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  • Jewelry stolen from Louvre Museum in Paris – DW – 10/19/2025

    Jewelry stolen from Louvre Museum in Paris – DW – 10/19/2025

    A break-in at the Louvre in the French capital Paris on Sunday saw suspected criminals make off with “priceless” jewelry, according to France’s culture minister.

    Rachida Dati said the incident occurred as the museum, one of the world’s most…

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  • Connecting the dots could unlock a breakthrough in cancer vaccine – FirstWord Pharma

    1. Connecting the dots could unlock a breakthrough in cancer vaccine  FirstWord Pharma
    2. Next-gen vaccine prevents up to 88% of multiple aggressive cancers  New Atlas
    3. Experimental Nanoparticle “Super-Vaccines” Stop Breast, Pancreatic, And Skin…

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  • Hospitals turn to music to help patients manage pain, anxiety

    Hospitals turn to music to help patients manage pain, anxiety

    Nurse Rod Salaysay works with all kinds of instruments in the hospital: a thermometer, a stethoscope and sometimes his guitar and ukulele.

    In the recovery unit of UC San Diego Health, Salaysay helps patients manage pain…

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  • China accuses US of cyberattack on national time center

    China accuses US of cyberattack on national time center

    BEIJING — BEIJING (AP) — China on Sunday accused the U.S. National Security Agency of carrying out cyberattacks on its national time center following an investigation, saying any damage to related facilities could have disrupted network…

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  • Gaza ceasefire under strain after exchange of fire between Israel and Hamas

    Gaza ceasefire under strain after exchange of fire between Israel and Hamas

    Unlock the Editor’s Digest for free

    The week-old ceasefire in Gaza came under strain on Sunday with Israel launching air strikes in the south of the enclave…

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  • Genome Maintains 3D Structure During Cell Division, Contrary to Long-Held Belief – Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology News

    1. Genome Maintains 3D Structure During Cell Division, Contrary to Long-Held Belief  Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology News
    2. In a surprising discovery, scientists find tiny loops in the genomes of dividing cells  MIT News
    3. Dynamics of…

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  • Villarreal v City: Scott Carson our guest pundit on Matchday Live – Manchester City FC

    1. Villarreal v City: Scott Carson our guest pundit on Matchday Live  Manchester City FC
    2. Match Officials: Serdar Gözübüyük to referee Villarreal vs Manchester City  Yahoo
    3. Villarreal vs Manchester City Preview, prediction, lineups, betting tips &…

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  • Meet AMIES, China’s new hope in breaking reliance on ASML’s chipmaking machines

    Meet AMIES, China’s new hope in breaking reliance on ASML’s chipmaking machines

    AMIES Technology, a new Chinese lithography equipment manufacturer that showcased its latest chipmaking products at an industry event in Shenzhen last week, is offering renewed optimism in the nation’s drive to reduce its dependence on Dutch giant ASML.

    The company presented a wide range of products – including compound-semiconductor lithography machines, laser-annealing systems, advanced inspection tools and solutions for packaging and wafer bonding – at the WeSemiBay Semiconductor Ecosystem Expo 2025, which featured more than 600 exhibitors, such as Huawei Technologies partner SiCarrier.

    Advanced lithography remains a significant bottleneck in China’s chipmaking ambitions. The country still trails far behind global leaders in the technology and is restricted from acquiring ASML’s top deep ultraviolet (DUV) and extreme ultraviolet (EUV) systems due to US export controls.

    Do you have questions about the biggest topics and trends from around the world? Get the answers with SCMP Knowledge, our new platform of curated content with explainers, FAQs, analyses and infographics brought to you by our award-winning team.

    Founded in February, AMIES is a spin-off from China’s leading lithography company, the state-owned Shanghai Micro Electronics Equipment (SMEE). While SMEE focuses on developing essential front-end tools, AMIES aims to commercialise equipment more swiftly, according to Chinese media reports, citing company representatives.

    US-sanctioned SMEE excels in back-end semiconductor processes like packaging, which often require less advanced lithography technology. When it comes to front-end wafer fabrication, however, it is still trying to catch up with Western leaders such as ASML.

    AMIES was spun off from SMEE in February. Photo: Handout alt=AMIES was spun off from SMEE in February. Photo: Handout>

    The Chinese company’s most reliable production-grade lithography tools are believed to support processes around 90-nanometre node and above. In late 2023, its shareholder Zhangjiang Group briefly claimed on social media that SMEE had “successfully developed a 28-nm lithography machine”, but later retracted the reference.

    In contrast, ASML’s EUV systems are used by leading chipmakers for processes at 2-nm nodes and below.

    For now, AMIES said its flagship product is its advanced packaging lithography machine, which held a global market share of 35 per cent and a 90 per cent share in China.

    On its website, AMIES lists four product lines: integrated circuits, advanced packaging, compound semiconductors and flat-panel displays. These encompass various types of annealing, inspection, chip manufacturing and packaging tools.

    In August, the company said it shipped its 500th stepper lithography machine. Steppers expose chip patterns on wafers one section at a time, unlike scanners, which continuously move the mask and wafer for faster, more precise exposures.

    AMIES received an award at the China International Industry Fair in September for its “next-generation fan-out packaging lithography system”.

    The company has received solid state support. AMIES’s nearly 30 shareholders include local government-backed funds such as Shanghai Information Investment, Spinnotec, the venture arms of Zhangjiang Hi-Tech Park and Citic Group, alongside a number of private equity investors, according to the Chinese corporate database Tianyancha.

    AMIES said it had a technical team of 600 people, with an average age of 33, and 65 per cent holding master’s or doctoral degrees.

    As part of China’s broader push for chip self-reliance across the supply chain, various players are racing to develop domestic DUV and EUV tools. Shenzhen-backed chip equipment firm SiCarrier, for example, is reportedly working on advanced-node lithography machines, although it has not publicly unveiled such products.

    Zetop Technologies – partially owned by SiCarrier and the US-sanctioned Changchun Institute of Optics, Fine Mechanics and Physics under the Chinese Academy of Sciences – counts key EUV optics researchers among its shareholders.

    Shanghai-based Yuliangsheng, in which SiCarrier also has a stake, supplied a 28-nm DUV system to Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corporation, China’s largest semiconductor foundry, for testing in 7-nm chip production, according to a Financial Times report in September.

    In the third quarter, ASML reported total net sales of €7.5 billion (US$8.8 billion), with China accounting for 42 per cent of system orders.

    However, ASML expected a sharp decline in demand from China next year, as tensions between the US and China, coupled with Beijing’s recent export controls on rare earth materials essential for ASML’s machines, have further complicated the global semiconductor supply chain.

    This article originally appeared in the South China Morning Post (SCMP), the most authoritative voice reporting on China and Asia for more than a century. For more SCMP stories, please explore the SCMP app or visit the SCMP’s Facebook and Twitter pages. Copyright © 2025 South China Morning Post Publishers Ltd. All rights reserved.

    Copyright (c) 2025. South China Morning Post Publishers Ltd. All rights reserved.


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  • Oncologist explains why chemotherapy doesn’t work for certain breast cancer patients – Health News

    Oncologist explains why chemotherapy doesn’t work for certain breast cancer patients – Health News

    Breast cancer remains the most common cancer among women worldwide. According to the World Health Organization (WHO), in 2024, around 2.4 million women were diagnosed with breast cancer globally, and approximately 685,000 women died from the…

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