Sing's basic points of advice: workers need to start with an understanding of their job and hours and time zones. Working North American hours has meant Sing never considered Asia. "I've done the math on when I would have to work and it would be difficult," he said.

When thinking about working from abroad as a North American professional, certain continents and areas make more sense: South America, Central America and Western Europe.

"Newly remote professionals still need to abide by hours, which is fine, but it is not hard to work from 1pm -9pm or 2pm-10pm in Europe. You're free when people are at dinner, or you can go to a cafe in the morning, and that can be a beautiful lifestyle," Sing said.And for remote professionals who are not on a specific company clock, "it opens up everywhere."

Sing uses Airbnbs for living, but as a self-described "solo remote professional," he also pays for an Outsite membership, so he can work in a collaborative environment. "It can get lonely so community is important," he said.The Outsite location he uses in Lisbon is "not packed," but it is occupied by five to seven people a day.

Right now, younger professionals who travel for nightlife and bars are not going to be able to have the experiences they want, "but if you enjoy a nice meal and glass of wine and don't need to have a bustling life, it's great," Sing said of his Lisbon experience."It is a little quiet, but when you talk to the locals, they talk about how it is pleasant."

The slower, more restricted life of Covid-19 that he has experienced in Lisbon brought Sing to a realization about a better work-tourism life balance. "When you are working, not just vacationing, it almost makes it easier to be more mundane in terms of routine," he said.

"I feel safe and productive and I have friends here now. ... The next narrative will be you can work from not just somewhere cheaper than the Bay Area in the U.S., but the next wave is outside the US," Sing said.

Erik Dyson, CEO of the disaster relief nonprofit All Hands and Hearts, runs a lean operation and his staff were already 85% to 90% remote before Covid-19. "It never made any sense to say, 'You're an amazing chief marketing officer but you have to move to Massachusetts, where we have our headquarters'. It made no sense to compel people to congregate in one place," Dyson said.

As an NGO, All Hands and Hearts also can't offer the same money as corporations, even if it can attract a demographic of young workers from similarly desired backgrounds and mindsets. That led Dyson to look for ways to use quality of life as a way to make up for the nonprofit's inability to compete on compensation.

"We made an early decision to embrace, as a recruiting strategy, that you can live wherever you want to live, and you will make less money, but we are mission-driven," he said.

Almost all of its team is very young, less than 30 years-old.

Think about all-remote workers. The idea of home is great, but you still need opportunities for human interaction and ways to experience the world, whether Dubuque, Iowa or Costa Rica.

Erik Dyson

All Hands and Hearts CEO

But Dyson discovered that remote work doesn't always even come close to working the way it should. When All Hands and Hearts brought about half of its 200 staffers to a meeting in Puerto Ricoa few years ago, many revealed feelings of isolation and loneliness working from home. "It sounds great, but they missed the informal conversations. ... wake up, I'm in an apartment, go to computer and work all day, teleconferencing, but don't ever talk to people or see people," Dyson said. "One of the big things I heard was, 'I miss human contact with co-workers.'"

He was struck by the digital merger of the Airbnb and WeWork models when he learned about the Outsite approach it is not the only business model of the type, with another called Selina also making a bid for young remote workers and All Hands and Hearts decided to buy memberships for all of its non-program staff, any staff not working at disaster sites.

"We said, 'if you miss human contact, go live in Portugal for a month, and the monthly burn is not much more than having an apartment, so go when your lease is up," Dyson said. "If I can help people extend tenure with us, it was worth the money. If I can move someone from two years tenure to three years, that is a huge uplift, but it's unrealistic to think they'll do this job for seven years," he said. "People sacrifice, including on salary."

"Outsite is not cheap," said, digital nomad Sing who described it as a "luxurious hostel" given its cohabitation and coworking design. "It's geared to a professional crowd that can afford it,not, if you will,the backpacker crowd."

Outsite provided All Hands and Hearts with a 50% discount on memberships, which ended up costing All Hands and Hearts roughly $10,000, "real money to us," Dyson said. But he said the cost, even to a tightly budgeted charity organization, pays for itself when the work benefit leads an employee to stay longer.

An Outsite membership is $149 annually, or $249 for a lifetime. Members can then access any location, with local pricesvarying from $50 nightly (Portugal) up to $120 (San Francisco). Members receive discounts when they book a week, or a month, and in off-season or last-minute periods.Members also gain access to an online community, and as many are not travelling right now, 70% are using Outsite for the professional networkingaspect, Guisset said, seeking knowledge from communities and travelers around the world about their current situation.

"We want to encourage longer stays and slower travel," Guisset said.

Some of the more exotic locales, such as Hawaii, are still out of reach for many All Hands and Hearts workers, even with a membership. So last Christmas, All Hands and Hearts gave a $300 credit with Outsite to employees for a week in Hawaii or a month in Portugal. "We don't give bonuses," Dyson said.

Unfortunately, that program rolled out around February, "and then Covid hit," Dyson said. "They have the credit sitting there and can't travel, but I think it will come back. ... They will go live there and check out places, and if you as an employer can enable me with Outsite or flights or work hours changing, I see that as a huge benefit and I know our people are appreciative."

Dyson said as a CEO how has managed a mostly remote staff for years, he has a warning for companies swiftly transitioning to a work-from-home paradigm: not all employees know how to work remote, or work well remotely. He dismissed concerns that employees are more likely to waste time at home,and said the nonprofit's experience offering unlimited paid time off showed that it is never the policy, but the person, that ultimately dictates success. "We never had a problem, not a single person had to be let go because of unlimited PTO," he said.

But measurements compiled by All Hands and Hearts of employee workload indicate that not all workers are created equal when it comes to their ability to be productive in a remote environment.

"Some people can't work remote," Dyson said. "I think the big challenge is not a metric measuring the productivity of all people doing it, but finding those who can. ... I spent 20 years living the corporate life and I was always traveling and I am going crazy now, six months at home. I am hearing from my team every day, everyone going stir crazy, they like to travel and are just pinned down, and European folks already started to travel because they can. ... Think about all-remote workers. The idea of home is great, but you still need opportunities for human interaction and ways to experience the world, whether Dubuque, Iowa or Costa Rica."

The nonprofit is already seeing that desire to travel in the volunteer staff of 8,000 to 10,000 workers itbrings in from around the world to rebuild schools in places like Nepal and the Bahamas. Earlier this summer, All Hands and Hearts opened bookings for a mid-Sept. volunteer opportunity in the Bahamas and it filled all the open spots for the first four months of work in a few days.

"There is a huge desire among the younger demographic," Dyson said. "Everyone's life has been upended, college students leaving school, taking a gap year, and people who left jobs. People being given flexibility they never had before."

I would like to return back to the U.S. to see friends and family, but it could be closed until 2021 or longer. ... It is almost as if when I go back to the U.S., I'm kind of trapped essentially, and that's why I'm taking the liberty ... if I have all my needs met, why not stay?

Drew Sing

solo remote professional

Whether workers like Drew Sing and employers like All Hands and Hearts will cede being the exception and become the rule in the world of work is impossible to predict like many features of a post-Covid world. But the way people outside of the existing digital nomad lifestyle are thinking about their own future is changing.

Dan Wasiolek, a senior equity analyst at financial research firm Morningstar who covers the lodging and travel sector, said when he read the recent headlines about J.P. Morgan and Fordgoing to hybrid work models, it hit him as being "meaningful" for an analyst who covers hotel companies reliant on properties in urban centers. But it also struck him personally, as a worker.

"As an analyst, I don't feel like I need to be in an office to be productive, and that's something I can measure and show it to be the case. I think there will be lots of people like me, and I wouldn't be surprised if I'm 50% in the office permanently. And it does allow me to say, 'OK, if I want to be in San Diego for the next five days with my family and work that Wednesday and Friday from there, and have a long weekend, it will be easier," Wasiolek said. "There is going to be an incremental portion of workers that will be in some sort of nomad life, not work six months from anywhere, but longer weekends, or a week here and there. That seems reasonable and realistic."

Outsite closed a post-seed round of funding during the Covid crisis, but the company declined to disclose details, and it is currently raising a real estate fund to buy distressed hospitality properties in areas it thinks will be popular post-Covid. Guisset said a lot of hospitality property managers were hoping for a good summer and lacking a sharp turnaround, will be more likely to sell properties as the season turns back to what would be dependent on business travel as vacations end.

"Business travel is in shambles and will never be the same. Some destinations and hotels will have to adapt to a new kind of tourism where people travel less frequently but stay longer," the Outsite CEO said. "When the real estate market was really high and hotels were doing really well, it was really hard to find those properties. Now it's much easier. We've already seen a lot of properties going to the market at discounted rates."

"The tables are turned," said Sing. "It's odd. No one can leave the U.S., but I've been given freedom to be able to maybe go back home, or go to another country."

Sing said he would consider going to Mexico, still open to Americans, or the U.K. or Ireland, because they are not EU countries tied to the Schengen Agreement on borders and travel.Americans can still fly to Mexico, and in addition to its existing Tulum location, Outside is about to open one in Cabo.

"I did not think I would be away this long," he said. But as it has become more difficult to just hop from place to place, "this remote working lifestyle is almost more enjoyable," Sing said.

As for an eventual return to the U.S. from Lisbon, or another international location, Sing still owns his place in Seattle that he can go back to, but due to the circumstances, he says he ishappy with his decision to be in Lisbon. "But I'm a remote pro, with a home base. It's unique, kind of new. ... I had to come to terms with a whole new world in March... I had to come to terms with being here for a long period of time. I would like to return back to the U.S. to see friends and family, but it could be closed until 2021 or longer. ... it is almost as if when I go back to the U.S., I'm kind of trapped essentially, and that's why I'm taking the liberty ... if I have all my needs met, why not stay?"

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Beyond work from home: Why 'digital nomads' think they're the future of remote life - CNBC

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First Integrated Water Treatment Facility construction begins, Singapore. – Construction Review

Singapore has begun construction of the first phase of its first Integrated Water And Solid Waste Treatment Facility, the Tuas Nexus, according to a statement release by National Environment Agency (NEA) and PUB. The Tuas Nexus is expected to be complete all its phases by the beginning of 2025,and is a co-location of two mega facilities the Tuas Water Reclamation Plant (Tuas WRP) and Integrated Waste Management Facility (IWMF) that will help forge a more sustainable Singapore by optimizing land use, and maximizing energy and resource recovery. The Integrated Water And Solid Waste Treatment Facility in Singapore is expected to be energy self-sufficient which will result in carbon savings of more than 200,000 tonnes of carbon dioxide annually, equivalent to taking 42,500 cars off Singapores roads. In addition, integrating the two facilities will result in land savings of up to 2.6ha, approximately the size of four football fields, as compared to building the two as standalone facilities, the release added.

Also Read: Singapore begins construction of the worlds largest inland floating PV system.

By employing the latest technologies, Tuas Nexus will harness the synergies of the water-energy-waste nexus from used water and solid waste. The by-product of one facility becomes a resource for the other facility, PUB and NEA explained. For example, IWMFs Food Waste Treatment Facility will convert source segregated food waste into food waste slurry suitable for co-digestion with used water sludge at Tuas WRP.

The co-digestion of food waste and used water sludge will increase biogas production by 40 percent at Tuas WRP, compared to biogas yield from treatment of used water sludge alone. The biogas produced will then be combusted at IWMF and the combustion heat energy recovered to improve the overall plant thermal efficiency and boost electricity generation, said the agencies. The electricity generated by IWMF will be used to sustain the operations of Tuas Nexus with excess to be exported to the grid. This excess electricity exported to the grid will be able to continually power up to 300,000 four-room HDB apartments.

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First Integrated Water Treatment Facility construction begins, Singapore. - Construction Review

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Remote Work Doesn’t Have to Mean All-Day Video Calls – Harvard Business Review

The Covid-19 crisis has distanced people from the workplace, and employers have generally, if sometimes reluctantly, accepted that people can work effectively from home. As if to compensate for this distancing and keep the workplace alive in a virtual sense, employers have also encouraged people to stick closely to the conventional workday. The message is that working from home is fine and can even be very efficient as long as people join video calls along with everyone else all through the day.

But employees often struggle with the workday when working from home, because many have to deal with the competing requests coming from their family, also housebound. So how effective really is working from home if everyone is still working to the clock? Is it possible to ditch the clock?

The answer seems to be that it is. Since before the pandemic weve been studying the remote work practices of the tech companyGitLab to explore what it might look like if companies to break their employees chronological chains as well as their ties to the physical workplace.

From its foundation in 2014, GitLab has maintained an all-remote staff that now comprises more than 1,300 employees spread across over 65 countries. The git way of working uses tools that let employees work on ongoing projects wherever they are in the world and at their preferred time. The idea is that because its always 9 to 5 somewhere on the planet, work can continue around the clock, increasing aggregate productivity. That sounds good, but a workforce staggered in both time and space presents unique coordination challenges with wide-ranging organizational implications.

The most natural way to distribute work across locations is to make it modular and independent, so that there is little need for direct coordination workers can be effectively without knowing how their colleagues are progressing. This is why distributed work can be so effective for call centers and in patents evaluation. But this approach has its limits in development and innovation related activities, where the interdependencies between components of work are not always easy to see ahead of time.

For this kind of complex work, co-location with ongoing communication is often a better approach because it offers two virtues: synchronicity and media richness. The time lag in the interaction between two or more individuals is almost zero when they are co-located, and, although the content of the conversation may be the same in both face-to-face and in virtual environments, the technology may not be fully able to convey soft social and background contextual cues how easy is it to sense other peoples reactions in a group zoom meeting?

All this implies that simply attempting to replicate online (through video or voice chat) what happened naturally in co-located settings is unlikely to be a winning or complete strategy. Yet this approach of seeing the face is the one that people seem to default to when forced to work remotely, as our survey of remote working practices in the immediate aftermath of lockdowns around the world has revealed.

There is a way through this dilemma. Our earlierresearchon offshoring of software development showed that drawing on tacit coordination mechanisms, such as a shared understanding of work norms and context, allows for coordination without direct communication.

Coordination in this case happens through the observation of the action of other employees and being able to predict what they will do and need based on shared norms. It can occur either synchronously (where, for instance, two people might work on the same Google doc during the same time period), or asynchronously (when people make clear hand-offs of the document, and do not work on it when the other is).

Software development organizations often opt for this solution and tend to rely extensively on shared repositories and document authoring tools, with systems for coordinating contributions (e.g., continuous integration and version control tools). But GitLab is quite unique in the for-profit sector in how extensively it relies on this third path not only for its coding but for how the organization itself functions. It leans particularly on asynchronous working because its employees are distributed across multiple time zones. As a result, although the company does use videoconferencing, almost no employee ever faces a day full of video meetings.

At the heart of the engineering work that drives GitLabs product development is the git workflow process invented by Linux founder Linus Torvalds. In this process, a programmer making a contribution to a code forks (copies) the code, so that it is not blocked to other users, works on it, and then makes a merge request to have the edited version replace the original, and this new version becomes available for other contributions.

The process combines the possibility of distributed asynchronous work with a structure that checks for potential coordination failures and ensures clarity on decision rights. Completely electronic (which makes remote work feasible) and fully documented, it has become an important framework for distributed software development in both for-profit and open source contexts.

GitLab has taken the git a step further, applying it also to managerial work that involves ambiguity and uncertainty. For instance, GitLabs chief marketer recently outlined a vision for integrating video into the companys year-ahead strategy. He requested asynchronous feedback from across the company within a fixed time window, and then scheduled a single synchronous meeting to agree on a final version of the vision. This vision triggered asynchronously input changes from multiple contributors to the companys handbook pages relating to marketing objectives and key results that were merged on completion.

GitLabs high degree of reliance on asynchronous working is made possible by respecting the following three rules right down to the task level:

1. Separate responsibility for doing the task from the responsibility for declaring it done.

In co-located settings, where employees are in the same office, easy communication and social cues allow them to efficiently resolve ambiguities and manage conflict around work responsibilities and remits. In remote settings, however, this can be difficult. In GitLab, therefore, every task is expected to have a Directly Responsible Individual (DRI), who is responsible for the completion of the task and has freedom in how it should be performed.

The DRI, however, does not get to decide whether the task has been completed. That function is the responsibility of a Maintainer, who has the authority to accept or reject the DRIs merge requests. Clarity on these roles for every task helps reduce confusions and delays and enables multiple DRIs to work in parallel in any way they want on different parts of a code by making local copies (forking). It is the Maintainers role to avoid unnecessary changes and maintain consistency in the working version of the document or code.

In a non-software context, say in developing the GitLab handbook page on expenses policies, individual DRIs, who could be anyone in the company, would write specific policies in any way they choose, and their contributions would be accepted or rejected by the CFO acting in the capacity of Maintainer, who could also offer feedback (but not direction) to the DRIs. Once live, the merged page serves as the single source of truth on expenses policies unless or until someone else makes a new proposal. Once more, the Maintainer would approve, reject, or offer feedback on the new proposal. In contexts like this, we would expect people in traditional management positions to serve as Maintainers.

2. Respect the minimum viable change principle.

When coordination is asynchronous, there is a risk that coordination failures may go undetected for too long for instance, two individuals may be working in parallel on the same problem, making one of their efforts redundant, or one person may be making changes that that are incompatible with the efforts of another. To minimize this risk, employees are urged to submit the minimum viable change an early stage, imperfect version of their suggested changes to code or documents. This makes it more likely that people will pick up on whether work is incompatible or being duplicated. Obviously, a policy of minimum viable changes should come with a no shame policy on delivering a temporarily imperfect output. In remote settings, the value of knowing what the other is doing as soon as possible is greater than getting the perfect product.

3. Always communicate publicly.

As GitLab team members are prone to say, we do not send internal email here. Instead, employees post all questions and share all information on the Slack channels of their teams, and later the team leaders decide what information needs to be permanently visible to others. If so, it gets stored in a place available to everyone in the company, in an issue document or on a page in the companys online handbook, which is accessible to anyone, in or outside the company. This rule means that people dont run the risk of duplicating, or even inadvertently destroying the work of their colleagues. Managers devote a lot of time to curating the information generated through the work of employees they supervise and are expected to know better than others what information may be either broadly needed by a future team or that would be useful for people outside the company.

However well implemented, asynchronous remote working of this kind cannot supply much in the way of social interaction. Thats a major failing, because social interaction is not only a source of pleasure and motivation for most, it is also where the random encounters, the serendipitous exchanges by the coffee machines and lift lobbies, create opportunities for ideas and information to flow and recombine.

To minimize this limitation, GitLab provides occasions for non-task related interaction. Each day, team members may attend one of three optional social calls staggered to be inclusive of time zones. The calls consist of groups of 8-10 people in a video chatroom, where they are free to discuss whatever they want (GitLab provides a daily starting question as icebreaker in case needed, such as: What did you do over the weekend? or Where is the coolest place you ever traveled and why?).

In addition, GitLab has social slack groups: thematic chat rooms that employees with similar interests can participate in (such as: #cat, #dogs, #cooking, #mental_health_aware, #daily_gratitude, #gaming) and a #donut_be_strangers channel that allows strangers that have a mutual interest to have a coffee chat to get together.

Of course, GitLab managers are under no illusion that these groups substitute perfectly for the kinds of rich social interactions outside work that people find rewarding. But they do help to keep employees connected, and, at a time when many employees have been working under confinement rules, this has proved very helpful in sustaining morale.

***

Working from home in an effective way goes beyond just giving employees a laptop and a Zoom account. It encompasses practices intended to compensate or avoid the core limitations of working remotely, as well as fully leverage the flexibility that remote can offer working not only from anywhere but at any desired time. We have focused on GitLab because it not only has extensive experience in remote working but also because it pursues an unusual mode of solving the intrinsic challenges of remote work. While some of GitLabs core processes (like its long, remote onboarding process for new hires) and advantages (like the possibility of hiring across the world) cannot be fully reproduced in the short run in companies that will be just temporarily remote, there are others that any company can easily implement.

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Remote Work Doesn't Have to Mean All-Day Video Calls - Harvard Business Review

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Co-location

Vela Expands Fixed Income Offering with Fenics UST – Business Wire

NEW YORK & CHICAGO & LONDON--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Vela, a leading independent provider of data and execution technology for global multi-asset electronic trading, today announced the addition of Fenics US Treasuries (Fenics UST), owned and operated by BGC Financial, to its fully-hosted and managed Direct Market Access (DMA) Platform. With Fenics, Vela expands its Fixed Income offering providing global clients with access to cash and derivatives trading venues via a single platform.

Velas award-winning multi-asset DMA Platform is cross-connected to Fenics co-location facility in New Jersey, delivering a short path to the venue and ensuring superior transactional and communication performance. Leveraging Velas DMA Platform, low-touch trading desks at buy- and sell-side firms can benefit from Velas fully-normalized order entry, pre- and post-trade risk layers and market data for all the major listed derivatives venues, while trading cash and derivatives U.S. Treasury markets through a single API.

Ollie Cadman, Chief Product Officer at Vela, commented: With the levels of automation in the Rates and Credit markets continuing to trend upwards, the addition of Fenics UST products to our DMA Platform provides our clients with ultra-low latency access to U.S. cash and derivatives treasuries data through a single API. Our high-performant execution platform can easily be integrated into any in-house or third-party EMS/OMS. He added, Vela is excited to have added Fenics onto our platform as part of our goal to expand our Fixed Income coverage and functionality to help Rates trading desks with price discovery, order routing and workflow automation.

Velas DMA Platform offers normalized order entry, pre-trade risk, drop copy, full risk management and normalized market data, supported by a strong clearing member ecosystem. This high-performant and scalable platform provides low latency and fully-normalized access to all the major listed derivatives venues for buy-side and sell-side firms. Vela offers the platform as a fully-hosted and managed solution (as-a-Service), leveraging its existing infrastructure network, exchange connectivity lines, and major points of presence across the globe.

About Vela

Vela is a leading independent provider of data and execution technology for global multi-asset electronic trading. Our software enables clients to rapidly access global liquidity, markets, and data sources for superior execution. We help firms successfully differentiate and innovate in an ever-changing, increasingly regulated and fiercely-competitive landscape, while also reducing total cost of ownership.

Velas market data, execution and automated trading software deliver a unique, ultra-low latency technology stack to simplify and streamline electronic trading. We leverage the latest innovations in technology to deliver cutting-edge performance, features and reliability. Our modular stack provides access to a comprehensive set of trading data and risk APIs and can be delivered as-a-Service from multiple co-location data centers globally.

With access to more than 250 venues, Vela provides global coverage across all major asset classes. Clients are supported by an award-winning team of technical and business experts available 24x7 from our multiple offices in the US, Europe, and Asia. Velas clients include traders, market makers, brokers, banks, investment firms, exchanges, and other market participants.

Visit us at http://www.tradevela.com

Follow us on Twitter @TradeVela

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Vela Expands Fixed Income Offering with Fenics UST - Business Wire

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Co-location

New data center in Greenville County brings expected investment of more than $200M over next few years – WYFF4 Greenville

A new data center is coming to Greenville County. DC BLOX will be located in Global Business Park bordering I-85 and close by Clemson Universitys CU-ICAR campus. The new data center will bring five high-paying new positions initially to the community along with an expected investment of over $200 million combined between DC BLOX and their tenant customers over the next few years."Organizations across the Carolinas and North Georgia have increasing demand for a Tier III rated regional data center that can provide the security, reliability, cost efficiency and expertise that lets them focus resources strategically," a news release said. "DC BLOX is answering that need by unveiling plans today to establish its next state-of-the-art data center in Greenville County, South Carolina."DC BLOX believes in serving locally and connecting globally, said Jeff Uphues, CEO of DC BLOX. We have long been attracted to this booming economic region and are grateful to Greenville County, the Greenville Area Development Corporation, City of Greenville and the South Carolina Department of Commerce for working collaboratively with us to create a strong business case for DC BLOX to come to Greenville. We are excited to be able to serve South Carolina businesses and the greater Greenville and Upstate community.The new Greenville data center will join the interconnected data center fabric of DC BLOXs sites in Birmingham, Atlanta, Huntsville and Chattanooga. Customers of the new Greenville data center will have access to DC BLOXs full range of co-location, connectivity and cloud storage solutions, including private, 100Gbps+ capacity network access to carriers, public cloud providers and internet exchanges.The 6-acre location will have five data halls with 45,000 square feet of data center space, capable of 15 megawatts of critical power, secure storage and shared and dedicated office space ideal for locating enterprise Security Operations Centers (SOC). Company officials say the Greenville data center will be the first of its kind in South Carolina, including the security required to protect Controlled Unclassified Information. DC BLOX is addressing changes in the technology landscape, which are driving many organizations to increased digitization and distribution of IT infrastructure, including mobile applications, the Internet of Things, and the cloud. Recognizing surging demand in underserved markets across the Southeast, DC BLOX brings data center, connectivity and cloud capabilities that have previously been available only in major metropolitan areas to underserved regions and markets. Its exciting to see another company recognize the benefits of doing business here in South Carolina. We celebrate DC BLOXs decision to locate in Greenville County, and we look forward to seeing them grow here in the Palmetto State, stated South Carolina Gov. Henry McMaster. DC BLOXs decision to locate its high-tech operations here is another sign that South Carolinas business-friendly climate, infrastructure and skilled workforce are attracting companies to our state. This investment is a win for the Greenville area and the entire state of South Carolina, added Secretary of Commerce Bobby Hitt. The new facility is expected to begin construction in the first quarter 2021 and be operational by the third quarter. Individuals and suppliers interested in joining with DC BLOX should visit the organization online at dcblox.com for more information.As a state-of-the art data center provider committed to serving locally and connecting globally, DC BLOX brings well-paying jobs and significant capital investment to Greenville. With its customers, it will help Greenville County accelerate economic growth and build on our reputation as a world-class technology community. DC BLOX is a welcome addition to the mix of companies doing business here and should attract interest from many others, said Greenville County Council Chairman and Greenville Area Development Corporation board member H.G. "Butch" Kirven. It was a pleasure to meet with Jeff and his team two years ago when they began to explore Greenville, said Greenville Mayor Knox White. We welcome this company with cutting-edge technology solutions that is committed to serving locally and connecting globally. DC BLOX will create an attractive environment for other organizations seeking to do business in our region.Duke Energys Carolina Investment Fund for economic development has approved a grant toward project expenditures incurred by the company, while the Coordinating Council for Economic Development has approved a $50,000 Set Aside grant to Greenville County to assist with the costs of site preparation and building improvements.

A new data center is coming to Greenville County.

DC BLOX will be located in Global Business Park bordering I-85 and close by Clemson Universitys CU-ICAR campus.

The new data center will bring five high-paying new positions initially to the community along with an expected investment of over $200 million combined between DC BLOX and their tenant customers over the next few years.

"Organizations across the Carolinas and North Georgia have increasing demand for a Tier III rated regional data center that can provide the security, reliability, cost efficiency and expertise that lets them focus resources strategically," a news release said. "DC BLOX is answering that need by unveiling plans today to establish its next state-of-the-art data center in Greenville County, South Carolina."

DC BLOX believes in serving locally and connecting globally, said Jeff Uphues, CEO of DC BLOX. We have long been attracted to this booming economic region and are grateful to Greenville County, the Greenville Area Development Corporation, City of Greenville and the South Carolina Department of Commerce for working collaboratively with us to create a strong business case for DC BLOX to come to Greenville. We are excited to be able to serve South Carolina businesses and the greater Greenville and Upstate community.

The new Greenville data center will join the interconnected data center fabric of DC BLOXs sites in Birmingham, Atlanta, Huntsville and Chattanooga.

Customers of the new Greenville data center will have access to DC BLOXs full range of co-location, connectivity and cloud storage solutions, including private, 100Gbps+ capacity network access to carriers, public cloud providers and internet exchanges.

The 6-acre location will have five data halls with 45,000 square feet of data center space, capable of 15 megawatts of critical power, secure storage and shared and dedicated office space ideal for locating enterprise Security Operations Centers (SOC).

Company officials say the Greenville data center will be the first of its kind in South Carolina, including the security required to protect Controlled Unclassified Information.

DC BLOX is addressing changes in the technology landscape, which are driving many organizations to increased digitization and distribution of IT infrastructure, including mobile applications, the Internet of Things, and the cloud. Recognizing surging demand in underserved markets across the Southeast, DC BLOX brings data center, connectivity and cloud capabilities that have previously been available only in major metropolitan areas to underserved regions and markets.

Its exciting to see another company recognize the benefits of doing business here in South Carolina. We celebrate DC BLOXs decision to locate in Greenville County, and we look forward to seeing them grow here in the Palmetto State, stated South Carolina Gov. Henry McMaster.

DC BLOXs decision to locate its high-tech operations here is another sign that South Carolinas business-friendly climate, infrastructure and skilled workforce are attracting companies to our state. This investment is a win for the Greenville area and the entire state of South Carolina, added Secretary of Commerce Bobby Hitt.

The new facility is expected to begin construction in the first quarter 2021 and be operational by the third quarter. Individuals and suppliers interested in joining with DC BLOX should visit the organization online at dcblox.com for more information.

As a state-of-the art data center provider committed to serving locally and connecting globally, DC BLOX brings well-paying jobs and significant capital investment to Greenville. With its customers, it will help Greenville County accelerate economic growth and build on our reputation as a world-class technology community. DC BLOX is a welcome addition to the mix of companies doing business here and should attract interest from many others, said Greenville County Council Chairman and Greenville Area Development Corporation board member H.G. "Butch" Kirven.

It was a pleasure to meet with Jeff and his team two years ago when they began to explore Greenville, said Greenville Mayor Knox White. We welcome this company with cutting-edge technology solutions that is committed to serving locally and connecting globally. DC BLOX will create an attractive environment for other organizations seeking to do business in our region.

Duke Energys Carolina Investment Fund for economic development has approved a grant toward project expenditures incurred by the company, while the Coordinating Council for Economic Development has approved a $50,000 Set Aside grant to Greenville County to assist with the costs of site preparation and building improvements.

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New data center in Greenville County brings expected investment of more than $200M over next few years - WYFF4 Greenville