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  • High-risk HIV groups facing record levels of criminalisation as countries bring in draconian laws | Global development

    High-risk HIV groups facing record levels of criminalisation as countries bring in draconian laws | Global development

    People at higher risk of HIV, such as gay men and people who inject drugs, are facing record levels of criminalisation worldwide, according to UNAids.

    For the first time since the joint UN programme on HIV/Aids began reporting on punitive laws a decade ago, the number of countries criminalising same-sex sexual activity and gender expression has increased.

    In the past year, Mali has made homosexuality a criminal offence, where the law previously only banned “public indecency”, and has also criminalised transgender people. Trinidad and Tobago’s court of appeal has overturned a landmark 2018 ruling that decriminalised consensual same-sex relations, reinstating the colonial-era ban. In Uganda, the 2023 Anti-Homosexuality Act has “intensified the proscription of same-sex relations”, and Ghana has moved in a similar direction with the reintroduction of legislation that would increase sentences for gay sex.

    The crackdown on gay rights comes as the fight against HIV/Aids has been hit by abrupt US funding cuts, which have combined with “unprecedented” humanitarian challenges and climate crisis shocks to jeopardise hopes of ending the global epidemic this decade, UNAids said.

    Several groups of people, known as “key populations”, are more likely to be infected with HIV. They include sex workers, gay men and other men who have sex with men, people who inject drugs, transgender people, and those in prisons and other enclosed settings.

    In 2025, only eight of 193 countries did not criminalise any of those groups or behaviours, or criminalise non-disclosure of HIV status, exposure or transmission, according to the report.

    The number of people infected by HIV or dying from Aids-related causes in 2024 was the lowest for more than 30 years, according to the UNAids annual report, at 1.3 million and 630,000 respectively.

    Mosele Mothibi, an HIV-positive unemployed garment worker from Maseru, Lesotho, has had her medications reduced after cuts to USAID. Photograph: Per-Anders Pettersson/Getty Images

    Progress was uneven – ranging from a 56% fall in infections since 2010 in sub-Saharan Africa to a 94% increase in the Middle East and North Africa. But coupled with scientific advances – such as twice-yearly drugs to prevent infection – the world had the “means and momentum” to end Aids as a public health threat by 2030, an internationally agreed goal, it said.

    However, that has been “seriously jeopardised” in the early months of this year after sweeping US aid cuts that could undo decades of progress. In January, Donald Trump cut funding that had underpinned much of the global HIV response almost overnight.

    The report highlights HIV-prevention services as an area of concern, with many particularly reliant on donor funding. The reported number of people receiving preventive drugs in Nigeria in November 2024 was approximately 43,000. By April 2025, that number had fallen to below 6,000.

    Activists say access to prevention will be a particular issue for key populations, who may not be able to access mainstream healthcare due to factors such as stigma or fear of prosecution, but relied on donor-funded community clinics that have now closed.

    Key populations were “always left behind”, said Dr Beatriz Grinsztejn, president of the International Aids Society (IAS).

    The report is being released before an IAS conference next week in Kigali, Rwanda, where researchers will share data on the impact of cuts.

    Modelling by Bristol University calculated that a one-year halt in US funding for preventive drugs in key populations in sub-Saharan Africa would mean roughly 700,000 people no longer used them, and lead to about 10,000 extra cases of HIV over the next five years.

    UNAids modelling suggests that without any replacement for funding from US Pepfar (president’s emergency plan for Aids relief), an additional 4m deaths and 6m new infections could be expected globally by 2029.

    However, Winnie Byanyima, executive director of UNAids, said 25 of the 60 low- and middle-income countries included in the report had found ways to increase HIV spending from domestic resources to 2026. “This is the future of the HIV response – nationally owned and led, sustainable, inclusive and multisectoral,” she said.

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  • Punjab CM directs to provide subsidy to farmers of wheat – RADIO PAKISTAN

    1. Punjab CM directs to provide subsidy to farmers of wheat  RADIO PAKISTAN
    2. 29 farmers in Lodhran receive free green tractors  Associated Press of Pakistan
    3. Punjab Announces Application Opening Date for Phase 2 of Green Tractor Scheme  ProPakistani
    4. PAD to distribute 10,000 subsidised tractors to farmers  Business Recorder
    5. 26 farmers win CM’s green tractor through e-balloting  nation.com.pk

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  • England vs India cricket LIVE: Third Test, day one, Lord’s – scores, commentary, highlights & updates

    England vs India cricket LIVE: Third Test, day one, Lord’s – scores, commentary, highlights & updates

    Postpublished at 10:39 British Summer Time

    India captain Shubman Gill: “I was a bit confused this morning but I would’ve bowled first. If there is anything in the wicket, it’s in the first day.”

    On winning the second test: “I think the contributions came in. All the batsmen chipped in and all the bowlers chipped in.

    “The bowlers are feeling pretty confident. I’m feeling great, as a batsman you feel like you’ll always be in the middle.

    “One change, [Jasprit] Bumrah comes in for [Prasidh] Krishna.”

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  • Stem Cell Therapy: Mouse Lemur Model Breakthrough

    Stem Cell Therapy: Mouse Lemur Model Breakthrough


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    Stem cell therapy is a relatively new technology that shows promising results against some of the diseases we otherwise struggle to treat. But transferring new stem cell therapies from laboratory animals to humans remains a challenge.

    The solution may lie in a small primate from Madagascar. New research shows that stem cells from the small gray mouse lemur are much more closely aligned with human biology than those from the mouse, which is otherwise the most commonly used laboratory animal in labs around the world. And this could be a gamechanger for the development of new treatments.

    “We have discovered and isolated adult stem cells in mouse lemurs for the very first time,” says Antoine de Morree, Associate Professor at the Department of Biomedicine at Aarhus University, and senior author behind the study.

    “We are looking at both muscle stem cells and mesenchymal stem cells – and they behave very differently from mouse stem cells.”

    Human-like cells in a miniature primate

    The study, recently published in the scientific journal Nature Communications, shows that muscle stem cells from mouse lemurs divide more slowly than those from mice and resemble human stem cells more closely.

    Researchers also discovered two new mechanisms that may explain some of the differences in stem cell function between humans and mice: Mouse lemur and human muscle stem cells produce less of the compound spermidine, which is crucial for cell function. By adding spermidine, the researchers were able to enhance the cells’ ability to divide – a discovery now set to be tested in clinical trials at Steno Diabetes Center Aarhus.

    Mouse lemur muscles contain fat cells – something seen in humans as well, but not in mice. This is due to the mouse lemur’s mesenchymal stem cells being particularly adept at forming fat. These cells produce large amounts of a protein called Complement Factor D, which plays a role in fat accumulation. This is significant because fat in muscle is associated with aging and disease.

    “This means the mouse lemur is not only a better model for human muscle – it also offers us entirely new potential treatment targets for diseases and symptoms that do not normally occur in mice,” says Antoine de Morree.

    Finding the right model organism

    The work started when the researchers looked for ways to identify new model organisms. They developed a new computational method to compare cells and tissues between different animals.

    In doing so, they found that mouse lemur muscles are very similar to human muscles. Something they could confirm with microscopy.

    This new method could greatly reduce animal usage by enabling researchers to identify the optimal animal model before doing any animal experiments. In this case, the researchers were confident to start exploring mouse lemur biology.

    “It is very exciting to challenge existing paradigms and in the end be able to study something that could not be modeled before,” says Pilar Stella, PhD student and the co-first author of the study.

    Closer to effective treatments

    Although stem cells have long been hailed as the key to regenerative medicine, only a few stem cell therapies are currently approved. A major reason is that many promising results from mouse studies do not translate to humans. With the mouse lemur as a new model, researchers can now develop therapies based on cells that more closely resemble our own.

    “This brings us closer to effective treatments for conditions like muscular dystrophy, age-related muscle loss, and other diseases where stem cells could play a role,” says Antoine de Morree.

    The next step is to test how best to deliver stem cells into muscle tissue in mouse lemurs, and how to fine-tune dosage and treatment timing. Meanwhile, the first human trial using spermidine is being prepared.

    Reference: Kang J, Kanugovi A, Stella MPJ, et al. In vivo self-renewal and expansion of quiescent stem cells from a non-human primate. Nat Commun. 2025;16(1):5370. doi: 10.1038/s41467-025-58897-x

    This article has been republished from the following materials. Note: material may have been edited for length and content. For further information, please contact the cited source. Our press release publishing policy can be accessed here.

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  • Zebrafish Genes Offer Blueprint for Human Heart Regeneration

    Zebrafish Genes Offer Blueprint for Human Heart Regeneration

    Humans can’t regenerate heart muscle damaged by disease, but scientists have long known that some animals, such as zebrafish, can.

    Researchers have now identified a set of genes in zebrafish that reactivate after damage to the heart and patch it up like new, pointing the way to therapies that could reactivate similar genes in humans and jump-start repair of the heart and perhaps other tissues after injury.

    The scientists from the University of California, Berkeley, and California Institute of Technology are still working to uncover which upstream gene or genes trigger reactivation of this gene circuit, which normally operates only during development in the embryo. But, once they do, it may be possible to use CRISPR tools to reactivate similar genes in humans after heart damage, since we employ the same set of genes as zebrafish to build the heart during embryonic development.

    “Zebrafish and humans are comparable in their cell types and how these cell types form during development, but a major difference in evolution is that adult zebrafish can regenerate many different structures, including their heart, after substantial injury, whereas humans can’t,” said Megan Martik, a UC Berkeley assistant professor of molecular and cell biology. “How can we harness what nature’s already figured out how to do in the zebrafish and apply it in a human context?”

    Martik and Marianne Bronner, a Caltech professor of biology and director of the Beckman Institute, are senior authors of a paper about the findings that appeared June 18 in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. The research was led by UC Berkeley graduate students Rekha Dhillon-Richardson and Alexandra Haugan, who are co-first authors of the paper.

    The heart is made up of many kinds of cells that comprise muscle, nerve and blood vessel tissue. A portion of these heart cells — in zebrafish, around 12 to 15% — originate from a specific population of stem cells called neural crest cells. Humans have analogous neural crest cells that give rise to varied cell types in almost every organ of the body, ranging from the facial skeleton to the nervous system. Disruption of neural crest cells during development leads to heart defects similar to those found in common congenital heart disorders.

    For some reason, zebrafish and a few other animals retain the ability as adults to rebuild tissues derived from the neural crest — the jaw, skull and heart, for example — while humans have lost that ability. These animals are not merely repairing damaged tissue, however. In the heart, cells around an injury revert to an undifferentiated state and then go through development again to make new heart muscle, or cardiomyocytes.

    “In both humans and zebrafish, we know that neural crest cells contribute to the heart and that they develop very similarly. But something about them is inherently different on the gene regulatory network level, because the neural crest-derived cardiomyocytes in the zebrafish can respond to injury by regenerating and the same cells in humans can’t,” Martik said.

    CRISPR therapy

    In the newly reported research, the scientists used single-cell genomics to profile all the genes expressed by developing neural crest cells in zebrafish that will differentiate into heart muscle cells. They then pieced together the genes expressed after they snipped away about 20% of the fish’s heart ventricle. This procedure seemed not to affect the fish, and after about 30 days their hearts were whole again.

    By knocking out specific genes with CRISPR, they identified a handful of genes that were essential to reactivation after injury, all of which are utilized during embryonic development to build the heart. One in particular, called egr1, seems to activate the circuit first and perhaps triggers the others, suggesting a potential role in regeneration.

    “Differentiated cell types revert back to more of an embryonic gene expression profile and then go through development again,” she said. “What we’ve shown in this paper is that when they do that, they activate this set of genes we know is really important for development of this population of cardiomyocytes.”

    The researchers also identified the enhancers that turn on these genes. Enhancers are promising targets for CRISPR-based therapies, since they can be manipulated to dial up or down the expression of the gene.

    Martik continues to explore the gene circuit involved in regeneration in zebrafish, and has also developed CRISPR techniques to target gene enhancers in heart-like organoids derived from human heart cells. The tiny organoids, called cardioids, are grown in a dish and develop scars similar to normal heart muscle, allowing her team to manipulate the genes involved in repair.

    Should she and her colleagues come up with a therapeutic approach, she has a vision that other cells derived from neural crest cells — such as in the jaw or the peripheral nervous system, among others — could be kicked into high gear to stimulate repair.

    “There are so many advances, especially here on campus, in terms of CRISPR therapeutics that if we find the switch that can activate the necessary gene programs to drive regeneration in an organism that can regenerate, then I think it’d be completely feasible to develop a CRISPR therapeutic to drive regeneration in a human-derived context,” Martik said. “I think Berkeley is the only place something like this can be done.”

    Reference: Dhillon-Richardson RM, Haugan AK, Lyons LW, McKenna JK, Bronner ME, Martik ML. Reactivation of an embryonic cardiac neural crest transcriptional profile during zebrafish heart regeneration. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA. 2025;122(25). doi: 10.1073/pnas.2423697122

    This article has been republished from the following materials. Note: material may have been edited for length and content. For further information, please contact the cited source. Our press release publishing policy can be accessed here.

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  • Sindh culture department says it is willing to take responsibility for Humaira Asghar Ali’s burial – Culture

    Sindh culture department says it is willing to take responsibility for Humaira Asghar Ali’s burial – Culture

    The Sindh culture department has stepped forward and offered to take care of the late actor Humaira Asghar Ali’s burial and funeral in light of reports that her family has refused to take the body for burial.

    Ali, a 32-year-old actor and model, was found dead in her apartment in Karachi’s DHA on Tuesday. The police found her decomposed body while carrying out a court-ordered eviction notice.

    South DIG Syed Asad Raza told Dawn that the actor’s family lived in Lahore and when the police approached them they, particularly her father, refused to take the body for burial.

    Later, he said, the deceased’s brother-in-law approached the police and he was expected to arrive here on Thursday (today) to meet with the police.

    When news spread of her family’s refusal to take the body, several members of the entertainment fraternity approached the police, expressing their willingness to perform the last rites and arrange the burial, the DIG said. “We shall hand them the body in case the family refuses,” he said. Actors Yashma Gill and Sonya Hussayn are among many who have stepped forward and offered to arrange the burial.

    In a notification issued by the Sindh culture department on Thursday, Culture Minister Syed Zulfiqar Ali Shah has taken notice of Ali’s death. He is “very much aggrieved for non-cooperation from her legal heirs to take over custody of the body for burial.”

    “In light of this situation and considering her contributions to the arts and culture of the country, the culture department is wiling to take responsibility for her burial arrangements with respect and in dignified manner,” read the notice, which was addressed to the South DIG. “It is therefore requested that her body be handed over to the culture department for burial after fulfilling formalities as per law.”

    The notice authorises the director-general of culture, Munawar Mahaser to complete further formalities.

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  • Plans for electricity bills based on where people live dropped

    Plans for electricity bills based on where people live dropped

    Plans to set people’s electricity bills based on where they live have been dropped by the government.

    Energy Secretary Ed Miliband said in April the government was considering zonal pricing, but on Thursday it said it would reform the current national pricing system instead.

    Zonal pricing supporters say it can lower bills in areas generating more energy, such as Scotland, though some energy firms say it could have scared off investment.

    Energy UK, which represents the industry, welcomed the government’s decision while the Conservatives called Miliband’s promise of lower electricity bills “a fantasy”.

    The current electricity pricing system means everyone in the country pays the same flat rate at all times regardless of where they live, but critics argue the price is calculated based on the most expensive electricity generated in the country at any given moment.

    Greg Jackson, founder and chief executive of Octopus Energy, told the BBC that zonal pricing works in countries such as Australia, Sweden, and Italy and calculates it could “reduce bills by around £100 a year for most households”.

    However, energy provider SSE said zonal pricing “would have added risk” to the system, arguing that national pricing creates “a stable and investable environment”.

    It welcomed the “much-needed policy clarity” from the government’s announcement, but Kate Mulvany, principal consultant at Cornwall Insight, said “clarity is not the same as resolution”.

    “This move will not solve the deep-rooted issues in Great Britain’s electricity market, and it must not be used as an excuse to continue business as usual,” she added.

    The decision to stick with a national pricing comes after a three year consultation. In April, Miliband the BBC that pricing reform was “an an incredibly complex question”.

    “There are two options, zonal pricing and reformed national pricing,” he said at the time.

    “Whatever route we go down my bottom line is bills have got to fall, and they should fall throughout the country.”

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  • Samsung unveils thinner Galaxy Z Fold 7 to counter rising Chinese foldables

    Samsung unveils thinner Galaxy Z Fold 7 to counter rising Chinese foldables

    Samsung has launched its latest foldable phones, including the Galaxy Z Fold 7 and a more affordable Galaxy Z Flip 7 FE, as part of its push to expand its premium product lineup and counter rising competition from Chinese smartphone makers.

    The move also comes as the company works to recover ground lost after falling behind Apple in global smartphone sales in 2023.

    The Galaxy Z Fold 7, priced at $1,999 in the United States, is 10% lighter and 26% thinner than its predecessor. It uses Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 8 Elite processor, while the new Flip 7 FE, priced at $899, runs on Samsung’s in-house Exynos chips.

    The company said the new models aim to reduce the size and weight concerns that have affected the adoption of foldable phones.

    Samsung said it is focused on strengthening its position in AI-powered smartphones through partnerships with external companies like Google. The Galaxy Z Fold 7 runs on One UI 8 based on Android 16 and includes Google’s Gemini AI voice assistant, which has also been added to Samsung’s new smartwatches.

    Samsung held the launch event in New York, emphasizing its focus on the U.S., Europe, and South Korea for foldable phone sales. TM Roh, president of the company’s device experience division, said Samsung plans to launch a tri-foldable phone by the end of the year.

    Samsung’s mobile president and chief operating officer, Choi Won-joon, said his main goal is to make Samsung a leader in smartphones powered by artificial intelligence. The company is targeting wider adoption of foldable phones by combining AI with its latest hardware updates.

    The launch comes as Samsung faces pressure on multiple fronts. Its chip division has seen profit declines partly due to delays in supplying AI chips to key partners. At the same time, it is working to manage rising U.S. tariffs that could increase component costs and reduce demand.

    To address this, the company has sped up production and shipments of smartphones bound for the U.S.

    Samsung also said it is tackling China’s export restrictions on rare earth materials by diversifying its supplier base and increasing internal stockpiles. The company manufactures smartphones in Vietnam, South Korea, and India, with Vietnam accounting for more than half of total output.

    Foldable phones currently make up a small share of the overall smartphone market but account for a larger portion of premium models priced above $800. Samsung’s share in this segment is facing pressure from competitors like Huawei and Honor, especially in China.


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  • Interior minister rebuffs rumours of President Zardari’s ouster as a ‘malicious campaign’

    Interior minister rebuffs rumours of President Zardari’s ouster as a ‘malicious campaign’

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    Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi rebuffed on Thursday speculations on social media suggesting the ouster of President Asif Ali Zardari, calling them baseless.

    In a statement posted on his official X (formerly Twitter) account, Naqvi defended the unity between the country’s political and military leadership.

    He firmly denied any discussions or intentions concerning the president’s resignation or a change in leadership.

    He described the rumors as “malicious campaign” aimed at discrediting President Asif Ali Zardari, Prime Minister Shahbaz Sharif, and Chief of Army Staff (COAS) Field Marshal General Asim Munir, asserting there is no truth to claims suggesting political rifts or changes in leadership.

    We are fully aware of who is behind the malicious campaign targeting President Asif Ali Zardari, Prime Minister Shahbaz Sharif, and the Chief of Army Staff. I have categorically stated that there has been no discussion,nor does any such idea exist,about the President being asked…

    — Mohsin Naqvi (@MohsinnaqviC42) July 10, 2025

    Referring to speculations suggesting that President Zardari has been asked to resign or that the COAS is seeking presidency, the interior minister said ‘there has been no discussion, nor does any such idea exist”.

    He emphasised that the president maintains a “strong and respectful” relationship with the military’s top leadership and quoted President Zardari as saying, “I know who is spreading these falsehoods, why they are doing so, and who stands to benefit from this propaganda”.

    “The sole focus of the COAS is the strength and stability of Pakistan, nothing else,” reiterated the interior minister.

    Read: No proposal to replace President Zardari: Irfan Siddiqui

    Naqvi linked those behind the alleged campaign with hostile foreign agencies, and vowed that the government would take “whatever action necessary to make Pakistan strong again, InshAllah”.

    Naqvi made similar statements in Sukkur last week, telling journalists not to believe in social media rumours. “Some people are disturbed by our unity.”

    He emphasised that the alignment between Pakistan’s political leadership, the military, and the government is the reason for the growing spread of disinformation. “For the first time, politicians, the government, and the military establishment are on the same page, and that bothers certain individuals.”

    The Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) also issued a statement to put to rest to speculations about the possible removal of President Zardari.


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  • Unfolding a New Standard in Foldable Design – Samsung Mobile Press

    Unfolding a New Standard in Foldable Design – Samsung Mobile Press

    On July 9, Samsung Electronics unveiled the Galaxy Z Fold7 at Galaxy Unpacked 2025 in Brooklyn — once again redefining innovation in foldable smartphones.

    As the thinnest and lightest Galaxy Z Fold yet, the Galaxy Z Fold7 features multimodal AI capabilities, a redesigned user interface and the series’ first 200-megapixel camera. With ultra-level refinement across design and technology, the device sets a new standard for foldable smartphones.

    Samsung Newsroom got an exclusive early look at the Galaxy Z Fold7 during Galaxy Unpacked 2025.

     

    ▲  The Galaxy Z Fold7, the thinnest and lightest in the Galaxy Z Fold series to date

     

    Design: Slimmer and Lighter

    The Galaxy Z Fold7 is the thinnest and lightest in the Galaxy Z Fold series to date — measuring 4.2 millimeters when unfolded, 8.9 millimeters when folded and weighing 215 grams. Considering the inclusion of a cover display and a complex folding mechanism, these are breakthrough figures.

     

    News Body for

    ▲  The Galaxy Z Fold7 is 4.2 millimeters thick when unfolded, shown next to two U.S. nickels for scale.

     

    News Body for

    ▲  The Galaxy Z Fold7 is 8.9 millimeters thick when folded, shown next to a marker for scale.


    The hardware innovation is immediately noticeable — significantly slimmer and more lightweight than its predecessors. The device feels closer to a bar-type smartphone in hand and is thinner than the average passport or card wallet, making it exceptionally comfortable to carry.

    News Body for

    ▲  The Galaxy Z Fold7 is noticeably lighter and more comfortable to hold.


    The cover display’s wider 21:9 aspect ratio makes everyday tasks like messaging, browsing and checking email more convenient — all without unfolding the device.

     

    News Body for

    ▲  The Galaxy Z Fold7’s cover display resembles a bar-type smartphone in both form and function.


    Design innovation extends to the hinge. The newly applied Armor FlexHinge is thinner while maintaining durability and the upgraded structure significantly reduces the visibility of the crease along the foldable display.

    News Body for

    ▲  The thinner and lighter Armor FlexHinge provides durability.


     

    News Body for

    ▲  The upgraded internal hinge structure reduces the appearance of the crease on the display.

     

    Camera: Clarity at the Highest Resolution

    The Galaxy Z Fold7 is the first in the Galaxy Z Fold series to feature a 200-megapixel camera — capturing four times the detail compared to its previous 50-megapixel counterpart. Paired with the AI-powered ProVisual Engine, the camera delivers sharper images and more vivid color.

     

    News Body for

    ▲  Details captured with the 200-megapixel camera


    Nightography ensures crisp, clear shots even in low light, while the front main camera now offers a wider 100-degree field of view — maximizing the advantages of the large display. From group selfies to sweeping travel scenes, the device helps frame every moment with ease.

     

    News Body for

    ▲  A wide-angle selfie taken with the 100-degree field of view

     

    Multimodal AI and One UI 8: Contextual Help in Real Time

    The Galaxy Z Fold7 debuts with One UI 8, introducing Samsung’s new multimodal AI experience.

    Thanks to Google’s Gemini Live, users can share their screen in real time while speaking with the AI assistant — enabling contextual requests based on what’s visible.

    For example, when a user comes across a photo of an unfamiliar dessert, Gemini can analyze the image, identify it and recommend nearby places that serve something similar.

     

    News Body for

    ▲  Gemini Live supports screen sharing for real-time assistance.


    Gemini can then save the restaurant list and set a calendar reminder — completing both tasks simultaneously. There’s no need to switch apps or copy and paste, as the AI assistant integrates seamlessly into daily routines.

    News Body for

    ▲  Gemini streamlines planning and coordination.


    This feature becomes even more powerful when paired with the Galaxy Z Fold7’s large screen and Multi-Window.

     

    News Body for

    ▲  Multi-Window allows users to perform a variety of tasks using the large screen.


    For instance, a user can display a chair on the left screen and a room on the right, then ask Gemini whether the furniture matches the interior. The AI assistant analyzes the context of both screens and offers helpful guidance.

    News Body for

    ▲  Gemini analyzes the image of the room, recommends a suitable chair and even converts it into the desired color.


    This Galaxy-exclusive user experience enables intuitive, natural communication between users and their devices — not only through text but also via images, voice and live camera input when requesting information or assistance from AI.

    The Galaxy Z Fold7 goes beyond a simple evolution in design and technology, setting a new benchmark with an ultra-premium experience that integrates into every part of daily life. From cutting-edge hardware and smarter AI to a best-in-class camera, the Galaxy Z Fold7 delivers the true ultra experience promised by Galaxy.

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