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Vivo X200 FE Launched in India With MediaTek Dimensity 9300+ SoC, 6,500mAh Battery

The Vivo X200 FE was unveiled in India on Monday alongside the Vivo X Fold 5, expanding the Vivo X200 lineup in the country. It features a 6.31-inch AMOLED screen and is powered by the MediaTek Dimensity 9300+ chipset. The handset houses a 6,500mAh battery supporting 90W wired fast charging. For photography, it gets a Zeiss-enhanced triple rear camera setup with a 50-megapixel main sensor and a 50-megapixel front-facing camera for selfies.

Vivo X Fold 5 Launched in India With 8.03-Inch Foldable Screen, 50-Megapixel Telephoto Camera

The Vivo X Fold 5 has an 8.03-inch foldable AMOLED inner display and a 6.53-inch AMOLED cover screen with a 120Hz refresh rate and a 4,500 nits local peak brightness. The phone sports three 50-megapixel rear cameras, including a telephoto shooter with 3x optical zoom and an ultrawide camera. It gets a Snapdragon 8 Gen 3 SoC and a 6,000mAh battery. The X Fold 5 measures 4.3mm in thickness when unfolded and weighs 217g.

Samsung Confirms Some Galaxy AI Features Will Remain Free After 2025: Report

Samsung has reportedly provided some clarity over the future of Galaxy AI features after the end of 2025. So far, the South Korean tech giant has maintained that the artificial intelligence (AI) tools and features that make up the Galaxy AI suite are only free to use till 2025. The company never officially confirmed if these features would be paywalled starting in 2026, or if they would continue to be available for free.

Lộ ảnh Honda ADV 350 2025 chính hãng đã về Việt Nam

ADV 350 2025 chính hãng của Honda Việt Nam vừa lộ ảnh thực tế đã về Việt Nam với 02 phiên bản màu mới Đỏ nhám và Đen nhám mâm vàng. Bên cạnh hình ảnh được tiết lộ, một nhân viên kinh doanh của một Đại lý Honda DreamWing cũng thông báo bắt đầu nhận […]

The post Lộ ảnh Honda ADV 350 2025 chính hãng đã về Việt Nam appeared first on Motosaigon.

Men in Love by Irvine Welsh review – the Trainspotting boys grow up

Three decades on from the author’s breakthrough debut, why are we still trapped in the Trainspotting moment?

It has been more than 30 years since Irvine Welsh published Trainspotting. To put that in perspective, it’s as distant to readers today as Catch-22 or To Kill a Mockingbird would have been in 1993. If you are anything like me, that doesn’t feel quite right. Because even at such a historical remove, there remains something undeniably resonant, something curiously current, about Welsh’s wiry, demotic, scabrous debut.

In part, this is explained by the sheer scale of Trainspotting’s success. It was one of those genuinely rare literary events, wherein a critically acclaimed, stylistically adventurous book catches the cultural zeitgeist to such a degree that it also becomes a commercial sensation, going on to sell over a million copies. Its cultural salience was further compounded by Danny Boyle’s cinematic adaptation, one of the highest-grossing UK films of all time, a visual intervention that seemed to crystallise the aesthetics of Britpop – high velocity, high audacity, high nostalgia.

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