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  • We Killed the Right Animal

    We Killed the Right Animal

    Nate Rogers revisits Larry McMurtry’s barn burner “Lonesome Dove,” which turned 40 this year and is experiencing a renaissance.

    Lonesome Dove by Larry McMurtry. Picador, 2025. 880 pages.

    IN THE CRUEL—and, honestly, somewhat funny—way it tends to happen for artists, Larry McMurtry was heaped with a fresh wave of copious praise just at the point when he could no longer appreciate it—after he had died, in 2021, at the age of 84. And through the subsequent machinations of internet-age virality that the entertainment industry can only dream of understanding, McMurtry’s 800-page magnum opus, Lonesome Dove, has once again become a book du jour, just like it was when it was first released in 1985 and won the Pulitzer Prize. McMurtry may not be here to bask in the phenomenon, but his publisher and estate certainly are; in February, it was announced that a new TV or film project was in the works based on the larger Lonesome Dove series.

    Watercooler moments in the book world are increasingly rare, and since this one promised horseback adventures, my friends and I recently decided to join the moment and commit to Lonesome Dove as the latest entry in our semiregular book club. The assignment was no small task for a group of thirtysomethings, some of them with young children, and all in the precarious state of fighting against potent attention-economy distractions. I personally hadn’t managed to read a book this long since college. But we all found ourselves spellbound by McMurtry’s vivid vision of a post–Civil War cattle drive, undertaken by Texas cowboys in the twilight of the Wild West. Every one of us finished the book with dirt-covered enthusiasm. The virality, as it often is, was well earned.

    Over bowls of chili, our book club met outside on a cold night in Los Angeles—the far west end of the country’s trail, really—and fell for a familiar trap: we romanticized the hell out of Lonesome Dove. It’s difficult not to. There’s a reason people have named their kids after Captain Augustus “Gus” McCrae, the lovably toxic former Texas Ranger at the center of the book, along with his lovably even-more-toxic longtime compatriot, Captain Woodrow F. Call. The many semiconnected characters of the full saga, who circle each other across a meandering path through the middle of the country, luxuriate in the book’s space.

    McMurtry has talked about these characters as if they were so organic that he had no control of them—as if he were on the edge of his seat to find out what they did, the same as we were. In this way, the book’s naturalistic quality makes it a ready foil to Cormac McCarthy’s nightmarish depiction of roughly the same time and place in Blood Meridian, which was also released in 1985. Lonesome Dove is like the relief of waking from a bad dream; there are horrors in McMurtry’s world too, but at least there’s also love and humor and heroism. Despite copious death, it feels eminently livable.

    So, like the unruly remuda of Lonesome Dove fans of the last 40 years, I grew attached to McMurtry’s presentation of the 1870s. I joined the long lineage of starry-eyed readers, some of whom have been drawn by the beauty of our past’s open landscape, others by the opportunity and adventure that such a landscape offers. I also joined the lineage of readers McMurtry himself probably would have rolled his eyes at.

    “The book is permeated with criticism of the West from start to finish,” McMurtry said in a 2010 oral history of Lonesome Dove published in Texas Monthly.

    Call’s violence, for example. But people are nostalgic for the Old West, even though it was actually a terrible culture. Not nice. Exterminated the Indians. Ruined the landscape. By 1884 the plains were already overgrazed. We killed the right animal, the buffalo, and brought in the wrong animal, wetland cattle. And it didn’t work. The cattle business was never a good business. Thousands went broke.

    Lonesome Dove is indeed a crushingly brutal book—the type of story in which bad things happen to people not because of narrative logic but because, in 1870s Texas, sometimes lightning just strikes you. And when it does, there’s no hospital nearby, no treatment to dole out. There’s little sentimentality to be offered either. A shallow grave and some quick words are the most you’ll get, if those around you have the time to spare.

    McMurtry’s insistence that his book is meant to be a critique rather than a glorification of the Old West aligns him with a particular school of exasperated nonfiction writers and scholars: those who routinely publish articles, year after year, reminding doom-stricken readers that it is actually, currently, the best time to be alive on this planet. That determination can be made when taking into account factors like infant mortality rate, average lifespan, medical innovations, and so on. Want to live without hunger? Want an education? Want to die of old age? You’ve never had a better shot than right now.

    But the reason some version of this article has to be written every year is because it rarely feels like you’re among the luckiest people to exist, especially when dips in quality of life call into question the general upward trend. Discussing Lonesome Dove in my friend’s backyard, we were just a short distance away from Altadena, where an entire community had recently been wiped from the earth by wildfires. The cost of living has been doing laps around inflation-adjusted income, plummeting 401(k) values have become a straight-up meme, and the long-term ramifications of climate change are starting to rear up in frighteningly tangible ways. It’s a difficult period to be told that this is “the best time to be alive.”

    What I can accept, though, is McMurtry’s broad point that, yeah, okay, at least from a misery-index standpoint, I’m probably fortunate not to have been born in the 1800s. I can nitpick the ebbs and flows of year-to-year quality of life growth, but I cannot deny that I’m much less likely to be killed by a water moccasin than your average 19th-century cowboy was.

    Still, I remain a little jealous of the dramatic lives of my Lonesome Dove friends. It’s a contradictory pang of human nature that McMurtry was clearly aware of, even if he didn’t like to admit it. The epigraph he chose for the book is about this wistful hypernostalgia: “Our forefathers had civilization inside themselves, the wild outside,” the quote from the early 20th-century academic T. K. Whipple reads in part. “We live in the civilization they created, but within us the wilderness still lingers. What they dreamed, we live, and what they lived, we dream.”

    Eventually, people are destined to look back upon our lives in the 2020s and see beautiful savages of their own. Some will wonder if they would have been happier or more fulfilled in our simpler world—and, given the way things are trending, they might very well be right. But all the while, they’ll be reminded of the plain truth of the matter—that it’s getting better all the time.

    LARB Contributor

    Nate Rogers is a writer in Los Angeles. His writing has appeared in The New York Times, Los Angeles Times, Stereogum, and elsewhere.

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    • The McMurtry canon is proof that good stories resonate like a plucked strand of barbed wire.

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  • Scam Call Center Busted in Islamabad With 65 Arrests – ProPakistani

    1. Scam Call Center Busted in Islamabad With 65 Arrests  ProPakistani
    2. Pakistan police arrest 149 in raid on ‘scam call centre’  BBC
    3. Cybercrime agency raids illegal call centre in Islamabad, arrests five foreign nationals  Dawn
    4. Foreigners among 65 held in NCCIA raid  The Express Tribune
    5. Suspects in Faisalabad online investment scam presented in court after remand  Dunya News

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  • DPM For Institutional Coordination, Fast-tracked Implementation To Transform Investments Into Tangible Economic Gains

    DPM For Institutional Coordination, Fast-tracked Implementation To Transform Investments Into Tangible Economic Gains

    ISLAMABAD, (UrduPoint / Pakistan Point News – 14th Jul, 2025) Deputy Prime Minister / Foreign Minister (DPM/FM), Senator Mohammad Ishaq Dar, on Monday stressed the need for institutional coordination and fast-tracked implementation, reaffirming government’s commitment to facilitating these investments into tangible economic gains and mutual prosperity.

    The deputy prime minister chaired a meeting to review progress on investment initiatives from friendly countries across key sectors, a DPM’s Office news release said.

    The meeting was attended by SAPM Tariq Bajwa, Secretaries of Law & Justice, Petroleum & Finance, Chairman SECP and senior officials from MoFA and relevant departments. Discussions focused on foreign investments in infrastructure, energy, petroleum, and economic development.


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  • Disaster narrowly averted after heat cracks huge stained glass window at iconic Malaga market

    Disaster narrowly averted after heat cracks huge stained glass window at iconic Malaga market

    Monday, 14 July 2025, 14:30

    The summer heat has a lot of effects, but an unexpected one was the incident it caused at Malaga’s Atarazanas market. On Friday, 11 July, part of the market’s huge stained glass window cracked due to the high temperatures in the city. The fire brigade removed the damaged piece in order to prevent other risks and further breakage.

    This enormous stained glass window was installed as part of an integral reform designed by César Olano, which began in 1971. Back then, the metal structure of the market was hidden by a false ceiling and a pavilion was created in the fishmonger’s warehouse. The stained glass window, which depicts various monuments of the city, is made up of 108 panes of painted glass, all created by Estudio Atienza. The company was established by artist and footballer Ángel Atienza Landeta, who turned to art after winning four European Cups with Real Madrid.

    The refurbishment was completed in 1974. The Nasrid gate of the old Atarazanas was declared a monument in 1979. Despite the signature ‘Atarazanas’, the market’s official name is Mercado de Alfonso XII. It underwent its last refurbishment between 2008 and 2010.

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  • Activity can reduce chances of specific types of dementia | Entertainment/Life

    Activity can reduce chances of specific types of dementia | Entertainment/Life

    Does sustaining an active lifestyle in midlife lower the risk of dementia?

    In a February 2019 study highlighted in Neurology, researchers reported that staying both physically and mentally active in midlife (40s) may protect the brain decades later.

    The study involved 800 Swedish women with an average age of 47 who were followed for 44 years and who were scored in two areas of mental and physical activities. Women who were assigned to high levels of mental activity were 46% less likely to have developed Alzheimer’s disease and 34% less likely to have developed dementia overall than the women in the group who performed lower levels of mental activity practices. With regards to physical activity, 52% of the women in the study were less likely to have developed a type of dementia associated with cerebrovascular (refers to blood flow in the brain) disease and 56% less likely to have developed more general dementia than the women in the group who remained less physically active.

    While the results indicate that levels of both physical and mental activities could affect cognition later, physician and study author Jenna Najar of the Institute for Neuroscience and Physiology at the University of Gothenburg in Sweden, noted that physical activity may lower the chances of vascular dementia in particular. The study’s conclusions also showed how the two effects — mental and physical activity — are distinct.

    As Najar put it, “We found that mental activities in midlife, such as reading a book, doing crossword puzzles, singing or attending concerts, to name a few, reduced the risk of dementia and Alzheimer’s disease, regardless of how physically active the women were. Physical activity, meanwhile, in midlife reduced the risk of more vascular forms of dementia, regardless of how mentally active the women were.”

    Experts agree that more studies need to be conducted to find the physical pathway connecting lifestyle factors in midlife to specific protective effects in the brain. Brain health has long been promoted for overall aging and cognitive health, and in that respect, the study was a confirmation and offered more validity that being mentally and physically active can lower the risks of cognitive decline in aging. While research is still developing, strong evidence exists that individuals can reduce their risk of cognitive decline by making key lifestyle changes, including participating in regular physical and mental activity, staying socially engaged, and maintaining good heart health.

    According to the Healthy Brain Initiative by the Centers of Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), “public health’s role in maintaining cognitive health is a vital part of healthy aging and quality of life is emerging.” Public health professionals are gaining a better understanding of brain disorders and risk factors, and the public health community should embrace cognitive health as a priority.

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  • Logan Paul ‘Impaulsive’ Podcast Joins WWE and Fanatics Podcast Network

    Logan Paul ‘Impaulsive’ Podcast Joins WWE and Fanatics Podcast Network

    Logan Paul, the social media star turned WWE wrestler, is bringing his popular interview podcast “Impaulsive” to the WWE and Fanatics podcast network.

    Paul, who rose to fame on Vine and YouTube, launched “Impaulsive” in November 2018. The show is co-hosted by Mike Majlak, who co-founded the podcast, a multiplatform content creator with more than 4.4 million followers across internet platforms. The official description for “Impaulsive” reads as follows: “The world’s greatest, most thought-provoking, mentally stimulating podcast in the history of mankind… hosted by a bunch of idiots.” To date, the podcast has racked up more than 900 million views on YouTube alone.

    The pact for “Impaulsive” reinforces Paul’s ties with the WWE, which is part of TKO Group. Paul, 30, first signed a contract with WWE in 2022 and has made regular appearances across the entertainment company’s shows and events, including the annual WrestleMania flagship event.

    “Impaulsive” has featured interviews with a range of personalities from the worlds of entertainment, sports and culture, including WWE Superstars such as Cody Rhodes, Roman Reigns and Rhea Ripley. Other notable guests have included Tom Brady, Kevin Hart, Machine Gun Kelly, MrBeast — and in June 2024, Donald Trump.

    The show will continue to be available through the Impaulsive YouTube channel (4.8 million subscribers) and all major audio platforms including Spotify and Apple Podcasts. WWE and Fanatics will provide promotional support for “Impaulsive” and Fanatics is handling ad sales for the podcast.

    In March, WWE announced an agreement with Fanatics to produce and distribute all WWE podcasts. That expanded their existing partnership, which includes global e-commerce, trading cards and memorabilia, special-event retail and more.

    With the addition of “Impaulsive,” the WWE and Fanatics podcast lineup includes: “What’s Your Story?” hosted by Stephanie McMahon (former WWE exec and daughter of Vince and Linda McMahon); “Six Feet Under With the Undertaker,” hosted by the WWE Hall of Famer; “What Do You Wanna Talk About?” hosted by Cody Rhodes; and “The Raw Recap Show,” hosted by Megan Morant and Sam Roberts, who also co-host an instant-reaction podcast following each WWE premium live event.

    Pictured above: Logan Paul at this April’s WWE WrestleMania 41 at Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas

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  • Barrios vs Pacquiao: Trainer Dave Coldwell on why he won’t watch legend’s comeback fight

    Barrios vs Pacquiao: Trainer Dave Coldwell on why he won’t watch legend’s comeback fight

    Maybe Pacquiao is chasing the old days, but I do hope it’s not just for the money. It would be sad if he’s boxing again purely for a payday.

    For my generation, Pacquiao’s greatness is secure. A lot of fighters go on one or two fights too long; Sugar Ray Leonard did the same. It’s sad, but it doesn’t take away from their legacy.

    Some younger fans, who only know him from social media, may judge him on what they see now – not really appreciating what he did in the past.

    Pacquiao’s comeback does raise important questions about how boxing manages fighters returning at an advanced age. Should there be stricter rules or age restrictions? It’s a tricky balance.

    Boxing is a sport where fighters’ health and safety must come first, but it’s also about individual choice. They’re all adults.

    Medical checks are in place, but clearly they don’t stop everyone from fighting too long or jumping straight into top-level fights.

    I’m not sure a hard age limit is the answer. Fighters like Bernard Hopkins and Foreman have shown it’s possible to compete at an elite level into their late forties, albeit they are one of a few anomalies.

    It’s more about case-by-case assessments – how well a fighter moves, how much punishment they’re taking. Getting hit at 46 is a lot more dangerous than at 26.

    The best outcome is that I wake up on Sunday and find out Pacquiao has lost and will now walk away, safe and sound, knowing he had an unbelievable career.

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  • Multiphoton intravital microscopy in small animals of long-term mitochondrial dynamics

    Multiphoton intravital microscopy in small animals of long-term mitochondrial dynamics

    Schematic of suction-based stabilization for super-resolution radial fluctuations (SRRF) intravital imaging and its results.

    To accomplish this, a conventional two-photon microscope was equipped with a 3D-printed holders, which stabilize the tissue surface.

    CHENGDU, SICHUAN, CHINA, July 14, 2025 /EINPresswire.com/ — Read the full article here: https://www.oejournal.org/oea/article/doi/10.29026/oea.2025.240311

    Studying how cells work inside a living body is one of the most powerful ways to understand health and disease. However, looking deep inside live tissue is extremely challenging, especially when trying to see very small structures like mitochondria—the tiny engines inside cells that produce energy and help regulate many important biological functions. These structures are constantly moving and changing, so scientists need imaging tools that can capture them in action, clearly and without harming the animal.

    In this study, researcher developed a new imaging approach that combines two powerful techniques to solve this problem. First, a special type of microscope called a two-photon microscope is used, which can look deep into live tissues with minimal damage. To improve how steady the tissue remains during imaging, they designed a custom-made, 3D-printed holder that gently uses suction to hold the tissue in place. This suction-based stabilization helps keep the tissue still within the camera’s focus, which is essential when trying to capture high-resolution images of tiny moving structures.

    Next, the images are improved further using advanced computer algorithms. These included techniques to reduce “noise” (unwanted blurry spots in images), correct for tiny shifts or drifts in the picture, and enhance image sharpness using a method called Super-Resolution Radial Fluctuations (SRRF). Together, these improvements doubled the resolution, allowing the researchers to clearly see details smaller than 250 nanometers, far beyond what a typical microscope can do.

    To demonstrate the power of this approach, they used a genetically modified mouse called the Mito-Dendra2 model, where mitochondria glow green under the microscope. With this model, the team was able to watch, in real time, how mitochondria split, merge, move, and respond to different health conditions. For example, it is observed how mitochondria behave in a model of alcohol-induced liver disease, and how a natural compound called berberine can help restore mitochondrial health during recovery. These insights would be nearly impossible to gain without being able to see the mitochondria directly inside a living animal.

    This work is important because it allows scientists to study the smallest building blocks of life in their most natural environment, inside living and functioning tissue. The combination of gentle physical stabilization, powerful microscopy, and advanced image processing offers a new standard for intravital imaging within live organisms. It opens the door for new discoveries in how cells respond to stress, how diseases develop, and how treatments work at the organelle level.

    In short, this breakthrough provides researchers with a valuable tool to explore the hidden world inside living tissues, making it easier to understand life at the cellular level and develop better ways to diagnose and treat disease.

    The research group of Prof. Jun Ki Kim from Asan Medical Center, the largest hospital in Korea, and University of Ulsan, College of Medicine, introduces a groundbreaking technology that provides super-resolution imaging inside the cells of living animals.

    Located at the intersection of engineering, medicine, and optics, the work conducted in this optics laboratory within a biomedical engineering department and affiliated medical center plays a vital role in shaping the future of healthcare and scientific discovery. This interdisciplinary environment brings together physicists, engineers, biologists, and clinicians to address some of the most pressing challenges in modern medicine—diagnosing diseases earlier, treating them more precisely, and understanding human biology at a deeper level.

    The importance of this work lies in its focus on translating light-based technologies—such as advanced imaging systems, diagnostic tools, and therapeutic devices, into real-world clinical solutions. In hospitals and clinics, doctors often rely on indirect indicators of disease, like blood tests or tissue biopsies, which can be invasive or limited in detail. Optical technologies offer a different approach: they provide real-time, non-invasive insight into the human body, revealing structures and molecular changes that are invisible to the naked eye.

    In this lab, researchers develop tools that can image cells inside a living body, detect early signs of disease, or guide surgeons during operations with light-based visualization techniques. Working hand-in-hand with medical professionals, engineers transform scientific principles into devices that are practical, safe, and effective for patient care.

    Moreover, the lab’s presence within a medical center fosters rapid collaboration and translation. Research does not remain confined to the lab bench; instead, it moves efficiently toward patient trials and clinical use. This dynamic setting ensures that innovations are not only technically advanced but also medically relevant.

    In the broader context, this work contributes to a global effort to make medicine more personalized, less invasive, and more data-driven and ultimately improving outcomes and quality of life for patients around the world.

    The research group specializes in the development and application of advanced bio-optical imaging systems, focusing on cutting-edge technologies that enable the visualization and analysis of biological tissues at cellular and subcellular levels. Their work in in vivo microscopy allows for high-resolution imaging of living tissues, providing critical insights into dynamic biological processes in real-time. This technique is particularly valuable in studying tissue structures and identifying disease markers, offering significant potential for improving diagnostics and therapeutic interventions.

    Another major area of focus for the group is medical device development, where they design and create innovative tools that integrate optical and imaging technologies for clinical applications. Their efforts are aimed at enhancing the precision, reliability, and accessibility of diagnostic devices, ensuring that they meet the needs of both healthcare providers and patients. In parallel, the group is heavily involved in the development of optical probes that can be used for in-depth, non-invasive tissue analysis. These probes are designed to interact with biological tissues at the molecular level, enabling detailed, real-time assessments of cellular processes.

    A key area of the group’s research is diagnosis and therapy, particularly leveraging the power of Raman spectroscopy. By utilizing the unique vibrational properties of molecules, Raman spectroscopy provides a powerful tool for identifying chemical signatures associated with various diseases, enabling early detection and precise monitoring of therapeutic responses. This approach holds great promise for improving disease diagnosis, particularly in oncology and other fields where early intervention is critical.

    Through their multidisciplinary work, the research group is advancing the frontiers of medical diagnostics, offering new solutions for in vivo imaging, disease detection, and personalized therapy.

    Andrew Smith
    Charlesworth
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    marketing@charlesworth-group.com
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  • WHO Calls for Launch of Long-Acting HIV Prevention Jab

    WHO Calls for Launch of Long-Acting HIV Prevention Jab

    Injectable lenacapavir – LEN, for short – is a highly effective, long-acting antiretroviral alternative to daily oral pills and other shorter-acting options, according to the World Health Organization ( WHO ).

    “While an HIV vaccine remains elusive, lenacapavir is the next best thing: a long-acting antiretroviral shown in trials to prevent almost all HIV infections among those at risk,” said Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, WHO Director-General.

    Test kit advantage

    WHO’s support for the injectable drug is significant because HIV prevention efforts are stagnating around the world.

    To make it easier for people to receive the injection close to home, the UN agency also recommends the use of rapid testing kits for the disease, as opposed to “complex, costly procedures”.

    According to the agency, 1.3 million people contracted HIV in 2024; people most impacted were sex workers, men who have sex with men, transgender people, people who inject drugs, people in prisons, and children and teens.

    “WHO is committed to working with countries and partners to ensure this innovation reaches communities as quickly and safely as possible,” insisted Tedros, in comments during the 13th International AIDS Society Conference (IAS 2025) on HIV Science, in Kigali, Rwanda.

    The recommendation for LEN is also in line with the US health authorities which approved it in June.

    Call for implementation

    Although access to the LEN injection remains limited outside clinical trials today, WHO urged governments, donors and partners to incorporate LEN “immediately” within national combination HIV-prevention programmes.

    Other WHO-supported HIV-prevention options include daily oral tablets, injectable cabotegravir – which is injected once every two months – and the dapivirine vaginal ring, as part of a growing number of tools to end the HIV epidemic.

    Funding dilemma

    Amid massive funding cuts to the global effort to end HIV-AIDS – including the leading US Government programme launched in 2003, PEPFAR, focusing on combating the disease in Africa – WHO also issued new operational guidance on how to sustain priority HIV services.

    “We have the tools and the knowledge to end AIDS…what we need now is bold implementation of these recommendations, grounded in equity and powered by communities,” said Dr Meg Doherty, Director of WHO’s Department of Global HIV, Hepatitis and STI Programmes and incoming Director of Science, Research, Evidence and Quality for Health.

    HIV remains a major global public health issue.

    By the end of 2024, an estimated 40.8 million people were living with HIV with an estimated 65 per cent in Africa. Approximately 630,000 people died from HIV-related causes globally, and an estimated 1.3 million people acquired HIV, including 120,000 children.

    More positively, access to HIV drugs continues to expand, with 31.6 million people receiving treatment in 2024, up from 30.3 million a year earlier. Without anti-retroviral medication, the HIV virus attacks the body’s immune system, leading ultimately to the onset of AIDS.

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  • vivo X Fold5 Foldable Phone Debuts in India

    vivo X Fold5 Foldable Phone Debuts in India

    The vivo X Fold5 is the brand’s newest foldable phone sporting an ultra-light and durable design, aerospace-grade hinge, massive battery with fast charging, pro cameras, and advanced AI features.

    The vivo X Fold5 is 9.2mm thin and weighs just 217 grams and boasts an 8.03-inch inner screen when unfolded and a 6.53-inch cover display. Get 4,500 nits peak brightness on both thanks to the ZEISS Master Color Display along with 2K+ resolution, 120Hz refresh rate, HDR10+, and Dolby Vision.

    It’s also extra durable with 2nd-gen Armor Glass and meeting both IPX8 and IPX9 water-resistance and IP5X dust resistance ratings. It has a new lightweight kinematic hinge that enables smooth folding and unfolding for extensive use for up to 600,000 folds. It also reduces screen creasing.

    One feature in particular that sets it apart is the massive 6,000mAh equivalent BlueVolt battery, which is the largest to date in any vivo phone. It supports 80W dual-cell FlashCharge wired and 40W wireless FlashCharge charging.

    Co-engineered with ZEISS, you also get a flagship camera experience with a 50MP ZEISS Telephoto Camera with 3x Optical Zoom and 100x HyperZoom, powered by a large IMX882 sensor. There’s a 50MP Ultra-Sensing VCS Bionic Main Camera with Sony IMX921 sensor and VCS True Color, and 50MP Ultra Wide-Angle Camera with a 120° field of view for landscapes, group shots, and architecture. AI-powered enhancements further

    vivo X Fold5
    vivo X Fold5 makes international debut: An ultra-light foldable with a pro camera, big battery and AI productivity suite.

    Designed for power users, the X Fold5 has a suite of AI-driven productivity tools for multitasking, communication, and content creation. Origin Workbench allows you to run up to five apps at once and manage tasks without the need to switch between multiple devices. vivo DocMaster enables seamless viewing and conversion of various document formats. Smart Call Assistant and AI Transcript Assist offer real-time transcription, summarization, and language translation.

    So far, the vivo X Fold5 has launched in India for 1,49,000 Rupees, the equivalent of about US$1,750.

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