On 10–11 June, the Grand Duchy hosts the third edition of its flagship tech summit, weeks before the EU AI Act’s most consequential provisions enter into force. Here is what the event has become, and why it matters this year in particular. Luxembourg, with a population smaller than Manchester’s and an outsized role in European finance, has spent the past few years quietly trying to make itself a credible address for technology as well. The country’s national digital sovereignty strategy aims to build out data, AI, and quantum capabilities by 2030. It now hosts more than 810 active startups, of which over 240 use AI as a core component. Its MeluXina supercomputer and Tier IV data centres are part of the substrate. The flagship public moment in this story arrives, for the third year running, in June.…