Categories
US

Soldier’s assault suit against officers can proceed to trial

NORFOLK, Va. — A US Army lieutenant who was pepper-sprayed, struck and handcuffed during a traffic stop in Virginia can present his claims of false imprisonment and assault and battery to a jury, a federal judge has ruled.

But the summary judgment Tuesday said federal immunity shield laws the two officers involved from facing Caron Nazario’s claims that they violated the Black and Hispanic soldier’s constitutional protections against excessive force and unreasonable seizure, as well as his right to free speech by allegedly threatening him with arrest if I have complained about their behavior.

US District Judge Roderick C. Young also ruled that the officer who initially pulled Nazario over is liable for illegally searching for a gun in the soldier’s SUV in violation of the US Constitution and Virginia law, leaving the question of damages on that point up to a jury. Nazario had a concealed carry permit.

The December 2020 traffic stop of the uniformed military officer in the small town of Windsor drew national attention and outrage after Nazario sued in April 2021, citing police body camera images and his cellphone video of the encounter. He was never charged with a crime.

Nazario had been driving home in the dark from his duty station when Officer Daniel Crocker radioed that he was attempting to stop a vehicle with no rear license plate and tinted windows, the lawsuit says. Body camera video later showed that a temporary tag was taped to the inside of the rear window.

“It appeared to Lt. Nazario that there was no good location in the immediate vicinity to stop safely. So, for the benefit of the officer’s safety and his own, Lt. Nazario continued slowly down US 460,” the lawsuit says. Nazario drove below the posted speed limit for less than a mile until he reached the well-lit parking lot of a BP gas station, it says.

Crocker said the driver was “eluding police” and he considered it a “high-risk traffic stop,” according to a report cited in the lawsuit. Another officer, Joe Gutierrez, was driving by and joined him.

The lawsuit says both officers escalated the situation by immediately pointing their guns at Nazario and trying to pull him out of the vehicle while he kept his hands in the air. Gutierrez pepper-sprayed Nazario multiple times as the officers yelled for him to get out.

At one point, Nazario said he was afraid to get out, to which Gutierrez replied: “You should be.”

When Nazario did get out and ask for a supervisor, Gutierrez responded with “knee-strikes” to his legs, knocking him to the ground, where the two officers struck him multiple times and then handcuffed and interrogated him, the lawsuit says.

Officer Gutierrez was later fired for failing to follow department policy during the stop. A special prosecutor concluded late last month that Gutierrez should not be criminally charged under Virginia law, but should be investigated by the US Justice Department for potential civil rights violations.

The federal judge ruled Tuesday that the officers had likely caused Nazario to pull over for an improperly displayed license plate, and to charge him with eluding police as well as obstruction of justice and failure to obey when he refused to exit the vehicle.

The judge also wrote that Nazario’s claims under the US Constitution of unlawful seizure and excessive force present questions about the officers’ conduct that could be put before a jury. But Young threw out the allegations under the federal doctrine of qualified immunity, which balances accountability with the need to shield officials who reasonably perform their jobs.

For example, the judge wrote that there is not a “clearly established right prohibiting the aiming of firearms, the use of threats or the use of OC spray against a suspect who has repeatedly refused to comply with lawful commands to exit a vehicle.”

The allegation that Nazario’s free speech was violated was also tossed under the federal immunity doctrine.

However, Young said Nazario’s claims under state law, false imprisonment and assault and battery, can move forward. The judge wrote that Virginia law “only provides local officials immunity from suits alleging negligence.”

Explaining his summary judgment on Crocker’s search for the gun, Young wrote that “the firearm was not relevant evidence for the crimes of eluding or obstruction of justice.” However, he said Nazario’s claims that Gutierrez knew about the search and failed to intervene could proceed Gutierrez has argued that he knew nothing about the search.

Jessica Ann Swauger, an attorney listed for Gutierrez, did not immediately respond to an email seeking comment.

Jonathan Arthur, one of the attorneys representing Nazario, said the judge’s ruling is a victory even though three of the federal claims were tossed.

“Whether it’s under federal law or whether it’s under state law, the jury is going to speak,” Arthur said. “And we hope that the jury is going to stand up and say that this behavior will not be tolerated.”

Anne C. Lahren, an attorney for Crocker, said the remaining questions are “classic” issues for a jury, rarely decided at this stage in a civil suit. She also noted that the judge found the stop itself and the officers’ ensuing commands to be lawful.

“Lt. Nazario’s own actions gave rise to the unfortunate, but lawful, escalation of force …,” Lahren wrote. “Had Lt. Nazario simply followed the lawful commands of the officers from the outset of the traffic stop, none of this would have been necessary.”

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Categories
Technology

Here’s Why the iPhone Battery Status Icon in iOS 16 Is So Controversial

In the latest iOS 16 beta, Apple has updated the status bar battery icon on iPhones with Face ID to display the exact percentage remaining rather than just a visual representation of battery level, and while the change has been largely welcomed, some users are unhappy with the way it has been implemented.

lock screen
In iOS 15 and earlier, battery percent has not been present on iPhones that have ‌Face ID‌ because of the lack of space on either side of the notch that houses the TrueDepth camera hardware. The new design adds the specific battery level to the battery icon, providing a better idea of ​​battery status at a glance.

In Apple’s latest design, the white battery icon remains completely filled in as the battery level gradually depletes. When the semi-transparent percentage reaches 20% or lower, a fifth of the battery icon turns red and the rest of the icon becomes semi-transparent, while the percentage inverts to white.

Apple appears to have chosen this abrupt change in styling to ensure that the central percentage number remains legible as the battery level depletes – if a white bar depleted behind the number then it would be harder to make out at a glance, Apple’s UI designers likely concluded .

Some users disagree with this approach, while others have suggested their own alternative designs for a battery status indicator with percentage level.

Perhaps Apple didn’t anticipate that such a small design change would be so controversial, or that some users have a very clear idea of ​​how they want their iPhone’s battery level to be represented.

For some, it’s simply a case of calling out what they consider to be poorly thought-out UI design. For others, it plays into low-battery anxiety, a major trigger of nomophobia. Either way, it’s become a surprisingly heated topic, while it’s easy to forget that the percentage display is optional (caveat: It’s enforced when in Low Power Mode.)

Of course, the battery level indicator design isn’t set in stone, and Apple could well change it in a later beta of iOS 16 or the final release. Whether you’re testing the latest public beta or not, what do you think about the way it’s been implemented? Let us know in the comments.

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Categories
Entertainment

Single woman who thought she was going on date at rooftop discovers where address leads to

A single woman who thought her potential date was inviting her to a fancy rooftop bar has made an awkward discovery after finding out where the address actually led to.

Quinn Martin, from the US, matched with a man, known only as “Jake”, from dating app Hinge.

WATCH THE VIDEO ABOVE: Woman discovers where her date’s address leads to

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After hitting it off via text message, Jake invited her to a rooftop lounge for their first date.

But when she looked up the address, she realized the location was an apartment block where the man lived.

“He was supposed to take me on a date. I have suggested there’s a rooftop lounge that just opened and not many people know about – and it’s BYOB (bring your own bottle) so we can check it out,” she explained.

Quinn Martin thought her potential date was inviting her to a fancy rooftop bar. Credit: Quinn Martin

At first, she missed his “joke” about bringing her own alcohol to the “bar” so she asked him to provide the address.

“A couple of hours before the date, I asked him for the address because I wanted to see what the place was all about so he sent me an address… of an apartment complex,” she said.

“Maybe I was missing something so I asked him, ‘Is it a restaurant? What is this place? I can’t find it online’.

“Three minutes later, he says, ‘Haha no’… with no other information.”

She quickly connected the dots.

‘Is he trying to trick me?’

“So I’m sitting there thinking, no way is this man trying to trick me into his apartment building. But yes… that’s exactly what he was doing,” she said.

Much to her surprise, the man eventually confessed the address was in fact that of his home.

“Haha I thought I did a good job selling it,” the man wrote in his text to Quinn.

“The views are pretty sweet but we can hit a bar if you’d rather that… I’m down for whatever you’re feeling.”

Quinn didn’t see the funny side after uncovering the truth.

But Jake insisted it was never his intention to “trick” her into going to his home.

“I definitely could have phrased it differently but just thought it would be a nice change of pace from the traditional bar scene,” he wrote in the text, adding: “I’m sorry it came off the wrong way.”

Learned his lesson

Quinn never showed up on the date but she praised the man for apologizing to her.

“I feel like he learned his lesson,” she said, laughing.

In the caption of the video, Quinn joked: “Quite literally escaped my own episode of SVU”, referring to the US crime drama TV series Law & Order.

Her video has been viewed more than 745,000 times – with many saying they could see Jake’s “cute” intentions but understood why his “coy” plan backfired.

“Rooftop lounge that’s BYOB was the first red flag,” one wrote.

‘Clever but not for first date’

Another said: “Okay as a third date maybe… but as a first date opener… it’s a no.”

One suggested: “Tone is pretty hard to discern, I kind of see what he was trying to do. But yeah just be straightforward about it.”

Another wrote: “I think he was just balling on a budget and was trying to do a sweet date idea without saying that.”

One added: “To be honest, this is clever but not for a first date.”

Another said while laughing: “I have been so traumatized that I could tell where he was going with that the second I read it. Why do men have the audacity, I’m so sorry.”

While one added: “I got the joke immediately and thought it was funny, but that should have been for like a fourth date, not a first.”

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Delta Goodrem speaks about Olivia Newton-John on Sunrise.

Delta Goodrem speaks about Olivia Newton-John on Sunrise.

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Categories
Sports

Nick Kyrgios continues blistering form with win over world No 1 Daniil Medvedev | Nick Kyrgios

Nick Kyrgios has continued his blazing run with a rolling three-set victory over world No 1 Daniil Medvedev in Montreal. Australia’s Wimbledon runner-up wore down Medvedev 6-7 (2-7), 6-4, 6-2 in a sapping second-round encounter played in searing heat and humidity.

After losing the opening set in a tiebreaker, Kyrgios had to dig deep and turned the match around with one incredible backhand pass to break Medvedev in the sixth game of the deciding set. He broke the dispirited Russian for a second straight service game before closing out the match to love after exactly two hours.

The stirring victory was Kyrgios’s third from four meetings with Medvedev, 14th win from past 15 matches and second ever over a world No 1 – eight years after conquering Rafael Nadal on his Wimbledon debut as a teenager.

“I’ve had some success against him in the past and he’s beaten me before so I feel like we know each others’ games well,” Kyrgios said. “I’m not the type of player who goes into these matches looking at rankings or anything like that.

“It’s just who I’m playing and what kind of ball they’re giving me and today I had a very clean objective of how I was going to play – a lot of serve and volley, a lot of aggressive play from the back – and I executed better than he did on the day. That’s all it came down to. He won the first set and I feel like I had opportunities there as well so hopefully I can keep this rolling.”

Kyrgios, who faces Australian No 1 Alex de Minaur next for a quarter-final spot, is not getting carried away despite signing as one of the US Open favorites following his rousing victory over last year’s Flushing Meadows champion.

“Look, a grand slam is much, much different from any other tournament,” he said. “If I was in this position of a grand slam, you’ve still got to win another set and that’s not easy at all. He’s a machine. He’s the best player in the world for a reason and at a grand slam he’s a totally different beast.”

Nevertheless, Kyrgios continues to make a mockery of the rankings and the 27-year-old’s latest triumph all but secured the Canberran an all-important seeding for the New York major starting on 29 August.

“Look, I feel confident in my body and my mentality going in to the US Open but at the same time there’s so much time between then and now,” Kyrgios said. “I’ve got to focus on this event and then Cincinnati. There’s so many things I’ve got to look forward to. I’m not even going to think about the US Open right now. I need to take care of my body.”

De Minaur set up a first-time meeting with Kyrgios with a 7-6 (7-4) 7-5 second-round win over Bulgarian Grigor Dimitrov, the 15th seed.

Categories
Australia

Almost 200,000 Australians don’t have safe drinking water, new report finds

Almost 200,000 Australians are often forced to drink water containing unsafe levels of uranium, arsenic, nitrates, fluoride and E.coli, according to the peak body for water suppliers.

A further 400,000 people across Australia regularly drink water that fails aesthetic standards, a new Water Services Association of Australia report has found.

Researchers discovered unsafe drinking water in 115 locations, while hundreds more had water that failed aesthetic standards.

Towns and communities in the Northern Territory, South Australia, Queensland and Western Australia returned the worst water quality results, with remote Indigenous communities found to be the most affected by unsafe drinking water.

Jackie Mahoney and Pam Corbett, who live in Alpurrurulam, 500 kilometers north-east of Alice Springs on the NT-Queensland border, say poor water quality causes a wide range of illnesses and problems.

“It makes you itchy … and causes kidney problems and makes you sick in the stomach,” Mr Mahoney said.

“People with sensitive skin were treated for scabies, but it wasn’t scabies. Children’s scalps were dry and itching, and lots of calcium on the taps and clogged pipes caused problems.”

A calcified shower head
Hard water in remote areas causes plumbing problems and contributes to chronic health issues. (ABC Alice Springs: Steven Schubert)

The community recently installed a filtration system which, they said, had helped to improve the water quality, but it did not remove everything and many people still suffered health issues because they had been forced to drink poor quality water for years.

“Before that it was worse,” Ms Corbett said.

“We didn’t know we were drinking no-good water. It made our stomach sick, and… our kids.”

Ms Corbett said she and her partner had approached governments, the Central Land Council and other funding bodies for a new water bore for the community but progress had been slow.

“I’m worried because of our kids, their future, the next generation. We need to fix this. We need new water soon, ASAP,” Mr Mahoney said.

“It’s our homeland. We’re there for life and we should have good water.”

600,000 rely on poor quality drinking water

The Water Services Association of Australia report shows 115 locations across remote Australia exceeded safe guidelines at least once in 2018-19, while 408 locations did not meet aesthetic standards, affecting more than 600,000 people.

More than 40 per cent of all locations surveyed were remote Indigenous communities, the report said.

A sign in Yuelamu about using water wisely
Many remote Indigenous communities struggle with drinking water access, including Yuelamu north-west of Alice Springs. (Supplied: Adam Lovell)

But association executive director Adam Lovell said the number of locations and breaches of the guidelines actually could be much higher because there was not enough testing being done.

“There’s hardly any data to understand what the water quality looks like,” he said.

“When we talk about closing the gap, we don’t know what that gap actually looks like right now.”

Unacceptably high levels of elements like uranium or arsenic could result in long-term chronic health issues, Mr Lovell said, but the most common risk was E.coli.

“It’s immediate. If a water supply is not being disinfected properly then there’ll be gastrointestinal problems in the house,” he said.

“Over the longer term you’ll see that the chemical impacts build up and build up and build up and they’re the chronic impacts, which are much harder to see immediately and then much harder to treat.”

A man drinks water in a remote Indigenous community.
Adam Lovell tests drinking water in Yuendumu, NT. (Supplied: Adam Lovell)

‘Blame shifting’ over water quality

Mr Lovell said in Australia’s major cities there were usually hundreds of water samples taken a day, testing for microbial contaminants like E.coli and chemicals.

“Australian drinking water guidelines should preferably be legislated and regulated across all states and territories, which currently it is not,” he said.

Report author Eric Vanweydeveld said there were too many government departments and other organizations involved in service provision for remote communities, which led to blame shifting and inaction.

Two men stand in a desert community.
Eric Vanweydeveld and Adam Lovell say there’s too much bureaucracy in managing water in remote Indigenous communities. (Supplied: Adam Lovell)

“If there is a water leak in the street, and you are a member of a remote community and you try to understand ‘who do I need to talk to fix this leak?’, you will deal with probably seven or 10 different departments ,” he said.

The report has recommended that the federal government spend $30 million to establish a national water monitoring program.

“That will help us understand what closing the gap looks like,” Mr Lovell said.

Steven Porter, from the Northern Territory Power and Water Corporation, said it had been working with the Central Land Council to secure $5.2 million from the National Indigenous Affairs Association to bring two new bores online but there was still a $1 million shortfall.

“In doing that we can access better sources of water and improve the quality of water for the local community,” he said.

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Categories
US

Trump ties may come back to haunt in swing state Wisconsin

MADISON, Wis. (AP) — Donald Trump reasserted his grip on Republicans in Wisconsin’s primary, but Democratic Gov. Tony Evers tried to play that against his newly minted Republican opponent Wednesday while observers said running too closely to Trump in the swing state could be dangerous.

Trump’s pick for governor, construction company co-owner Tim Michels, beat out the choice of establishment Republicans. Democratic Gov. Tony Evers said that means Michels now “owns” Trump and he won’t be able to moderate in the general election.

“His relationship with Trump is going to drive this campaign,” Evers told reporters after eating breakfast with his running mate, state Rep. Sarah Rodriguez. “Trump owns him, he owns Trump. That’s his problem with him, that’s not mine.

Michels sought to tie Evers to President Joe Biden, releasing a new TV ad the day after his win that calls them “both career politicians in way over their head.” The ad does not mention Trump’s endorsement of Michels.

Michels’ campaign adviser Chris Walker said in a statement that Evers and Biden “are going to desperately attempt to do everything they can to distract the people of Wisconsin from their massive failures.”

Michels, in his victory speech, touted himself as the voice for a working class that he said has been left behind by Democrats. Evers mocked that message, noting that Michels owns a $17 million estate in Connecticut.

“He can wear a blue shirt so that he can have a blue collar, but at the end of the day I’m not quite sure that someone of his status with houses all over the country can say ‘I’m just one of you ,’” Evers said.

Like Trump, Michels has cast himself as an outsider. Evers dismissed that too, calling it “one of the biggest jokes of this campaign.” He cited Michels’ work of him serving on the boards of powerful lobbying groups, including the state chamber of commerce.

Trump narrowly won the state in 2016 and lost by a similar margin in 2020. A Marquette University Law School poll released in May showed Trump’s favorability rating in the state at 35%, with 61% having an unfavorable opinion.

In addition to supporting Michels, Trump is a strong supporter of the Republican US Sen. Ron Johnson, who faces Mandela Barnes, the current lieutenant governor.

“Trump cuts both ways,” Republican strategist Brandon Scholz said. “While he drives his base and supporters in the primary, will that help in the general because he turns off as many people as he turns on? … I don’t think we know yet.”

Michels would be smart to focus on Biden, Evers and the issues such as inflation, crime and the economy, not Trump, said Republican strategist Mark Graul.

Evers pointed to recent polls to argue that Michels is out of step with a majority of Wisconsin residents on key issues like abortion rights and the outcome of the 2020 election won by Biden. Trump has continued to push for decertification, which attorneys from both sides and legal experts have discounted as an unconstitutional impossibility.

Michels has been inconsistent on decertification, but he does want to dismantle the bipartisan elections commission and sign bills Evers vetoed that would make it harder to vote absentee.

Trump is popular with many because he is perceived to be a fighter, but Michels needs to spread that message, said Republican Assembly Speaker Robin Vos. I have endorsed former Lt. Gov. Rebecca Kleefisch in the primary and was targeted for defeat by Trump.

“If he is a perceived to be a fighter who gets things done, I think that will be a much more appealing general election message,” Vos said of Michels.

Michels’ win over Kleefisch, who was endorsed by Mike Pence and represented a continuation of former Gov. Scott Walker’s legacy, was the clearest victory for a Trump-backed candidate in Wisconsin. But every candidate who ran in support of decertifying Biden’s 2020 victory lost. That included the Trump-backed challenger to Vos, candidates for attorney general and secretary of state and legislative candidates seeking to unseat Republican incumbentsincluding one taking on Senate Majority Leader Devin LeMahieu.

In the days before the election, Vos challenger Adam Steen was joined on the campaign trail by the investigator Vos hired under pressure from Trump to look into the 2020 election. That investigator, former Wisconsin Supreme Court Justice Michael Gableman, also appeared at the Trump rally.

A triumphant Vos declared his 260-vote win shows “you don’t have to be a lapdog to whatever Donald Trump says.” You called a meeting of Assembly Republicans for Tuesday to discuss the future of Gableman’s contract, which has cost taxpayers more than $1.1 million and remains subject to five pending lawsuits.

Evers said Vos must fire Gableman or “I’m fearful we’re going to be talking about this election for the next 20 years.”

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Categories
Business

Bunnings Warehouse worker shares new twist in staff apron pocket saga with new TikTok video

A Bunnings worker has sparked a debate about what the clear pockets on the front of staff aprons are actually used for.

Sharing on TikTok, the employee wrote: “Okay… Here’s what the Bunnings pouch is really for.”

Watch above: Bunnings worker shares new apron twist

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After shoppers discovered the pockets were used to display team member’s name tag, the worker said there was another hidden purpose for the clear pouches.

She claimed there’s a second “secret compartment” in the pocket that holds a small notepad which is unique to each Bunnings store.

“Name badge yes, however we have a notepad for every store,” she said in the video.

The Bunnings worker said the pocket also holds a store notepad in a ‘secret compartment’. Credit: rhiannonsean/TikTok

In the footage, you can see the Bunnings team member pull out the green notepad from the hidden compartment.

She added: “I’ve worked in probably eight Bunnings stores in my eight years, and I’ve always gotten one.”

Bunnings fans have been in a spin over the easy-to-miss detail after Australian comedian Luke Donkin raised the issue in a recent viral TikTok post last month.

“I honestly have no idea what this pocket is used for,” he said.

“I’ve always wanted to put like a trail mix in it and then just (motions to eat it) throughout the day. But I’d probably get in trouble.”

At the time, it was confirmed that the clear pouch was used to hold the staff member’s name tag.

She said the notepads are unique to each Bunnings store. Credit: Rhiannonsean/TikTok

But just when you think you may know all there is to know about the pockets on the front of Bunnings staff aprons, there appears to be yet another twist.

While another worker pointed out there’s yet another secret compartment.

“My apron has three pockets there… you showed two,” they said.

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Categories
Technology

The Samsung Z Fold 4 still doesn’t give a good reason to buy a foldable phone

Folding phones seem, intuitively, like a great idea. Phones are good! Tablets are good! Put them both together, fold it in half, and presto: you’ve made the best of both worlds. Credit to Samsung, too, for willingly subjecting itself to all the growing pains of figuring out how to make a good foldable phone. Last year’s Galaxy Z Fold 3 was a good foldable, and the new Z Fold 4 looks to be even better, if ever so slightly. (I have lots of thoughts about the new era of flip phones, like the Z Flip 4, but we’ll save those for another day.)

What Samsung hasn’t done — what no one has done yet, really — is make the case for why you’d actually want a foldable phone. And until it can explain why it’s worth all the extra cost and tradeoffs, I’m having a hard time figuring out why you’d be willing to give up the phone you know and love to get one.

What Samsung needs to do with the Galaxy Fold (and the rest of the industry will eventually need to do with their own foldables) is convincing people that it’s worth buying a phone that’s more expensive, more fragile, and takes up more room in your pocket .

The Z Fold 4 is a big, big phone.
Photo by Allison Johnson/The Verge

Right now, the worst thing about foldables is that they force you to make significant sacrifices on the most important device you own: your smartphone. The new Fold 4 is a little shorter, about an ounce heavier, and about twice as thick as the Galaxy S22 Ultra. It’s also $600 more expensive. The Ultra has a bigger battery, better camera specs, and a 6.8-inch screen that supports an S Pen. The Fold 4, when opened, is noticeably larger, but the candy bar phones still get plenty big. And Fold makes a lot of sacrifices for some more real estate.

It’s not even clear to me that Samsung knows why you should make all of those sacrifices. On its website, one of the first selling points the company offers is that you can prop up the screen on a table by opening it halfway for watching or taking videos hands-free. Here in reality, we call that a kickstand, and this is an awfully expensive one. In this mode, you’re also only using half the screen, which sort of defeats the whole purpose.

So far, multitasking seems to be the foldable’s one actual advantage. Open up your Galaxy Fold, and you can run two apps side by side or even three or four on the screen at once! This, I agree, is a delightful thing. Being able to use my browser and my notes app side by side or see my calendar and my email together is much better than constantly swiping between two full-screen apps. And seeing two pages at a time in the Kindle app is the best. And you know what? Big screens are just good — good for games, good for reading, good for watching Netflix.

But these aren’t just arguments for foldables; they’re arguments for tablets. And so far, the arguments for Android tablets don’t seem to be convincing many users. While Android has gotten better as a large-screen operating system, and the Fold 4’s software being based on Android 12L is a good sign, too many apps that are “optimized” for foldables are actually just sticking a giant sidebar onto one side, which doesn’t accomplish much. Others just streeeetch everything to fit the larger screen. Don’t even get me started on how the vast majority of apps deal with Microsoft’s approach of two separate screens attached with a hinge.

The Z Fold 4 wrangles Android pretty well, but it’s still mostly just a big phone screen.
Photo by Allison Johnson/The Verge

Samsung has done an admirable job of wrangling all of Android’s weirdness onto the Fold’s screen, and in general, it’s not that the Fold doesn’t work; it’s that there’s nothing about the Fold that is dramatically better than the phone or tablet you might already be carrying around. And shoving them into a single device actually makes them both a little worse.

Over the years, I have been taken in by a number of attempts to make a device that can be and do everything. There were the modular devices, such as Google’s Project Ara and the Asus PadFone. There were the extensible phones from Essential and Motorola and others. In every case, they ended up being mediocre versions of everything that somehow added up to less than the sum of their parts. Right now, foldables are stuck in the same place: big, unwieldy, expensive phones that unfurl into small tablets that die — both in terms of battery life and durability — too quickly.

The other approach to the many-screened future is to try and build the best version of every device, let users choose which they want to use at any given time, and make sure their software, settings, and data flow seamlessly around the ecosystem. This is, roughly, the Apple approach: it will happily sell you a Mac, an iPad, and an iPhone based on the idea that they’re all for different things and then use iCloud and the App Store to make everything work across those devices . It might end up more expensive — though you can buy an iPhone 13 and an iPad Mini for less than the Fold 4 — but it comes with fewer tradeoffs.

Still, I say all this and yet can’t help myself: I want the tweener devices to work. I want a touchscreen Mac, and I want a foldable phone that is actually both a great phone and a great tablet. It would mean fewer things to charge, fewer things to update, and fewer things to carry around. But I’m not going to downgrade my phone just to get a half-decent tablet attached, and that still feels like the state of the foldable.

Categories
Entertainment

Beloved rock star Gord Lewis found dead aged 65, allegedly murdered by his own son

Canadian rock star Gord Lewis died aged 65 on Sunday after he was allegedly murdered by his own son.

The Hamilton Police Department found Lewis in Ontario who “isolated” the incident to the musician’s son, Johnathan Lewis.

Johnathan Lewis, 41, has since been arrested and charged with “second-degree murder.”

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The investigation is ongoing, according to police.

Hamilton detective Sara Beck said at a news conference on August 8 (US time) that they were not searching for additional suspects, the New York Post reported.

Police confirmed that Johnathan Lewis was in custody and had been charged.

Despite charging Johnathan Lewis, Beck added that they were “continuing to seek out witnesses and reviewing video in the area”.

Police said “a positive identification has not been made of the deceased due to the level of decomposition”, the Post reported.

Reportedly Gord Lewis had “injuries consistent with foul play” and the death was deemed a homicide.

Gord Lewis performs. Credit: Supplied

Police said they were performing a wellness check on Lewis’ residence after a 911 call from staff at Canadian publication The Spectator.

Beck said the publication was receiving suspicious messages from two email accounts – both linked to Johnathan Lewis.

The first message came at 8 pm on 6 August (local time) and continued until the next day.

Reportedly one email said, “Funeral people need to get here quick. My dad is starting to decline.”

Gordon Lewis. Credit: Supplied

Investigation ongoing

Another said, “Now I just want to get help for my sickness and give my dad a proper burial. He didn’t deserve this”.

An autopsy is set to be performed along with “additional steps” to determine the cause of death properly.

The only other family member to speak out was Johnathan’s brother Brian Lewis who said, “We ask that you respect our privacy at this time,” according to The Spectator.

Lewis’ band Teenage Head announced the news on their Instagram on Tuesday.

“We are heartbroken and still trying to process the loss of our friend, bandmate and brother Gord Lewis Our hearts are with his family and all that knew and loved him,” the statement said.

“Gord was a force and an inspiration to many.

“You were taken from us far too soon.”

Lewis’ death is not the first for the rock band they lost another member, their drummer Frankie Venom in 2008 after a battle with throat cancer.

Teenage Head first began in 1975 when the band members were still in high school.

The band is best known for their songs Let’s Shake and Some Kinda Fun.

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Sports

New club enters race for unsigned Bulldogs midfielder

Brisbane has entered the race for Western Bulldogs midfielder Josh Dunkley, reports AFL Media’s Cal Twomey.

Dunkley remains out of contract with the Bulldogs and has been linked with the likes of Port Adelaide and Essendon.

Twomey understands the Lions are now also in the mix for the 25-year-old, who has a long-term contract offer in front of him from the Dogs.

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“He’s still weighing up his decision, he’s got a big call to make, and I don’t think it’s going to be a call that he makes until the end of the Bulldogs’ season now,” Twomey told SEN Breakfast.

“Brisbane, I understand, have a level of interest in him as well, joining the likes of Port Adelaide and Essendon, who have been linked to him for a little bit longer.

“We reported a couple of weeks ago the Power’s interest in Dunkley and I still have them as a real contender for him if he decides to leave the Kennel.

“But I’m led to believe the Lions to be in the mix as well. He has a link in Queensland too where his sister Lara plays netball with the Queensland Firebirds.

“The Dogs want to keep him, and they’ve got a long-term offer in front of him, and that’s been in front of him for some time.

“He has a big call to make. Expect some conclusion on that probably at the end of the Dogs’ year.”

Dunkley, a premiership player with the Bulldogs in 2016, is averaging 25 disposals from 20 games this season.

The unsigned Bulldog has also kicked 17 goals.

Western Bulldogs Brisbane Lions





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