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  • The 5-block brotherhood: Wemby welcomes Sinan Huan to the club

    The 5-block brotherhood: Wemby welcomes Sinan Huan to the club

    LAUSANNE (Switzerland) – Sinan Huan joined an exclusive club at the FIBA U19 Basketball World Cup 2025 – the China big man became just the fourth player in tournament history to average 5.0 blocks per game.

    Sinan Huan prevailed in a battle of titans as he blocked Amadou Seini’s layup under the basket with 1 minute and 32 seconds remaining in a tie game which China eventually won 81-77 over Cameroon.

    It was Huan’s fifth block of the game and his 35th of the tournament — an event that started with a bang: 8 rejections in the opener against Canada.

    You may also want to read this:

    Huan Sinan joins Wemby, Zhou Qi in All-Time Top 10 blocks list

    The final block punched Sinan’s ticket to the U19 World Cup 5-blocks-per-game brotherhood. There, he joins Victor Wembanyama and two Chinese compatriots Qi Zhou and Hansen Yang.

    All-time players to average 5.0 blocks in U19 World Cup history

     

    Player

    Country

    Year

    Blocks per game

    1.

    Victor Wembanyama

    France

    2021

    5.7

    2.

    Qi Zhou

    China

    2013

    5.4

    3.

    Hansen Yang

    China

    2023

    5.0

    3.

    Sinan Huan

    China

    2025

    5.0

    Earlier in the tournament, one of his teammates, Yi Yuang, also etched his name into the history books with a dazzling new assist record: 17 dishes in a single game.

    You may also want to read this:

    All-time assist record broken again, China’s Yi Yang delivers flawless 17 dimes

    FIBA

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  • Cough medicine turned brain protector? Ambroxol may slow Parkinson’s dementia

    Cough medicine turned brain protector? Ambroxol may slow Parkinson’s dementia

    Dementia poses a major health challenge with no safe, affordable treatments to slow its progression.

    Researchers at Lawson Research Institute (Lawson), the research arm of St. Joseph’s Health Care London, are investigating whether Ambroxol — a cough medicine used safely for decades in Europe — can slow dementia in people with Parkinson’s disease.

    Published on June 30 in the prestigious JAMA Neurology, this 12-month clinical trial involving 55 participants with Parkinson’s disease dementia (PDD) monitored memory, psychiatric symptoms and GFAP, a blood marker linked to brain damage. Parkinson’s disease dementia causes memory loss, confusion, hallucinations and mood changes. About half of those diagnosed with Parkinson’s develop dementia within 10 years, profoundly affecting patients, families and the health care system.

    Led by Cognitive Neurologist Dr. Stephen Pasternak, the study gave one group daily Ambroxol while the other group received a placebo. “Our goal was to change the course of Parkinson’s dementia,” says Pasternak. “This early trial offers hope and provides a strong foundation for larger studies.”

    Key findings from the clinical trial include:

    • Ambroxol was safe, well-tolerated and reached therapeutic levels in the brain
    • Psychiatric symptoms worsened in the placebo group but remained stable in those taking Ambroxol.
    • Participants with high-risk GBA1 gene variants showed improved cognitive performance on Ambroxol
    • A marker of brain cell damage (GFAP) increased in the placebo group but stayed stable with Ambroxol, suggesting potential brain protection.

    Although Ambroxol is approved in Europe for treating respiratory conditions and has a long-standing safety record — including use at high doses and during pregnancy — it is not approved for any use in Canada or the U.S.

    “Current therapies for Parkinson’s disease and dementia address symptoms but do not stop the underlying disease,” explains Pasternak. “These findings suggest Ambroxol may protect brain function, especially in those genetically at risk. It offers a promising new treatment avenue where few currently exist.”

    Ambroxol supports a key enzyme called glucocerebrosidase (GCase), which is produced by the GBA1 gene. In people with Parkinson’s disease, GCase levels are often low. When this enzyme doesn’t work properly, waste builds up in brain cells, leading to damage. Pasternak learned about Ambroxol during a fellowship at The Hospital for Sick Children (SickKids) in Toronto, where it was identified as a treatment for Gaucher disease — a rare genetic disorder in children caused by a deficiency of GCase.

    He is now applying that research to explore whether boosting GCase with Ambroxol could help protect the brain in Parkinson’s-related diseases. “This research is vital because Parkinson’s dementia profoundly affects patients and families,” says Pasternak. “If a drug like Ambroxol can help, it could offer real hope and improve lives.”

    Funded by the Weston Foundation, this study is an important step toward developing new treatments for Parkinson’s disease and other cognitive disorders, including dementia with Lewy bodies. Pasternak and his team plan to start a follow-up clinical trial focused specifically on cognition later this year.

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  • Saudi Arabia unveils new skill-based system for expatriate work permits

    Saudi Arabia unveils new skill-based system for expatriate work permits

    Saudi Gazette report

    RIYADH — Saudi Minister of Human Resources and Social Development Ahmed Al-Rajhi has issued a decision classifying the work permits of expatriate workers into three main skill categories: high-skill, skilled, and basic.

    The classification of existing work permits and technical system upgrades began on June 18 for expatriates currently working in the Saudi labor market. The classification would take effect for incoming expatriate workers as of July 1.

    The ministry has issued a guidance manual outlining all the details of the decision, which is available on its official website.

    This decision is part of the ministry’s broader efforts to foster a more attractive and efficient labor market, develop human capital, and enhance the business environment, contributing to achieving the objectives of Saudi Vision 2030 and the National Transformation Program.

    The measure aims to enhance worker performance, attract global talent to transfer expertise and experience to the Saudi labor market, improve operational efficiency, benefit from international experience, and build an environment that supports innovation and the development of business models.

    The decision will improve verification mechanisms and enable better management of the skill-level distribution of expatriate workers in the labor market by ensuring that workers possess the required skills and qualifications for their job roles, in line with best international practices.

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  • Investors expect bitcoin to break out to new records in the second half

    Investors expect bitcoin to break out to new records in the second half

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  • The ski resort Olympians flock to each summer

    The ski resort Olympians flock to each summer

    According to Ellen Guidera Purcell, Henry’s wife and a key figure in Portillo’s day-to-day operations, the early days mostly involved the Purcells inviting their famous friends here for ski parties. “The parties were an omen of the future,” Guidera said. “Because Portillo has continued not only as a place for beautiful skiing but also as a place for good times with family and friends,  a place of happy dinners, parties, bar dancing and making memories.”

    Carolina Mendoza, a retired business owner, first visited Portillo in the mid-1970s as a teenager growing up in Venezuela. She’s returned nearly every year since, only missing a Portillo season during the pandemic or while living in Europe. For Mendoza, whose mother is Chilean, there’s a magic to this little mountain hamlet. “There’s such a sense of community here,” she said. ‘It almost makes you feel like you’re with family.”

    But Portillo has also become synonymous with serious skiing. Known for its challenging alpine terrain, it hosted the FIS Alpine World Ski Championships in 1966, which established its reputation as a hardcore winter sports destination. Today, both the convivial atmosphere and the hair-raising slopes remain critical to Portillo’s cult-favoured status. Every year from June to September, when the northern hemisphere is in the throes of summer, snow-chasers from the US, Canada, Europe and Latin America head here to enjoy an endless winter. Many, like Mendoza, are repeat visitors. Others are world-class athletes in training for big-ticket events like the Olympics.

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  • Many NGG Improvements Arrive For AMD’s Open-Source Linux OpenGL/Vulkan Drivers

    Many NGG Improvements Arrive For AMD’s Open-Source Linux OpenGL/Vulkan Drivers

    Well known AMD Mesa developer Marek Olšák has been working on a number of improvements to benefit the Next-Gen Geometry “NGG” support within the RadeonSI and RADV graphics drivers for benefiting modern Radeon GPUs under Linux.

    The NGG support continues to be improved upon for the AMD RadeonSI Gallium3D and RADV Vulkan driver code within Mesa for this modern geometry pipeline on RDNA GPUs.

    Merged this week was this MR with various NGG changes and kicking off the first part of a set of four planned set of patches around AMD Next-Gen Geometry.

    There was then this second MR providing more NGG changes. Among that work now merged is for NGG geometry shaders can now optionally cull against clip and cull distances. clip vertex and position outputs. NGG VS/TES/GS shaders can also now optionally skip cull distance exports. Plus other improvements.

    RADV NGG 3 MR

    Yet to be merged but currently being reviewed is the third part providing “major changes” to NGG for the RADV Vulkan driver along with enabling more culling and clipping/culling optimizations. This third set of patches provide a number of RADV driver improvements to enhance performance.

    There is also the fourth merge request with “lots of radeonSI changes”, dropping the LLVM LDS linking code, and other improvements. It will be interesting to see the net performance impact for these NGG improvements to the OpenGL and Vulkan AMD Linux drivers once all of the code is merged.

    Nice seeing all of these improvements being worked on by Marek for the open-source AMD Mesa driver code ahead of this quarter’s Mesa 25.2 code branching — especially the RADV improvements now that Radeon Software for Linux is no longer focusing on its proprietary Vulkan driver option.

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  • 7 hidden iOS 26 features iPhone users need to know about

    7 hidden iOS 26 features iPhone users need to know about

    iOS 26 is still a few months away. Once it’s available to all iPhone users, we’re sure to start finding many new features we didn’t know Apple was adding. Since the focus will be the new Liquid Glass UI, it’s only natural that users will start there.

    However, it’s the hidden iOS 26 features that will keep you coming back to explore the update in the weeks and months to come. With that said, here are seven hidden features in iOS 26 that you need to check out as soon as you update.

    Custom snooze duration: One of the most interesting iOS 26 features lets users set a snooze duration between 1 and 15 minutes. That way, you can have a snooze timer that works for your schedule, and you don’t have to use Apple’s default 9-minute timer.

    AirPods Camera Remote: Apple Watch users can already control their iPhone’s Camera. However, iOS 26 will let users control the app using AirPods 4 and AirPods Pro 2. They just have to press and hold the stem to start recording video.

    Multiple journals: With this fall’s update, Apple is expanding the Journal app to the Mac and the iPad. Additionally, one new iOS 26 feature will be the ability to create multiple journals for different aspects of users’ lives. Images can also be added inline with text, and a map view shows where the users created each journal entry.

    Image source: Christian de Looper for BGR

    AirPods auto-pause: Another interesting hidden iOS 26 feature is that AirPods 4 and AirPods Pro 2 will be able to detect when you fell asleep and stop playing media.

    Adaptive Power: iOS 26 has a new Adaptive Power mode when using your iPhone. Apple explains: “When your battery usage is higher than usual, iPhone can make small performance adjustments to extend your battery life, including slightly lowering the display brightness or allowing some activities to take a little longer.”

    Pin favorite Apple Music tunes: If you’re an Apple Music user, you can pin your favorite songs, artists, albums, and stations to the top of your library. You can also select an action, such as go to album, shuffle, or start playing automatically.

    Manage credit cards in Wallet: This is one of the best iOS 26 features, as Apple now lets you manage your real life credit cards in the Wallet app. You can also manage autofill cards, which means you no longer need to carry your physical cards around, even when Apple Pay isn’t available.

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  • Here is how AI can help to understand gut bacteria

    Here is how AI can help to understand gut bacteria

    Tokyo [Japan], July 6 (ANI): Gut bacteria are considered to be a key factor in many health-related issues. However, the number and variety of them are vast, as are the ways in which they interact with the body’s chemistry and each other.

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    For the first time, researchers from the University of Tokyo used a special kind of artificial intelligence called a Bayesian neural network to probe a dataset on gut bacteria in order to find relationships that current analytical tools could not reliably identify.

    The human body comprises about 30 trillion to 40 trillion cells, but your intestines contain about 100 trillion gut bacteria. Technically, you’re carrying around more cells that aren’t you than are. Food for thought. And speaking of food, these gut bacteria are, of course, responsible for some aspects of digestion, though what’s surprising to some is how they can relate to many other aspects of human health as well.

    The bacteria are incredibly varied and also produce and modify a bewildering number of different chemicals called metabolites. These act like molecular messengers, permeating your body, affecting everything from your immune system and metabolism to your brain function and mood. Needless to say, there’s much to gain by understanding gut bacteria.

    “The problem is that we’re only beginning to understand which bacteria produce which human metabolites and how these relationships change in different diseases,” said Project Researcher Tung Dang from the Tsunoda lab in the Department of Biological Sciences, adding, “By accurately mapping these bacteria-chemical relationships, we could potentially develop personalized treatments. Imagine being able to grow a specific bacterium to produce beneficial human metabolites or designing targeted therapies that modify these metabolites to treat diseases.”

    There are uncountably many and varied bacteria and metabolites, and therefore far more relationships between these things. Gathering data on this alone is a monumental undertaking, but unpicking that data to find interesting patterns that might betray some useful function is even more so. To do this, Dang and his team decided to explore the use of state-of-the art artificial intelligence (AI) tools.

    “Our system, VBayesMM, automatically distinguishes the key players that significantly influence metabolites from the vast background of less relevant microbes, while also acknowledging uncertainty about the predicted relationships, rather than providing overconfident but potentially wrong answers,” said Dang. “When tested on real data from sleep disorder, obesity and cancer studies, our approach consistently outperformed existing methods and identified specific bacterial families that align with known biological processes, giving confidence that it discovers real biological relationships rather than meaningless statistical patterns.”

    As VBayesMM can handle and communicate issues of uncertainty, it gives researchers more confidence than a tool which does not. Even though the system is optimized to cope with heavy analytical workloads, mining such huge datasets still comes with high computational cost; however, as time goes on, this will become less and less of a barrier to those wishing to use it. Other limitations at present include that the system benefits from having more data about the gut bacteria than the metabolites they produce; when there’s insufficient bacteria data, the accuracy drops. Also, VBayesMM assumes the microbes act independently, but in reality, gut bacteria interact in an incredibly complex number of ways.

    “We plan to work with more comprehensive chemical datasets that capture the complete range of bacterial products, though this creates new challenges in determining whether chemicals come from bacteria, the human body or external sources like diet,” said Dang. “We also aim to make VBayesMM more robust when analyzing diverse patient populations, incorporating bacterial ‘family tree’ relationships to make better predictions, and further reducing the computational time needed for analysis. For clinical applications, the ultimate goal is identifying specific bacterial targets for treatments or dietary interventions that could actually help patients, moving from basic research toward practical medical applications.” (ANI)

    (This content is sourced from a syndicated feed and is published as received. The Tribune assumes no responsibility or liability for its accuracy, completeness, or content.)


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  • FIRST GOLD FOR DESAK MADE RITA, SECOND FOR NURSAMSA IN KRAKOW FINALS

    FIRST GOLD FOR DESAK MADE RITA, SECOND FOR NURSAMSA IN KRAKOW FINALS

    Indonesia claimed both gold medals in a spectacul pair of Speed finals at the IFSC Climbing World Cup Krakow 2025, with Desak Made Rita Kusuma Dewi and Raharjati Nursamsa topping the podium and both setting new personal bests in their gold medal races.

    DESAK MADE RITA CLAIMS MAIDEN WORLD CUP WIN

    In front of a packed crowd in Krakow’s central square, Desak Made Rita Kusuma Dewi of Indonesia stormed to her first-ever IFSC World Cup gold medal with a clean 6.27-second run in the women’s final. The reigning world champion delivered with consistency and defeated Emma Hunt of the USA, who slipped midway through the gold medal race and closed in 7.56 seconds.

    “I’m very happy, this is my first gold medal since Bern,” said the 24-year-old Indonesian. “In my last competition in Bali I fell in the quarter-final. My coach always tells me to enjoy the competition, and that if I do so, I can improve my personal best in each race. My goal is to set a new world record.”

    It was the second World Cup medal of the season for Hunt, who won gold earlier this year in Denver, Colorado, USA.

    The all-Polish bronze medal race saw Paris 2024 Olympic champion Aleksandra Miroslaw beat teammate Natalia Kalucka with a powerful 6.36. Kalucka, running clean, clocked 6.64. The result marked Miroslaw’s 21st career World Cup medal and a good recovery after missing out on the gold medal race.

    Notably absent from the final round was China’s Deng Lijuan, who did not start due to a finger injury sustained during yesterday’s qualification round.

    For the women’s Speed complete results click here.

    NURSAMSA STRIKES AGAIN

    In the men’s event, Raharjati Nursamsa of Indonesia shined with a lightning-fast 4.73 in the gold medal race, setting a new men’s Asian record and personal best, also securing his second World Cup win after taking gold in Jakarta, Indonesia, two years ago. His teammate Kiromal Katibin slipped early in the final and did not finish, settling for silver.

    “I feel so happy, it’s my personal best and my first gold medal in two years,” said Nursamsa. “I’m not completely satisfied, I will keep enjoy my climbing, enjoy every competition with no pressure.”

    The bronze medal went to Omasa Ryo of Japan, who kept his composure with a 5.48-second effort after Zach Hammer of the USA slipped near the top of the route. It was Omasa’s fourth career World Cup podium, and his second of the season following silver in Bali, Indonesia.

    Katibin’s silver marked his fourth consecutive podium finish of the 2025 season, having previously won gold in Denver and bronze in both Wujiang, China, and Bali.

    For the men’s Speed complete results click here.

    NEXT UP

    With the Krakow leg concluded, the IFSC World Cup Series 2025 moves to Chamonix, France, where Lead and Speed competitions are scheduled from 11 to 13 July.

    News and updates about all IFSC events will be available on the IFSC website and on the Federation’s digital channels: Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn, Threads, TikTok, X, YouTube, and exclusively for the Chinese audience, Douyin, Weibo, and Xiaohongshu.


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  • Dalai Lama, a global symbol of Tibetan culture and resistance, turns 90 – Politico

    1. Dalai Lama, a global symbol of Tibetan culture and resistance, turns 90  Politico
    2. Dalai Lama celebrates 90th birthday with followers in north Indian town  Al Jazeera
    3. Richard Gere joins Dalai Lama’s 90th birthday celebrations  BBC
    4. Dalai Lama at 90: succession will not be dictated by China  The Express Tribune
    5. Statement Affirming the Continuation of the Institution of Dalai Lama  The Office of His Holiness The Dalai Lama

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