Two men have been taken to hospital after a seaplane crash near Moruya on the far south coast of New South Wales.
Key points:
Emergency services were called to Coila Lake just after 1pm
Two men in their 50s sat on the plane while it was sinking
The men were winched to safety and have been taken to hospital
Emergency services were called to Coila Lake at Tuross Head just after 1pm after reports of a plane crash.
Police said the male pilot and passenger escaped the wreckage and sat on the plane while it was sinking before being winched to safety by the Westpac Rescue Helicopter.
Both men, aged in their 50s, were treated for minor cuts and abrasions and taken to Moruya District Hospital as a precaution.
Shane Daw, general manager for the Westpac Surf Life Saving Rescue Helicopter, says the plane had flipped over in the lake.
He said it could have been a far worse outcome.
“We found two people in the water trying to climb up onto the aircraft itself,” he said.
“The pilot of the seaplane was able to put the aircraft down and, whilst it’s flipped, it could’ve been a far more tragic story.
“There was a bit of luck involved there but also it was very fortunate that we were close by.”
Marine Rescue NSW were also called to the scene of the seaplane crash to assist.(Supplied: Marine Rescue NSW)
Fire and Rescue NSW were also called to the scene to help with hazardous materials, including a potential fuel leak.
“The crews have managed to use boats and booms and put it around the plane as a precautionary action to make sure if fuel does float to the top, it’s going to be contained and allowed to evaporate off before it causes any harm,” said Acting Superintendent with Fire and Rescue NSW Phil Eberle.
Fire and Rescue NSW has referred the matter to the EPA.
Surf Life Savers from the Far South Coast branch were also called to assist, with their branch director praising the teamwork between the emergency services.
“It’s not the typical call you expect to go to but it’s really fortunate outcome and lucky to have so many services so close by,” said Far South Coast Surf Life Saving director Cheryl McCarthy.
As news broke that the FBI had seized 10 boxes of evidence while carrying out their search warrant on former President Donald Trump’s Mar-A-Lago residence, his lawyers were floating the idea that something more sinister might be going down.
Appearing Tuesday evening on Fox News, Trump lawyer Alina Habba expressed concerns about the actions of FBI personnel, alleging the possibility of planted materials.
“Quite honestly, I’m concerned that they may have planted something, you know?” the attorney said. “At this point, who knows? I don’t trust the government, and that’s a very frightening thing as an American.”
Striking a similar tone, Trump lawyer Christina Bobb took issue earlier in the day on Real America’s Voice with “not [being] allowed to observe” the search while being present during the raid on Monday on Trump’s legal behalf.
“No, there is no security that something wasn’t planted,” the lawyer said. “I’m not saying that’s what they did.”
“This was a completely unnecessary power flex. It was a weird flex,” Bobb added. “It’s quite honestly sad to see what they have done to our country.”
Asked by The Daily Beast on Tuesday whether she believes the FBI is playing tricks, Bobb said: “I have no reason at this point in time to believe anyone has made anything up.”
The Wall Street Journal reported Tuesday that the National Archives had already seized 15 boxes of documents “and other items” from the resort in January “that Mr. Trump should have handed over to the agency at the end of his term.”
Those boxes contained several documents that federal law requires be turned over once a president leaves office, along with archives that officials described as “classified national security information.”
A source told the newspaper that those documents included correspondence between Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, among others. The discovery of those documents led to the involvement of the Justice Department. In June, Justice Department lawyers returned to Mar-a-Lago, where they sought more information about the sensitive material taken from the White House. Investigators were led to a basement where boxes of documents were stored, but investigators “looked around and eventually left,” a source told the Journal.
A June 8 letter from the Justice Department ordered Trump’s legal team to secure the room where the documents were stored. The latest search was undertaken because the FBI believed even more classified documents had been stored at the residence, the paper reported but it is unclear how or if the latest search is connected to the June visit.
The FBI raid might have caused some headaches within Trump’s orbit, but it also now gives MAGAworld allies more than enough material to cast Trump as a victim, which one current adviser sees as a path for Trump to win a second term—or, as some advisers falsely claim, a third term.
“The Biden folks love to talk about preserving ‘norms,’ and now they’re so desperate to ‘get’ Trump that they’re raiding his home and turning him into a martyr,” a Trump adviser told The Daily Beast. “They’re going to mess around and single-handedly get him re-elected.”
Elsewhere, on cable news on Tuesday night, several Trump backers cast doubt on the legitimacy of law enforcement activity at the former president’s estate.
Fox News host Jesse Watters suggested that the FBI is engaging in illegal activity.
“What the FBI is probably doing is planting evidence, which is what they did during the Russia hoax,” Watters asserted, pejoratively referring to the investigation into Russian meddling in the 2016 election, a habit among Fox’s primetime hosts. “We also have a hunch they doctored evidence to get the warrant.”
Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich also baselessly ginned up fears about evidence tampering.
Referring to the “fake FBI,” Gingrich said on right-wing activist Charlie Kirk’s show, “You’ll notice they didn’t allow anybody on the Trump side into Mar-a-Lago. So we have no idea whether or not they planted evidence.”
Yot’s never too late to fix a problem. It doesn’t matter if it’s you who has been putting off a trip to the doctor or your country that has been putting off properly taxing its natural resources, it really is better late than never.
Just because the former Liberal treasurer Peter Costello failed to cash in on the resources boom of the early 2000s, and just because the mining industry succeeded in scuttling the Rudd government’s mining tax in 2009, doesn’t mean Australia should let the benefits of record commodity prices slip through our fingers yet again. Failing to do something sensible twice before is hardly a good reason to repeat the mistake a third time.
This year Norway, with a population of only 5.3 million, will collect about $137bn in tax from their oil industry. They had expected $95bn but will collect nearly 50% more than planned, mainly because of higher oil and gas prices. That’s what a good resource tax system looks like.
Meanwhile here in Australia, despite being the world’s third largest exporter of fossil fuels, people are struggling with high prices for oil, gas and electricity (the vast majority of which is still produced from burning our own coal and gas). The idea that an energy exporter like Australia is having a tough time when the prices of our energy exports are sky high shows just how broken and detached from reality our political debate has become.
The profit share of GDP is at record highs, the wage share is at record lows, real wages are falling, and the Reserve Bank of Australia is lifting interest rates to rein in inflation caused more by profits than consumers.
And in a valiant attempt to defend the indefensible, the Business Council of Australia may have thrown the mining industry under the bus, while trying to argue that profits aren’t coming at the expense of wages.
The BCA’s chief economist Stephen Walters says that “after excluding the miners and banks, which are distorting this data and where wages are amongst the highest in the nation, the broader profit share actually has failed”.
Energy firms’ record profits during energy crisis ‘immoral’, says UN secretary general – video
Just think about that. The lobby group for big business is admitting that the profits of the mining industry are so enormous they are skewing the national statistics. Could there be a stronger case for an overhaul in the way we tax these companies?
This latest claim from Walters appears to be an attempt to walk away from an earlier claim from the BCA’s chief executive Jennifer Westacott who said “once mining profits were removed, the profits share of income had actually fallen to its lowest point in 20 years”.
Thanks to the Liberals, we already have a super-profits tax on the banks, although it only took $1.6bn of the $37.6 billion profits made by the sector in 2021. And in the words of the BCA, the financial sector profited thanks partly to the “cheap money” provided by the RBA during the pandemic. So surely now is a good time to increase the windfall tax on the banks – and impose something similar on the miners.
There is no economic reason that the mining industry, and the gas industry in particular, shouldn’t share some of their gains to help Australians struggling with energy price pain. The Norwegians, by taxing their oil and gas industry, have accumulated $1.8tn in their sovereign wealth fund. But in Australia, which exports far more fossil fuels than Norway, we have just $200bn in our future fund, most of which came from the privatization of Telstra. To put it another way, the value of our wealth fund is only a little bigger than one year’s worth of Norway’s oil tax revenue, even though Norway’s economy is a quarter of the size of ours.
It’s not just the mining and banking industries that are exploiting rising prices while pretending they can’t afford to pay employees more. Qantas, Harvey Norman and thousands of local cafes have converted higher prices for some inputs into bigger profits for themselves. But oil and gas profits have soared to astounding levels – the highest in recorded history – driven by high energy prices amid Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
The Nobel prize-winning economist Joseph Stiglitz has argued that a windfall profits tax on energy companies is a “no brainer” and in Australia economists from Rod Simms to Chris Richardson have joined calls for such a tax on the gas industry. Whether it is used to pay down the debt the business lobby is worried about or to make childcare and medicine cheaper is besides the point. There’s no need to make the perfect enemy of the good.
In 2013 the BCA demanded a repeal of Australia’s “unconscionably high carbon tax” and in 2019 Westacott called Labor’s 5-15% emission reduction target range “economy wrecking”. Yet in the lead up to the 2022 election, the BCA was proposing even more ambitious emissions reductions than Labor’s 43%.
So the fact that the BCA would prefer to talk about productivity, rather than a tax on its biggest members – which it has now openly acknowledged reap absurdly high profits – is staggering. The business lobby will change its mind when the public leaves it behind.
The real question is whether Australia will take this opportunity to fix the way we tax the resource sector, or again wait for the next one.
Rockstar Games is currently hard at work on GTA 6, one of the most highly anticipated video games of the decade. While news about the upcoming title has trickled out in recent months, with early reports claiming it will have male and female Hispanic protagonists as well as a sweeping Miami setting, we still don’t know much about the game. That hasn’t stopped Rockstar Games and parent company Take-Two from hyping it up as the next massive leap in entertainment.
‘The Rockstar Games team is determined to once again set creative benchmarks for the series, our industry, and for all entertainment, just as the label has done with every one of their frontline releases,’ Take-Two CEO Strauss Zelnick said in a recent financial call.
He confirmed the game was ‘well underway’ at the studio, and proceeded to hype up the future of the franchise. While it appears Zelnick has unwavering confidence in the project, it may be too early to get excited.
The idea for GTA 6 has been gestating for nearly a decade, with little tangible progress shown to the public. It was only in February 2022 that Rockstar confirmed active development was progressing, and there’s been little news of the game since then.
Read: Everything we know about Rockstar’s Grand Theft Auto 6
According to Bloomberg, the game is also at least two years away – or even further, given the current game delay cycle we’re in. Reports from multiple sources agree that Rockstar is currently taking its time with the game in an effort to better look after employee wellbeing.
Previous projects, including Red Dead Redemption 2, have been heavily scrutinized in the past, for allegedly being developed under terrible crunch conditions. Going forward, Rockstar is reportedly looking to change this, and the perception of its company culture.
So while Rockstar appears to have wildly ambitious plans to change the face of entertainment for good, those looking forward to seeing the results of this commitment shouldn’t hold their breath. It’s also important to take claims like these with a dose of realism. While GTA 6 will no doubt make a massive impact, like GTA 5 before it, it’s always best to keep expectations in check and be aware of how hype can warp your future enjoyment.
GTA 6 is currently in development, with more news promised at a later date.
Ben Affleck has put his Pacific Palisades mansion on the market for $30 million after rumors to have purchased a sprawling home in Beverly Hills with his wife Jennifer Lopez.
He first snapped up the stunning property, complete with seven bedrooms, nine bathrooms, a gym, screening room and spa, for $19.2 million back in 2018.
At the time, he bought the plush home in a bid to be near his ex-wife Jennifer Garner, with whom he remains amicable since their 2015 split, and the three children they share, daughters Violet, 16, Seraphina, 13 and ten- year-old son Samuel.
Saying goodbye: Ben Affleck has put his Pacific Palisades mansion on the market for $30 million after purchasing a sprawling home in Beverly Hills with his wife Jennifer Lopez; seen in 2021
At the time, Realtor.com described the house as ‘an entertainer’s dream’, with the full listing for the home stating it has a spacious living room with fireplace, formal dining room with butler’s pantry, study with bar and more.
Additionally, it is equipped with a screening room, gym, family room with full bar, temperature controlled walk-in wine cellar and maid’s room.
The decision to list his home comes a month after the 49-year-old Batman star tied the knot with his new wife, 53, during an intimate ceremony in Las Vegas.
Moving out: He first snapped up the stunning property, complete with seven bedrooms, nine bathrooms, a gym, screening room and spa, for $19.2 million
For sale: At the time, he bought the plush home in a bid to be near his ex Jennifer Garner, with whom he remains amicable since their 2015 split, and the three children they share, daughters Violet, 16, Seraphina, 13 and ten -year-old son Samuel
While he and J-LO have yet to confirm that they have purchased a property together, moving trucks were recently spotted outside each of their respective homes.
Lopez and Affleck’s rumored new abode was most recently owned by Australian billionaire James Packer, who’s the former fiancé of Mariah Carey. Other previous residents include DeVito and his ex-wife, Matilda alum Rhea Perlman.
DeVito and Perlman sold the seven-bedroom home in 2015 for $28 million to developers Stuart and Stephanie Liner. The Liners then made numerous upgrades to the estate and listed it for $85 million. Packer then bought the property for around $60 million in 2018.
Wow: At the time, Realtor.com described the house as ‘an entertainer’s dream’, with the full listing for the home stating it has a spacious living room with fireplace, formal dining room with butler’s pantry, study with bar and more
It’s unclear what Lopez and Affleck paid for the house, and there’s a shroud of mystery surrounding the alleged deal, since the house was not even listed for sale when they reportedly bought it.
In fact, real estate experts told TMZ that it hadn’t even been shown off-market, with the exception, potentially, being to Lopez and Affleck.
The house sprawls across 29,000-square-feet, which would allow ample space for the couple’s blended brood of five children.
The Jenny from the Block songstress shares 14-year-old twins Max and Emme with ex-husband Marc Anthony, while the Good Will Hunting star is the father to daughters Violet, 16, Seraphina, 13 and son Samuel, 10, with ex- wife Jennifer Garner.
The massive estate is also said to have many luxury amenities and perks, including an at-home movie theater, a hair salon, a gym, an entertainment room, a wine cellar, a sprawling pool, and even multiple guest houses.
Man and wife: While he and J-LO have yet to confirm that they have purchased a property together, moving vehicles were recently reported to have been spotted outside each of their respective homes; seen last month on their honeymoon in Paris, France
Melbourne coach Simon Goodwin has conceded his club is always looking at “contingencies” but wouldn’t confirm or deny interest in Collingwood ruckman Brodie Grundy as a potential replacement for young gun Luke Jackson.
Goodwin conceded Jackson, who has been heavily linked to a big-money move to Fremantle, had yet to inform the club whether he was staying or going in 2023.
But ahead of a must-win clash with Carlton on Friday night, with the Demons needing a win to maintain their chances of a top-four finish, Goodwin wouldn’t comment on a link to Grundy, who has five more years remaining on his contract at Collingwood.
“It’s a good story and I understand the questioning but I’ve been pretty clear on this over a number of years. I’m not going to speculate and talk about players from opposition clubs,” the premiership coach said on Wednesday.
“Clearly, people in our industry are going around looking at how they can potentially improve their list… that’s not my focus. It’s not for me to comment on.”
Brodie Grundy could be headed to Melbourne. Picture: AAP Image/Daniel PockettSource: AAP
Goodwin said Melbourne would give Jackson, who has formed a key one-two punch with Demons captain Max Gawn, as much time as he needed to make a decision.
But he also said the club was always making contingency plans as part of list management, which would include covering Jackson’s potential departure.
“If you look at list management all the time you have contingency plans for a whole range of different things that sit within your environment,” he said.
“We’ve talked about Luke a lot. We are going to give him the most amount of time to make his decision about him. We don’t know what the decision is at the moment.
Luke Jackson has been linked to Fremantle. Picture: Will Russell/AFL Photos via Getty ImagesSource: Getty Images
“We’ll continue to build contingencies, to work with Luke and give him the best environment possible to want to stay here and Luke will make that decision when the time is right.
“But as a club and as an organisation, you look at all positions … about how you are best going to move forward in the future.”
Goodwin said premiership defender Jake Bowey was “AFL ready” and could soon return to the Melbourne line-up having been sent back to the VFL after the round 17 loss to Geelong to find his best form.
But more changes to the team that lost by just seven points to Collingwood last week were unlikely for the clash with Carlton, Goodwin adamant his premiership-winning outfit was “tracking in the right direction”.
“We’re really comfortable with where our team is sitting. We clearly have a lot of pressure from guys underneath,” he said,
“But in terms of the type of player or personnel in the team, we are really comfortable. The last couple of weeks we have played some of our best footy for the year.
“We played a really dominant game against Fremantle and last week… we had momentum for big parts.
“There’s a lot to like in the way we are going, we just have to execute a little bit better and the results will be different.”
China’s ambassador to Australia has stressed there will be no compromise on Taiwan, saying Beijing has been “waiting for a peaceful reunification” but will not rule out using other means if necessary.
Key points:
As China continues military drills around Taiwan, Xiao Qian says there is no room for compromise
He has addressed ties with Australia, saying a change in government provided an “opportunity to reset”
The media came under attack for souring relations through its “negative” China coverage
“As to what does it mean ‘all necessary means?’ You can use your imagination,” Xiao Qian said.
Addressing the National Press Club as China’s historic military drills in the Taiwan Strait entered a sixth day, Mr Xiao would not predict how long the exercises would continue.
“If every country put their ‘One China’ policy into practice with sincerity, with no compromise, it is going to guarantee the peace and stability across the Taiwan Strait,” he said.
“There’s no room for compromise. How long it’s going to last, a proper time? I think there will be an announcement.”
The drills were triggered by a visit to the island from United States House of Representatives Speaker Nancy Pelosi last week, angering China, which regards the self-ruled island as its own.
Saying Beijing’s response is “legitimate and justified”, the ambassador repeated China’s blame on the US for the current tensions.
“It is the US side that should, and must, take full responsibility for the escalation of tensions in the Taiwan Strait,” Mr Xiao said.
The largest-ever Chinese exercises surrounding the island have included ballistic missile launches and simulated sea and air attacks in the skies and seas surrounding Taiwan.
They have fueled discussion about the global response if China were to attack the island.
It has also prompted Taiwan to begin its own military drills to test combat readiness, and prepare air raid shelters for its 23 million residents.
“I would rather not use the word ‘invasion’ when we talk about China and Taiwan,” Mr Xiao said.
“Taiwan is different from any other scenario or situation. Taiwan is not an independent state … Taiwan is a province of the People’s Republic of China.”
People in Taiwan have been told to take shelter and cover their eyes and ears in the event of a missile attack.(Reuters: Ann Wang)
Mr Xiao’s comments came as China released a new statement mirroring the remarks.
China’s Taiwan Affairs Office reaffirmed its threat to use military force to bring Taiwan under its control.
An English-language version of the Chinese statement said Beijing would “work with the greatest sincerity and exert our utmost efforts to achieve peaceful reunification … But we will not renounce the use of force”.
Mending Australia-China relations
Repairing China and Australia’s fractured ties dominated much of the ambassador’s speech.
He said the change in government provided an “opportunity to reset” the relationship between the two nations.
In recent years, the relationship has deteriorated, with China imposing trade sanctions on several Australian exports such as wine and lobsters.
The ambassador said recent high-level meetings had been productive, but that there was still a long way to go.
“The positive progress in our bilateral relations is encouraging. It’s [an] encouraging start. And, of course, there’s a lot of work to be done,” he said.
Mr Xiao pressed the importance of cooperation and not being swayed by interests with other partners.
While he has avoided naming the US, he said Australia should make its own judgments and decisions, “free from interference from a third party”.
“When we cooperate, we both win. When we don’t, we both lose,” he said.
“So, it is imperative for the governments of our two countries to adopt positive policies towards each other, take positive and concrete measures to improve the atmosphere of cooperation.”
Ms Pelosi met with Taiwan’s President Tsai Ing-wen during her visit to Taipei. (AP: Taiwan Presidential Office)
Australia has joined with other nations — including the US — to condemn Beijing’s decision to extend military drills around Taiwan.
Chinese officials have said condemnation by Australia was undermining regional peace and stability, and amounted to meddling in its affairs.
Prior to Mr Xiao’s address, acting Prime Minister Richard Marles called on China to end its combat exercises and maintain the status quo.
He added that there was little the federal government could do to ward off constant Chinese criticism of Australia, saying it was up to China whether relations with Australia thawed or deteriorated again.
“If engaging in a more respectful, diplomatic way takes us some way down a path, it does — and if it doesn’t, it doesn’t,” Mr Marles said.
“We can only control our end of this equation. But we will always be speaking up for the national interest.”
Media comes under attack
Australia’s media was also criticized for its role in sourcing relations.
The ambassador said China was rarely portrayed in a positive light, instead coverage was overwhelmingly negative and unfair.
“Media coverage of China is, at many times, misleading and harms friendship between the two peoples,” he said.
“No country is perfect, however the coverage on a country that is always in a negative perspective is nowhere near to telling the truth about that country.”
Fan Yang, a research fellow in Chinese-Australian communities at Deakin University, said she tended to agree with the ambassador that “there was a lack of diversity in Australian journalists reporting on issues of China.”
She said this was because Australian interests and angles were applied to coverage on China.
Foreign Minister Penny Wong met with Chinese counterpart Wang Yi in July, in the first such talks since 2019. (Supplied: Australian Embassy in Jakarta)
Mr Xiao said China was committed to strengthening ties, marking December 22 — the 50th anniversary of the diplomatic relations between the two countries — as a key date.
“I think it’s perfect time for our two countries to review the past, look into the future, take concrete actions in the spirit of mutual respect and mutual benefits.”
Feng Chongyi, an associate professor from the University of Technology Sydney, said nothing new came out of the address and was disappointed that Mr Xiao did not elaborate on concrete measures to reset and improve Australia-China relations.
“He pretty much attributed all the reasons for the deterioration of Australia-China relations in the past few years to the policies of the previous Australian government, without suggesting that China had any responsibility, [and] even denying Chinese economic coercion in general, which is untrue,” Dr Feng told the ABC.
“The policy of the previous Australian government was a bipartisan consensus, a fact the ambassador ignored.”
Becca Balint, Vermont’s state Senate president, has won the Democratic nomination for the state’s at-large congressional seat, NBC News projects.
The victory makes her likely to become the first woman to represent the heavily Democratic state in Congress. Vermont is the only state that has never had a female member of its congressional delegation.
Balint, a state senator since 2014 who rose to Senate president two years ago, would also be the first openly gay lawmaker to represent the state on Capitol Hill should she win in November.
Balint, 54, a progressive Democrat backed by Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., and the Vermont icons Ben Cohen and Jerry Greenfield, the co-founders of Ben & Jerry’s ice cream, defeated Lt. Gov. Molly Gray.
The more centrist Gray had the backing of fellow Democrats like former Vermont Govs. Madeline Kunin and Howard Dean, while retiring Sen. Pat Leahy had donated $5,000 to her campaign.
Leahy’s retirement announcement set the race for the House seat in motion. Democratic Rep. Peter Welch is running for the seat he is vacating.
Leahy, a Democrat, was elected to the Senate in 1974. Sanders, an independent and a former at-large representative, was elected to the Senate in 2006, the same year Welch was elected to the House.
The state has only three representatives in Congress — its two senators and an at-large House member.
Dareh Gregorian is a political reporter for NBC News.
Australia’s largest airline will increase the waiting time between domestic to international connecting flights by 30 minutes in an effort to mitigate the number of people arriving at their destination without their luggage.
From August 21, Qantas travelers at Australian airports will only be provided outbound international flight options with 90-minute connection times, up from 60 minutes, to accommodate for domestic delays.
Those with existing bookings who will be affected by the change will be notified of the new policy by the airline and moved to an earlier flight.
Qantas will increase the minimum connection time from 60 to 90 minutes in an attempt to stop passengers from arriving in another country without their bags. Credit:Bloomberg
It’s the first move of a broader attempt to fix baggage handling issues at the national carrier, where the mishandled baggage rate has jumped to nine in every 1000 passengers.
The group’s executives have been meeting daily to improve the airline’s sluggish performance and are considering expanding the policy to inbound international to domestic flights as well as domestic connecting flights.
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Qantas Group chief executive Alan Joyce said that, while there were a lot of good reasons why the operational performance of the airline had not been up to standard, the group was taking “additional steps”, shaped by feedback from frontline teams who have borne the brunt of customer dissatisfaction.
“Bringing our operations back to pre-COVID standard and maintaining our focus on safety is our absolute priority,” the executive said.
Qantas has been crippled by the number of staff falling ill due to COVID-19 and the flu. Sick leave is tracking about 50 per cent higher than usual.
Samsung is holding a big fall event today, where we expect to see two folding phones—the Samsung Galaxy Z Flip 4 and Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 4—along with two Galaxy Watch 5 watches and new Galaxy Buds earbuds.
Super-leaker Evan Blass recently published a massive gallery of all the new devices on the Indian website he works with, 91Mobiles. He shows every device in an array of different colors. I encourage you to go to Evan’s story to see the full array.
The event will be virtual, held at 9 am ET on Aug. 10, and you can watch it on Samsung’s website or on YouTube (embedded below).
If you aren’t on ET, here are some other time zones for the Unpacked event:
6 a.m. PT
2pm BST
3 p.m. CET
7 p.m. in Mumbai
9 p.m. in Taipei
10 pm in Seoul
11 p.m. in Sydney
Folks in New York City get a special surprise: A massive, mysterious Samsung pop-up space has appeared on 10th Avenue near the High Line in Manhattan (photo above), and the hours on the currently closed door say it will be open from Aug .11-31.
When Will These Products Be Available?
You can currently “reserve” the new Samsung products to get a special coupon, with no commitment necessary. They are anticipated to go on pre-sale shortly after the event ends, with a sale date of Aug. 26.
They will be available at all the major US carriers as well as Samsung, Best Buy, and Amazon. Samsung will almost certainly have aggressive trade-in deals for your old phones and watches.
The new pop-up space takes up most of a block along Tenth Avenue.
How Much Will They Cost?
One of the big questions around the Samsung Galaxy Z Flip 4 and Z Fold 4 is how much they will cost in the US.
Samsung’s mobile head TM Roh says he’s aiming to make foldables “mainstream” this year, which may signal more affordable prices. The Galaxy Z Flip3 cost $999.99 and comprised 70% of last year’s Samsung foldable sales; the Galaxy Z Fold3, at $1799.99, was the other 30%.
A recent leak of a Dutch Amazon page for the Z Fold 4 claims that the phone will cost $10,374. I can say with 100% confidence that the Galaxy Z Fold 4 will not cost more than $5,000.
Samsung Galaxy ZFlip 4
The Samsung Galaxy Z Flip 4 looks a lot like the Z Flip3, according to renders and leaks. The biggest immediate change is what looks like a less protruding hinge, which will make the whole device feel slightly smaller in your pocket.
A writer for 91Mobiles claims to have specifications for the phone. The most important is a bigger battery: 3,700mAh versus 3,300mAh in the Z Flip3. I cited the Z Flip3’s battery life as its biggest minus in my review. He also says the front screen is a touch bigger, going from 1.9 to 2.1 inches.
Samsung Galaxy ZFold 4
Reliable leaker Ice Universe showed a Fold 4 (right) next to a Fold3 (left) and calls it “a further optimized version of Fold3.” You can see in his comparison that the Fold 4 is slightly shorter and wider, giving the front display a more natural aspect ratio; the bezel also appears to be slimmer.
Ice also tweeted some other specs earlier this year, including a new camera system with 50MP, 12MP ultra-wide, and 10MP 3x zoom cameras. Maybe I just like Ice right now because it’s 90 degrees in my home office.
One Twitter leaker who I don’t know, has been endorsed by Ice Universe, a leaker I trust. He gives good news about some performance improvements with the new Qualcomm Snapdragon 8+ Gen 1 processor, but points out that charging is still limited to 25 watts.
Samsung Galaxy Watch5
A French website, Dealabs, appears to give many of the details on the new watches, which go on sale on Aug. 26. The main Watch5, which replaces the basic Watch 4 model, will come in 40mm and 44mm sizes in Bluetooth and 4G models. The Galaxy Watch5 Pro, a more rugged device, will come in only a 45mm size.
The watches run Google’s Wear OS on Samsung Exynos W920 processors, according to the site, and are IP68 rated for waterproofing.
The new pop-up space will be open for two weeks after the product launch.
Samsung Galaxy Buds 2 Pro
German website WinFuture claims to have full information on Samsung’s Galaxy Buds 2 Pro earbuds. According to the site, the buds will have eight hours of battery life per charge, with a total of 29 hours in their charging case.
The Buds will have 10mm main drivers and a 5.3mm high-frequency tweeter. They’ll offer a 33dB reduction in ambient sound with their active noise cancellation. They’ll be expensive, though: at $233 in Europe, they’re competing with Apple’s AirPods Pro.
We hope to have hands on with these new devices right after the launch event.