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South China Morning Post
41 minutes ago
- South China Morning Post
Robot performs realistic surgery with 100% accuracy in ‘major leap'
A robot has performed realistic surgery on its own with 100 per cent accuracy, researchers have said. In a 'major leap' towards using more robots in operating theatres, a machine trained on the videos of surgeries was able to precisely work on removing a gallbladder. The robot operated with the expertise of a skilled human surgeon, according to Johns Hopkins University researchers in the US, even during unexpected scenarios typical in real-life medical emergencies. The robot was watched as it performed a lengthy phase of a gallbladder removal on a lifelike patient. It was able to respond to and learn from voice commands from the team, just like a novice surgeon working with a mentor. Overall, there were 17 tasks in the surgery, the robot had to identify certain ducts and arteries and grab them precisely, strategically place clips, and sever parts with scissors.


South China Morning Post
4 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
Trump announces new tariffs on Philippines, Iraq, Libya, Moldova, Brunei and Algeria
Adapting his 'flood the zone' tactic to foreign trade, US President Donald Trump announced on Wednesday another flurry of take-it-or-leave-it letters imposing tariffs on six smaller economies that have resisted him or are too small to merit individual negotiating attention. Advertisement The latest unilateral actions were 20 per cent tariffs on the Philippines, 25 per cent on Moldova and Brunei, and 30 per cent on Iraq, Algeria and Libya, effective August 1. These, the letters added, are separate from any sectoral tariffs that may be imposed later. The nearly identical letters released on Trump's social media account said 'It is a Great Honor for me to send you this letter' that demonstrates Washington's willingness to continue trading despite America's 'significant trade deficit with your great Country'. 'Our relationship has been, unfortunately, far from reciprocal,' the letters said. 'This deficit is a major threat to our Economy and, indeed, our National Security!' the president added, signing off 'With best wishes'. The build-up follows this week's announcement that his original deadline for reaching '90 deals in 90 days' was postponed until August 1 after very few agreements were secured. Advertisement The new limit, he quickly added, was 'firm, but not 100 per cent firm' if more deals materialised. 'I would say final – but if they call with a different offer, and I like it, then we'll do it', he added.


South China Morning Post
5 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
Will Trump's ‘Big Beautiful Bill' offer opportunities for China?
US President Donald Trump's latest tax and spending act might 'cause some trouble' for China, according to analysts. Advertisement However, they also said Beijing may be able to benefit in certain areas if the act – known officially as the One Big Beautiful Bill – generates further political instability and damages domestic industries such as the US clean energy sector. The act aims to make permanent tax cuts, lock in Trump's priorities on border and defence financing, increase Washington's debt limit by US$5 trillion, slash healthcare funding and jeopardise dozens of planned clean energy projects with ties to China. It has sparked widespread concern across the world over an anticipated surge in US federal deficit – estimated by the Congressional Budget Office to reach at least US$3 trillion over the next decade – and its capacity to reshape global capital flows by sharply reducing incentives for US multinationals to keep profits and investments overseas. The act 'is not aimed at China' but will indirectly affect it and other countries, according to Zhu Junwei, director of Horizon Insights Centre, a Chinese think tank. Advertisement 'Nowadays, when Americans oppose certain domestic policies, they often invoke China – claiming that a certain measure would benefit Beijing and should therefore be rejected. Whether there are exaggerations in such claims requires closer analysis,' she said.