UNICEF and WHO welcome KSrelief funding for measles and polio epidemics prevention

The World Health Organization (WHO) and UNICEF welcomed today funding agreements from the King Salman Humanitarian Aid and Relief Centre (KSrelief) valued at US$ 10 million to further bolster polio and measles programmes in eight countries. The agreement was signed on the sidelines of the World Health Summit in Berlin.

The new funding will provide UNICEF and WHO with US$ 5 million each in response to a call for emergency action by WHO and UNICEF to avert major polio and measles epidemics. WHO and UNICEF have urged countries to prioritize vaccination for children as they rebuild their immunization systems following major global immunization disruptions caused by COVID-19. The pandemic has left millions of vulnerable children at heightened risk of preventable childhood diseases.

With this generous contribution from KSrelief, WHO will support the polio and measles programmes in Somalia, Iraq, and Sudan through the procurement of laboratory equipment; enhancing surveillance; digitalisation of EPI; strengthening the cold chain; and trainings of campaign vaccinators. UNICEF will support the five high-risk countries of Afghanistan, Central African Republic, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Guinea, and Pakistan with the procurement and in-country distribution of polio and measles vaccines and supplies like cold chain equipment and syringes; recruitment and training of vaccinators; and sustainably strengthening immunization systems.

“COVID-19 has had a devastating effect on immunisation services globally,” said Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, Director-General of WHO. “KSrelief’s generous support will help WHO to save children’s lives, benefiting an estimated 50 million people and averting major outbreaks of vaccine-preventable diseases including polio and measles in Somalia, Iraq and Sudan.”

“We can’t let COVID-19 drive new epidemics of childhood disease, ” said UNICEF Executive Director Catherine Russell. “The pandemic disrupted routine immunization services around the world, leaving millions of vulnerable children at heightened risk of polio, measles and other preventable childhood diseases. This new agreement will translate into lives saved and stronger immunization systems that will benefit millions of children.”

Dr Abdullah Al Rabeeah, Supervisor General of King Salman Humanitarian Aid and Relief Centre (KSrelief) stated: “This cooperation agreement will strengthen global action to protect vulnerable children at increased risk from preventable childhood diseases; it also affirms the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia’s dedication to saving lives and safeguarding futures. The agreement is the result of the Kingdom’s commitment to working with the WHO and UNICEF to jointly address global health challenges.”

Source: World Health Organization

Thirty years of hope and higher education for refugees in West Africa

After surviving a brutal rebel assault on the church where she worshipped, Ornella Banam escaped the civil war in Central African Republic in 2014, fleeing to Burkina Faso. She managed to continue her studies there, hoping to become a nutritionist but, when her father died two years later, she could no longer afford the fees and had to drop out of college.

Last year, Banam was selected for the DAFI (Albert Einstein German Academic Refugee Initiative) scholarship programme, allowing her to return to higher education. “This scholarship gave me back the hope I had lost five years earlier,” says the 30-year-old. “I saw my dream shattered, but thanks to this opportunity, I am newly optimistic.”

The most recent figures show that refugee enrollment in tertiary education globally rose to 6 per cent in the academic year 2020-21. This represents a welcome increase from 1 per cent just a few years ago, but still falls well short of the target of 15 per cent higher education enrollment by 2030 set by UNHCR, the UN Refugee Agency, under its ’15by30′ campaign. The figures reflect a pervasive inequality whereby refugees suffer enrolment rates that are — at every level of education: primary, secondary, and tertiary — lower than even the poorest sections of society.

The DAFI Tertiary Scholarship programme — funded principally by the German Government with support from Denmark, the Czech Republic, UNHCR, the UN Refugee Agency, and private donors — is crucial to achieving the 15by30 goal. It has enabled 21,500 refugees to enroll in higher education globally since 1992, including 6,200 in West Africa since 2010. This year, 934 young refugees won DAFI scholarships in 15 West African countries.

“This scholarship gave me back the hope I had lost…”

Like many others in the DAFI programme, Banam’s dream stems from her own experience, growing up in a country where poverty is rife and food often short. “Malnutrition is the leading cause of infant mortality in the world, particularly in my country,” she says, adding that she wants “to care for children suffering from malnutrition around the world”. With the DAFI scholarship covering the cost of her tuition fees, rent, and living expenses, Banam is, once again, able to devote herself to her studies.

Florine Lutumba was only eight years old when civil war forced her family to leave their home in the Democratic Republic of Congo and, for the last 15 years, she has lived in Côte d’Ivoire where she earned her baccalaureate at secondary school paving the way to the possibility of university education. But when her father’s ill health forced Lutumba to abandon her studies in order to help make ends meet.

“I was in a lot of pain because I could see my friends going to [university], continuing their education and getting ahead of me,” says Lutumba. “After a while, I decided not to lament anymore because it was only making me feel miserable.”

Having set her mind to it, she started working with her younger sister, baking and distributing pastries in her neighbourhood of the capital, Abidjan, eventually earning enough money to pay for evening classes in Business Administration at a private university.

Since 2021, DAFI has taken on the cost of Lutumba’s university tuition fees, freeing her to focus more closely on her studies. “Schooling is no longer a worry for me. Thanks to this scholarship, which covers my … fees, daily transport and medical expenses, I have a better life and I feel fulfilled.”

“My academic results are always very good,” she adds. “I always strive for excellence.”

Hard-working and dedicated, Lutumba, now 23, believes the difficult times refugees frequently have to overcome, “should be a motivation and not a source of discouragement”. Aiming to obtain her degree with flying colours, Lutumba has high hopes: “My ambition is to manage or lead a big company in the future.”

The impacts of a DAFI scholarship can be life-long, Mbabazi Mugemana, 45, has been a refugee since the 1994 Rwanda genocide. DAFI support ensured that the talented high school student was able to become a successful graduate and, in the two decades since, he has earned a master’s degree, forged a career as a teacher, educational consultant, and community leader, and is studying for a PhD.

“It is not only the scholarship,” Mugemana says, “we received training and coaching on how to be in life, in an enterprise, to look for jobs, everything.” Today, he remains involved in the programme that paved the way for his own success, acting as an observer on DAFI selection panels in Cameroon, where he lives.

The new scholars Mugemana sees joining the programme give him hope for the future of higher education among refugees: “I have seen that the importance of the DAFI scholarship to young refugees in Cameroon, is that they are well equipped to face their studies and their professional lives, without exception, everywhere they go.”

Reporting by Moussa Bougma in Burkina Faso, Lath Divia Kibangou in Cote d’Ivoire and Helen Ngoh Ada in Cameroon

Source: UN High Commissioner for Refugees

Suez Canal To Raise Transit Fees In 2023

CAIRO– The Suez Canal’s transit tolls will increase by 15 percent for all types of vessels, and 10 percent for dry bulk and cruise ships, starting next year, the Suez Canal Authority (SCA) announced in a statement yesterday.

The authority said, rising energy prices, freight rates, and daily charter rates for ships, predicted to continue next year, are the main reason for raising transit tolls along the vital canal, connecting the Mediterranean Sea to the Red Sea.

“The (tolls) increase is inevitable and is a necessity, in light of the current global inflation, which translates into increased operational costs and the costs of the navigational services provided in the canal,” SCA Chairman, Ossama Rabiee, said in the statement.

He said, the SCA adjusted the tolls through clear mechanisms, incorporating the changes in the maritime transport market, noting the canal remains the most efficient and least costly route compared to alternative routes.

Source: Nam News Network

Ukraine, Food Security in Spotlight During UN Leaders Week

The annual gathering of leaders at the U.N. General Assembly is taking place this year in the shadow of Queen Elizabeth’s funeral and as the war in Ukraine heads into a possibly decisive period.

U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres is skipping the Queen’s funeral to remain in New York to oversee an Education Summit on Monday. He will then participate in the opening of the annual debate Tuesday morning, telling reporters it would be “inconceivable” that he would miss it.

U.S. President Joe Biden as host country leader would traditionally be the second head of state to address the assembly Tuesday, but as he will be attending Elizabeth’s funeral Monday, U.S. officials say his speech will now shift to Wednesday.

Spotlight

Neither Russian President Vladimir Putin nor Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy will be coming to New York, but despite this, their conflict will dominate the agenda.

“I think that Joe Biden and other Western leaders will use this as an opportunity to simply hammer home their anger with Russia over this war,” Richard Gowan, U.N. director for the International Crisis Group, told VOA.

He said Western leaders will also be seeking to shore up support from some non-Western countries they feel are trying to avoid taking sides or criticizing Russia.

U.S. Ambassador Linda Thomas-Greenfield told reporters Friday that Russia’s invasion of Ukraine “tests the fundamental principles that the U.N. was founded on.” She urged the international community not to abandon those values.

“We must double down on our commitment to a peaceful world and hold even closer our deeply held principles of sovereignty, territorial integrity, peace and security,” she said.

“And that’s why next week is so critical. We believe this is a moment to defend the United Nations and to demonstrate to the world that it can still take the world’s most pressing global challenges on.”

On Thursday, the U.N. Security Council will hold a ministerial level meeting on the situation; it could see some heated exchanges between Russian and Western officials. There will also be a separate side event that day on accountability for war crimes committed in Ukraine.

But despite what will be many meetings and events about the conflict, even the secretary-general is not optimistic that there will be the opportunity for any ground-breaking diplomacy on the sidelines of the annual debate.

“My good offices are ready, but I have no illusions … at the present moment, the chances of a peace deal are minimal,” he told reporters Wednesday.

Food crisis

Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has driven up global food, fertilizer and fuel prices, pushing fragile countries closer to the brink.

World Food Program Chief David Beasley warns that in 82 countries, as many as 345 million people are acutely food insecure, or “marching toward starvation.”

Somalia is one of the worst off.

Four failed rainy seasons have led to unprecedented drought. Eight million people could soon face famine if October’s rains fail as forecast.

“In total, 300,000 people are expected to be in IPC 5 conditions between October and December,” the Food and Agriculture Organization’s chief economist, Maximo Torero, told U.N. Security Council members Thursday.

IPC 5 is the humanitarian classification for famine.

In 2011-12 more than 250,000 Somalis died from famine. In 2016, there were fears that would be repeated, but international donors rallied to prevent the worst outcome.

Today, leaders know they need to act and do so quickly.

Somalia has sent its special envoy for drought response to New York to muster international support.

“Food is available inside the country — what we need is cash,” Abdirahman Abdishakur told VOA.

He warns that if a scaled-up humanitarian response does not happen in the next few weeks, people will die.

“The famine is real — it is happening,” he said.

On Wednesday, there will be a high-level meeting on responding to urgent needs in the Horn of Africa.

As for rising global food prices, the United States, the African Union, European Union and Spain will co-chair a food security summit Tuesday.

“It is bringing both the South as well as countries — developing countries and donor countries — together in the room to address these issues and how we move forward,” Ambassador Thomas-Greenfield said. “So that we can avoid the crisis that we are actually experiencing right now and see if we can make the situation better in the coming months.”

Improving market supply

The United Nations is counting on a package deal it has brokered with the help of Turkey and agreed by Ukraine and Russia, to put more grain on the global market and lower food prices.

The deal, signed July 22 in Istanbul, allows Ukrainian grain exports out of its Black Sea ports that Russia had blockaded. A separate agreement seeks to remove obstacles to get Russian fertilizer and food exports to world markets. Although not under Western sanctions, some shippers and insurers have been reluctant to do business with Russian companies for fear of running afoul of other sanctions targeting Moscow.

So far, more than 3 million metric tons of Ukrainian grain has gotten to markets in more than 30 countries via the deal, leading to a drop in food prices.

“Prices at the international level have gone down, but it is true that prices at the domestic level have not yet seen the decrease that we have seen in the international market,” said U.N. Conference on Trade and Development chief Rebeca Grynspan, who helped negotiate the deal.

She is also working to get more Russian fertilizer to markets, to ease prices, which she says are currently three times more than they were before the pandemic. If farmers cannot afford fertilizer, their crop yields could shrink, leading to food shortages next year.

“Fertilizer is a very important part of this deal,” Grynspan said.

Multitude of crises

While Ukraine may monopolize the spotlight during the high-level week, there is no shortage of other pressing issues, crises and conflicts for leaders to discuss.

Many will come up in bilateral meetings among top leaders. Others will get a broader setting.

Ahead of the general debate, Secretary-General Guterres is convening an education summit to address the massive disruption caused to schooling by the pandemic. The U.N. says 244 million young people worldwide are still out of school.

A new report from the U.N. children’s agency, UNICEF, estimates that only a third of 10-year-olds worldwide can read and understand a simple written story. That is half what it was pre-pandemic.

This is the first year leaders will meet again in New York in person in large numbers since the pandemic began in 2020, and while COVID-19 will not be in the spotlight, pandemic recovery will be part of economic and health discussions.

As will the climate crisis.

The U.N. chief just returned from Pakistan, where deadly floods have submerged one-third of the country.

“What is happening in Pakistan demonstrates the sheer inadequacy of the global response to the climate crisis, and the betrayal and injustice at the heart of it,” he told reporters.

He will use his platform to press for more investments for climate adaptation and mitigation for the poorest countries, which have contributed the least to climate change.

Source: Voice of America

JA Worldwide Inducts 2022 Laureates into the Global Business Hall of Fame

BOSTON, May 26, 2022 /PRNewswire/ — The Global Business Hall of Fame, presented by JA Worldwide, features entrepreneurs and business leaders spanning the last two centuries. From the inventor of blue jeans to the co-founder of one of the world’s leading biotech companies, visitors to our digital showcase find inspiring influencers to kindle their entrepreneurial spirit.

Global Business Hall of Fame, presented by JA Worldwide

About the Global Business Hall of Fame

The Global Business Hall of Fame is not only reflective of JA’s global reach, the diversity of JA students in 115 countries, and a wide range of global industries, but also prioritizes nominees who are working toward the Global Goals for Sustainable Development (SDGs), reinforcing to young people that they have the power to be a force for global good.

In addition, nominees for new laureates are grouped into two categories:

  • Leader: An executive-level professional who inspires others, the Leader’s contributions have advanced the landscape of business with a focus on improving lives. As a result, the Leader has led companies and initiatives toward the Global Goals and is a role model who exhibits social values, inclusivity, and a global point of view. The Leader is likely to have led ventures with a large scope of responsibility, resources, and talent.
  • Innovator: Under 40 years of age, entrepreneurial in spirit, and community focused, the Innovator is changing the landscape globally or has recently emerged on the global stage. The Innovator is an inspiration, full of energy, passionate about work, courageous, and a promoter of change and innovation on behalf of the global good.

Each of our new laureates joins a digital exhibit with immersive, aspirational content, redesigned this year—thanks to the support of Delta Air Lines—to look and feel like a hall-of -fame exhibition. The Global Business Hall of Fame inspires young people through laureate stories and achievements.

The Global Business Hall of Fame 2022 Laureates

We’re pleased to announce our 2022 laureates:

  • Bethlehem Tilahun Alemu (Leader/Ethiopia): When Bethlehem saw skilled artisans in her community living with chronic unemployment, she built a company that would showcase their skills and provide well-paying, sustainable jobs. Today, she is founder and Executive Director of soleRebels, Africa’s fastest-growing footwear company. She has approached her other startups—The Republic of Leather, Garden of Coffee, Made by Ethiopia, Selam Bank, GIZA digital, NoodFoods, and TeffTastic—with the same goal: provide employment and economic prosperity in her community, while dispelling the myth that Ethiopians and Africans don’t know how to create their own prosperity.
  • Alisée De Tonnac (Innovator/Switzerland): Alisée is CEO and co-founder of Seedstars World, the largest global competition for startups in emerging and fast-growing startup ecosystems, which connects entrepreneurs with investors and grants. Alisée has managed competitions in more than 85 cities and has a physical presence in 15 strategic co-working hubs around the world. As a result, more than 40,000 entrepreneurs from emerging markets have taken part in Seedstars’ events and programs, fundraising more than US$250 million and creating more than 2,500 jobs. After the outbreak of COVID-19, Alisée also launched #SeedstarsCares, an initiative that facilitates discussions and forums via webinars, podcasts, and videos about the pandemic and other important world issues.
  • Marcos Galperin (Leader/Argentina): As founder and CEO of Mercado Libre, the largest ecommerce and fintech ecosystem in Latin America, Marcos has empowered the Latin American entrepreneurial community by leveling the playing field between large companies, small businesses, and entrepreneurs. Under Marcos’s leadership, Mercado Libre seeks to foster entrepreneurship through educational initiatives that encourage financial literacy and inclusion and support entrepreneurs whose projects contribute to environmental, social, and economic goals, which the company calls “triple impact entrepreneurs.” Through Mercado Libre, Marcos has brought decent work and economic growth to 18 countries in the Americas, enabling more than one million families to make their livelihoods by operating in the platform.
  • Audrey Cheng (Innovator/Kenya): Audrey is co-founder, former CEO, and board member of Moringa School, a learning accelerator headquartered in Kenya that teaches skills to African youth that increase their employability potential and launch their careers. Moringa School provides digital education—including a technology bootcamp—that gives rising developers and data scientists the skills they need to enter the booming tech workforce. Today, the school also offers scholarships to low-income students and women in an effort to even the socioeconomic and gender imbalance in tech. As a natural outgrowth of the school, Audrey co-founded LendHer Capital, which funds Kenyan, female-led businesses.
  • The Global Business Hall of Fame nomination process is designed to engage diverse stakeholders from around the world and to ensure protocols are followed in the selection of laureates. To ensure fairness and transparency, the annual process involves checking performed by PwC, the Global Process Integrity Partner of the Global Business Hall of Fame. PwC oversees JA Worldwide’s processes for entry evaluation, manages the committee selection of finalists, and provides a platform for the Voting Jury.

About JA Worldwide
As one of the world’s largest and most-impactful youth-serving NGOs, JA Worldwide delivers hands on, immersive learning in work readiness, financial health, entrepreneurship, sustainability, STEM, economics, citizenship, ethics, and more. Reaching more than 12 million young people each year through nearly half a million teachers and business volunteers, JA Worldwide is one of few organizations with the scale, experience, and passion to build a brighter future for the next generation of innovators, entrepreneurs, and leaders. Visit us at jaworldwide.org.

Contact
Tere Stouffer
Chief Marketing Office
JA Worldwide
+1-212-641-0747
tere.stouffer@jaworldwide.org

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AMAZFIT LANCE LA T-REX 2 : UNE NOUVELLE SMARTWATCH GPS ROBUSTE POUR L’EXTÉRIEUR, CONÇUE POUR AFFRONTER LES GRANDS ESPACES

Doté d’un système de positionnement par 5 satellites à double bande et d’une puissante batterie d’une autonomie de 24 jours[1], ce nouvel accessoire intelligent peut endurer toutes les aventures.

LONDRES, 25 mai 2022 /PRNewswire/ — La marque mondiale de vêtements intelligents Amazfit, appartenant à Zepp Health (NYSE : ZEPP) a créé sa montre la montre la plus robuste et la plus avancée à ce jour avec le lancement de la T-Rex 2. Ayant passé 15 tests de résistance de niveau militaire[2], la nouvelle smartwatch GPS robuste conçue pour l’extérieur peut accompagner les utilisateurs dans des environnements extrêmement difficiles. Combinant la double bande, les 5 satellites et une résistance à l’eau de 10 ATM[3], elle est le compagnon idéal des aventuriers et des sportifs en plein air.

The Amazfit T-Rex 2 is a rugged outdoor GPS smartwatch with dual-band and 5 satellites positioning, and 10 ATM water resistance that can accompany users in extremely challenging environments.

Avec des modes de sport supplémentaires, de nouvelles fonctions de navigation et un suivi complet de la santé, la T-Rex 2 aide les amateurs d’aventure et de fitness en plein air à repousser leurs limites, quels que soient la manière et le lieu de leur exploration.

La T-Rex 2 est la troisième édition de la série Amazfit T-Rex. Les fonctions améliorées de la T-Rex 2 visent à permettre aux aventuriers amateurs de plein air, tels que les surfeurs et les randonneurs, d’enregistrer leurs données de santé personnalisées, quel que soit l’endroit où ils prennent leur dose de fitness.

Ne manquez jamais une aventure

Aucune aventure n’est hors de portée avec la T-Rex 2. Ce nouvel appareil aide les randonneurs, les alpinistes, les coureurs de fond et les aventuriers à explorer des terrains inconnus grâce à ses fonctions de navigation sur la trajectoire de l’itinéraire, de navigation en temps réel et de suivi du voyage[4]. Il utilise également la navigation à retour direct pour indiquer la ligne droite[5] la plus courte pour revenir au point de départ d’un voyage. L’altimètre barométrique et la boussole intégrés sont parfaits pour ceux qui veulent conquérir de nouveaux sommets et découvrir des sentiers inexplorés. Grâce à la nouvelle fonction d’importation d’itinéraires, les utilisateurs peuvent importer des itinéraires présélectionnés et les suivre à l’aide de la montre.

Avec le positionnement à double bande et la prise en charge de cinq systèmes de navigation par satellite, la montre peut réduire plus efficacement les interférences environnementales, et atteindre une vitesse de recherche plus rapide et un positionnement plus précis[6].

Autonomie de la batterie ultra-longue et ajout de modes sportifs permettant d’atteindre de nouvelles profondeurs

Comme pour tous les appareils Amazfit, l’autonomie de la batterie est ultra-longue et suffisamment puissante pour fonctionner pendant 24 jours – ce qui signifie qu’aucune retraite en pleine nature alimentée par l’adrénaline ne devra être écourtée.

La T-Rex 2 propose également plus de 150 modes sportifs – comprenant désormais le triathlon, la chasse, la pêche, le swing de golf et le mode surf[7] – et avec une note de 10 ATM, elle peut résister à une pression d’eau équivalente à une profondeur de 100 m, pour accompagner les porteurs lorsqu’ils surfent ou nagent.

Gestion de la santé 24 heures sur 24 par simple pression d’un bouton

La montre intègre également des fonctions de gestion de la santé 24 heures sur 24[8] grâce à son 6 PD (six photodiodes) BioTracker™ développé par ses soins, afin que les utilisateurs puissent obtenir rapidement et efficacement les données qui comptent. Cela comprend la surveillance de la fréquence cardiaque, de la saturation en oxygène du sang et des niveaux de stress, le tout en même temps, afin d’obtenir une évaluation personnalisée. Grâce à la mesure facile d’un seul coup d’Amazfit[9], les utilisateurs peuvent également mesurer quatre paramètres de santé différents[10] – fréquence cardiaque, saturation en oxygène du sang, niveau de stress et fréquence respiratoire – en seulement 45 secondes.

La ténacité de l’intérieur à l’extérieur

La montre est suffisamment robuste pour être utilisée[11] à des températures aussi basses que -30°C et résister à des températures aussi basses que -40°C et élevées que +70°C, prouvant ainsi qu’elle est un compagnon de confiance même dans des conditions extrêmes. L’Amazfit T-Rex 2 est capable de fonctionner à travers les vagues de chaleur, les forêts tropicales humides et les glaciers polaires.

Un design inspiré de la nature

Les quatre palettes de couleurs conviennent parfaitement aux aventuriers du plein air et réunissent style, texture et durabilité. La clarté de l’écran couleur HD AMOLED de 1,39″, la haute résolution et l’affichage permanent signifient également que le porteur n’aura jamais à arrêter son activité pour suivre ses progrès ou toute information importante. Avec un écran plus grand, il n’a jamais été aussi facile de surveiller vos données pendant vos déplacements.

L’Amazfit T-Rex 2 sera lancé mondialement le 24 mai 2022 (GTM+1) à partir de 229,9 € en Europe. Elle sera disponible en prévente sur les boutiques Amazfit Amazon en Italie et en France le 1 juin 2022, et également dans les points de vente Amazefit d’Italie, de France et d’Allemagne le 1 juin 2022. L’Amazfit T-Rex 2 sera disponible dans d’autres pays au cours du mois de juin 2022.

Pour plus d’informations, rendez-vous sur le site www.amazfit.com/en/

Notes de bas de page :
1, L’autonomie de la batterie peut varier en fonction des réglages, des conditions d’utilisation et d’autres facteurs.
2, Les données pertinentes sur ce sujet proviennent du rapport suivant : H202203154768-01EN. Une exposition prolongée n’est pas recommandée car elle peut endommager la montre et ses composants.
3, Selon la norme ISO 22810:2010, l’Amazfit T-Rex 2 atteint un indice de 10 ATM, soit une étanchéité jusqu’à 100 mètres, et convient donc aux éclaboussures, à la neige, à la douche, à la natation ou à certains sports nautiques à grande vitesse.
4, Ces fonctionnalités seront ajoutées via une mise à jour OTA.
5, La ligne droite indiquée pour revenir au point de départ d’un voyage peut ne pas être un itinéraire pratique à suivre en raison de facteurs environnementaux ; elle est uniquement destinée à vous aider à suivre votre position par rapport au point de départ du voyage. Cette fonctionnalité sera ajoutée via une mise à jour OTA.
6, Les services de positionnement en intérieur ne sont pas pris en charge. La vitesse et la précision de positionnement peuvent être affectées par l’environnement environnant. La montre peut se connecter automatiquement à un maximum de deux systèmes satellites à la fois. Les connexions satellites spécifiques peuvent dépendre de votre emplacement.
7, Le mode sport Surfing sera ajouté via une mise à jour OTA.
8, La surveillance 24 heures sur 24 de la fréquence cardiaque et de la saturation en oxygène du sang (SpO2) doit être activée dans l’application Zepp.
9, Pour procéder à la mesure en un coup et à d’autres mesures métriques manuelles, veuillez porter la montre à une distance d’un doigt du poignet et garder le bras immobile pour de meilleurs résultats. Les mouvements et les caractéristiques environnementales et physiques peuvent influer sur la vitesse et la précision de la surveillance et de la mesure.
10, Ce produit et l’application Zepp ne sont pas des dispositifs médicaux et ne peuvent pas être utilisés à des fins médicales, ou comme base de diagnostic d’un état médical.
11, Le mode basse température doit être installé via une mise à jour OTA. Elle est désactivée par défaut et doit être activée dans les paramètres de la montre.

À propos d’Amazfit

Amazfit, l’une des principales marques mondiales d’accessoires portables intelligents axés sur la santé et la forme physique, fait partie de Zepp Health (NYSE : ZEPP), une entreprise de technologie de la santé. Proposant une large sélection de montres intelligentes et de bracelets, l’essence de la marque Amazfit est « Up Your Game », encourageant les utilisateurs à vivre leurs passions et à exprimer librement leur esprit actif. Amazfit est alimenté par la plateforme de gestion de la santé exclusive de Zepp Health, qui fournit des informations et des conseils exploitables 24 heures sur 24 et 7 jours sur 7 pour aider les utilisateurs à atteindre leurs objectifs de bien-être. Avec un savoir-faire exceptionnel, les montres intelligentes Amazfit ont remporté de nombreux prix de design, dont le prix iF Design Award et le Red Dot Design Award.

Lancé en 2015, Amazfit est aujourd’hui adopté par des millions d’utilisateurs. Ses produits sont disponibles dans plus de 90 pays sur le continent américain et dans les régions EMEA et APAC. Pour en savoir plus sur Amazfit, rendez-vous sur le site www.amazfit.com. Pour en savoir plus sur Zepp Health, rendez-vous sur le site www.zepphealth.com.

Photo : https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1823671/image_1.jpg