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Technology

Google Pixel 6a three weeks later: still the HERO! (video)

Pixel 6a review Source: Pocketnow

This is the Google Pixel 6a, but it’s also NOT what I think many of us have come to expect.

See, we’ve known this Pixel “a” series as the company’s most successful lineup ever, but it’s also more of a nod to the past. Just like the early days of the Pixel, the Nexus also started as a premium offering, only for things to not pan out, and for the company to shift strategies with the Nexus 4 in creating the world’s first flagship killer.

In sort-of the same approach, the Pixel 3a was a genius move. Instead of only focusing on one phone, you could choose between flagship and mid-ranger, with the benefit that great photography became a Pixel trait across the board. It was pretty irresistible at just $399, but then Google kept experimenting. Over the next two years we saw all Pixels tip completely to become mid-rangers, but then this year, it seems the formula is now to go hard on defying the establishment.

POCKETNOW VIDEO OF THE DAY

So sure, even if the Pixel 6a is a successor to every “a” variant we’ve seen before, it’s different because it’s not really a mid-ranger, and sure, I wouldn’t call it a flagship either. At a time when most heroes have lived long enough to become the villain, this phone is something else.

Let’s try to remember the flagship killer formula one more time. These all had flagship processors, powerful specs, and probably skimped out on things like the camera, certifications and a few other things, but then they were priced so aggressively you wouldn’t argue. Ok, that’s the Pixel 6 but with a great camera. I still think that is probably the best value for a phone right now, but then the Pixel 6a takes that approach even further.

It follows on the look and feel of his more-expensive brother in almost every way. It’s slightly smaller, but not necessarily a one-handed phone either. It shares the same flat aluminum rails but instead of a glass back, this is actually a thermoformed plastic composite that could’ve fooled me easily. Yet, the choice of materials and the footprint help it feel so good in the hand. After spending months complaining about the behemoth the Pixel 6 Pro was, this is like the answer to anyone left missing the Pixel 5.

Pixel 6a review Source: Pocketnow

Specs

Once you look into internals though, you’ll debate calling this a flagship killer, but mostly because of certain choices to keep the price down. Flagship processor, check. Decent amount of RAM, storage and battery, check. Latest 5G, Wi-Fi and Bluetooth, check. It’s not until you get to the IP rating that you won’t get the same as others, but it’s here, but where things fall apart is in its lack of wireless charging, though if we’re fair, it has never been an A series Pixel trait. That said, if you came here looking for the headphone jack the A series was famous for, tough luck. It’s gone.

I also know it’s already become a common thing to get at least some boost in refresh rate on the screen at this price, but blame the iPhone SE for setting the bar pretty low. The Pixel 6A does beat the pants off of that with a more futuristic approach to the bezels, and a much better OLED panel. It might not bring anything over 60Hz, but at least its color reproduction is far better than most of the phones that go beyond at this price. If anything I wish the dual firing speakers depended less on just the bottom firing module, but you and I know even the Pixel 6 Pro has that problem.

Pixel 6a review Source: Pocketnow

And listen, I also heard there were some complaints about choppy performance from this phone, but it’s one of the reasons I like to take my time. It was kind of a thing for the first 3 days or so, but it’s as if the Tensor chip got to know me quick. Even putting it next to the 120Hz of the Nothing Phone (1) I see this Pixel 6A launching folders faster. Obviously, that is to be expected if Android belongs to Google, but I will tell you I prefer the implementation of Material You more here than in the more expensive Pro. The smaller screen allows for a denser feel and easier one-handed use, which is only augmented by its cohesive design aesthetic. Pixel perks like the at-a-glance widget, voice recorder transcriptions, that in-your-face always-on display, timely Android updates, and almost every other thing you get with the regular and Pro siblings are all here.

Pixel 6a review Source: Pocketnow

Performance

That said, this also means you also can’t spare yourself from the things that come with the territory, like not being able to remove some of these UI elements. It’s the same case with battery life where this phone is not bad, but it’s also not great. I do consider it sips on power better than even its larger brothers with their extra juice given its lack of high refresh rate, but all you need to do is leave this phone untouched for a couple of hours to notice how inefficient Tensor can be on idle . The good thing is that since Google already ironed out all the connectivity bugs we had last year, the experience with phone calls and data connectivity was pretty good while I tested it on AT&T’s 5G network, or as I traveled with Google Fi.

Pixel 6a review Source: Pocketnow

Camera

Maybe the most controversial move is with the cameras because I kid you not, these sensors are at least four years old. Yes, if you’re still rocking a Pixel 3, I won’t blame you for thinking this isn’t an upgrade, but it’s not that simple. Surely those specs must be dated, but Tensor brings a new ISP to power those cameras, and we all know that when it comes to computational photography, a Pixel is a Pixel.

I spent a good deal of time saying wow to some of the results, mainly given the amount of detail this phone can pull in tough scenarios, and that’s even some of these not being fully optical. It’s got some of the contrast of the Pixel 6 Pro, but not all of it, and yet it’s there when I want it, like when I take photos of landscapes, and that’s regardless of the focal length I pick. This phone can do a pretty amazing job in closeups, and since it does a great job at locking focus, this is also while the wind is giving flowers a hard time. Colors have this added sense of character that you’d need to pay for a Pro iPhone to get. And sure, there is no Telephoto on board, but even the crop is handled so well you might struggle to notice physics didn’t take part in it.

Pixel 6a review Source: Pocketnow

Same with night photography, where this phone pulls in a crazy amount of detail and handles colors and light pretty well. The Ultra-wide struggled a bit in some cases but not always, and where I seriously have no complaints about the primary. Sadly we don’t get a lot of the long exposure tricks the Pixel 6 Pro brings, but Astrophotography is here, and you’ll be shocked to know that at almost half the price, this Pixel 6a takes the same amount of time at taking the shot than the Pro.

Selfies are good, though not my favorite because I feel skin tones are overdone, and even if portraits were mostly the same, I do feel separation was mostly hit or miss, and this even applies from the primary cameras.

Pixel 6a review Source: Pocketnow

Where you will find differences with the Pro Pixel is in video capture. Even if voice enhancement features are here, I feel this phone pulls in a lot more grain than the Pro model, and where the codec struggles a lot, particularly with all the moiré you’ll see in certain scenarios. It’s not terrible but not close to being my favorite. Switch to selfie video and you’ll see how that gets even worse, and not just because you’re stuck at 1080p. Grain is pretty strong, dynamic range is almost not there at all, and stabilization can be kind of weird, even if the primary handled that mostly well. Overall, you’ll love the photos, but this is not the phone for TikToks, Instagram Reels or meaningful family videos.

Pixel 6a review Source: Pocketnow

Conclusion

To conclude, I think you now understand why it was so important for me to introduce this video with how this lineup came to be, and how this phone is not necessarily that. Yes, this is the Pixel 6a, but we saw Google switch the formula with the 4a by giving us a 5G variant. We then saw the company switch the cheap feel for metal and a more aggressive price with the 5a.

Point is, yes, this is Google’s most affordable Pixel, but it’s also another switch in strategy. Yes, it’s like an iPhone SE because it includes a flagship chip, but if we’re honest, it’s nothing like it because Apple sticks to a six-year-old design, and doesn’t take full advantage of the chip in photography. By contrast, the Pixel 6a is almost as good as the Pixel 6, which in our opinion is the flagship killer, all while giving you an option to pay less for most of those features

So, it’s not really a flagship. It’s not really a mid ranger. The Google Pixel 6a is something else which I feel you should really consider. If you don’t care about high refresh rate, wireless charging, a glass back and a few other tidbits, this should be your phone. It’s a Pixel, but less expensive. Another bold move from the same company that already made all other phones look bad with the rest of the 6 series launched earlier.

PBI Google Pixel 6a Sage Color

Google Pixel 6a

Not a flagship, not a mid-ranger

If you don’t care about high refresh rate, wireless charging, a glass back and a few other tidbits, this should be your phone. It’s a Pixel, but less expensive.

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US

Reconciliation bill includes nearly $80 billion for IRS funding

Charles P. Rettig, commissioner of the Internal Revenue Service, testifies during the Senate Finance Committee hearing titled The IRS Fiscal Year 2022 Budget, in Dirksen Senate Office Building in Washington, DC, June 8, 2021.

Tom-Williams | Pool | Reuters

Senate Democrats on Sunday passed their climate, health and tax package, including nearly $80 billion in funding for the IRS.

Part of President Joe Biden’s agenda, the Inflation Reduction Act allocates $79.6 billion to the agency over the next 10 years. More than half of the money is meant for enforcement, with the IRS aiming to collect more from corporate and high-net-worth tax dodgers.

The remainder of the funding is earmarked for operations, taxpayer services, technology, development of a direct free e-file system and more. Collectively, those improvements are projected to bring in $203.7 billion in revenue from 2022 to 2031, according to recent estimates from the Congressional Budget Office.

More from Personal Finance:
Does the Inflation Reduction Act violate Biden’s $400,000 tax pledge?
5 things borrowers can do while they wait for student loan forgiveness
Is the economy in a recession? Top economists weigh in

IRS audits have plunged over the past decade, with the biggest declines among the wealthy, according to a May 2022 report from the Government Accountability Office.

The audit rate for Americans making $5 million or more dropped to about 2% in 2019, compared to 16% in 2010, the report found. The agency said it is working to improve these numbers.

However, if the Inflation Reduction Act is approved by the House and signed into law, it will take time to phase in the added IRS funding, explained Garrett Watson, a senior policy analyst at the Tax Foundation. The Congressional Budget Office only estimates about $3 billion of the $203.7 billion in revenue for 2023.

“We didn’t get to this state with the agency overnight, and it will take longer than overnight to go in the right direction,” he said.

IRS: We won’t boost ‘audit scrutiny’ on the middle class

While advocates applaud the enhanced IRS budget, opponents argue the beefed-up enforcement may affect more than wealthy Americans, violating Biden’s $400,000 pledge.

“My colleagues claim this massive funding boost will allow the IRS to go after millionaires, billionaires and so-called rich ‘tax cheats,’ but the reality is a significant portion raised from their IRS funding bloat would come from taxpayers with income below $400,000, ” Sen. Mike Crapo, R-Idaho, ranking member of the Senate Finance Committee said in a statement.

IRS Commissioner Charles Rettig said the $80 billion in funding would not increase audits of households making less than $400,000 per year.

“The resources in the reconciliation package will get us back to historical norms in areas of challenge for the agency — large corporate and global high-net-worth taxpayers,” he wrote in a letter to the Senate.

“These resources are absolutely not about increasing audit scrutiny on small businesses or middle-income Americans,” he added.

More than two-thirds of registered voters support increasing the IRS budget to strengthen tax enforcement on high-income taxpayers, according to a 2021 poll from the University of Maryland.

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Technology

Panasonic and Leica to Launch Jointly-Developed Mirrorless Camera

L Squared Technology

Panasonic will release a mirrorless camera that it will jointly develop with Leica “in about a year” that is the result of the expanded partnership the two brands signed in May.

The report comes courtesy of Nikkei, which has found evidence that shows that the manufacture of all small digital cameras has basically ceased across the board. As part of that report, the publication spoke with Panasonic which confirmed that not only has it ceased production of Lumix-branded compact cameras, but that it would also be focusing on the high-end of the market which includes leveraging its partnership with Leica to produces a co-developed mirrorless camera next year.

“Production of existing products will continue for the time being, but in the future, the company plans to concentrate on developing high-end mirrorless machines aimed mainly at enthusiasts and professional filmmakers,” Panasonic tells Nikkei.

“We are planning to release a mirrorless machine jointly developed with Leica Camera, which we formed a comprehensive partnership with at the end of May, in about a year.”

In May, Panasonic and Leica announced a new agreement that was categorized as a “business alliance” that further tightened the relationship between the two companies. The two brands had already been working closely together for several years, but this agreement, known as Ltwowould join both business and marketing together in the development of cameras.

What the two brands would do under this new relationship was vague at the time, but this somewhat offhanded remark from Panasonic to Nikkei is the first confirmation that the two brands are working on a future camera product together under the new Ltwo partnership. Given Panasonic’s statement about a focus on high-end products and the history of Leica’s brand, it is probably safe to assume the final product will exist in that space.

It is not clear how this new camera will fit in with Panasonic or Leica’s current full-frame offerings. The two companies both produce mirrorless L-mount cameras that exist in that high-end space, and whether or not the co-developed camera will replace both lines or be in addition to them was not revealed.

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US

Body of judge Jeremiah Bueker recovered from lake: deputies

An Arkansas judge drowned in a lake during a weekend getaway with family and friends, authorities said.

The body of Arkansas County Northern District Judge Jeremiah T. Bueker was recovered early Sunday from the bottom of Mud Lake in Jefferson County, sheriff officials said in a statement. He was 48.

The judge was spending time with several relatives and friends during a “recreational” outing over the weekend when he ventured off alone, authorities said.

“After time had passed and no one had seen or heard from Bueker, worry to set in,” sheriff officials said Sunday.

Bueker was last seen near Mud Lake, which dumps into the Arkansas River just north of Reydell. The judge’s family then called 911 after they couldn’t find him on Saturday.

Jefferson County deputies launched extensive ground and water searches for Bueker that were later suspended due to low visibility. Mud Lake was then scoured just after sunrise Sunday and a sonar detected the judge’s body at the bottom, authorities said.

Bueker's photo over a map of the drowning location
Bueker’s death is being probed as an accidental drowning, but his body is being sent to a state medical examiner for an autopsy, authorities said.
Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office

“Deputies utilized subsurface body recovery drag/rescue hooks to recover Bueker’s body,” authorities said. “Upon recovery of the body, deputies and investigators with the assistance of family positively identified the body as that of Bueker.”

Bueker’s death is being probed as an accidental drowning, but his body is being sent to a state medical examiner for an autopsy, authorities said.

Sheriff Lafayette Woods said he hoped the recovery of Bueker’s body provides “some sense of closure” to his family and loved ones.

“The scour of emotions they must feel right now is devastating,” Woods said.

Stuttgart Mayor Norma Strabala, meanwhile, said she was “shocked and heartbroken” by Bueker’s sudden death.

“Jeremy was an important and special person in this community, serving as a good friend, fierce attorney, and as Arkansas County Northern District Court Judge for nearly a decade,” Strabala wrote on Facebook. “I am praying for Sunny, her family and this community as we mourn this tragic loss.”

Bueker, who was elected as a district judge in 2012, was an “avid outdoorsman” and a “very proud father,” a Stuttgart city official told the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette.

He was last seen alive late Saturday, authorities told the outlet.

“His family had a weekend at a cabin on the family’s property,” said Maj. Gary McClain of the Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office. “They were riding [utility vehicles] and returned back to the cabin. It appears he decided to go swimming after maybe being dusty and he went missing. No one was with him; he was alone.”

Relatives said Bueker loved to swim, so taking a spontaneous dip would not have been unusual for him, McClain added.

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Business

South Australians inch closer to the EV road trip as charging network improves

For regional motorists in South Australia, options are few and far between when it comes to the rapid charging of electric vehicles (EVs).

For some people, like Katherine Tuft from Roxby Downs, the EV infrastructure turned what would be a seven-hour drive to Adelaide into 10 hours.

“It’s quite doable but it’s not the most efficient way to get around as far out as we are, but that’s nothing to do with the car and all to do with the inadequacy of the charging network,” she said.

EVs can be charged from just about any power outlet, but Ms Tuft said it wasn’t about the number of charge points but the speed capability of the chargers.

“We’ll get to Port Augusta on about 30 per cent battery after having left at 100 per cent,” she said.

“There’s nowhere fast to charge, which is why we’ll sit on them for an hour or so and get another 10 or 15 per cent and that’s enough to get us to Clare, where there is a fast charger.

“We can then zip up to 80 per cent within half an hour and get to Adelaide.”

Janie Butterworth has had a rapid charging station outside her Port Lincoln business for five years.

As a destination point on the tip of the Eyre Peninsula, she has observed another issue of a patchy regional charging network.

“Hardly anybody uses it, people probably don’t come out this far if they’ve got an electric vehicle because it’s logistically impossible,” Ms Butterworth said.

“If you’re going to drive it somewhere that’s too far from your house, you’re going to get stuck charging it somewhere for a long time.”

Regional network update

To address range anxiety and charge time delays, in February a $12.4 million state government grant was awarded to the Royal Automobile Association (RAA) to construct a 140-site fast and rapid charging network across South Australia.

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Technology

Lenovo Xiaoxin Pro 27, the first AIO with dedicated Intel graphics

Lenovo has published a preview image of the Xiaoxin Pro 27, an all-in-one AIO that happens to be the first we see with intel Arc graphics.

Intel is going slowly, but surely, in its return to the dedicated graphics market. The already marketed models of the M series for notebook computers will also be used in other product lines. We saw it last week in the Intel NUC 12 mini-PCs and now its presence is coming to us in an AIO.

Lenovo Xiaoxin Pro 27

It is a compact all-in-one desktop computer based on a 27 inches diagonally. (It is also announced that the series will be available in another 24-inch model). Other announced data tells us that its native resolution is 2K (2560 × 1440 pixels)

The panel has technologies against annoying blue light and has a refresh rate of 100Hz. In its chassis, it mounts 5-watt stereo speakers from the JBL brand, an FHD webcam and noise-canceling microphones. It has USB Type C and HDMI inputs, while its power supply is 230W.

The great novelty of this AIO is the integrated Intel graphics that it uses, the first time it has been announced in the segment. The model chosen by Lenovo is the A370M. Although it is the entry range of Intel, Lenovo ensures that outperforms an RTX 3050M of NVIDIA in video editors such as Adobe Premier or Davinci Resolve and says that it achieves 152 FPS in League of Legends (with 2K resolution), 110 FPS in Counter Strike GO and 142 FPS in World of Tanks with FHD resolution.

This AIO will use 12th Gen ‘Alder Lake’ Intel processors, but we don’t know the amount of RAM (probably 8GB LPDDR5 and up) and storage (surely at least 256GB M.2 PCIe SSD).

Lenovo Xiaoxin Pro 27

This Lenovo Xiaoxin Pro 27 is interesting for those looking for a compact desktop with an Intel base hardware and the first dedicated ones in the segment. It will be available next fall without a defined official price.

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US

See the Trump toilet photos that he denies ever existed

Remember our toilet scoop in Axios AM earlier this year? Maggie Haberman’s forthcoming book about former President Trump will report that White House residence staff periodically found wads of paper clogging a toilet — and believed the former president, a notorious destroyer of Oval Office documents, was the flusher.

Why it matters: Destroying records that should be preserved is potentially illegal.

Trump denied it and called Haberman, whose New York Times coverage he compulsively follows, a “maggot.”

  • Well, it turns out there are photos. And here they are, published for the first time.

Habermann — who obtained the photos recently — shared them with us ahead of the Oct. 4 publication of her book, “Confidence Man: The Making of Donald Trump and the Breaking of America.”

  • A Trump White House source tells her the photo on the left shows a commode in the White House.
  • The photo on the right is from an overseas trip, according to the source.

Trump spokesperson Taylor Budowich told Axios: “You have to be pretty desperate to sell books if pictures of paper in a toilet bowl is part of your promotional plan.”

  • “We know … there’s enough people willing to fabricate stories like this in order to impress the media class — a media class who is willing to run with anything, as long as it is anti-Trump.”

Between the lines: The new evidence is a reminder that despite the flood of Trump books, Haberman’s is hotly anticipated in Trumpworld.

The cover of Maggie Haberman's book, "Confidence Man"
Cover: Penguin Press

Haberman’s sources report the document dumps happened multiple times at the White House, and on at least two foreign trips.

  • “That Mr. Trump was discarding documents this way was not widely known within the West Wing, but some aides were aware of the habit, which he engaged in repeatedly,” Haberman tells us.
  • “It was an extension of Trump’s term-long habit of ripping up documents that were supposed to be preserved under the Presidential Records Act.”

The handwriting is visibly Trump’s, written in the Sharpie ink I favored.

  • Most of the words are illegible.
  • But the scrawls include the name of Rep. Elise Stefanik of upstate New York, a Trump defender who’s a member of House Republican leadership.

Go deeper: A radical plan for Trump’s second term

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Business

“Carbon tax on wheels?” The dirty tactics that stopped Australia going electric

Day by day the calls for Australia to introduce fuel efficiency standards in an effort to catch up to the rest of the world in the switch to electric vehicles – and to solve its growing fuel security, cost and pollution issues – grow stronger.

Experts have been calling for it for years, ever since an Australian Transport Council recommended it in 2008, and at leat nine different proposals have been presented since then – nearly one a year. The reason it didn’t was because of a series of outrageous scare campaigns led by industry and embraced by conservatives..

The result is that Australia has a fleet of dirty inefficient cars that likely cost an extra $2.2 billion in added fuel costs in 2021 alone – and is leaving the country with poor fuel security, bad pollution, and at the end of the queue when it comes to the uptake of electric vehicles.

Over the last six years, the total cost of not implementing fuel emission standards, as had been recommended by the Climate Change Authority, and endorsed by a ministerial forum, is estimated at $5.9 billion – and that is fuel costs alone, not health or climate impacts.

And it is all the result of what experts say are a series of misleading campaigns, with the strings pulled by the incumbent car lobby fearful of change and eager to protect one of the last “free markets” in the western world.

The Australia Institute has released a report that details the multiple attempts at stopping the introduction of a fuel efficiency standard, on the same day as Fairfax Media revealed correspondence that confirms the efforts by the car industry, and Toyota in particular, to continue to dilute and frustrate rules that could support a switch to EVs.

The documents revealed by Fairfax confirmed the huge lobbying efforts of some of the leading legacy car makers in diluting Australia’s policies on EVs, in a bid to protect their strong hold on hybrid vehicle sales.

Australia’s EV sales remain less than two per cent of total new car sales, a fraction of what they are in the US, and particularly in China and most parts of Europe. (The world average is expected to be nearly 14 per cent this year).

Yet the demand for EVs in Australia is huge and largely unmet – as witnessed by the massive orders for the Tesla Model Y (more than 15,000), which began deliveries in Australia last week – and because apart from Tesla it is near impossible to get hold of one.

Most other car companies are putting their priorities elsewhere, to countries that do have fuel and emissions standards, and are either not offering their EVS at all to Australia, or providing only a small number.

Australia may have come closest to a fuel efficiency standard in 2017, when the then energy and environment minister Josh Frydenberg floated the idea in an opinion piece, only to be shouted down by the Murdoch media for proposing a “carbon tax on wheels”.

Frydenberg dismissed the allegation, but the Coalition quickly backed off, and when Labor went to the 2019 election with a fuel emission standard proposal, prime minster Scott Morrison borrowed the Murdoch branding and called it a “carbon tax on cars”, and energy minister Angus Taylor described it as “reckless.”

It’s been typical of the scare campaigns thrown at new technologies by the fossil fuel lobby and conservatives. But now the industry and advocates have had enough, and are urging the new Labor government to finally embrace them. Climate and energy minister Chris Bowen is not ruling them out.

“Fuel efficiency standards are a common, relatively simple policy mechanism with net benefits,” The Australian Institute writes in a new report released on Monday. “However, previous attempts to introduce standards in Australia have been marred by disinformation and misleading claims.”

“Australians are being left behind simply because, as a nation, we are still accepting gas guzzling cars with no emissions standards,” says Richie Merzian, the TAI’s climate and energy program director.

“Australian motorists are the victims of having one of the world’s least efficient and most polluting car fleets, and it’s costing us every time we fill up at the petrol pump.”

Merzian argues that rather than extending the reduction of the fuel excise, policy makers should lock in savings for the motorists by introducing average efficiency standard for new cars in Australia that will ensure they are more efficient and less polluting.

Merzian says the introduction of robust fuel efficiency standards – rather than the soft ones now proposed by the main car lobby – should lead to 100 per cent zero emissions new vehicle sales by 2030 or 2035 at the latest.

This would not only reduce transport emissions, he says, but save Australians money in fuel costs and reduce the nation’s dependence on imported oil.

The best way to do it?

Merzian says fuel emissions standards should be implemented as soon as possible, and they need to have integrity, and should use the WLTP standard, or World Harmonize Light Vehicles Testing Procedure (WLTP).

Other considerations include allowing for manufactures to pool emissions with other manufactures, how a sales weighted average target could be applied to allow the vehicle

Other policy measures that could be added include higher fuel taxes, tax or registration fees based around a CO2 component, along with zero emissions vehicle sales targets, and incentives for efficient or zero emissions vehicles.

“Fee-bate systems”, which levy a fee on the purchase of higher emitting vehicles and use the revenue to incentivise the purchase of zero or low emissions vehicles, are also easy to implement and are self-funding if designed carefully. They exist in New Zealand and in France.

For more news on the EV transition, and the latest models and trends, please go to our EV-focused sister site, The Driven.

Categories
Technology

Save up to $699! Samsung Galaxy Z Flip3 5G and Fold3 5G prices drop massively

Love foldable smartphones? Save up to $699 on Samsung Galaxy Z Flip3 5G and Fold3 5G. Know how to.

Love foldable smartphones? If yes, then this could be the best chance for you to get your hands on a feature packed foldable smartphone. Yes, Samsung Galaxy Z Flip3 5G and Fold3 5G prices have been slashed in the US ahead of Samsung Galaxy Z Flip4 and Fold4 launch. Bestbuy is offering an exciting deal on both of the handsets that let you save up to $699. You just have to choose an eligible plan from broadband service provider Verizon. That’s not all, you can even opt for EMI options to pay the remaining cost in monthly installations starting from $8.33/mo. This is a pretty decent deal for those who are looking for a premium foldable smartphone on a budget.

Samsung Galaxy Z Flip3 5G and Fold3 5G price drop in US: How to grab it

To grab the deal all you have to do is go to Bestbuy and select a Samsung Galaxy Z Flip3 5G 128GB phone and then choose an eligible network plan from Verizon. Pay the one time activation fee along with EMI and it’s done. Your device will be shipped to you. However, do note that you will have to opt for Verizon service for a period of 36 months in order to avail this discount. The handset is originally priced at $1049.

Similarly, if you want to grab a Fold3 5G 256GB, you can save $1000 on an eligible T Mobile plan. The monthly installation plan starts at $33.33 for 24 months. The phone was originally priced at $1799.

This is a limited time deal and if you’re planning to get a stylish 5G phone on budget, you must pick any of the Galaxy Z series handsets from Bestbuy sooner, rather than later.

Further if you want to save more, you can save $800 on trade-in of an eligible device like iPhone X, iPhone XR, iPhone XS, iPhone XS Max, iPhone 11 Pro, iPhone 11 Pro Max, iPhone 11, iPhone 12 Pro and others.

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Categories
US

Family of LA crash victim Asherey Ryan addresses driver

The sister of the pregnant woman who died in a California car crash that killed five other people said the family has forgiven the driver arrested in the fatal collision.

Sha’seana Kerr — whose sister Asherey Ryan was among the victims in the Thursday wreck — expressed sympathy for Nicole Lorraine Linton, 37, who allegedly caused the crash after she blew a red light at a Los Angeles intersection.

“I just want to tell her that we forgive her,” Kerr told news station KTLA.

“She will have to live with this for the rest of her life. That’s why she was spared. We understand it already.”

On Thursday about 1:40 pm, a Mercedes-Benz sped through a red light before it slammed into through traffic, video of the tragic crash obtained by RMG News shows.

Investigators allege that Linton – a nurse with Kaiser Permanente’s West Los Angeles Medical Center – was driving over 100 miles per hour in a 35 mph zone, Fox 11 reported.

Ashley Ryan
Ryan’s unborn child, her 11-month-old son Alonzo Quintero and her boyfriend Reynold Lester all died in the collision.
Ashley Ryan/Facebook
6 killed, including baby and pregnant woman, in fiery LA crash, frightening video shows
Asherey Ryan, a 23-year-old who was pregnant, was among the several victims on Thursday, when a speeding driver blew a red light at a Los Angeles intersection.
RMG

Ryan’s unborn child, her 11-month-old son Alonzo Quintero and her boyfriend Reynold Lester all died in the collision. Lester had reportedly been driving her to a prenatal checkup at the time of the crash.

Six minors and two adults were also injured in the wreck.

In the interview Saturday, Ryan’s sister said she was her “first best friend.”

“The first person I knew. The first person I probably had a conversation with,” she said at a gathering at the site of the crash. She’s my only big sister. Every day we take our sons outside and we walk them around the block. Cada dia. The neighbors know us. Today, I had to take that walk alone with my son.”

Cops at the scene
Six minors and two adults were also injured in the wreck.
Los Angeles Times via Getty Image
Driver's car at the scene
Ryan’s sister, Sha’seana Kerr, said Saturday, “I just want to tell her that we forgive her,” according to a local TV station.
Los Angeles Times via Getty Image

Officials on Friday arrested Linton on charges of vehicular manslaughter and gross negligence.

The case has been referred to the Los Angeles County District Attorney’s Office.

Linton — who has been hospitalized for major injuries she sustained in the wreck — is expected to appear in court Monday.

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