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  • World humanoid Robot Games 2025 in images

    World humanoid Robot Games 2025 in images



    China revolutionizes Robotics: World humanoid Robot Games 2025 in images

    China has once again showcased to the world that a robotic revolution is on the horizon.

    With the successful hosting of the World’s first Humanoid Robot Games 2025 that took place from August 15 to 17 at Beijing’s National Speed Skating Oval, built for the 2022 winter Olympics.

    If you missed the futuristic event, you can scroll down here for a complete look of the world of Robotics.

    China revolutionizes Robotics: World humanoid Robot Games 2025 in images

    1 – The inaugural World Humanoid Robot Games took place in Beijing, China from 15 to 17 August.

    China revolutionizes Robotics: World humanoid Robot Games 2025 in images

    2 – Beijing’s National Speed Skating Oval, built for the 2022 Winter Olympics, hosted the World Humanoid Robot Games.

    China revolutionizes Robotics: World humanoid Robot Games 2025 in images

    3 – The event featured over 500 humanoid robots from 280 international teams from 16 countries competing across 26 different events.

    China revolutionizes Robotics: World humanoid Robot Games 2025 in images

    4 – Organizers insist that the World Humanoid Robot Games intends to trial and refine current robotics, adding that sporting events are an ideal way to test a robot’s decision making as well as motor skills.

    China revolutionizes Robotics: World humanoid Robot Games 2025 in images

    5 – The World Humanoid Robot Games is part of China’s push to become a global leader in humanoid robotics, with the government eyeing a world-class industry in the next couple of years.

    China revolutionizes Robotics: World humanoid Robot Games 2025 in images

    6 – A robot knocks out another during the Free Combat event at the World Humanoid Robot Games in Beijing, China.

    China revolutionizes Robotics: World humanoid Robot Games 2025 in images

    7 – A robot takes part in the Wushu or Chinese Martial Art event at the World Humanoid Robot Games in Beijing, China.

    China revolutionizes Robotics: World humanoid Robot Games 2025 in images

    8 – Robots play five-a-side football at the World Humanoid Robot Games in Beijing, China. 

    China revolutionizes Robotics: World humanoid Robot Games 2025 in images

    9 – Robots compete in the 100-metre dash on the final day of the 2025 World Humanoid Robot Games in Beijing, China.

    China revolutionizes Robotics: World humanoid Robot Games 2025 in images

    Unitree Robotics and X-Humanoid emerged as the biggest winners by medal count at the World Humanoid Robot Games, winning 11 and 10 medals respectively at the three-day event.

    With AI, dominating the world landscape, the robots showcased their potential beyond hosting fancy ceremonies for products launch.

    The Chinese government has setup a plan for 2027 to build a world-class humanoid industry.

    China is eyeing on becoming global leaders in humanoid robotics, and World Humanoid robots championship is one step further in this direction.

    A whole new era of humanoid robotics has begun!

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  • ‘Ek Mazak September 14 Ko Bhi Hoga’: Did Basit Ali Predict Brutal Hammering For Pakistan In Asia Cup? | Cricket

    ‘Ek Mazak September 14 Ko Bhi Hoga’: Did Basit Ali Predict Brutal Hammering For Pakistan In Asia Cup? | Cricket

    India-Pakistan fans waving flags (AP)

    Pakistan will face India in the Asia Cup on September 14, and it seems former cricketer Basit Ali expects a brutal hammering for the Men in Green. The Pakistan cricket team is going through a massive slump in international cricket, and the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) is furious over the returns.

    Pakistan finished last in the ICC World Test Championship (WTC), and delivered shambolic performances in the T20 World Cup 2024 and the ICC Champions Trophy. Their performance in bilaterals was also not something to boast about, with the team recently suffering a T20I series defeat to Bangladesh and an ODI series defeat to West Indies.

    Basit Ali Furious At PCB For Player Contract Saga

    The shambolic performance across formats forced the PCB to make big changes in the central contracts. The board completely removed the A category and downgraded ace players Babar Azam and Mohammad Rizwan to category B to join Abrar Ahmed, Fakhar Zaman, Haris Rauf, Hasan Ali, Saim Ayub, Salman Agha, Shadab Khan, and Shaheen Afridi.

    Test captain Shan Masood was also pushed to category D from B, while Naseem Shah was demoted to category C from B. Usman Khan, who left the UAE to play for Pakistan, even failed to bag a contract.

    While many cricketers were downgraded in the central contracts, a few were rewarded for their good showings, with Abrar Ahmed, Haris Rauf, Saim Ayub, Salman Agha and Shadab Khan getting a promotion to category B from C. Basit Ali wasn’t impressed by how Pakistan gave the new contracts and called the saga a complete ‘Joke’.

    Speaking to Kamran Akmal on YouTube Show ‘Game Time’, Ali further said, “Ek mazaak September 14 ko bhi hoga. (One more joke will happen when India play Pakistan on September 14).


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  • Comparative Evaluation of Sodium Bicarbonate and Hyaluronidase as Adjuncts to Lignocaine in Peribulbar Block During Cataract Surgery

    Comparative Evaluation of Sodium Bicarbonate and Hyaluronidase as Adjuncts to Lignocaine in Peribulbar Block During Cataract Surgery


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  • Brightest Ever Fast Radio Burst Allows Researchers To Identify Its Origin

    Brightest Ever Fast Radio Burst Allows Researchers To Identify Its Origin

    An international team of astronomers have observed one of the brightest fast radio bursts (FRBs) ever detected—and pinpointed its location in a nearby galaxy (NGC 4141). FRB 20250316A has been nicknamed RBFLOAT, which stands for Radio Brightest FLash Of All Time. The finding and the discovery of the location surprised the team and revealed new insight into FRBs, which are one of astrophysics’ biggest mysteries.

    FRBs are powerful, millisecond-long flashes of radio waves from space. Researchers suspect that they are the result of extreme cosmic events but have, so far, been unable to determine their exact origin. FRBs are notoriously difficult to study because they vanish in the blink of an eye.

    This discovery was made using the Canadian Hydrogen Intensity Mapping Experiment (CHIME), one of the premier instruments used to study FRBs, along with data from NASA’s JWST. One of CHIME’s telescopes (also called outriggers) is located in the National Radio Quiet Zone on the campus of the U.S. National Science Foundation Green Bank Observatory. This outrigger is one of several CHIME telescopes distributed across North America, which also includes locations in British Columbia and California, designed to work together for very long baseline interferometry (VLBI). A co-author on the paper, Fengqiu Adam Dong, is a Jansky Fellow based at the NSF Green Bank Observatory.

    The Green Bank Outrigger, combined with the rest of the array, allowed researchers to triangulate RBFLOAT’s position with extremely high spatial resolution, down to tens of milliarcseconds, which corresponds to approximately 13 parsecs (or 45 light-years) at the FRB’s distance.

    READ MORE

    This news was adapted from press releases from several institutions involved with this research, including McGill University and the Center for Astrophysics | Harvard & Smithsonian. 

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  • WTA Monterrey Quarterfinal Predictions Including Noskova vs Alexandrova

    WTA Monterrey Quarterfinal Predictions Including Noskova vs Alexandrova

    Quarterfinal action at the WTA 500 in Monterrey has thrown up some intriguing matchups, with players at very different points in form and confidence levels. The conditions here have rewarded both clean hitting and steady baseline play, and it feels like each match has its own storyline. With a mix of big servers, gritty counterpunchers, and rising stars, these contests should offer plenty of variety heading into the weekend.

    WTA Monterrey Quarterfinal Predictions

    Alycia Parks vs Rebecca Sramkova

    Head-to-Head: first meeting

    Alycia Parks has powered her way through the draw with her serve setting the tone, while Rebecca Sramkova has relied on consistency and movement to pull through long matches. They haven’t crossed paths before, and that contrast in styles could make this one tricky to call. If Parks can sustain her rhythm, it may tilt her way, but Sramkova has shown she can drag opponents into uncomfortable rallies.
    Prediction: Parks in 3

    Antonia Ruzic vs Marie Bouzkova

    Head-to-Head: first meeting

    Antonia Ruzic has enjoyed a strong week, taking advantage of her opportunities and finding confidence with each win. Marie Bouzkova, though, brings a wealth of experience at this stage and tends to thrive in these gritty hard-court encounters. Their first meeting promises to be a test of patience more than power, and whoever dictates the tempo is likely to edge it.
    Prediction: Bouzkova in 2

    Embed from Getty Images

    Diana Shnaider vs Elise Mertens

    Head-to-Head: Mertens 2–1 Shnaider

    Diana Shnaider’s ball-striking has been a feature of her rise, but she has yet to hit similar heights this year. Elise Mertens, by contrast, has leaned on her trademark steadiness and tactical awareness to advance. This will be their third meeting this year, with both splitting wins during the clay swing. The balance here will rest on whether Shnaider’s aggression can hold up against Mertens’ counterpunching game. Expect swings in momentum but Mertens’ steadier game and confidence at the moment to win out.
    Prediction: Mertens in 2

    Linda Noskova vs Ekaterina Alexandrova

    Head-to-Head: first meeting

    Linda Noskova has already put together an impressive set of wins this week, and her confidence is showing. Ekaterina Alexandrova has been solid as well, producing clean hitting and using her experience to good effect. This will be their first meeting, which adds an extra layer of intrigue. Noskova’s aggressive shot-making could trouble Alexandrova, but the Russian’s ability to absorb pressure and stay composed makes this a fascinating matchup.
    Prediction: Noskova in 2

    Main Photo Credit: Andy Abeyta/The Desert Sun / USA TODAY NETWORK

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  • ‘Nicest judge in the world’ dies aged 88

    ‘Nicest judge in the world’ dies aged 88

    US celebrity judge and social media star Frank Caprio has died aged 88, his family has said.

    His death following a diagnosis of pancreatic cancer was announced on his official Instagram account, where he was remembered for his “warmth” and “unwavering belief in the goodness of people”.

    David Caprio, his son, thanked fans for their love and support and urged people to “spread a little kindness” in his father’s memory.

    Beloved for his compassion and humour in the courtroom, videos of Judge Caprio presiding over cases on his hit show Caught in Providence have had billions of views on social media, earning him the title the “nicest judge in the world”.

    In an the Instagram statement to his 3.4 million followers, Judge Caprio was remembered for the “countless acts of kindness he inspired”.

    “His warmth, humour, and kindness left an indelible mark on all who knew him,” the statement said.

    Judge Caprio had presided over thousands of cases in his hometown of Providence, Rhode Island before embarking on a TV career.

    The company behind Caught in Providence, Debmar-Mercury, paid tribute to Judge Caprio’s “unique brand of compassion and common sense approach”.

    “We will miss him dearly,” co-presidents Mort Marcus and Ira Bernstein said in a statement.

    During its run, Caught in Providence was nominated for three Daytime Emmys, with Judge Caprio earning two of his own nominations last year.

    His signature courtroom style produced viral clips ranging from him inviting children to sit with him behind the bench during cases, to announcing a “mini-judge” plushie of himself.

    A TikTok video showcasing his morning routine – brushing his teeth, signing his book and watching videos of his own show – has had more than 5m views.

    In an 2019 interview, Judge Caprio said his courtroom proceedings “show a slice of life of Rhode Island that is very interesting, and it reflects the same issues people are experiencing nationwide”.

    After being diagnosed with pancreatic cancer in 2023, Judge Caprio said he was “fully prepared to fight as hard I can” and thanked followers for their support.

    In one of his last social media posts, Judge Caprio announced he was back in hospital after suffering a “setback” in his treatment and asked his followers for their prayers.

    Judge Caprio is survived by his wife, Joyce Caprio, of almost 60 years, their five children, seven grandchildren and two great-grandchildren.

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  • Aspirin Confers No Long-Term Heart Benefits in Older Adults

    Aspirin Confers No Long-Term Heart Benefits in Older Adults

    TOPLINE:

    Healthy older adults who received aspirin experienced no significant long-term benefits against major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE); the rates of major hemorrhage were higher among users of aspirin than among users of placebo.

    METHODOLOGY:

    • Guidelines advise against routine initiation of aspirin for primary prevention of atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease events in older adults, yet many continue to use it. The long-term effects of using aspirin in this population remain uncertain.
    • Researchers analyzed data from 15,668 older adults from Australia and the US who took part in the ASPREE trial (median age at the end of the trial, 79 years; 43.1% men) to assess the post-trial and long-term effects of aspirin on cardiovascular events.
    • At enrollment, the participants had no history of cardiovascular events, dementia, or any physical disability that limited their independence.
    • The participants were randomly assigned to receive daily low-dose aspirin (100 mg) or a matching placebo and were followed for a median of 4.7 years during the trial.
    • The occurrences of incident MACE and major hemorrhage were tracked for an additional median follow-up of 4.3 years after the trial. The combined median follow-up, including the in-trial and post-trial periods, was 8.3 years.

    TAKEAWAY:

    • Over the combined follow-up period, participants who received aspirin experienced no significant benefit for MACE compared with those who received placebo.
    • However, during the post-trial period, the use of aspirin was linked to an 18% higher rate of MACE (hazard ratio [HR], 1.18; 95% CI, 1.02-1.37) and a 25% higher rate of myocardial infarction (HR, 1.25; 95% CI, 1.01-1.54) than the use of placebo.
    • Over the combined follow-up period, users of aspirin experienced a 24% higher rate of major hemorrhage than users of placebo (HR, 1.24; 95% CI, 1.10-1.39). Aspirin users also had higher rates of upper gastrointestinal bleeding and bleeding at another site.

    IN PRACTICE:

    “Other research suggests that certain subgroups might benefit from aspirin for primary prevention. However, established bleeding risks and also the possible absence of long-term MACE benefit need to be considered in clinical decision-making,” the researchers reported.

    SOURCE:

    This study was led by Rory Wolfe, PhD, of Monash University in Melbourne, Australia. It was published online on August 12, 2025, in the European Heart Journal.

    LIMITATIONS:

    The researchers could only ascertain the use of aspirin at the annual visits, which prevented precise tracking of changes between visits. The post-trial comparison was not randomized, which may have influenced the assessment of risks.

    DISCLOSURES:

    This study received grants from the National Institute on Aging and National Cancer Institute at the National Institutes of Health in the USA, the National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia, Monash University, and the Victorian Cancer Agency. Aspirin and placebo were provided by Bayer AG. Several authors reported receiving research support or honoraria and having other financial ties with various sources, including Bayer.

    This article was created using several editorial tools, including AI, as part of the process. Human editors reviewed this content before publication.

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  • After year in early access, Rogue Prince of Persia hits consoles now

    After year in early access, Rogue Prince of Persia hits consoles now

    The Prince of Persia franchise made an unexpected return to its 2D origins today as Ubisoft stealth-launched The Rogue Prince of Persia across PlayStation 5, Xbox Series X|S, and PC. The announcement came during Xbox’s Gamescom broadcast, with the game instantly available to Game Pass. Evil Empire developed the title in partnership with Ubisoft, spending over a year refining the game through Steam Early Access. The team implemented 15 major updates based on community feedback, completely overhauling the art direction, adding new biomes and weapons, and deepening the progression system before today’s console debut.

    Rogue-lite mechanics blend classic Prince gameplay with modern design

    The game tasks players with saving Persia from mystical Hun invaders through fast-paced 2D combat and parkour. True to rogue-lite conventions, death resets progress but persistent upgrades through the Mind Map system and collected Soul Cinders ensure meaningful advancement between runs.Combat emphasises the series’ trademark wall-running and acrobatic movement, enhanced by over 100 unlockable weapons and medallions that create diverse build possibilities. Players navigate procedurally generated levels while uncovering narrative elements that expand the story with each attempt.Persian-American composer ASADI created an electronic soundtrack that launches on streaming platforms August 22, with vinyl pre-orders coming later. The complete soundtrack features 13 new tracks alongside previously released material.Nintendo Switch and Switch 2 versions are planned for later in 2025.


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  • The surprising reason timber plantations explode into megafires

    The surprising reason timber plantations explode into megafires

    The odds of high-severity wildfire were nearly one-and-a-half times higher on industrial private land than on publicly owned forests, a new study found. Forests managed by timber companies were more likely to exhibit the conditions that megafires love — dense stands of regularly spaced trees with continuous vegetation connecting the understory to the canopy.

    The research, led by the University of Utah, University of California, Berkeley, and the United States Forest Service, is the first to identify how extreme weather conditions and forest management practices jointly impact fire severity.Leveraging a unique lidar dataset, the authors created three-dimensional maps of public and private forests before five wildfires burned 1.1 million acres in the northern Sierra Nevada, California.

    In periods of extreme weather, stem density — the number of trees per acre — became the most important predictor of a high-severity fire. Even in the face of accelerating climate change, how we manage the land will make a difference.

    “That’s a really hopeful finding because it means that we can adjust how we manage these landscapes to impact the way fires move through them,” said Jacob Levine, postdoctoral researcher at the U and lead author of the study. “Strategies that reduce density by thinning out both small and mature trees will make forests more robust and resilient to fire in the future.”

    In a 2022 study, Levine and collaborators found that fire severity was typically higher on privately managed forests. They also discovered the risks extended to areas near to, but not owned by, private industry, threatening the wilderness, small landowners and urban areas in their shadow.This new study is the first to identify the underlying forest structures that make high-severity fires more likely in some areas than in others.

    The study was published on Aug. 20, 2025, in the journal Global Change Biology.

    Lidar unlocks forest structure secrets

    Plumas National Forest, the study area in California’s northern Sierra Nevada, is emblematic of the wider trend of wildfire occurrence and severity. The region’s mixed conifer forests are adapted to periodic, low- to medium-severity fires that cleared vegetation, creating large spaces between clumps of trees. Efforts to increase timber resources led the U.S. government to implement fire suppression policies in the 1800s, including a ban on controlled burns that Indigenous People practiced for millennia. In the absence of natural fire cycles and Indigenous burning, modern forests have more fodder to fuel high-severity fires, defined as a fire that kills more than 95% of overstory trees.

    Plumas National Forest is a mosaic of private industrial and public ownership, and 70% of the study area was burned in five massive wildfires between 2019 and 2021, including the largest single fire in California’s recorded history, the Dixie Fire. Serendipitously, a unique dataset had been collected a year before the region burned.

    In 2018, the U.S. Forest Service, Geological Survey and National Aeronautics and Space Administration surveyed the Plumas National Forest and surrounding private land using airborne light detection and ranging (lidar) flights. The lidar sensors shoot billions of lasers at the landscape below, which bounce off the grass, shrubs, saplings, tree canopies and other structures in the forest with high precision.

    “We have a really detailed picture of what the forest looked like immediately before these massive fires. It’s an unbelievably valuable thing to have,” Levine said. “Understanding the forest structures that lead to high-severity fire allows us to target mitigation strategies to get ahead of this massive fire problem while still producing enough timber to meet market demand.”

    Private vs public management strategies

    Timber companies are focused on maximizing profits and providing a sustainable source of wood, a valuable resource for society and economic engine for rural communities. Most practice plantation forestry — clear-cutting an area and replanting the trees in a tightly packed grid. After 80 to 100 years, they do it all again, leaving a patchwork of dense stands of trees of similar age and size.

    “You can think about stacking a bunch of matches together in a grid — that’s going to burn a lot better than if you have those matches dispersed as smaller clumps,” Levine explained. “A bigger fire can easily reach the canopy in dense forests. Then it’s ripping through one tree after another, tossing out chunks of burning material miles in advance. It’s a different story.”

    The objectives of public lands are more varied, requiring management for grazing, recreation, restoration, timber production and wildlife corridors. They’re also beholden to the public, which stymies their ability to do active management. Environmental organizations often sue to stop proposed projects that would remove trees to thin down density.

    Although the study demonstrates that private industrial lands fare worse, both private and public agencies have much room for improvement to protect our nation’s forests. Most Sierra Nevada trees lack adaptations to recover from high-severity fires, leading to more and more of our forests turning into shrub and grasslands.

    “This has major implications for timber, but also for carbon sequestration, water quality, wildlife habitat and recreation,” Levine said. “Shrub and grasslands can be beautiful, but when we think of the Sierra Nevada we picture majestic forests. Without major changes in forest management, future generations could inherit a landscape that looks very different than the one we cherish today.”

    Other authors include Brandon Collins of the U.S. Forest Service and University of California, Berkeley; Michelle Coppoletta of the U.S. Forest Service; and Scott Stephens of University of California, Berkeley.

    The study, “Extreme weather magnifies the effects of forest structure on wildfire, driving increased severity in industrial forests,” was published on Aug. 20, 2025, in the journal Global Change Biology.

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  • How hidden cosmic highways feed the Universe’s biggest stars

    How hidden cosmic highways feed the Universe’s biggest stars

    The size of our universe and the bodies within it is incomprehensible for us lowly humans. The sun has a mass that is more than 330,000 that of our Earth, and yet there are stars in the universe that completely dwarf our sun.

    Stars with masses more than eight times that of the sun are considered high mass stars. These form rapidly in a process that gives off stellar wind and radiation, which could not result in stars of such high mass without somehow overcoming this loss of mass, or feedback. Something is feeding these stars, but how exactly they can accumulate so much mass so quickly has remained a mystery.

    Observations of enormous disk-like structures that form around a star — accretion disks — had been proposed as the chief way of rapidly feeding young stars. However, a team of researchers from several institutions including Kyoto University and the University of Tokyo, has discovered another possibility.

    “Our work seems to show that these structures are being fed by streamers, which are flows of gas that bring matter from scales larger than a thousand astronomical units, essentially acting as massive gas highways,” says corresponding author Fernando Olguin.

    Following on previous research, the team required a higher angular resolution to observe this system in detail, since regions forming high-mass stars are more distant than those with lower mass. The researchers utilized the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array, or ALMA, a powerful telescope in Chile composed of an array of antennae that can observe dust and molecular line emissions at millimeter wavelengths.

    Their observations revealed a young star feeding from potentially two streamers. One such streamer was connected to the central region of the star, with a velocity gradient indicative of rotation and possibly infall. This suggests that the streamer carries enough matter at a high rate to quench feedback effects from the young star, eventually contributing to the overly dense region observed around the central massive star.

    The research team expected to see a dust disk or torus of several hundreds astronomical units in size, but they did not expect the spiral arms to reach far closer to the central source.

    “We found streamers feeding what at that time was thought to be a disk, but to our surprise, there is either no disk or it is extremely small,” says Olguin.

    These results suggest that, independent of the presence of a disk around the central star, streamers can transport large amounts of gas to feed star-forming regions, even in the presence of feedback from the central star.

    Next, the team plans to expand their research by studying other regions to see if this is a common mode of accretion that results in the formation of massive stars. They also plan to explore the gas close to the star to determine whether they can confirm, or rule out, the presence of small disks.

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