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Lenovo Yoga 7i 16 Gen 7 (2022) – Review 2022

As 2-in-1 laptops go, 16 inches is pretty huge. Most convertible laptop/tablet hybrids have screens measuring 12 to 14 inches for more comfortable carrying in tablet mode. A 16-inch tablet isn’t one you’ll use all the time, but a 16-inch desktop replacement laptop that can pivot for presentations or become a tablet for annotating or sketching? That’s a combination that may make more sense, and that’s where the Lenovo Yoga 7i 16 Gen 7 ($1,399.99) comes into the picture. Launching alongside the more mainstream Yoga 7i 14 Gen 7, the bigger model gives users a little more elbow room, a slightly beefier CPU, and a larger battery. It’s got the slick, feature-filled design and rock-solid performance we love about the 14-inch model, but in giant economy size. Bigger may not always be better, but in this case it’s not half bad.


The Biggest Convertible Since Mary Kay’s Cadillac

Like its smaller sibling, the Yoga 7i 16 is available in two colors, Storm Gray and Stone Blue, both anodized shades to dress up the CNC milled aluminum chassis. The Lenovo measures 0.76 by 14.2 by 9.8 inches, more or less matching its 2-in-1 archrival the HP Specter x360 16 (0.78 by 14.1 by 9.7 inches), but is lighter—the Lenovo tips the scale at 4.19 pounds to the HP’s 4.45.

Lenovo Yoga 7i 16 Gen 7 (2022) laptop mode

Our $1,399.99 review unit combines Intel’s 12th Generation Core i7-1260P processor (four Performance cores, eight Efficient cores, 16 threads) with 16GB of LPDDR5 memory, a 512GB PCIe 4.0 solid-state drive, and a glossy IPS touch screen with 2,560-by -1,600-pixel resolution and 400 nits of brightness. No other screen is available (ie, you can’t match the Specter x360 16’s OLED panel), but other models at Lenovo.com offer a 4GB Intel Arc A370M GPU instead of our unit’s Iris Xe integrated graphics.

There are a few design changes that come with the increase in bulk from the Yoga 7i 14 to the 7i 16. The wider chassis provides room for a compact numeric keypad squeezed in at the right of the keyboard. The keys of the number pad are a little narrower than the primary keys, but not so much that they feel cramped when entering spreadsheet data.

Lenovo Yoga 7i 16 Gen 7 (2022) front view

Another change is a different position for the speakers, with a speaker grille between the screen and keyboard. With four stereo speakers, two 3-watt woofers, and dual 2-watt tweeters, the sound offered by the 16-inch laptop is superb, with robust volume and great clarity. It’s enhanced with Dolby Atmos support and automatic amplification.

Given the slim, streamlined design of the Yoga 7i 16, the convertible offers an impressive selection of ports. It’s a welcome departure from the current minimalist chic that relies on just a few Thunderbolt 4 ports plus adapters or dongles, for most ports, and it makes the Yoga 7i a versatile choice for users on the go. On the left, you’ll find an HDMI video output, two USB Type-C/Thunderbolt 4 connectors, a USB 3.2 Type-A port, and a full-size SD card slot.

Lenovo Yoga 7i 16 Gen 7 (2022) left ports

On the right are a 3.5mm headphone jack and a second USB-A port, along with the power button. The Lenovo also has up-to-date wireless support, with Wi-Fi 6E in lieu of Ethernet and Bluetooth 5.2 for quick connections to peripherals and audio devices.

Lenovo Yoga 7i 16 Gen 7 (2022) left ports


The Display: Skinny Screen Sides, With a Bump

The 16-inch touch screen looks great, with crisp details thanks to 2,560-by-1,600 resolution, good contrast, and full support for both touch and active pen. (Unfortunately there’s no pen in the box.) But it’s all the more impressive when you stop to notice the slim bezels around the display—if you don’t look for them, you might miss them completely, since Lenovo boasts the laptop has a 91% screen-to-body ratio in tablet mode.

It’s also impressive that despite the narrowness of the screen borders, you never feel like you’re missing a place to hold the Yoga when in tablet mode—the rounded edges of the chassis provide enough of a finger and thumb grip to hold on comfortably without encroaching on the display real estate.

Lenovo Yoga 7i 16 Gen 7 (2022) front view

Above the screen is the slight protrusion of what Lenovo calls the communications bar, the housing for the 1080p webcam, dual microphones, and Windows Hello-compatible IR face recognition sensors for the laptop. It’s sort of a reverse approach to Apple’s infamous notch, raised above the display instead of dipping down into it. There’s a sliding privacy shutter for the webcam (although it’s so small you might not notice it) and the bar itself provides a handy ridge to help you open and close the lid despite the smoother rounded corners.


Performance Testing the Yoga 7i 16: A High-End Laptop Contest

For our benchmark charts, we matched the Yoga 7i 16 Gen 7 against two other 16-inch deluxe notebooks, the directly competing HP Specter x360 16 convertible and the AMD-powered Asus Vivobook Pro 16X OLED. We also compared it to another plus-size convertible, the 15-inch, business-oriented Dell Latitude 9520 2-in-1.

Our main productivity benchmark for Windows systems is UL’s PCMark 10, which simulates everyday tasks like word processing, spreadsheet analysis, web browsing, and videoconferencing. We also run PCMark 10’s Full System Drive test to assess the responsiveness and throughput of a laptop’s boot drive. Geekbench 5 is another test that simulates popular apps including PDF rendering and speech recognition with a bit more of a focus on processing power.

Two other CPU-intensive benchmarks that stress all available cores and threads are Maxon’s Cinebench R23, which uses that company’s Cinema 4D engine to render a complex scene, and the open-source video transcoder HandBrake, which we use to convert a 12-minute clip of 4K video to 1080p resolution (lower times are better). Our final productivity test is workstation vendor Puget Systems’ PugetBench extension for Adobe Photoshop, which uses the Creative Cloud 22 version of the famous image editor to execute a variety of general and GPU-accelerated tasks ranging from opening, rotating, and resizing an image to applying masks, gradient fills, and filters. Like HandBrake, the test rates a PC’s suitability for digital content creation and multimedia jobs.

All of these systems sailed past the 4,000-point mark in PCMark 10 that indicates excellent productivity for the likes of Microsoft Office and Google Workspace, but they swapped victories in specific benchmarks, with the Asus claiming most of the CPU honors but the Yoga 7i 16 winning in Geekbench. The bigger picture shows that they’re all high-performance productivity and creative machines.

We test PCs’ graphics capabilities with two game-like animations a piece from two benchmark suites. The DirectX 12 tests Night Raid (more modest, suitable for laptops with integrated graphics) and Time Spy (more demanding, ideal for gaming rigs with discrete GPUs) hail from UL’s 3DMark, while GFXBench contributes the 1440p Aztec Ruins and 1080p Car Chase subtests, rendered off-screen to accommodate different display resolutions. The latter two tests focus on high-level image rendering and low-level routines like texturing respectively.

The HP and Asus dominated these tests, which was predictable since they have discrete Nvidia GeForce GPUs that outperform both the Dell’s 11th Gen and the Lenovo’s 12th Gen Intel integrated graphics.

Finally, we test laptops’ battery life by looping a locally stored 720p video file (the open-source Blender movie Tears of Steel) with display brightness at 50% and audio volume at 100%. We make sure the battery is fully charged before the test, with Wi-Fi and keyboard backlighting off. We also use a Datacolor SpyderX Elite monitor calibration sensor and software to measure the screen’s color saturation—what percentage of the sRGB, Adobe RGB, and DCI-P3 color gamuts or palettes the display can show—and its brightness in nits (candelas per square to put).

The Lenovo’s battery life was impressive, exceeding 18 hours in our video rundown. That outlasted the Dell by nearly two hours and crushed the runtimes of the OLED-screened Asus and HP. Those systems got their revenge in our color coverage measurement, showing more vivid hues and spanning virtually all of the various gamuts compared to the laptops with IPS panels. The Yoga 7i’s screen brightness was a little lower than we like to see in a high-end notebook (the same number of nits look more brilliant with an OLED rather than IPS display), but perfectly acceptable. The screen supports Dolby Vision HDR, reserving max brightness for smaller portions or application windows rather than the full screen that our test measures.


Verdict: More Room to Maneuver, If You Want It

Generally speaking, 15.6-inch and 16-inch convertible laptops are awfully unwieldy for use as tablets, but they shine when pivoted to easel or kiosk more for presentations and can take touch interaction further than a smaller notebook. If your budget permits we prefer the HP Specter x360 16’s dazzling OLED display, but the Lenovo Yoga 7i 16 Gen 7 is a great alternative and a superbly well-made solution for anyone seeking a larger 2-in-1.

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Categories
Entertainment

‘I avoid them whenever possible’: the children’s authors who don’t like kids | kids

Children’s authors disliking children has become a thing. It’s been said of Enid Blyton, AA Milne, Dr Seuss, Maurice Sendak, Shel Silverstein … and now we hear that the late, dear Raymond Briggs, the sweet grumpy writer and illustrator who became National Grandpa to millions of us who never met him, was another. Interviews with Briggs, who died last week aged 88, could be heard on the radio, saying for all to hear: “I’ve no interest in children. Didn’t want to have any.”

It’s dismaying. How could they?

As a writer, and daughter, partner and mother of writers, I can tell you: no writers like children – if said children are wanting things from the writer when the writer wants to be writing. This isn’t exclusive to any particular kind of writer, nor even to creative people. It’s true of everyone, as we know now after lockdowns requiring people to simultaneously work and school at home. (I avoided this with my child by making her a writer too, via the noble tradition of child labour. We wrote five books together, which were published in 36 languages ​​and optioned by Spielberg, twice. Boom!)

But I don’t believe in this so-called dislike. First, of all the possible reasons for liking or disliking an individual, was there ever a dafter one of her age? And second, having no interest in children per seor not wanting kids yourself, isn’t dislike.

In 2015, in a Guardian interview with Sarah Hughes, Briggs points to a photo of the grandchildren of his late partner, Liz. “This one used to want to sit on my head,” he told her. “’I want to sit on his head,’ he’d say and climb up. It was lovely.” Then, she wrote, “I have stared into space for a moment.” Is this someone who dislikes children?

When Briggs was suggested as Children’s Laureate, the answer was “no, thank you… all that running all over the country, all the bookings and bed and breakfasts and railways. I don’t want to go to schools and give talks on children’s books. I don’t actually know anything much about children. I try to avoid them whenever possible.”

I suspect that individual or known children can be OK, but a mass of tiny maniacs and fuss is alarming to people who work in quiet. So is it really children that these writers aren’t keen on? Perhaps AA Milne just disliked that the success of his children’s books outshone the reputation he really desired, as a playwright. His son wasn’t happy with being Christopher Robin, writing of “toe-curling, fist-clenching, lip-biting embarrassment” and how “it seemed to me almost that my father had … filched from me my good name and had left me with the empty fame of being his son”. But there’s no suggestion Milne senior did that on purpose.

On the day of Sendak’s barmitzvah in 1942 in New York, his father learned of the destruction of the family in Europe. This was only part of the trauma that made his parents of him, in Maurice’s word, “crazy”. His dark topics about him were sometimes taken as an aggression to a young readership, an indication that he did not care for them. He said himself that if he’d come from a happy home he wouldn’t have become an artist. “I refuse to lie to children,” he said, apropos “the great 19th-century fantasy that paints childhood as an eternally innocent paradise”, and described his job as “the idiot role of being a kiddie book person”. He and his partner of him Eugene did not build a family because he was certain, from his family history of him, that he would mess it up. Again, I’m not convinced it’s children that he didn’t like.

Children's author Raymond Briggs
Raymond Briggs, who created and illustrated the Snowman, said he tried to avoid children. Photograph: Richard Saker/The Guardian

Shel Silverstein, author and illustrator of The Giving Tree, didn’t like dull children’s books and was not initially keen to write for children. Plus he was a satirical Sixties guy with an eminently misunderstandable sense of humour, and a very sad story with his own daughter, who died young in the care of her relatives after the death of her mother. Heaven forbid that a children’s author be complex! (To some people he’ll always be the guy who wrote Sylvia’s Mother.)

The myth that Dr Seuss (Theodor Guisel) disliked children seems based on childlessness, which in the 1950s was pretty much held as evidence of disliking them – when in fact his wife, Helen Palmer, also a children’s writer, couldn’t conceive. During their lives they did have an imaginary daughter, Chrysanthemum-Pearl, who appeared on the Seuss Christmas cards.

Enid Blyton, we’re told – by her own daughter – was “without a trace of maternal instinct”. But we’re also told – by her other daughter of her – that she was a wonderful companion who could “communicate with children in a quite remarkable way, and not just on the page”.

But it doesn’t matter if writers can handle children’s more riotous aspects or not. They just need to have a handle on a child’s point of view – as they do on any character’s.

Humbug and sentimentality are greater enemies; books written to appeal to adults. I don’t mean books that naturally appeal to people of all ages: those are magic.

Briggs said: “People are always saying, ‘Well, who did you aim this at?’ and I keep replying, ‘Books are not missiles, you don’t aim them at anybody’.”

In wise words from US writer Edward Eager’s novel half-magic: “The four children divided all grownups into classes. Last and best and rarest of all were the ones who seemed to feel that children were children and grownups were grownups and that was that, and yet there wasn’t any reason why they couldn’t get along perfectly well and naturally together, and even occasionally communicate.”

This article was amended on 14 August 2022. Briggs was referring to a photo of the grandchildren of his late partner, Liz; not of his “late wife’s offspring” as stated in an earlier version.

Categories
Sports

FIA finally breaks silence on Oscar Piastri contract saga, Daniel Ricciardo

The FIA ​​has finally broken its silence on the Oscar Piastri contract saga, confirming the ongoing dispute between McLaren and Alpine will be resolved without having to go to court.

Australian driver Daniel Ricciardo became embroiled in F1’s mid-year silly season following reports he will be replaced by young compatriot Piastri at McLaren next year.

The news erupted last week after two-time world champion Fernando Alonso blindsided the F1 world and jumped into Sebastian Vettel’s vacated seat at Aston Martin.

Watch Every Practice, Qualifying & Race of the 2022 FIA Formula One World Championship™ Live on Kayo. New to Kayo? Start your free trial now >

Alpine then announced Piastri would be the man to replace Alonso, only for the 21-year-old Melburnian to reject the seat — a bold move for someone who is yet to drive in F1.

Alpine believes that Piastri should respect the contract, but the Victorian believes the commitment is not valid.

The French team threatened to file a civil lawsuit to recover the millions of dollars in training it has spent on Piastri this season.

“Going to the High Court is over 90 per cent certain that’s what we’ll do,” Alpine team principal Otmar Szafnauer told Reuters.

“If the CRB (Contract Recognition Board) says, ‘Your license is only valid at Alpine’, and then he (Piastri) says, ‘That’s great, but I’m never driving for them, I’ll just sit out a year ‘, then you’ve got to go to the High Court for compensation.”

McLaren Chief Executive Officer Zak Brown and Otmar Szafnauer. Photo by Andy Hone/Pool via Getty ImagesSource: Getty Images

On Friday, FIA President Mohammed Ben Sulayem claimed the issue would be solved through their own means instead of in the courtroom.

“The FIA’s Driver Contract Recognition Board (CRB) was set up to deal with contract priority issues between drivers and F1 teams,” he tweeted.

“That’s why we rely on their decision to resolve any conflict.”

According to French publication Auto Hebdothe CRB has found that both Piastri’s Alpine and McLaren contracts are valid.

The CRB, a group made up of independent lawyers, was set up to determine the legality of driver contracts and settle disputes between teams.

The body was founded in 1991 after seven-time world champion Michael Schumacher signed for Benetton despite having agreed to discuss a contract with Jordan.

Oscar Piastri of Australia. Photo by Clive Mason/Getty ImagesSource: Getty Images

Szafnauer also hinted at a potential collusion between Piastri’s manager Mark Webber, Alonso and his manager Flavio Briatore.

Webber and Alonso are close friends after their time in F1, while Briatore, who was a former team boss at Bennetton and Renault, has been Alonso’s long-term manager.

“Look, I have no record of it, but this is Formula 1 and maybe in a couple of years someone says that they have evidence of shared information, I would not be surprised,” Szafnauer said.

“I always tell everyone that in Formula 1 you have to act as if everyone knows everything. That there are no secrets in these things. When you ask someone not to say anything, they act like everyone knows.

“That’s how I’ve run my business in Formula 1 for 25 years. And if this (information sharing) has happened, you should not be surprised.”

Meanwhile, former F1 driver turned pundit Christian Danner said Piastri’s tactics “clearly has the handwriting” of Briatore.

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Categories
Australia

WA Premier Mark McGowan and MPs caught speeding in Perth despite warning of crash perils

Mark McGowan and more than half of his ministers have been caught speeding, incurring thousands of dollars in fines and hefty demerit points.

Some of the high-profile MPs who fell foul of the law are the Premier’s closest allies, including Attorney-General John Quigley, Police and Road Safety Minister Paul Papalia, and Health Minister Amber-Jade Sanderson.

Mr McGowan admitted to speeding twice in four months in 2021 — including during a double demerit period for the Queen’s Birthday long weekend last September.

Despite strong government public messaging about the dangers of speeding — especially during double demerit crackdowns — Mr McGowan exceeded the speed limit by between 10 and 19km/h, copping four demerit points and a $400 fine.

In April last year, Mr McGowan’s lead foot saw him handed another $100 fine for exceeding the speed limit by not more than 9kmh.

Mr McGowan’s speeding ends came as WA recorded its highest road toll in five years in 2021 — 166 people losing their lives. So far this year there have been 87 fatalities, including a horror period when young drivers and passengers died or were seriously injured.

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Categories
Technology

Red Dead Redemption 2 sales hit 45 million, continues strong trends

Red Dead Redemption 2’s total sales hit 45 million since the game released in 2018.

Red Dead Redemption 2 sales hit 45 million, continues strong trends 2 |  TweakTown.com

VIEW GALLERY – 2 IMAGES

Nearly four years after launch, Red Dead Redemption 2 has achieved powerful sales figures across all platforms. As of June 30, 2022 during Take-Two Interactive’s Q1 FY23 period, Rockstar’s cowboy epic has sold 45 million copies combined across digital and physical channels.

These gains are up 1 million units quarter-over-quarter and 7 million units year-over-year, and continue RDR2’s trends of selling 1 million units between Q4 and Q1 periods. These sales may punctuate a sunsetting of Red Dead franchise content for some years to come; Rockstar has effectively stopped updating Red Dead Online with new meaningful content so it can focus almost exclusively on Grand Theft Auto 6, and RDR2’s campaign is practically set in stone with no expansions in sight.

Red Dead Redemption 2 sales hit 45 million, continues strong trends 2123 |  TweakTown.com

That being said, Take-Two Interactive still expects Red Dead Online to be a meaningful contributor to its annual net bookings. Red Dead Online delivers microtransaction revenues through live service purchases and has, to a lesser extent, buffered TTWO’s yearly digital revenues.

“We now expect to deliver net bookings of $5.8 billion to $5.9 billion. Our assumptions take into consideration some shifts in our pipeline for the year, as well as movement in foreign exchange rates and the uncertain macroeconomic backdrop. The largest contributors to net bookings are expected to be NBA 2K, Grand Theft Auto Online and Grand Theft Auto V, Empires & Puzzles, Rollic’s hyper casual mobile portfolio, Toon Blast, and Red Dead Redemption 2 and Red Dead Online. 45% Zynga, which includes our former T2 mobile titles, 37%, 2K; 17%, Rockstar Games; and 1%, Private Division.”

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Categories
Entertainment

Neighbors star Ben Turland teases new role after soap exit

form neighbors star Ben Turland has teased more details about his upcoming role in new psychological thriller series Riptide.

“It’s going well and everyone’s nice – there are a lot of the same crew from neighbors working on it,” revealed Turland in an interview with Inside Soap.

According to the soap star, his new character is not dissimilar to the role he played on neighbors.

benny turland as hendrix greyson in neighbors

FremantleChannel 5

Related: form EastEnders star Jo Joyner signs up for new Channel 5 drama

“My character is quite misunderstood, he’s had it pretty tough, but he loves his family. He’s not too far away from Hendrix!”

Riptidea new prime-time Channel 5 drama set in Australia, is being made by neighbors‘production company Fremantle Australia.

Two more familiar soap faces will star in the show – former EastEnders star Jo Joyner and Turland’s neighbors co-star Peter O’Brien.

O’Brien, who recently reprized his role as Shane Ramsay for the Aussie soap’s final weeks, will play a main character in the drama.

jo joyner on lorraine

ITV

Related: neighbors star Candice Leask on scrapped Rodwell stories and show ending

Joyner will play Alison, whose life is disrupted when her Australian husband vanishes after a morning surf.

It’s unclear whether he was caught up in a dangerous riptide, or whether there’s more to his disappearance than meets the eye as this intriguing mystery plays out.

Turland also addressed his final performance as Hendrix Grayson, who tragically died on the soap after battling with pulmonary fibrosis.

The actor revealed the positive response he had to his emotional exit from the soap and said “It was so beautiful.”

“I’ve had a lot of messages from people – I had a family member who was recently diagnosed with pulmonary fibrosis, and I have other relatives who’ve had friends pass away from it. They said it was a pretty accurate story of someone with that condition. Just hearing that was enough.”

neighbors has now come to an end, but catch-up episodes are available via My 5 (UK) and 10 Play (Australia).

Read more neighbors coverage on our dedicated homepage

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Sports

Wallabies alarm bells ringing as 2023 World Cup nears

They’re the good times. The losses have thrown up the same frailties: accuracy and discipline, or not enough of it for long enough. This weekend’s 48-17 loss exposed another one: Australia’s back three or, specifically, the lack of a genuine fullback. Jordan Petaia, Marika Koroibete and Tom Wright are all good athletes and good footballers but none of them could offer a safe pair of hands under Argentina’s aerial assault. It is terrifying to ponder what the Springboks might do to the same three players in Adelaide in two weeks’ time.

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Australia’s forward pack is capable of battering opposition teams and Rob Valetini’s running lines off set piece were one of the few bright spots in Sunday’s loss. But the pack hasn’t nailed the brief with any regularity. In fact, the only reliable things about the Wallabies at all this season is that they’ll trail at halftime.

Perhaps that is to be expected from a team as buffeted by injuries as this one has been. Call Australia A, Australia ‘C’, for the forseeable future, because there’s a XV of potential starters on the sidelines right now. Scott Sio, Dave Porecki, Folau Fainga’a, Allan Ala’alatoa, Izack Rodda, Rory Arnold, Lachlan Swinton, Michael Hooper, Quade Cooper, Samu Kerevi, Hunter Paisami, Izaia Perese, Andrew Kellaway and Tom Banks, off the top of the head.

But as Dave Rennie said on Sunday: “We’ve got to be better. While we know we’ll get a few guys back, whoever puts the jersey on has to front.”

Limping through each season and hoping everything will click in a World Cup year is what fans have been reduced to. Cheika’s Wallabies finished 2018 with a 30 per cent win rate off four wins from 13 Tests. They were beaten by Wales in the group stages, then smashed by England in the quarter-finals. The year before a World Cup year is the time when belief is bedded in or seeds of doubt take root.

Right now, the Wallabies’ course hangs in the balance. Rennie’s overall win rate is 40 per cent, or 10 wins from 25 Tests. They’re two from five this season, with the toughest of the Rugby Championship yet to come and a five-Test spring tour hot on its heels. Of those sides, you could only pick out Italy as a certain win.

The Wallabies react after losing to Argentina by a record margin.

The Wallabies react after losing to Argentina by a record margin.Credit:Getty

In France next year they will likely play Argentina or England in the quarter-finals. Cheika and Jones are both seasoned Test coaches now. Rennie, for all his success in Super Rugby, for his measured, detail-driven approach and popularity among his players, will be the World Cup rookie.

Dave Rennie’s post-match interview with the herald was the first time the Wallabies coach has betrayed frustration with the gap between what he believes his players are capable of and what they’re producing in game.

“We’re better than that, but you can talk about it all you like, you’ve got to put it on the park,” he said.

The search for answers continues, with no guarantee that returning players will make enough of a difference. Add fullback to the five-eighth crisis and there is not a lot to feel hopeful about as we head into back-to-back clashes with South Africa and New Zealand.

Watch every match of The Rugby Championship on the Home of Rugby, Stan Sport. All matches streaming ad-free, live and on demand on Stan Sport.

Categories
Australia

Off-season native bee carers give macadamia farmer a pollination backup plan against varroa mite

“Foster parents” who take care of native beehives in their own backyards have helped a Queensland macadamia nut farmer develop a pollination backup plan should the invasive varroa mite spread.

Geoff Chivers started investigating using the small, stingless insects to pollinate his orchards, which were some of the oldest in Bundaberg, when varroa mite first started spreading around the world.

In five years, he has gone from five beehives to 150, which he said was made possible by a group of enthusiastic locals he called the “foster parents.”

“We need to have feed for those bees in the off-season,” he said.

“We actually host them out to families and friends in Bundaberg who have either large areas of native bush around them or backyards in the middle of town where there’s lots of flowering plants or vegetable patches.”

He was not looking for any new foster parents, with all of the beehives adopted and thriving in their host homes.

“We’ve found that the bees actually flourish in the urban environment because of the variety of flowers and other things that they can collect pollen from,” he said.

A mid shot of a man in a blue work shirt holding a small house-like native bee hive in front of a grevillia bush
Macadamia farmer Geoff Chivers has spent years researching and developing native bee hives for use in his orchard.(Rural ABC: Kallee Buchanan)

Macadamia trees have a short flowering window, and because orchards are large and surrounded by monoculture crops, the bees would not have enough food or variety without their host families.

“The foster parents love it, they really become attached to their hives,” he said.

“While we only need the hives for probably four to six weeks each year, they tell me they actually miss them when they’re gone.

“There’s a lot of people that just love to sit out and watch the bees come and go and just do what they do.”

Win-win for bees and community

All of Mr Chivers’ beehives currently have homes with foster parents like retiree Hugh O’Malley, whose wife Allison first suggested they get involved.

A wide shot of a white haired man resting his hand on a small native bee hive
Hugh O’Malley has been fostering native bees for three years.(Rural ABC: Kallee Buchanan)

“I’ve got a little vegetable garden and I’d had trouble with a lot of plants, like cucumbers for example, with pollination,” Mr O’Malley said.

“Since we’ve had the bees here, which we have for about three years, things like that are growing quite well.”

He said the bees were low-maintenance and easy to integrate into his existing garden.

“If they need any water they get it off a bit of dew off the grass and of course they know where to go for food,” he said.

“So I don’t have to do anything… I don’t use any sprays or anything like that, which is good for the bees.

“It’s nice to see them there, and they’re no problem because they don’t sting.”

It’s estimated about 90 per cent of the pollination for macadamia nuts is done by honey bees, but with the detection of the devastating varroa mite in New South Wales, farmers in Queensland have been considering their options should bee numbers drop significantly.

Patience pays off

Mr Chivers said it had taken years of experimentation and education to get the native bees working in his orchard, but he was seeing tangible results.

“We placed the bees around the outside of the orchard believing that they would move through the orchard,” he said.

“What we actually saw was around the outside of the orchard, we’re getting a much better nut set, but not so much into the orchard.

“We started experimenting [with] moving the hives actually inside the orchard… we put a grid pattern throughout the orchard so each hive is no more than 50 meters from another hive.”

In one of the oldest orchards in the district, he said kernel recovery — a measure of how much nut is inside the shell that determines what the grower is paid — had risen from 30 to 35 per cent.

A larger honey bee rests on a white flower beside a small stingless bee.
Native stingless bees (right) are not susceptible to the invasive varroa mite, which can devastate honey bee (left) colonies.(Supplied: Tobias Smith)

Some limits

While it was a success for his farm, Mr Chivers acknowledged there were limits to how much the bees could do in place of traditional honey bee pollination, particularly when it came to breeding and splitting beehives, which is a much slower process in the stingless varieties. .

“We couldn’t go out tomorrow and get enough hives to pollinate all the macadamia orchards or other farms around here, but we have enough now, I believe to pollinate, all our own farms,” ​​he said.

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Categories
Business

Discount registration for historic vehicles in Australia: Everything you need to know

Own a classic or collectible car? It could be eligible for cheaper registration, if you don’t plan on driving it very often.


State and territory governments across Australia have introduced discounted registration for older vehicles – providing they are deemed to be a legitimate classic or collectible car, and not an old bomb.

However, authorities are now grappling with ways to stop motorists from rorting the discount registration scheme.

The intention of the program is to ease some of the financial burden on owners of classic cars, and to preserve historically significant vehicles for future generations.



South Australia is the latest jurisdiction to introduce new eligibility standards for historic vehicle registration, becoming the second state to lower the age of applicable vehicles from 30 years to 25 years.

From 1 July 2022, vehicles in South Australia aged 25 years and older are now eligible for the discounted registration – allowing up to 90 days of driving each year for an annual fee of about $85.

The change brings South Australia’s Conditional Registration Scheme into line with Victoria’s Club Permit Scheme, which allows cars aged 25 years and older to be driven for 90 days annually for less than $200.



In New South Wales, vehicles must be more than 30 years old to be eligible for the Historic Vehicle Scheme, with 60 days of driving available for $96 for the first year, and $47 thereafter.

While Queensland also limits its Special Interest Vehicle Concession Scheme to cars more than 30 years old, those vehicles can only be used for approved events throughout the year, with a cost of about $220 for those on the scheme.

Northern Territory conditions are similar to those in Queensland, with vehicles 30 years and older eligible under the Club Registration Scheme for around $130 annually – but they are only able to participate in special events.



Western Australia’s version, known as Concessions for Classics, is a little more complicated. Vehicles manufactured prior to 1990 can receive a discount of up to 75 per cent off the cost of standard registration, with 90 days total of driving available annually – 60 days for use in special events, and the remaining 30 days for personal use.

Tasmania also limits its Special Interest Vehicle Registration to cars aged 30 years or older, but comes with the caveat that they must be “in exceptional condition inside and out”. For around $200, those on the scheme get 104 days of logged driving each year.

Most of these schemes are only available to authorized car club members. For more information, contact your local state or territory government department.



Ben Zachariah

Ben Zachariah is an experienced writer and motoring journalist from Melbourne, having worked in the automotive industry for more than 15 years. Ben was previously an interstate truck driver and completed his MBA in Finance in early 2021. He is considered an expert in the area of ​​classic car investment.

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Technology

9 Android Features You Should Be Using Every Day

This article is sponsored by Samsung.

Android phones are renowned for their customization and versatility, which means your device boasts a tonne of features, and can do a heap of things, you probably have no idea about.

In order for you to get the most out of your phone, we’ve rounded up nine tricks and features you should know about in order to get the most out of your Android. And if you don’t own an Android and you’re tempted to make the switch over, Samsung has just released the Galaxy S22 range, which offers three models to choose from.

For some of these options, we’ve offered a guide to where to find them on your phone, but models and iOS differ. If our directions aren’t right, try Googling the feature alongside your phone model.

9 Android features you should be using

1.One-handed mode

If you’re working with a Galaxy SS22 Ultra, Google has a custom keyboard you can download and set up as your default — if you hold onto the comma key, it’ll transform into a smaller keyboard that’s much easier to quickly type on.

2.Glide typing

While we’re on the topic of Google’s keyboard, if it offers a faster way to type, where instead of pressing each letter you can drag your finger (or S-Pen, if you have an S22 Ultra) to each letter. The impressive tech will speed up typing considerably.

3.Smart Lock

Any tech expert will tell you how important it is to set up a PIN code or biometric scan to lock your phone and protect your data, but let’s not deny that it’s a little time-consuming. But Androids offer a location-based service where your phone automatically removes the lock if it detects you’re, for example, at home. It can also remove a lock if your Bluetooth is connected to a trusted device, like a car. To set it up on a Samsung, head to Settings, then Security, Advance Settings and choose Smart Lock (other Androids might differ slightly).

4. Add lock PINs to apps

But that’s not all when it comes to customizing your security. We’ve all felt that slight sense of horror when a friend or co-worker borrows your phone to look at something, knowing that a few swipes away could reveal way more information than you’re willing to offer.

App pinning lets you lock one app to your screen until you re-enter your pin, meaning the person with your phone is stuck in whatever app is open when you give them the phone. You’ll need to set it up in advance, but it’s easy to use: open Settings, Security, Advanced Settings then App pinning. Afterwards, you can access it in any app by swiping the bottom of your screen, selecting the app, and voilá! No more anxiety when you’re handing over your phone.

5. Set your own default apps

We all have our preferred web browsers, but the same goes for messenger apps, maps, emailing and more. Androids let you customize your default app for all kinds of tasks — just head to Settings, Apps, then Default Apps. There, you can make WhatsApp or another messenger service your default rather than SMS messages, as well as a heap of other options.

6. Bring back lost notifications

Sometimes, you might swipe away a notification by mistake. Thankfully, Androids keep an easy-to-access log of all your notifications, meaning you can go back if you have a nagging feeling you accidentally archived an email or missed an important text. Searching ‘notification log’ will pull it up, or you can make a shortcut via the Widgets app pretty easily, too.

7.Disable animations

Androids have in-built animations for their menus and apps, like shrinking them as they close. It’s not everyone’s cup of tea, which is why it’s easy to disable: there’s an option to turn them off under the Accessibility list in Settings. You’re welcome!

8. Split your screen and run apps side-by-side

This handy tool lets you split your screen in half, either vertically or horizontally depending on your screen orientation, meaning you can work in two apps at once without flicking back and forth. It’s incredibly useful when you’re working with data from two sources, or just multitasking! It’s particularly great on the S22 Ultra, considering the generous 6.8-inch screen size.

To put it to use, open up the app carousel, and press the circular button on top of the app of your choice — a menu should appear with ‘split top’ as an option. (If it doesn’t pop up, the app’s developers have blocked the option.)

9.Become a developer

This list proves that Android phones are endlessly customizable, but this is really just the tip of the iceberg. All Androids offer a ‘Developer Mode’ that frees up your phone to customization even further, from homepage skins to rendering and debugging. It’s a whole big world that only takes a few clicks to access — it’s slightly different across models, so we’d recommend Googling “developer mode” + your phone.

And there you have it, nine features you should be using on your Android.

This article has been updated since it was first published.