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  • Author creates ‘paradise’ from Little Maplestead cricket field

    Author creates ‘paradise’ from Little Maplestead cricket field

    A nature writer who has transformed a former cricket field into a wildlife meadow has said anyone can get involved in increasing biodiversity, even if they have a box window.

    James Canton says it has taken him 15 years to transform two acres of land at Little Maplestead, on the Essex-Suffolk border, from concrete and overgrown grass to a fully functioning ecosystem.

    In that time, the 58-year-old has created a “paradise” home to nightingales, butterflies and bumble bees, as well as an abundance of thriving wildflowers.

    Mr Canton said: “There was nothing living there, it’s very difficult for any biodiverse life living on just a bit of grass.”

    When he first started, the author enlisted the help of an expert to help him and said: “It was a gradual process.

    “You’re creating little pockets where wildlife can come back.”

    Mr Canton grew up in north London but moved to rural Essex. He now works as a lecturer for the University of Essex and has written six books.

    While growing up in London he said he was always playing football in the park and wanted to be outside in nature.

    Mr Canton said rewilding usually required at least 100 acres of land which was not accessible to everyone.

    But he said young people had become conscious about the environment and could do their bit by creating a small pocket of wildlife in their homes through renaturing.

    The writer said renaturing is as simple as filling an old cardboard box with soil and planting some native flowers where bees and pollinators will come and feed.

    He described the process of renaturing as “small scale nature restoration”.

    “It’s good for you and good for nature,” he said.

    “I think as humans we are happier when we are outside.”

    He said renaturing was different to rewilding because that was “taking large areas of the globe and not having human intervention”.

    In his twenties, Mr Canton travelled the world and saw how indigenous and Eastern cultures lived alongside nature.

    “We [the West] tend to have more of a colonial mindset with nature and what we can take,” he said.

    “We need to be part of nature but for indigenous people that is their standard.”

    However, he said renaturing was starting to become a recognised term as people in urban areas looked for ways to reconnect with wildlife.

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  • TV tonight: on the trail of the man accused of murder by mail | Television

    TV tonight: on the trail of the man accused of murder by mail | Television

    Poisoned: Killer in the Post

    9pm, Channel 4
    On New Year’s Day 2023, 25-year-old Imogen “Immy” Nunn’s body was found in her Brighton home, after she had consumed a poison bought online via a suicide forum. This unsettling two-part documentary shows that Immy was one of many who had used the sites. It looks at the devastating conversations in the forum and meets the families of other victims, with one father reading his son’s last posts and the replies from users who cheered him on as he was dying. It then follows the Times journalist James Beal’s efforts to find a man accused of shipping this lethal poison globally, which culminates in Beal going undercover and meeting him face to face. (The man is now awaiting trial in Canada over similar allegations.) Hollie Richardson

    Plunderer: The Life and Times of a Nazi Art Thief

    7.20pm, PBS America
    Bruno Lohse was a Nazi art dealer who was in charge of looting masterpieces from Jewish people for Hermann Göring. He spent a brief spell in jail, but was released to continue his career in the art trade. Prof Jonathan Petropoulos investigates his story. HR

    Can’t Sell, Must Sell

    8pm, Channel 4
    The endless booby traps embedded within the UK housing market continue to give rise to new TV variants. In this series, the sibling property developers Stuart and Scarlette Douglas help homeowners sell seemingly unsellable properties. They are in West Sussex confronting challenging market conditions and equally problematic interior-decoration issues. Phil Harrison

    Side Hustlers

    8pm, U&W
    Unusually, this business reality show seems more interested in mentorship than manufactured conflict. The angel investors Ashley Graham and Emma Grede offer useful advice and timely cash injections to their female-led startups. But even amid this supportive vibe, things don’t always work out – as one hustler is about to discover. Graeme Virtue

    Ghosts US

    9pm, BBC Three

    Plenty of fun … Richie Moriarty, Danielle Pinnock and Román Zaragoza in Ghosts US. Photograph: BBC/©2024 CBS Broadcasting, Inc. All Rights Reserved/Bertrand Calmeau

    The silly supernatural sitcom feels more like background TV than its British cousin, but it’s still plenty of fun. In this triple bill, a belated wedding gift (a children’s dinosaur bed, no less) brings the exes Isaac and Nigel back together, before Jay’s disapproving folks descend on Woodstone Manor for Christmas. Hannah J Davies

    Debbie Horsfield Remembers: Poldark

    10pm, BBC Four
    It’s a decade since a topless Aidan Turner scythed crops on the Cornish coast – and fans’ weak knees have just about recovered. Before revisiting the opening episode, the screenwriter and executive producer Debbie Horsfield discusses how the drama won hearts. HR

    Film choice

    A disorientating swirl of creeping dread … Donald Sutherland and Julie Christie in Don’t Look Now. Photograph: Cinetext Bildarchiv/Casey Productions/Studiocanal/Allstar

    Don’t Look Now (Nicolas Roeg, 1973), midnight, BBC Two
    BBC Two’s week of trying to creep everyone out before bed continues with the scariest film ever made. Nicolas Roeg’s 1973 Daphne du Maurier adaptation is a disorientating swirl of creeping dread. Donald Sutherland and Julie Christie play a grief-stricken couple who travel to Venice and find themselves plagued by malevolent clairvoyants and terrifying sightings. The final sequence, in which Sutherland follows a figure through the city, is as nightmarish as anything you will ever see. Stuart Heritage

    Live sport

    Women’s Euro 2025 football: England v Netherlands, 4.15pm, BBC One
    The second Group D match, in which Leah Williamson will be hoping for a repeat of England’s victory the last time the sides met, in 2023. Followed by France v Wales at 7pm on ITV1.

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  • Spandau Ballet house celebrates 100 years as museum

    Spandau Ballet house celebrates 100 years as museum

    Getty Images Leighton House on the 3rd October 2019 in London in the United Kingdom. The Leighton House Museum is an art museum in the Holland Park area of the Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea in west London. The house was the former home and studio of the leading Victorian artist, Frederic, Lord Leighton, Getty Images

    The Leighton House Museum is an art museum in the Holland Park area

    An artist’s home – that also starred in the video for Spandau Ballet’s 1983 hit Gold – is celebrating 100 years as a public museum.

    Painter Frederic Leighton commissioned the building of Leighton House in 1864 and when he died in 1896 his collection was sold, but the house retained.

    Visitors were allowed in from 1900, and when it was taken over by the council in 1926 its future as a public museum was secured.

    Now people are being asked to share their memories of the place between then and now for “Leighton House: A Journey Through 100 Years”.

    Getty Images Leighton House, considered one of the country's most important artist homes and the integration of Eastern and Western art under one roof in London, United Kingdom on April 17, 2023. The famous British painter Frederic Leighton lived in the red-bricked building in the 19th century and it reflected his appreciation for Islamic art. (Photo bGetty Images

    Leighton House is considered one of the country’s most important artist homes

    Leighton intended to create a purpose-built studio-house where he could work and live.

    His friend George Aitchison, whom he met in Rome more than a decade earlier, was employed as the architect.

    The project lasted more than 30 years, and the house was designed as a showcase for artistic taste – and to entertain and impress artists, collectors and celebrities.

    Between 1869 and 1895 it was transformed by a series of extensions.

    Getty Images Leighton House, considered one of the country's most important artist homes and the integration of Eastern and Western art under one roof in London, United Kingdom on April 17, 2023. The famous British painter Frederic Leighton lived in the red-bricked building in the 19th century and it reflected his appreciation for Islamic art. (Photo bGetty Images

    Frederic Leighton lived in the red-bricked building in the 19th Century and his décor reflects his appreciation for Islamic art

    Getty Images Lord Frederic Leighton's studio, Leighton House, 12 Holland Park Road, London, 1895. Interior view showing recently completed works including 'Flaming June' and 'The Maid with the Golden Hair'. (Photo by English Heritage/Heritage Images/Getty Images)Getty Images

    The studio in 1895, showing recently recently completed works including Flaming June

    Getty Images Rear view of Leighton House in London on a clear day, showing its red-brick facade, large glass conservatory, and the distinctive golden dome of the Arab Hall, with two people walking on the lawn in the foreground and leafless trees surrounding the building.Getty Images

    Leighton House is the former home of artist Frederic Leighton

    During World War Two the house was damaged by bombing and remained closed until the early 1950s.

    Limited funds for restoration saw interiors whitewashed, floors stripped, and fluorescent lighting put in.

    This neutralised much of what remained of Leighton’s decoration, which has now been restored to its jewel-like tones and Middle Eastern influences.

    This included re-gilding the dome and restoring the ziggurats on the roof of the Arab Hall.

    Alan Davidson/Shutterstock Black-and-white photo of a group of people posing at a party in 1981, including Spandau Ballet members Gary Kemp and John Keeble, performance duo Tik and Tok, and others.Alan Davidson/Shutterstock

    Spandau Ballet’s Gary Kemp and John Keeble with guests at the London Designer Collections party at Leighton House Museum in 1981

    Getty Images William De Morgan titled 'Tobias and the Angel at the River Tigris', 'Christ and Peter' by Simeon Solomon and 'The Wine Press' by John Roddam Spencer Stanhope are pictured during a preview at Leighton House Museum in February 2016 Getty Images

    Tobias and the Angel at the River Tigris, Christ and Peter and The Wine Press at Leighton House Museum

    The centenary programme will feature several key exhibitions and the museum is asking the public to share their memories.

    Kensington and Chelsea councillor, Kim Taylor-Smith, encouraged people to take part, dubbing Leighton House “Kensington’s own National Treasure”.

    Senior curator of the council’s museums, Daniel Robbins, said the programme “brings together every aspect of Leighton House that makes it distinctive, significant and still relevant 100 years later”.

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  • MK Dons honour Bletchley Park codebreakers on new away kit

    MK Dons honour Bletchley Park codebreakers on new away kit

    The new MK Dons away kit includes a tribute to World War Two codebreakers.

    Bletchley Park collaborated with the EFL League Two team on the design, which referenced the circular keys on the Enigma machine – a typewriter-like device used by Germany to encode military messages.

    Now a museum, Bletchley Park in Buckinghamshire, was once a secret site which housed codebreakers, including Alan Turing, who cracked codes and helped shorten the war.

    The football club told the BBC: “Bletchley Park were brilliant, really helpful in designing the kit alongside us and ensuring everything was accurate.”

    MK Dons teamed up with Reebok for the kit, their second collaboration with the sportswear giant for the 25/26 season.

    A new crest for the club was announced last week and includes a nod to the city’s “iconic roundabouts”.

    According to a club spokesperson, the new owners, a Kuwait-based consortium, had been keen to embrace the history of the area “and establish those links”.

    Iain Standen, Bletchley Park CEO said: “This collaboration between MK Dons, Reebok, and Bletchley Park is more than a kit—it’s a tribute to the ingenuity of the Bletchley Park wartime Codebreakers and a celebration of our local heritage.

    “By blending sport, design, and history, we’re inviting new audiences to step into the story of Bletchley Park and experience firsthand the legacy that continues to inspire innovation today.

    “The new away kit pays tribute to our historic site, with Enigma machine keys subtly imprinted into the fabric, honouring Bletchley Park’s cipher-breaking achievements and the pioneering individuals behind them.

    “This partnership offers a unique opportunity for both fans and visitors to connect with the remarkable stories that shaped our world, stories that can be discovered here at Bletchley Park.”

    Visitors to Bletchley Park can see the Bombe, an early computer that helped crack the German cipher.

    Its story was featured in the 2014 film The Imitation Game, starring Benedict Cumberbatch as Alan Turing.

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  • Mindfulness meditation boosts attention across all age groups

    Mindfulness meditation boosts attention across all age groups

    A new study from the USC Leonard Davis School of Gerontology reveals that just 30 days of guided mindfulness meditation can significantly enhance key aspects of attentional control – especially how quickly and accurately people direct their focus – regardless of age.

    The study is among the first to use eye tracking, a powerful and objective measure of attention, to test the effects of mindfulness training on young, middle-aged, and older adults. The findings demonstrate that even short-term meditation can lead to measurable cognitive improvements, said USC Leonard Davis School postdoctoral researcher Andy Jeesu Kim, the study’s first author.

    This study shows that mindfulness isn’t just about feeling more relaxed-it can literally change the way your brain handles attention. And that’s incredibly important for maintaining cognitive health as we age.”


    Andy Jeesu Kim, study’s first author

    Why attention matters in aging

    As people age, they often experience slower reaction times and increased difficulty tuning out distractions. These changes are tied to a brain system called the locus coeruleus–noradrenaline (LC-NA) system, which plays a critical role in attention, arousal, and memory. Prior research, including work led by USC Leonard Davis Professor and study senior author Mara Mather, links age-related decline in this system to early Alzheimer’s disease changes.

    Previous investigation has also shown that mindfulness meditation can enhance brain areas involved in attention and may increase activity in the LC-NA system. However, this is the first study to examine how mindfulness training affects attention using precise eye-tracking methods and whether the benefits differ across age groups, Kim explained.

    The study: Mindfulness vs. audiobook

    The USC study enrolled 69 adults split into three age groups: young (18–30), middle-aged (50–65), and older adults (65–80). Participants were randomly assigned to practice one of two options:

    • Mindfulness meditation using the Headspace app, 10–15 minutes per day for 30 days
    • An audiobook control, listening to chapters from a novel for the same duration

    All participants completed three in-person lab visits and performed two eye-tracking visual search tasks that measured their speed and accuracy in focusing attention and ignoring distractions.

    Key findings: Faster focus, stronger control

    After the mindfulness training, participants showed improvements in several core aspects of attention:

    • Faster reaction times: Participants were quicker to move their eyes toward target shapes, showing more efficient visual processing.
    • Improved goal-directed focus: They made more direct saccades (eye movements) toward relevant targets and were better able to resist being pulled off course by distracting objects.
    • Reduced distractibility: In some tasks, participants were less likely to fixate on irrelevant but visually “loud” items.

    Interestingly, the benefits were not limited to one age group.

    “We expected older adults to benefit the most, but we found that mindfulness improved attention similarly across young, middle-aged, and older adults,” Kim said. “This suggests mindfulness can be a useful tool at any stage of life.”

    However, these improvements were not reflected in self-reported mindfulness scores from questionnaires, underscoring the value of objective eye-tracking measures.

    A powerful tool for everyday attention

    Although mindfulness has been widely embraced for stress relief and emotional wellness, this study provides compelling evidence for its cognitive benefits, too. The improvement was particularly apparent in attention control, a mental ability that is crucial for everything from driving to reading to social interactions.

    Importantly, the study also compared the effects of the mindfulness intervention to an audiobook control. While both groups showed some improvement in attention, mindfulness participants improved more quickly and more significantly in certain areas, particularly reaction speed.

    What’s next

    The researchers note that while the study demonstrates promising short-term benefits, future studies should explore whether longer or more intensive mindfulness training could produce even greater effects, especially for older adults facing age-related cognitive decline.

    “We’re excited about the potential of digital mindfulness interventions to help people support their brain health,” Kim said. “It’s simple, low-cost, and widely accessible. The key is consistency.”-

    “The effects of mindfulness meditation on mechanisms of attentional control in young and older adults: A preregistered eye tracking study,” appeared in eNeuro on July 7, 2025. The study was funded by the National Institute on Aging (F32-AG076288) and the USC Center for Mindfulness Science. Along with Kim and Mather, coauthors included Keran Chen and Ying Tian of the USC Leonard Davis School.

    Source:

    University of Southern California

    Journal reference:

    Kim, A. J., et al. (2025). The effects of mindfulness meditation on mechanisms of attentional control in young and older adults: a preregistered eye tracking study. eNeuro. doi.org/10.1523/eneuro.0356-23.2025.

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  • More 999 alcohol calls for London in August than at Christmas

    More 999 alcohol calls for London in August than at Christmas

    Almost 10,000 alcohol-related emergency calls to the London Ambulance Service (LAS) were made last summer, with paramedics urging people to drink sensibly.

    The service said it received more emergency calls in June, July and August individually, than it did in December during the Christmas party season.

    And May and June this year have seen greater numbers for alcohol-related calls than in the previous two years, LAS said.

    The service’s Mark Faulkner said: “We are asking people to look after themselves and their friends. Every avoidable alcohol-related call we attend could take away from someone who might have a life-threatening condition.”

    Between June and August in London last year, LAS attended more than 9,700 alcohol-related calls and over 4,700 drug overdoses.

    By comparison, in December 2024 it received more than 2,600 alcohol-related calls and 1,100 drug-related calls.

    Mr Faulkner said: “We understand Londoners want to go out and have fun in the height of summer – particularly with the wealth of music festivals and outdoor events that London offers.

    “August brings more alcohol-related calls than the Christmas party season so if you are enjoying the festival season, please drink sensibly.

    “If you suspect that a friend is having a drug overdose, there are steps you can take to help to us them. This includes calling 999, telling us what they’ve taken and following the instructions of the 999 call-handler.

    “There is no such thing as a reliable drug dealer. You do not know what you are taking and what it might have been mixed with. Even if you have taken the substance before, this does not mean it is safe.”

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  • Vaccine ‘misunderstanding’ behind Liverpool measles spike, medic says

    Vaccine ‘misunderstanding’ behind Liverpool measles spike, medic says

    Sarah Spina-Matthews & Anna Jameson

    BBC News, Liverpool

    BBC A man sits speaking wearing a navy nurse's uniform in a hospital building. BBC

    Alder Hey chief nurse Nathan Askew said the MMR vaccine is “very safe”

    A spike in measles cases among children on Merseyside has been caused by misunderstanding around the safety of vaccines, a hospital head nurse has said.

    Alder Hey Children’s Hospital has seen a surge in children being taken to hospital after becoming “seriously unwell” with highly contagious virus.

    The rise has been blamed on a fall in the uptake of the measles, mumps and rubella (MMR) vaccine.

    Chief nurse Nathan Askew said serious cases of the virus had “basically all went away” early in his career, but had now started to come back as “vaccine levels are dropping”.

    The number of children in the north west of England to receive both doses of the MMR vaccine fell to 84.5% in 2023-24 from 87.1% in 2021-22, according to figures from the NHS.

    Mr Askew said the virus had been “eradicated in the UK and now it is back as a really contagious and dangerous childhood illness”.

    He said there was “a lot of misunderstanding” around the MMR vaccine, particularly after a study which falsely linked it to autism.

    Mr Askew said many studies have shown the claim “is not true” and there is no link.

    “This vaccine’s been in use for well over 50 years. It’s very safe, tried and tested,” he said.

    A man with a shirt beard and a woman with red hair stand speaking in front of a brick building.

    Tony Murphy and Claire Kelly said vaccinating their son against meningitis may have saved his life

    Measles infections usually start with cold-like symptoms like a runny nose, followed by a blotchy rash on the body days later.

    Children are usually given the MMR jab before their first birthday, with the second administered after they turn three.

    People of any age can be given the vaccine via the NHS for free.

    Liverpool mother Claire Kelly said she made sure her children were vaccinated, including her son .

    She said his vaccination against meningitis “probably helped save” his life when he contracted the infection.

    “They do need to get vaccinated…all the kids should have it,” she said.

    She said she was hoping to get the second dose of the MMR vaccine for her daughter as soon as possible.

    ‘Really nasty’

    Director of Public Health for Liverpool City Council Matt Ashton said measles was “incredibly easy to transmit” among unvaccinated people.

    “One infected person can infect up to 15 other people, so it can spread really rapidly,” he said.

    Mr Ashton warned the “worrying” increase in cases could result in “large outbreaks” in the community.

    He said: “That becomes very difficult to manage, and also can have potentially serious consequences for people who catch measles.

    “We all have responsibility here to look after our children and young people, and the reality is diseases like measles are really nasty and it’s not something you’d want your loved ones to catch or be exposed to.”

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  • ‘Tennis helped me come to terms with Usher syndrome diagnosis’

    ‘Tennis helped me come to terms with Usher syndrome diagnosis’

    Isobel Fry & Lauren Hirst

    BBC News, Liverpool

    BBC Neil Bamford is standing on the tennis courts and he is staring directly at the camera and laughing. He is wearing a black visor and white tennis T-shirt. BBC

    Neil Bamford said his love of tennis had “opened so many doors” for him

    Each year Neil Bamford has to face the reality that his eyesight could deteriorate a little more.

    At just 19 years old, he was diagnosed with Usher syndrome, a progressive condition that affects hearing, vision and balance.

    “For me it’s been so slow – it’s that narrowing effect on your life,” said the 53-year-old, who now only has partial sight in one eye and uses hearing aids.

    While he did not realise it at the time, his diagnosis would eventually lead him to a new passion in life, tennis.

    Neil, from Liverpool, has shared his story as part of BBC North West Tonight’s six-part series about living with invisible disabilities and conditions.

    The former first aid and lifeguard trainer, who has been wearing hearing aids since the age of six, first started to notice issues with his eye sight when he was 12 years old.

    But it was another seven years before his diagnosis was confirmed.

    “It was horrendous, absolutely horrendous,” said Neil.

    “My mum went with me and she was crying her eyes out when they told me because, that was the other thing back then, nobody could tell you anything.

    “It would be ‘you’re going to lose your sight but we can’t tell you when’.”

    More than 400,000 people are estimated to have Usher syndrome across the world, according to the Usher Syndrome Coalition.

    Neil said he struggled to accept the news: “I just went into denial, isolation and stayed there for an awfully long time.

    “It’s thinking, well, I used to be able to do that last year, this summer the sun is affecting me an awful lot more, this winter I’m absolutely dreading it because it will be worse than the last one.

    “Every year I realise something else has progressed.”

    Neil Bamford is swinging his racket to hit the tennis ball during a game in this action shot. He is wearing a white tennis T-shirt, black shorts, white trainers and a black visor.

    Neil said the sport has helped to give him a new lease of life

    But he said his life began to open up again after discovering Bradbury Fields – a charity which helps blind, and partially sighted people, and those with dual sensory impairments to achieve their potential.

    Through the charity, Neil found tennis, which he has credited with helping him come to terms with his condition.

    “I didn’t pick up a racket until 2017 and that was just a taster session on these courts. [I’d given] up on sport,” he said

    “Your sight starts to deteriorate, and you think, ‘oh, that’s it’.

    “As narrow as my life became, when I acknowledged that it was an issue and I sought help, then my life started opening up again.”

    As his love of the sport grew, Neil decided to start competing.

    “In 2019, I thought ‘right I’ll give the regionals a go’,” he said.

    “I won the regionals – I was in total shock and I’ve been competing ever since.

    “I’ve been in the GB squad for five years, played at Wimbledon twice.

    “It’s opened so many doors.”

    Neil’s story features in a special six-part BBC North West Tonight series about invisible disabilities and conditions. You can watch it on BBC One in the Northwest of England and the Isle of Man from 18:30 BST on Wednesday 9 July. It will also be available on the BBC iPlayer.

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  • iPhone 17 Pro and iPhone 17 Pro Max are launching this September with major camera and design upgrades; could be priced higher than expected – Technology News

    iPhone 17 Pro and iPhone 17 Pro Max are launching this September with major camera and design upgrades; could be priced higher than expected – Technology News

    Apple is gearing up to launch its highly anticipated iPhone 17 series soon, with a new addition making its debut—the iPhone 17 Air, which is set to replace the usual Plus variant. The upcoming lineup is expected to feature four models: the regular iPhone 17, the sleeker iPhone 17 Air, and the premium iPhone 17 Pro and iPhone 17 Pro Max. Apple is expected to debut its iPhone 17 series around mid-September 2025. While the official launch date remains unconfirmed, tech analyst David Phelan predicts the announcement will most likely take place on September 9.

    iPhone 17 Pro and iPhone 17 Pro Max design:

    The newest renders provide the most detailed look yet at the iPhone 17 Pro and iPhone 17 Pro Max, highlighting a shifted Apple logo and a reimagined MagSafe magnetic ring layout. Leaks suggest that the logo will be relocated—most likely centered within a new glass section—positioning it lower on the rear panel compared to earlier versions.

    The iPhone 17 Pro lineup is also expected to feature an aluminum frame paired with a redesigned camera module, taking design cues from the iPad Pro. To support wireless charging, Apple is said to incorporate a glass panel within the aluminum housing, placed just below the camera setup.

    iPhone 17 Pro and iPhone 17 Pro Max camera:

    The iPhone 17 series is set to get a significant boost in selfie camera performance, with a new 24MP front-facing lens—twice the resolution of the 12MP sensor used in the iPhone 16 models. This upgrade was later confirmed by well-known Apple analyst Ming-Chi Kuo in January 2024.

    Back in October 2024, analyst Jeff Pu also revealed that the iPhone 17 Pro would feature a redesigned rear camera layout, switching to a horizontal triple-lens arrangement. Among the upgrades is a 48MP telephoto camera offering 3.5x optical zoom.

    iPhone 17 Pro and iPhone 17 Pro Max price:

    Apple is expected to maintain its traditional pricing strategy for its standard iPhone lineup in 2025. According to early reports, the iPhone 17 could launch in India with a starting price of Rs 89,900, while the newly introduced iPhone 17 Air might debut at approximately Rs 99,900.

    For those interested in higher-end models, the iPhone 17 Pro is anticipated to carry a price tag of Rs 1,39,900, and the flagship iPhone 17 Pro Max could be priced at Rs 1,64,900. However, some reports also suggest that prices could see a slight increase.

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  • Queues at Oasis pop-up shop as band goes on tour

    Queues at Oasis pop-up shop as band goes on tour

    Tanya Gupta

    BBC News, West Midlands

    BBC Men and women are queued up near railings outside the Oasis Live '25 pop-up shop. Two men are wearing yellow high-visibility vests and one has a hard hat. A sign directs people where to queue. The Bullring shopping centre can be seen in the background.BBC

    Fans have been queueing outside the pop-up shop in the Bullring in Birmingham

    An Oasis pop-up shop has opened in Birmingham city centre with excited fans queuing to get in.

    The shop in the Bullring is stocked with limited-edition clothing, vinyl and accessories, and shoppers lined up outside shared their anticipation with BBC Radio WM.

    The Oasis reunion tour kicked off on Friday in Cardiff and continues this weekend with brothers Liam and Noel Gallagher back home in Manchester and together again after a backstage row in 2009 saw them go their separate ways.

    One man in the queue, who will be going to see the band perform at Heaton Park on Friday, said: “It’s been a long time coming; I can’t wait. I think it’s going to be mad.”

    Adam Vaughan/EPA/Shutterstock An Oasis fan walks past advertising boards ahead of the first gig of the Oasis Live 25 tour in Cardiff.Adam Vaughan/EPA/Shutterstock

    The tour kicked off in Cardiff with fans donning bucket hats and shades for the occasion

    He said he had seen Liam and Noel separately a couple of times but added: “I’m really looking forward to seeing them both together on stage rather than separately.”

    Lila, at the shop looking for merchandise, said she loved the band and wanted to see what the shop had, particularly “more T-shirts and some jackets or bucket hats”.

    The 16-year-old, there with her father, explained how she became a fan of the 90s band: “My mates got me into it. I never used to like them at first.”

    Another man, looking for a burgundy tracksuit for the Manchester gig, said: “I can’t wait; I’m like a little kid at Christmas.”

    Men’s magazines such as Esquire and Mr Porter have set out dress codes for the tour, which include the band’s signature look: bucket hats, sunglasses, shirts, jeans and vintage track tops.

    Men and women are queuing up near railings outside the Oasis Live '25 pop-up shop. A sign directs people where to queue. The Bullring shopping centre can be seen in the background.

    Some of the younger people in the queue got into Oasis through their dads

    Rachel was looking for a top to wear when she sees Oasis at Wembley in September with her dad. She said she hoped the brothers would still be together by then, adding: “I hope they don’t have a row on the stage.”

    She said she grew up listening to the band with her father and was looking forward to hearing Stand by Me and “all the favourites”, adding: “My music taste comes from my dad.”

    Formed in 1991, Oasis is one of the best-selling bands in British history, but the Gallaghers always had a fractious relationship, ending in a fight in 2009 that resulted in Noel leaving the band.

    Last year, they confirmed they were reuniting for a series of live shows, with gigs in London, Manchester, Cardiff, Edinburgh and Dublin.

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