Browse Category

Wearables News 27 June 2025 - 10 July 2025

Tech Just Leveled Up: Samsung’s Foldables, AI Browsers, and the Smartwatch Takeover / Updated: 2025, July 10th, 12:00 CET

Tech Just Leveled Up: Samsung’s Foldables, AI Browsers, and the Smartwatch Takeover / Updated: 2025, July 10th, 12:00 CET

Samsung released the Galaxy Z Fold 7 and Z Flip 7, with Fold 7 folded thickness of 8.9 mm and Flip 7’s 4.1-inch external cover display, a 200 MP main camera, Snapdragon 8 Elite, up to 16 GB RAM, IP68, seven years of Android updates, and Fold 7 dropping S Pen support. Both devices feature deep Google Gemini AI integration…
Global Wearable Health Tech News – June and July 2025

Global Wearable Health Tech News – June and July 2025

Biobeat’s cuffless vital-sign patch received FDA clearance and CE marking for hospital-grade remote monitoring, enabling cuffless measurement of blood pressure, heart rate, SpO2, and respiratory rate via PPG and AI. On June 19, PharmaSens and SiBionics announced niia™ signature, an all-in-one patch that combines a continuous glucose monitor with an insulin pump, unveiled at ADA 2025. LifePlus’s LifeLeaf non-invasive monitor…
Trends 2025: Consumer Electronics & Wearables – AI, AR, Health Tech and More (Updated: June 27th, 2025)

Trends 2025: Consumer Electronics & Wearables – AI, AR, Health Tech and More (Updated: June 27th, 2025)

Global consumer tech sales are projected to reach $1.29 trillion in 2025, about 2% growth over 2024. Apple leads wearables with roughly a 20–25% global market share in recent quarters, driven by its Watch and AirPods lines. Wearable shipments grew 5.4% in 2024 to 534.6 million units and are expected to grow 4.1% in 2025 as key segments mature. IDC…
1 4 5 6

Stock Market Today

  • LSE Plans to Ease Public Holding Rules for Overseas Companies in FTSE Indexes
    January 27, 2026, 9:13 AM EST. The London Stock Exchange Group (LSE) announced plans to relax rules requiring the minimum number of shares held by the public for overseas companies to join key indexes like the FTSE 100. This move aims to attract more international firms to British benchmark indexes, potentially boosting market diversity and liquidity. Currently, strict rules limit index inclusion, but easing these could open doors for more foreign businesses. The LSE's strategy reflects growing competition among global stock markets to attract listings and expand investor options. Observers note this could reshape dynamics in London's equity markets amid shifting global investment trends.
Go toTop