China Life (Overseas) launches service platform 'Enrich' in partnership with Town Health, others
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RTHK
an hour ago
- RTHK
HK's National Games merch blends spirit and city icons
HK's National Games merch blends spirit and city icons Rosanna Law said the products embody the spirit of the Games, while incorporating elements of the city. Photo: RTHK Secretary for Culture, Sports and Tourism Rosanna Law on Saturday said that official merchandise for Hong Kong's participation in this year's National Games will uniquely blend the spirit of the event with iconic elements of the city. Hong Kong is set to co-host the Games for the first time in November alongside Guangdong and Macau. Speaking at the launch ceremony for the Hong Kong competition region's official franchised products, Law emphasised the local character of the merchandise. "These products embody the spirit of the Games while incorporating elements like the scenery of Victoria Harbour, city landmarks and local cuisine, showcasing the unique charm of the Hong Kong competition region," she said. The merchandise, featuring the National Games mascots "Xiyangyang" and "Lerongrong" alongside Hong Kong-specific imagery such as Tai O and the Star Ferry, will go on sale starting Monday. Law said initial purchase locations include the Kai Tak Mall, West Kowloon Station and Wan Chai Immigration Tower. "In the future, we will gradually expand to more locations across Hong Kong for the convenience of citizens and tourists. The licensed merchandise retailers will also introduce products from the Guangdong competition zone for sale in Hong Kong," she said. Product offerings range from plush toys and pins to cups and other commemorative items. Regarding the Games themselves, Law said that preparations were progressing smoothly, and she encouraged the public to support the SAR delegation during the competition.


South China Morning Post
2 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
Chinese unicorn Moonshot launches AI model Kimi K2 in red-hot open-source market
Chinese start-up Moonshot AI has released a new open-source artificial intelligence (AI) model, called Kimi K2, that is touted to excel in frontier knowledge, maths, coding and general agentic tasks, as the company looks to maintain an edge against rivals such as DeepSeek Advertisement Beijing -based Moonshot said Kimi K2 was developed with a mixture-of-experts (MoE) architecture and boasts 1 trillion total parameters, with 32 billion so-called activated parameters – specialised computational units engaged for specific tasks, according to the firm's blog post on Friday. MoE is a machine-learning approach that divides an AI model into separate sub-networks, or experts – each focused on a subset of the input data – to jointly perform a task. This is said to greatly reduce computation costs during pre-training and achieve faster performance during inference time. Moonshot said it open-sourced two versions of Kimi K2. The foundation model, Kimi-K2-Base, was optimised for researchers and builders who want full control for fine-tuning and custom solutions. By contrast, Kimi-K2-Instruct was post-trained for drop-in, general-purpose chat and agentic AI experiences. Kimi K2 is now freely available via its web and mobile applications. Advertisement Moonshot's latest AI model reflects a broader trend in the industry towards open-source development, which has enabled developers – from start-ups like DeepSeek to larger tech firms such as Baidu and Alibaba Cloud – to improve efficiency and attain broader adoption of their AI products. The open-source approach gives public access to a program's source code, allowing third-party software developers to modify or share its design, fix broken links or scale up its capabilities.


South China Morning Post
2 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
Chinese healthcare graduate sells ice cream, ‘embarrassed' alma mater forces clip removal
A woman in China who graduated from medical school and is now selling ice cream on the street has captivated mainland social media after alleging that her alma mater urged her to delete her videos because her story made it feel 'embarrassed'. The woman, surnamed Li, graduated three years ago from the privately-run Zhongshan College of Dalian Medical University in Liaoning province, northeastern China, earning a bachelor's degree in medical imaging. Her experience gained significant attention with a viral video released in early May. After graduation, Li accepted a position at a major hospital in Guangxi Zhuang autonomous region, where she is originally from. However, she left the job for unspecified reasons, as she stated in her video. In April, she began selling ice cream mixed with mango from a street stall in Hechi, Guangxi, explaining that she needed to earn money while preparing for the civil service qualification exam, as reported by the Xiaoxiang Morning Herald. Li, above, decided to sell ice cream from a street stall to earn money while studying for the civil service qualification exam. Photo: Douyin Following the video's viral success – garnering 5 million views and 100,000 likes – Li received a phone call at the end of June from a teacher named Chen, her class instructor. Chen urged Li to remove her video, claiming it had negatively impacted the school's reputation and caused current students to worry about their future, according to Li. Li stated that she promptly deleted the video and refrained from mentioning the school's name again. 'But some people from the school still left comments on my social media account, attacking and defaming me. This incident has disrupted my life and my ice cream business,' Li was quoted as saying.