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  • ‘Autofocus’ specs promise sharp vision, near or far

    ‘Autofocus’ specs promise sharp vision, near or far

    Chris Baraniuk

    Technology Reporter

    IXI Niko Eiden, smiling and wearing IXI's autofocus specs.IXI

    “People don’t want to look like cyborgs,” says Niko Eiden

    They look like an ordinary pair of glasses – but these are tech-packed specs.

    On a Zoom call, Niko Eiden, chief executive and co-founder of Finnish eyewear firm IXI, holds up the frames with lenses containing liquid crystals, meaning their vision-correcting properties can change on the fly.

    This one pair could correct the vision of someone who normally uses totally different pairs of glasses for seeing near or far.

    “These liquid crystals… we can rotate them with an electrical field,” explains Mr Eiden.

    “It’s totally, freely tuneable.” The position of those crystals affects the passage of light through the lenses. A built-in eye-tracker allows the glasses to respond to whatever correction the wearer needs at a given moment.

    However, tech-laden eyewear has a troubled history – take Google’s ill-fated “Glass” smart glasses.

    Consumer acceptability is key, acknowledges Mr Eiden. Most people don’t want to look like cyborgs: “We need to make our products actually look like existing eyewear.”

    IXI A pair of IXI glases. On one side you can see through to the electronicsIXI

    IXI glasses have lenses that can be manipulated with an electric field

    The market for eyewear tech is likely to grow.

    Presbyopia, an age-related condition that makes it harder to focus on things close to you, is projected to become more common over time as the world’s population ages. And myopia, or short-sightedness, is also on the rise.

    Spectacles have remained largely the same for decades. Bifocal lenses – in which a lens is split into two regions, usually for either near- or far-sightedness – require the wearer to direct their vision through the relevant region, depending on what they want to look at, in order to see clearly.

    Varifocals do a similar job but the transitions are much smoother.

    In contrast, auto-focus lenses promise to adjust part or all of the lens spontaneously, and even accommodate the wearer’s changing eyesight over time.

    “The first lenses that we produced were horrible,” admits Mr Eiden, candidly.

    Those early prototypes were “hazy”, he says, and with the lens quality noticeably poor at its edges.

    But newer versions have proved promising in tests, says Mr Eiden. Participants in the company’s trials have been asked, for example, to read something on a page, then look at an object in the distance, to see whether the glasses respond smoothly to the transition.

    Mr Eiden says that the eye tracking device within the spectacles cannot determine exactly what a wearer is looking at, though certain activities such as reading are in principle detectable because of the nature of eye movements associated with them.

    Since such glasses respond so closely to the wearer’s eye behaviour, it’s important the frames fit well, says Emilia Helin, product director.

    IXI’s frames are adjustable but not to a great degree, given the delicate electronics inside, she explains: “We have some flexibility but not full flexibility.” That’s why IXI hopes to ensure that the small range of frames it has designed would suit a wide variety of faces.

    The small battery secreted inside IXI’s autofocus frames should last for two days, says Mr Eiden, adding that it’s possible to recharge the specs overnight while the wearer is asleep.

    But he won’t be drawn on a launch date, which he intends to reveal later this year. As for cost, I ask whether £1,000 might be the sort of price tag he has in mind. He merely says, “I’m smiling when you say it but I won’t confirm.”

    Getty Images A mother tries on glasses in a store with her young daughterGetty Images

    Autofocus lenses could help people who struggle with varifocals or bifocals

    Autofocus lenses could help people who struggle with varifocals or bifocals, says Paramdeep Bilkhu, clinical adviser at the College of Optometrists.

    However, he adds, “There is insufficient evidence to state whether they perform as well as traditional options and whether they can be used for safety critical tasks such as driving.”

    Chi-Ho To, an optometry researcher, at the Hong Kong Polytechnic University has a similar concern – what if the vision correction went wrong or was delayed slightly while he was, say, performing surgery on someone?

    “But I think in terms of general use having something that allows autofocusing is a good idea,” he adds.

    Mr Eiden notes that the first version of his company’s lenses will not alter the entire lens area. “One can always glance over the dynamic area,” he says. If wholly self-adjusting lenses emerge then safety will become “a much more serious business”, he adds.

    In 2013, UK firm Adlens released glasses that allowed wearers to manually change the optical power of the lenses via a small dial on the frames. These lenses contained a fluid-filled membrane, which when compressed in response to dial adjustments would alter its curvature.

    Adlens’ current chief executive Rob Stevens says the specs sold for $1,250 (£920) in the US and were “well received by consumers” but not so much by opticians, which he says “strangled sales”.

    Since then, technology has moved on and the concept of lenses that refocus themselves automatically, without manual interventions, has emerged.

    Like IXI and other companies, Adlens is working on glasses that do this. However, Mr Stevens declines to confirm a launch date.

    Joshua Silver, an Oxford University physicist, founded Adlens but no longer works for the company.

    He came up with the idea of fluid-filled adjustable lenses back in 1985 and developed glasses that could be tuned to the wearer’s needs and then permanently set to that prescription.

    Such lenses have enabled roughly 100,000 people in 20 countries to access vision correcting technology. Prof Silver is currently seeking investment for a venture called Vision, which would further rollout these glasses.

    As for more expensive, electronics-filled auto-focus specs, he questions whether they will have broad appeal: “Wouldn’t [people] just go and buy reading glasses, which would more or less do the same thing for them?”

    Hong Kong Polytechnic University Prof Chi-Ho To holding up a lens.Hong Kong Polytechnic University

    Prof Chi-Ho To has developed a lens which slows short-sightedness

    Other specs tech is even slowing down the progression of eye conditions such as myopia, beyond just correcting for them.

    Prof To has developed glasses lenses that have a honeycomb-like ring in them. Light passing through the centre of the ring, focused as normal, reaches the wearer’s retina and allows them to see clearly.

    However, light passing through the ring itself is defocused slightly meaning that the peripheral retina gets a slightly blurred image.

    This appears to slow improper eyeball growth in children, which Prof To says cuts the rate of short-sightedness progression by 60%. Glasses with this technology are now in use in more than 30 countries, he adds.

    British firm SightGlass has a slightly different approach – glasses that gently reduce the contrast of someone’s vision to similarly affect eye growth and myopia progression.

    While autofocus glasses and other high-tech solutions may have promise, Prof To has an even bigger goal: glasses that don’t just slow down myopia but actually reverse it slightly – a tantalising prospect that could improve the vision of potentially billions of people.

    “There is growing evidence that you can do it,” teases Prof To.

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  • PTI’s Qaiser acquitted in Azadi March case

    PTI’s Qaiser acquitted in Azadi March case


    ISLAMABAD:

    A lower court in Islamabad on Thursday acquitted former National Assembly Speaker Asad Qaiser in a case linked to the 2022 Azadi March.

    Judicial Magistrate Abbas Shah announced the reserved verdict, approving the acquittal request submitted by Asad Qaiser in the Azadi March case.

    The case was registered at Kohsar Police Station during the political protests led by Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaaf. Qaiser was among several party leaders accused of violating public order during the march.

    During the hearing, Qaiser’s legal team argued that the charges were politically motivated and lacked sufficient evidence.

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  • Government inheriting poor value assets due to bad handling of PFI contracts, watchdog says | Private finance initiative

    Government inheriting poor value assets due to bad handling of PFI contracts, watchdog says | Private finance initiative

    Bad management of private finance contracts is leading to poor quality assets being handed back to the government, including schools and hospitals, according to parliament’s spending watchdog.

    Its report into the use of private finance initiatives (PFI) for infrastructure comes at a time when the government has identified private investment in projects such as power plants and transport outside London as a key part of its growth agenda.

    However, the public accounts committee (PAC) is warning that a series of problems with PFI deals could put the government’s ambitions to attract investors for such schemes “in jeopardy”.

    Setting out a series of recommendations to ministers, MPs on the committee said that UK infrastructure risked becoming “stony ground” for investors unless major changes were made.

    PFI took off under Tony Blair’s government, which saw it as a way of building key public projects without adding to the national debt. However, these deals have long been controversial, and not have always been seen to provide value for money to taxpayers.

    More than 650 public sector organisations have their buildings, IT and essential infrastructure managed by a private consortium under a PFI deal, and state bodies are set to pay £136bn in unitary charges for these contracts until 2052-3.

    Half of the contracts – covering hospitals, schools and transport – are set to expire during the next decade. The PAC report called on ministers to ensure such contracts were carefully managed so that private sector firms complied with their contractual obligations and “only quality assets are handed back” to government.

    Last year a report by the Association of Infrastructure Investors in Public Private Partnerships warned that schools and hospitals that depend on PFI contracts were in danger of “severe disruption” unless they could find a way to cope once those contracts expire.

    MPs on the PAC are also calling for a more comprehensive framework for how risk is shared between the public and private sector when they work in partnership, particularly after the high-profile collapse of the outsourcing company Carillion, which halted work on new hospitals in Liverpool and Birmingham.

    The government also needs to provide detailed information on the pipeline of future projects in order to attract new investors, according to the PAC, amid a current lack of data about the past performance of projects or when future ones will be delivered.

    “Our scrutiny has found a woefully obscured picture for any seeking to invest in big infrastructure projects in the UK, with a corresponding drain of skills overseas,” said Sir Geoffrey Clifton-Brown, chair of the PAC.

    “Without a long-term, consistent pipeline giving an idea of what to expect in years to come, UK infrastructure risks becoming stony ground for any investor.”

    The PAC is calling on the Treasury to identify which financing models it would support for money for different types of projects, such as energy, transport or communication, to attract investors and drive competition.

    A central database covering private finance for infrastructure investment should be published, according to the report, to help the Treasury to deliver value for money, given the huge amounts of money involved in such projects, such as the £14.2bn pledged by the government for the Sizewell C nuclear power station in Suffolk.

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  • Rugby headgear can’t prevent concussion – but new materials could soften the blows over a career

    Rugby headgear can’t prevent concussion – but new materials could soften the blows over a career

    The widely held view among rugby players, coaches and officials is that headgear can’t prevent concussion. If so, why wear it? It’s hot, it can block vision and hearing, and it can be uncomfortable.

    Headgear was originally designed to protect players from cuts and abrasions. But players still hope it will offer them a degree of protection against the collisions they experience in the game. Some players adopt it after previous concussions.

    We’re now seeing increasing numbers of professional players opting in. The Irish men’s team, for example, field up to five players each match sporting headgear. In Japan, it’s mandatory for juniors. And more parents in New Zealand are making their children wear it, too.

    The exact specifications for rugby match kit – boots, shorts, shoulder pads and
    headgear – are regulated through World Rugby’s Law 4 and Regulation 12. In 2019, the governing body launched a trial enabling players to wear headgear with new technical specifications in training and matches.

    The specifications have meant manufacturers can take advantage of novel “isotropic” materials that can potentially reduce the impact forces experienced by players.

    Conventional headgear is composed of soft foams that flatten when a player’s head collides with the ground or another player. As such, they can only minimally absorb those collision forces.

    Isotropic materials behave differently. They can absorb impacts from multiple directions and may offer a level of protection against the effects on a player’s head of a tackle or other collision event.

    Given these changes, and in light of recent research, we may need to change the narrative around rugby headgear: while it may not prevent concussion, it might reduce the total contact “burden” experienced by players in a game and over a whole season. And this could have benefits for long-term brain health.

    Impacts across seasons and careers

    Contact in rugby – through tackles, at the breakdown, and in scrums and lineouts – leads to players experiencing a number of collisions or “head acceleration events”. This contact is most commonly head to ground, head to body or head to head.

    By having players use “smart” mouthguards with embedded micro-accelerometers and gyroscopes to capture head movements, researchers can now measure each collision and each player’s contact load in a game – and potentially over a career.

    A player’s total contact load is found by adding together the magnitude of the impacts they experience in a game. These are measured as “peak linear accelerations” or “peak rotational accelerations”.

    While past research and media attention has focused on concussion, it has become clear the total contact burden in training and matches – the total “sub-concussive knocks” through head acceleration events – may be as important, if not more so.

    One of our own research projects involved following 40 under-16 players wearing smart mouthguards for all training and matches across one season. Peak Linear accelerations are measured as a g-force (g). Activities such as such as running, jumping and shaking the head would measure under 8g, for example, whereas heading a soccer ball might measure 31g.

    The results of our study showed the players differed greatly in their cumulative exposure over a whole season, from 300g to nearly 14,000g. These differences would be amplified further over an entire rugby career.

    Some of the variation is likely due to a player’s team position, with loose forwards having a greater burden than others. But it also seems some players just enjoy the contact aspects of the game more than others.

    Rugby is an impact sport: the Ireland and England women’s teams clash in 2025.
    Getty Images

    Potential benefits of new headgear materials

    Researcher Helen Murray at the University of Auckland has highlighted the need for more research into the burden of collisions, rather than just concussions, over a rugby career. In particular, we need to know more about its effect on future brain health.

    We hope to contribute to this by following our existing cohort of players through their careers. In the meantime, our research has examined the potential of existing rugby headgear and new isotropic materials to mitigate peak accelerations in rugby collisions.

    Using the field data collected from male and female players over the past four seasons, we have designed laboratory testing protocols to compare the conventional and newer materials.

    The results suggest the new forms of headgear do have the potential to reduce the impact burden for players.

    We found 55–90% of head acceleration events do involve direct contact with the head. As such, collision-mitigation headgear could be beneficial. And our laboratory testing produced an estimated 30% reduction in peak linear accelerations with the headgear compared to without.

    The nature of concussion is complex and related to the size of an impact as well as its direction and angle. For instance, we observed the concussions experienced by the junior players occurred between 12g and 62g – well below the male threshold of 70g requiring professional players to be removed from the field for a head injury assessment.

    Currently, it seems unlikely headgear can prevent concussion. But it does appear new headgear materials could significantly reduce the total impact burden for players during their careers. And this may help safeguard their future brain health.

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  • Japan a Prime Destination for Global Investors Amid Trump Tariffs, Pimco Says

    Japan a Prime Destination for Global Investors Amid Trump Tariffs, Pimco Says

    Japan has emerged as a prime destination for global investors as the trade war triggers a reassessment of capital flows into the US, according to Pacific Investment Management Co.

    The Asian nation is drawing inflows that seek to benefit from “once-in-a-generation structural reforms” in equities and rising rates in fixed income after decades of monetary stimulus, according to Ben Ferguson, co-head of Pimco in Japan. US President Donald Trump’s policy announcements have been “disruptive” and the latest tariff announcements “highlight the need to, at least consider diversification,” he added.

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  • China Stocks Narrow Gap With Hong Kong on Policy Optimism

    China Stocks Narrow Gap With Hong Kong on Policy Optimism

    After lagging Hong Kong stocks by the most since 2008, Chinese equities are showing signs of catching up as valuations and optimism over policy support rekindle investor interest.

    The onshore market had lacked momentum for months, while shares in Hong Kong rallied on the back of technology and new consumer themes. A nascent reversal is taking place in July, as investors bet on positive policy messaging from the Politburo meeting and more action following Beijing’s campaign to curb aggressive price competition in key industries.

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  • CNY/USD: Dollar Losing Allure for Chinese Traders Creates Runway for Yuan

    CNY/USD: Dollar Losing Allure for Chinese Traders Creates Runway for Yuan

    Chinese traders are pulling back from the dollar, helping ease a shortage that has rattled the banking system and setting the yuan up for further gains.

    The dollar’s premium over the yuan, as reflected in 12-month swap points, has narrowed by 25% since the end of December. Chinese state-owned banks have gradually shifted from wanting dollars to reducing their demand for it, to offering it out, according to traders who declined to be identified as they’re not authorized to speak publicly.

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  • Ancient Protein Analysis Sheds New Light on Rhino Family Tree

    Ancient Protein Analysis Sheds New Light on Rhino Family Tree

    Paleontologists have retrieved ancient enamel protein sequences from a fossilized tooth of Epiaceratherium sp., a rhinocerotid that lived in Canada’s High Arctic between 24 and 21 million years ago (Early Miocene). The recovered sequences allowed the researchers to determine that this ancient rhino diverged from other rhinocerotids during the Middle Eocene-Oligocene epoch, around 41-25 million years ago. The new data also shed new light on the divergence between the two main subfamilies of rhinos, Elasmotheriinae and Rhinocerotinae, suggesting a more recent split in the Oligocene, around 34-22 million years ago, than shown previously through bone analysis.

    A paleoartist’s reconstruction of the three extinct rhino species: in the foreground is a Siberian unicorn (Elasmotherium sibiricum), and close behind are two Merck’s rhinoceroses (Stephanorhinus kirchbergensis); in the far background is a woolly rhinoceros (Coelodonta antiquitatis). Image credit: Beth Zaiken.

    Dr. Marc Dickinson from the University of York and colleagues analyzed a tooth of Epiaceratherium sp. using a technique known as chiral amino acid analysis to gain a clearer understanding of how the proteins within it had been preserved.

    By measuring the extent of protein degradation and comparing it to previously analyzed rhino material, they were able to confirm that the amino acids were original to the tooth and not the result of later contamination.

    “It is phenomenal that these tools are enabling us to explore further and further back in time,” Dr. Dickinson said.

    “Building on our knowledge of ancient proteins, we can now start asking fascinating new questions about the evolution of ancient life on our planet.”

    The rhino is of particular interest as it is now classified as an endangered species, and so understanding its deep-time evolutionary history, allows us to gain vital insights into how past environmental changes and extinctions shaped the diversity we see today.

    To date, scientists have relied on the shape and structure of fossils or, more recently, ancient DNA (aDNA) to piece together the evolutionary history of long-extinct species.

    However, aDNA rarely survives beyond 1 million years, limiting its utility for understanding deep evolutionary past.

    While ancient proteins have been found in fossils from the Middle-Late Miocene — roughly the last 10 million years — obtaining sequences detailed enough for robust reconstructions of evolutionary relationships was previously limited to samples no older than four million years.

    The new study significantly expands that window, demonstrating the potential of proteins to persist over vast geological timescales under the right conditions.

    “Successful analysis of ancient proteins from such an old sample gives a fresh perspective to scientists around the globe who already have incredible fossils in their collections,” said Dr. Fazeelah Munir, also from the University of York.

    “This important fossil helps us to understand our ancient past.”

    The results were published this week in the journal Nature.

    _____

    R.S. Paterson et al. Phylogenetically informative proteins from an Early Miocene rhinocerotid. Nature, published online July 9, 2025; doi: 10.1038/s41586-025-09231-4

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  • ATC upholds Gandapur arrest warrants

    ATC upholds Gandapur arrest warrants


    ISLAMABAD:

    An Anti-Terrorism Court (ATC) on Thursday maintained the arrest warrants of Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa Chief Minister Ali Amin Gandapur and also ordered to initiate the process to declare former minister Amir Mahmood Kayani proclaimed offender.

    ATC judge Tahir Abbas Sapra heard the case. The court maintained the arrest warrants of Gandapur for his continuous non-appearance despite being summoned in the Faizabad protest case on the disqualification of the founder of PTI.

    During the hearing, Ilyas Siddiqui, Raja Zahoor, and others appeared in the court on behalf of the accused.

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  • Gregg Wallace dropped by BBC over doubts he could ‘change behaviour’ | Gregg Wallace

    Gregg Wallace dropped by BBC over doubts he could ‘change behaviour’ | Gregg Wallace

    Gregg Wallace was dropped from the BBC after bosses concluded they had no confidence he could “change what seems to be learned behaviour”, the corporation has told him.

    A letter of dismissal to the former MasterChef presenter from the head of compliance for BBC television states she cannot be sure his presence on a show would allow for “a sufficiently safe and respectful environment” for others, the Telegraph reported.

    The letter from Claire Powell, head of compliance for BBC Television, states that she took into consideration his recent diagnosis of autism, which Wallace himself suggested had made the MasterChef set a “dangerous environment” for him.

    She concluded that he “struggled to distinguish the boundaries between appropriate and inappropriate behaviour in the workplace”, despite being given relevant training in 2019.

    Wallace stood aside from presenting MasterChef in November after BBC News reported a series of allegations being made against him by 13 people, who worked with Wallace across a 17-year period.

    A report into his behaviour, overseen by law firm Lewis Silkin, was then commissioned by MasterChef’s producers Banijay. The report’s findings are expected imminently.

    Wallace has already admitted using inappropriate language and apologised, but claimed earlier this week to have been cleared of “the most serious and sensational accusations made against me”.

    Powell’s letter, obtained by the Telegraph, said the corporation had taken into account that Wallace was a presenter on a flagship BBC show and referred to the “impact that your comments had on the BBC’s reputation”.

    “I have also taken into account whether your behaviour could be improved with training and/or coaching,” she stated. “However, having reviewed the 2025 findings, I do not have the confidence that you can change what seems to be learned behaviour for you to make what you perceive to be jokes in the working environment, without understanding the boundaries of what is appropriate.

    “I also have to consider the fact that various people in the BBC have spoken to you about your behaviour over the course of your career, and that you also already received training/coaching in 2019.

    “I do not have confidence that your behaviour can change to ensure there is a sufficiently safe and respectful environment for others working with you in the types of programmes the BBC has engaged you to present.

    “Such productions are not heavily scripted programmes and involve sound and consistent levels of judgment in relation to interactions with others which cannot constantly be monitored or supervised.”

    The Telegraph also reported Wallace was preparing to sue the BBC for discrimination. The 60-year-old has revealed a recent autism diagnosis. In a statement early this week, he accused the BBC of failing “to investigate my disability or protect me from what I now realise was a dangerous environment for over 20 years”.

    BBC insiders have suggested his dismissal had nothing to do with his autism diagnosis and was down to his behaviour.

    A BBC spokesperson said: “Banijay UK instructed the law firm Lewis Silkin to run an investigation into allegations against Gregg Wallace. We are not going to comment until the investigation is complete and the findings are published.”

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