10,000 flames lit at the Tower of London mark 100 years since WWI

10,000 flames were lit in the moat of The Tower of London as part of a memorial installation marking the centenary of WWI.
10,000 flames were lit in the moat of The Tower of London as part of a memorial installation marking the centenary of WWI.

Image: In Pictures via Getty Images

2018%2f10%2f17%2f52%2flauraps.2264fBy Laura Byager

This year marks 100 years since the end of World War I. 

700,000 British soldiers lost their lives in the war, which was fought from 1914 to 1918. The fallen soldiers are being commemorated at The Tower of London in the British capital with a pretty spectacular light show. 

SEE ALSO: War and Peace: 10 Photos Commemorating 100 Years Since WWI

10,000 individual flames are being lit every night around the 950-year-old castle in central London. The flames will be lit from 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. every night until Armistice day on November 11th — the day marking the truce signed in 1918.

The installation, located in the old moat of the fortress, is entitled “Beyond the Deepening Shadow.”

Image: In Pictures via Getty Images

The installation was designed by artist Tom Piper, who previously worked on the 2014 installation “Blood Swept Lands and Seas of Red” — a project which involved 800,000 ceramic flowers being spread throughout the moat surrounding The Tower of London. 

As commemoration of the centenary of the end of the First World War, an installation at the Tower of London, called Beyond the Deepening Shadow: The Tower Remembers fills the moat with thousands of individual flames: a public act of remembrance for those who lost their lives in the Great War, on 4th November 2018 in London, United Kingdom. The tribute will run for eight nights, leading up to and including Armistice Day. (photo by Mike Kemp/In Pictures via Getty Images)

Image: In Pictures via Getty Images

The title of this year’s installation derives from a war sonnet by poet Mary Borden, which reads:

“They do not know that in this shadowed place/

It is your light they see upon my face.”

As commemoration of the centenary of the end of the First World War, an installation at the Tower of London, called Beyond the Deepening Shadow: The Tower Remembers fills the moat with thousands of individual flames: a public act of remembrance for those who lost their lives in the Great War, on 4th November 2018 in London, United Kingdom. The tribute will run for eight nights, leading up to and including Armistice Day. (photo by Mike Kemp/In Pictures via Getty Images)

Image: In Pictures via Getty Images

The torches will be lit for the last time on November 11th.

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ASMR unboxing the iPad Pro, Apple Pencil, and Smart Keyboard Folio

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Alex Humphreys

Apple’s new iPad Pro is the biggest one yet and has got some pretty serious accessories. This week, senior tech correspondent Ray Wong unboxes not only the iPad Pro, but also the new Apple Pencil and iPad Pro Smart Keyboard Folio. Find out which specs we think are worth whispering about. 

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Ariana Grande finally answers the question we’ve all been asking about her ponytail

The science-defying ponytail in action.
The science-defying ponytail in action.

Image: Kevin Mazur/Getty Images for American Expres

2016%2f09%2f16%2fe7%2fhttpsd2mhye01h4nj2n.cloudfront.netmediazgkymde1lzex.0212fBy Rachel Thompson

Ariana Grande is indisputably a legend. But, almost as legendary as Ari herself, is her ponytail.

This is a ponytail which defies gravity and just, like, the laws of what’s scientifically possible with human hair. 

SEE ALSO: Ariana Grande is cool with all her exes in new song ‘thank u, next’

Those of us with long hair will know that trying to master the high pony look is a downright painful ordeal. An ordeal that Grande isn’t entirely unfamiliar with, as it turns out. 

Camila Cabello posed a question to Ari on Sunday that countless others have all been wondering: “ITS SO PAINFUL HOW DO YOU DO IT.” 

well u actually have hair so that prolly makes it a lil more painful ….. nah jk i’m in constant pain always and don’t care at all

— Ariana Grande (@ArianaGrande) November 4, 2018

“well u actually have hair so that prolly makes it a lil more painful….nah jk i’m in constant pain always and don’t care at all,” replied Grande. 

Rather you than me, Ari.

WATCH: You can tame your own robodinos in Horizon Zero Dawn

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iPad Pro (2018) review: Apple reinvents the tablet… again

Every product here is independently selected by Mashable journalists. If you buy something featured, we may earn an affiliate commission which helps support our work.

iPad extreme

Apple’s 2018 iPad Pros pack more power than almost anyone will ever need.

by Raymond Wong


Whenever I get a new gadget to review, I try to focus on its standout features and use them to their fullest to get a deeper understanding of the product’s strengths and weaknesses.

With the iPhone XR, it mainly came down to the display and not having a secondary camera, so we shot all the product photos for the review with another iPhone XR to see if I’d miss the iPhone XS’s better screen and more versatile camera (spoiler: no).

For Apple’s new iPad Pros (2018), I did my best to use my 12.9-inch review unit to do everything a customer might use it for — things like drawing, editing video, writing, reading, watching videos, listening to music, playing 3D games, and then trying to do as many of these things simultaneously like you might on a laptop or desktop computer.

How much of a “real” computer experience can you get with the new iPad Pros is what I wanted to know. Can it finally replace a laptop the way a Surface Pro can? The answer: Maybe, kinda, sorta.

There’s no question the new iPad Pros, with their spankin’ boxier design and slimmer bezels, are beautiful slabs of glass; Face ID is awesome, they’re even more powerful than any iOS device or competing tablets, and they can do some seriously incredible things with the right apps.

But the tablets are hampered by the same limitations of previous iPads (Pro or not): iOS on an iPad still isn’t as robust for general work as a MacBook running macOS. That doesn’t, however, mean the iPad Pro’s strengths aren’t better than its weaknesses, though.

iPad Pro (2018)

$799 (starting for 11-inch) and $999 (starting for 12.9-inch)

The Good

  • Gorgeous design with slim bezels
  • Spectacular display
  • All-day battery life
  • Insane performance
  • Has a USB-C port!

The Bad

  • Really pricey
  • No headphone jack
  • Rear cameras are worse than previous gen
  • Accessories sold separately
  • iOS 12 needs better multitasking

The Bottom Line

Apple’s iPad Pros (2018) are such powerful mobile computers, you’ll need to change the way you work to truly get the most out of them. But the thing is, you’ll want to.

Cool Factor4

Learning Curve5

Performance5

Bang for the Buck4

You can multitask with features like opening two or three apps at the same time, but with the way they’re designed to work, it’s slower than a traditional windowed-app experience on a Mac or PC. I love having a touchscreen to tap and scroll, but I long for a mouse when I want more precision when I’m doing things like scrubbing through a timeline in a video editing app.

And as vastly improved as the new Apple Pencil is with its ability to magnetically clip onto the iPad Pro and wirelessly charge it, and as great as the Smart Keyboard Folio’s two angle positions are, they cost extra, and they’re not necessarily always a better substitute for a tried and true keyboard (with good key travel) and responsive trackpad.

For certain types of creative professionals who will relish the iPad Pro’s desktop-class performance, the iPad Pros paired with an Apple Pencil are well worth the high price tag — the 11-inch starts at $799 and the 12.9-inch starts at $999, respectively, without any accessories — to unlock a new kind of creative and mobile productivity.

The new iPad Pro inspired me to want to do more, to make more, to “Think Different” just like the original Mac did when I sat down in front of its all-in-one design, boxy mouse, and drew in MacPaint for the very first time.

But if you’re just planning to use the iPad Pro to watch videos, browse social media, or play light games like Candy Crush, its potential will be wasted, and any older or cheaper iPad or cheaper brand of tablet will do. 

You should only get a new iPad Pro if you’re gonna be pushing its power. Otherwise it’s like getting a sports car and never driving faster than 35 mph — people will ooh and ahh at your shiny new thing, but you’ll return home feeling empty every time.

All-new design and Liquid Retina display

Not since the iPad Air has the iPad received such a major design overhaul that it changes everything about Apple’s tablet. From the second I touched the new iPad Pros right after their announcement, I knew this was the iPad’s very own iPhone X moment.

On the 11-inch iPad Pro, Apple’s increased the display size (up from 10.5 inches) while maintaining virtually the same footprint as the old model. The iPad Pro I’ve been testing, the 12.9-inch one, is the tablet that feels the most tangibly new.

The all new aluminum body is a cross between an iPhone 5 and the antenna bands from the iPhone 6.

Dustin Drankoski/Mashable

The bezels are slim as the 11-inch and equal on all four sides, but it’s so much easier to handle in your hands. Without a huge “forehead” and “chin” bezels, the 12.9-inch no longer feels like a breakfast tray when you grab it in landscape. In portrait mode, the side bezels are still a reasonable thickness for your thumbs comfortably to rest on.

Both iPad Pros are thinner — the thinnest iOS devices ever — at 0.23 inches (5.9mm) thick, but there’s no flex to them at all. I tried bending my review unit with a moderate amount of pressure and it remained rigid.

The quad speakers are smaller, but louder and clearer.

Dustin Drankoski/Mashable

The buttons are flatter, but no less tactile.

Dustin Drankoski/Mashable

The 11-inch weighs the same 1.03 pounds as the 10.5-inch iPad Pro, but the 12.9-inch model is 0.10 pounds lighter. It’s not something you should notice, but psychologically because the whole device is smaller and thinner it somehow seems much lighter than it really is.

In space gray (there’s no other color for these new iPad Pros), the tablets and their flat sides look like powerful work displays — not your typical lean-back device for binging Netflix. Combined with the rounded corners of the Liquid Retina display, something Apple tells me was developed first for the iPad Pros but launched with the iPhone XR first, the modern industrial design is both futuristic yet familiar.

The corners of the display are now rounded off to match the curvature of the metal body.

Dustin Drankoski/Mashable

The display itself is arguably Apple’s best LCD in a device ever, even better than the iPhone XR’s screen in my opinion. While it lacks any kind of 3D Touch pressure sensitivity or Haptic Touch vibrational feedback, the Liquid Retina display is still stunning from all viewing angles. Not to mention, it’s really bright, the colors are rich, and the resolution (2,732 x 2,048) is beyond sharp. Its ProMotion feature, which ramps the display refresh rate from 24Hz (for things like reading) all the way up to 120Hz (for things like scrolling and gaming) is a feature of the iPad Pros that I wish the iPhones had.

Beautiful as the screens are, Apple could have went further. The new iPad Pro displays don’t support HDR and as good as the LCD is, it’s no OLED. It’s not a deal-breaker by any means, but whenever I watched Netflix videos with letterboxing (the black bars above and below the content), I cried a little inside that the screen wasn’t OLED so that the bars would be as black as the bezels instead of dark gray.

An OLED display with HDR support would have driven up the price even more, but it would have made the heftier price tag more justifiable.

The TrueDepth camera system enables Face ID.

Dustin Drankoski/Mashable

The rest of the iPad Pro is pure Apple refinement. The buttons are flatter, but they’re no less tactile. The quad speakers are physically smaller, but they’re actually a little bit louder and producer wider and clearer sound. There’s no headphone jack (like you didn’t see that coming?) and I don’t really mind since AirPods are so, so good and good wireless headphones can be in any price range from $25-$500. If you’re not down with wireless, grab a USB-C-to-headphone-jack dongle from Apple for $9.

Tucked into the top bezel (in portrait mode) is a TrueDepth camera system. Just like on iPhone X, XS, XS Max, and XR, the camera system houses the front-facing FaceTime camera, infrared camera, dot projector, flood illuminators, and other sensors like the proximity and ambient light sensors, and a microphone.

It’s super advanced camera tech, but here’s what you need to know: It supports Face ID in any orientation (portrait, landscape, and even some angles in between), it enables Animoji and Memoji (also good for using these during FaceTime video calls), and it takes selfies (more on that later).

Animoji and Memoji

Raymond Wong/Mashable

Setting up Face ID

Raymond Wong/Mashable

It’s mighty impressive Apple was able to get Face ID to work in any orientation and equally baffling why the iPhone X, XS, and XR can’t unlock in any orientation other than portrait. It’s not perfect — I still got some Face ID unlock fails at some angles or if my hand was covering the TrueDepth camera system (iOS warns you if you’re blocking it) — but mostly it successfully worked more times than on my iPhone XS.

The luddites will bemoan the loss of Touch ID (even though it’s inaccurate and false that it’s less secure than Face ID), but I didn’t miss it one bit. I’ve moved on to Face ID and only those who have never used it will never understand how much better it is for things like unlocking the device, authenticating Apple Pay purchases, and entering saved passwords.

Goodbye Lightning, and hello USB-C!

Dustin Drankoski/Mashable

The biggest change besides the design and Face ID is the USB-C port. Yes, my friend, Apple has killed the Lightning port on an iOS device for the first time.

Switching from Lightning to USB-C means all of your existing cables won’t work and you’ll have to buy new ones if you don’t already own some, but the advantages of the universal port are worth the swap.

For one, the new iPad Pros can charge using the same USB-C cable and power adapter as the ones that come with any of Apple’s MacBooks (that include the MacBook, MacBook Pros, and the new MacBook Air). Hurray for less crap to travel with!

Another reason USB-C’s more versatile than Lightning: It’s easier to connect the iPad Pros to an external monitor (up to 5K resolution) and to accessories like a DSLR camera. Just by changing the port, Apple’s essentially made the iPad Pros more like a laptop computer than previous iPads have ever been.

As much as I hate dongles, it’s so great to not have to buy a special Lightning-to-USB dongle to connect to download photos from my SD cards directly to the Photos app. I used the same accessories I use for my 12-inch MacBook: an SD card reader plugged into a USB-A-to-USB-C adapter that came with an old Pixel phone, and voilà, downloaded all my photos without having to spend another penny.

Not to mention, with a USB-C-to-Lightning cable, the new iPad Pro’s have USB-PD (power delivery) and can charge another device like an iPhone at 7.5 watts. I mean, bumming a charge off an iPad Pro is a good reason to choose an iPad Pro to bring with you on a flight instead of a MacBook.

The possibilities with USB-C are endless… if Apple builds around it. Right now, crucial accessories that would make the iPad Pros more computer-like such as hard drives and USB flash drives do nothing when you plug them into the tablets. With no Finder or proper file system, there’s just no way to read the files on these storage devices.

It really seems like a no-brainer for the Files app to be able to do this and I’m praying Apple adds support for external storage drives in an upcoming iOS 12 update or iOS 13.

APPLE PENCIL + SMART KEYBOARD

The worst thing about tablets designed as laptop replacements is their hidden costs. As if the tablet itself isn’t already expensive enough, the accessories — essentials to get the most out of it — cost extra and add to the price.

For the iPad Pros, the extra costs are for the Apple Pencil and Smart Keyboard Folio. The second-generation Apple Pencil has been redesigned with several improvements and as a result costs $129 ($30 more than the original).

Whether you agree the updates are worth another $30 is your decision, but I think they are. Would I have preferred the same $100 price? Of course I would have since the Pencil’s already pricey enough, but hear me out.

The new Apple Pencil fixes all the things that were wrong with the first one.

Dustin Drankoski/Mashable

With the new Apple Pencil, Apple’s addressed two of the original’s chief complaints: storing it and charging it. The new Pencil has a matte finish that’s not easier to hold in your fingers especially if they’re sweaty. New is a flat side that’s good for two things: not rolling off the table (yes!) and magnetically attaching to the side of the iPad Pro.

Magnetically clipping it to the iPad Pro also connects the new Pencil and wireless charges it at the same time. In a briefing for the new iPad Pros, Apple showed me a gutted version of the new Pencil and the tightly-packed magnets and components within the slim writing and drawing instrument. It’s a marvelous engineering feat no doubt.

The tip on the new Pencil’s just as precise as the old Pencil.

Dustin Drankoski/Mashable

Clip the Pencil onto the iPad Pro and it wirelessly charges.

Dustin Drankoski/Mashable

The new Apple Pencil also supports gesture controls. For example, if you’re doodling in the Notes app, you can double-tap on the side of the pencil and it’ll switch from ink to the eraser (or change it to toggle between current and last tool used, or show the color palette). Other apps can customize the tap gesture to whatever they want. In a demo at the iPad Pro’s announcement, we saw Photoshop use it to zoom in on an image. It’s a useful addition and I really hope developers get fun with it like maybe use for gaming or something.

Beyond these changes, the new Apple Pencil’s the same responsive stylus as the previous one. The tip’s pinpoint precise and there’s virtually no lag when dragging it across the iPad Pro’s screen.

Whether it’s drawing (fun fact: all of the animations in this review were drawn by Mashable’s talented senior illustrator Bob Al-Greene using the new iPad Pro, Apple Pencil, and Procreate app) or splitting video clips in Adobe Premiere Rush CC or iMovie, the Apple Pencil’s so versatile for creating things on the iPad Pros it’s practically a must-buy accessory.

There is one bad piece of news: The first-gen Apple Pencil doesn’t work with the new iPad Pros and the new Apple Pencil won’t work with older iPad Pros.

The keyboard’s gonna cost ya extra.

Dustin Drankoski/Mashable

The other must-have accessory that makes the iPad Pro more like a laptop is the Smart Keyboard Folio ($179 for the 11-inch and $199 for the 12.9-inch).

The keyboard’s mostly the same with the same liquid-resistant covered keys. So if you didn’t like the previous Smart Keyboard you probably won’t like the new ones. Me? I like that the keyboards have more travel than the “butterfly switch” keyboards in all of the MacBooks. I wish the Keyboard Folio’s keys were backlit, but I can touch type so isn’t a huge biggie.

I do have to credit Apple for improving “lapability”. Compared to the previous Smart Keyboard, the new one has two angles to position the iPad Pro and makes for more comfortable viewing angles with the set on your lap or on a table.

Now with protection on the backside.

Dustin Drankoski/Mashable

I also like that the Keyboard Folio protects the entire backside and magnetically clicks into place on the iPad Pro using over 100 magnets embedded into the tablet’s aluminum backside.

Apple’s keyboard is good, but I found myself wishing it had a trackpad like on the Surface Pro’s Touch Keyboard. I know you can touch the iPad’s screen and maybe Apple thinks the Pencil is a good enough mouse replacement, but’s easier to have a cursor input at keyboard level instead of having to reach up and tap with a finger, or the Pencil, or use a two-finger gesture on the screen to call up a cursor when I’m doing things like typing thousands of words (like this review which I wrote about a third on an iPad Pro before going back to my MacBook Pro because it was easier to multitask).

I don’t even know where to begin with the new iPad Pro’s performance. The A12X Bionic chip powering the tablets is such a monster and so far ahead of any other competing mobile chip that it’s perhaps time to stop classifying it as mobile silicon.

When the original iPad Pro launched in 2015 with A9X chip, Apple touted its power as comparable to desktop performance and our own tests confirmed the speed.

Three years later, the new iPad Pros take performance to another level. The 7-nanometer A12X Bionic’s based on the A12 Bionic inside of the iPhone XS, XS Max, and XR and though they’re similar, the A12X Bionic is considerably more powerful thanks to its 8-core design versus the 6-cores in A12 Bionic.

Apple says the chip is up to 35 percent faster on single-core and up to 90 percent faster on multi-core processes. I broke out the reliable Geekbench 4 to test both claims.

It may be thin, but the iPad Pro is one powerful and fast computer.

Dustin Drankoski/Mashable

Using the average of three CPU tests, the new iPad Pro scored 5,027 on single-core and 18,050 on multi-core compared to the 2017 iPad Pro’s 3,964 single-core and 9,529 multi-core scores. That makes the new iPad Pros 27 percent faster on single-core and 89 percent faster on multi-core — all within Apple’s claims.

As I’ve said over and over again, synthetic benchmarks like these CPU scores give you an idea of where the new iPads pro rank in comparison to other devices. But what you really want to know is what kind of tangible performance you can get from such power and will it actually make a difference in your work.

I can’t speak for every kind of person’s needs, but I can tell you editing video on the go is not easy. Ask any video producer and they’ll recommend using a beefy laptop with a discrete graphics processor, especially if you’re crunching 4K video files, and rendering lots of transitions and effects, etc.

The more powerful your CPU and GPU, the faster videos will render and export. So I put the iPad Pro’s to the task.

Using Adobe Premiere Rush CC, I created a 3-minute long project file consisting of five 4K video clips (taken with an iPhone XR for our XR review), tossed in a title at the front and a “Subscribe” card at the end, added three video clip transitions (two dissolves and one dip-to-white), and color-graded two clips each with one filter preset.

The entire project weighed in at 179MB and although I had hoped to export the video in 4K, the highest settings you can export in Rush CC on mobile is 1080p at 30 fps. Since the videos were shot at 24 fps, I selected settings for 1080p and 24 fps, and then hit the export button.

I did this on multiples iOS devices running iOS 12.1 and took the average of three exports tests and here’s what I got (don’t worry, all devices were charged to 100 percent and remained plugged in to prevent any kind of performance throttling from depleted battery health:

  • 12.9-inch iPad Pro (2018): 54 seconds
  • 10.5-inch iPad Pro (2017): 1 minute and 24 seconds
  • 9.7-inch iPad Air 2 (2014): 7 minutes and 18 seconds
  • iPhone X (2017): 1 minute and 56 seconds
  • iPhone XS (2018): 1 minute and 13 seconds

I also did the export test on my MacBook running the newest version of macOS Mojave and a Surface Pro running the latest version of Windows 10 Pro:

  • 12-inch MacBook (2015) with 8GB of RAM: 2 minutes and 1 second
  • Surface Pro (2017) with GHz + 8GB of RAM: 8 minutes and 8 seconds

Breaking down the numbers, the new iPad Pro exported the video 56 percent faster than last-gen iPad Pro, and 711 percent faster than a four-year-old iPad Air 2, and 115 percent faster than the iPhone X.

The performance gap is smaller compared to the iPhone XS — the new iPad Pro exported the video 35 percent faster — but still speedier. The time saved from waiting for an export to be finished is time that can be put towards uploading or doing something else.

Even more nuts is the iPad Pro’s performance compared to laptops. It exported the video 124 percent faster than my 2015 12-inch MacBook and 804 percent faster than a 2017 Surface Pro.

These are preliminary performance tests, too. It’s up to developers to optimize their apps to tap into the A12X Bionic’s insane power so it’s very possible better code could mean even faster performance.

Many of the apps I tested such as Rush CC, Lightroom CC, Procreate, and others weren’t optimized for the the iPad Pro’s screen resolution (you’ll know because they don’t fill out the entire display), but I expect them to be updated on the day of the tablets’ release or shortly after.

The A12X Bionic’s raw power makes everything on iOS (and I mean everything) feel faster. Beautiful 3D games like Asphalt 9 and Fortnite run smooth and rarely with any framerate issues. It’s very telling when Fortnite at “high” graphics settings is playable at 30 fps, but a 2017 top-of-the-line 2017 15-inch MacBook Pro with discrete graphics can barely load it without lag.

Battery life is also as excellent as on previous iPads. Apple advertises “up to 10 hours” for mixed usage and I got just about exactly that for reading, playing some games, watchings lots of YouTube and Netflix, and typing out some of this review. More intensive apps like Rush CC and iMovie will drain your battery quicker, so keep that in mind. But even still, I still got around 7-8 hours while working with pro-level apps.

Swipe up on the home bar to bring up the multi-tasker.

Dustin Drankoski/Mashable

iOS 12 on iPad Pro is, well… iOS 12. With iOS 11, Apple gave the iPad Pros a much-needed productivity boost that better used the larger displays. Features like Slide Over, which lets you open a third app on top of two split-screen apps, drag-and-drop, a dock that holds more apps, screenshot annotations in Notes, and the Files app narrowed the gap between an iPad Pro and, say, a Surface Pro or a Chromebook, but not by a whole lot.

While there are a whole bunch of new features in iOS 12 (see our full review here), most of them are available on both iPhone and iOS with very few of them being iPad-only. It’s nice to see the Stocks and Voice Memos app finally on the iPad, and the improved versions of Apple News, Apple Books (formerly iBooks), and Apple Music present on iPad, but I’d love to see Apple rethink not just these apps, but iOS as a whole for the iPad.

Multi-tasking is the same as on iOS 11 and could use an update.

Dustin Drankoski/Mashable

Looking for the Control Center? It’s now a swipe down from the top right.

Dustin Drankoski/Mashable

Sure, iOS 12 uses the new gestures first introduced with the iPhone X (short swipe from the Home bar to return to the homescreen, swipe up towards the middle to bring up all your recent apps, and swipe up from the top left and right corners to bring down notifications and the Control Center), all of which are very easy to get used to, but fundamental 2-in-1 laptop things like cursor support, or keyboard shortcuts, or real windowed-apps are either nonexistent or still not yet available in many apps.

I’m aware that iOS is an entirely different way of doing things compared to macOS and Windows 10 and I don’t know what’s the best solution to make it more like these desktop operating systems without compromising its lightness. All I know is the more Apple keeps cramming in so much power into the iPad Pro, the more I wish it could do more macOS things.

iOS 13’s still a year’s out, but I strongly feel Apple needs to revamp iOS for the iPad Pro to really make the hardware more compelling.

Apple took out optical image stabilization, but it’s not like you’re a monster and take pics with an iPad camera, right?

Dustin Drankoski/Mashable

No gadget review is complete without any kind of camera tests. An iPad’s no iPhone, which means you’re not gonna be using it to take many photos or videos.

So it’s not really disappointing to see the iPad Pro’s get somewhat of a camera downgrade. The rear camera’s still a 12-megapixel shooter, but Apple’s changed it from a six-element lens to a five-element lens and removed optical image stabilization.

I was upset at first — you always want a better camera in every new product — but after hearing Apple’s explanation and thinking about the number of times I’ve used my iPads for shooting photos, I understood the change.

One: Most people don’t use their iPad cameras and when they do, it’s mostly for things like taking photos of notes or documents or scanning QR codes. And two: Because the iPad Pro is so thin and the position of the camera now needs to sit behind the display (the camera on the previous-gen iPad Pros sat in the space within the top bezel), Apple had to redesign the camera to fit in the aluminum case.

If you’re scanning documents, then no big loss. But if you’re in the minority and do shoot with your iPad, you’re gonna notice some loss in sharpness from shaky hands.

iPad Pro (2018)

Raymond Wong/Mashable

iPad Pro (2017)

Raymond Wong/Mashable

On the bright side (pun intended), the iPad Pro cameras take photos with Smart HDR, which increases the dynamic range and brings out the shadows and highlights.

iPad Pro (2018)

Raymond Wong/Mashable

iPad Pro (2017)

Raymond Wong/Mashable

Selfies, on the other hand, get a couple more options. Here’s how a regular selfie compares:

iPad Pro (2018)

Raymond Wong/Mashable

iPad Pro (2017)

Raymond Wong/Mashable

And here’s Portrait mode and the four different studio lighting effects:

Portrait mode

Raymond Wong/Mashable

Studio Light

Raymond Wong/Mashable

Contour Light

Raymond Wong/Mashable

Stage Light

Raymond Wong/Mashable

Stage Light Mono

Raymond Wong/Mashable

Portrait mode is only available on the front-facing camera. Why can’t the iPad Pro’s single-rear camera shoot portrait mode shots using the Neural Engine and machine learning to isolate backgrounds like on the iPhone XR? Apple wouldn’t say or even tell me if it’s something that could be added later in a software update.

And if you’re shooting video (more power to you if you wanna be the next Martin Scorsese shooting with a tablet), the iPad Pros shoot 4K at 30 or 60 fps. Previous iPads could only record at 30 fps.

Enabling tomorrow’s creators and creations

Using the the 12.9-inch iPad Pro for the last week, I kept asking myself: who are these powerful new tablets for?

And I kept coming back to the creative professional — the niche user who is willing to change the way they’re used to doing things on a laptop or desktop — and not the mainstream user. You can of course buy an iPad Pro because maybe you have to have the latest and greatest Apple device and it’ll be a great consumption tablet, but you wouldn’t be getting your money’s worth.

It’s challenging to convince people who have already established a way of working to create with new tools and in a different way. It definitely felt weird at first for me to edit a video by essentially “drawing” with it using an Apple Pencil with the iPad Pro laid flat on a table instead of on a display parallel to my face. But after a few hours doing things in this new way, it felt natural. Working on a video felt new and the lightbulbs were going off in my head like they haven’t in ages.

This physical closeness with digital content creation is a paradigm shift from mouse and keyboard. On a laptop or computer, you click on things and it feels mechanical and inhuman. With an iPad Pro, you’re touching the glass with your fingers, you’re slicing clips or drawing lines with the Pencil, and you’re feeling the words as you type them out on a keyboard and touching them on the screen when you fix typos.

“The new iPad Pros are only expensive if you buy one and don’t create with things with it.”

It’s such an intimate creation process that it made me realize that Apple’s not merely trying to change my or your old habits. Apple’s not trying to make the iPad Pro a laptop replacement because the device isn’t one. It’s trying to do something bigger: invent a new way of creating for a new generation that is not bound to the old computing laws of clicking a mouse.

For tomorrow’s creators, creating on iPad Pros will be normal. The iPad Pros already have the power to make and design the rich and high-quality visual and audio content for tomorrow. The device, instruments, and apps are no different than when creators shifted from analog to digital with the advent of personal computers decades ago.

Just like with the original Mac, the new iPad Pros are made for creators will gladly embrace the costs because it makes things so much easier and faster. The new iPad Pros are only expensive if you buy one and don’t create things with it. Otherwise, they’re a steal for anyone who wants the future, today.

  • Senior Tech Correspondent

    Raymond Wong

  • Tech Editor

    Pete Pachal

  • Photography

    Dustin Drankoski

  • Illustrations

    Bob Al-Greene

  • Video producers

    Alex Humphreys, Ray White, and Raymond Wong

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India: Delhi pollution level deteriorates to ‘hazardous’ category

New Delhi, India – A blanket of smog greeted residents of New Delhi on Monday as air quality deteriorated sharply overnight in India‘s capital, triggering warnings that even healthy people were at risk of health problems.

The air quality index, that measures PM 2.5 tiny particulate matter that reaches deep into the lungs, more than doubled within a few hours to 707 on Monday morning at Mandir Marg, the worst affected area in the city, pollution monitoring agency AQICN data revealed.

This is double the mark of 300 that authorities deem as hazardous.

Suggestion to friends in Delhi. Today the air is incredibly toxic. Please remain indoors, wear a mask and install a filter if you can. Please ask elders to avoid outside exposure through morning walks. Take care.

— Apar Gupta (@apargupta84) November 5, 2018

The US embassy in New Delhi said its air pollution index had on Monday morning breached the “hazardous” level upper limit of 500, at which it stops measuring levels of PM2.5.

New Delhi, with a population of 16 million, ranks among the world’s most polluted cities.

The air quality in the Indian capital usually worsens at this time of year when crops burned in nearby states envelops the city. It is expected to worsen with smoke from firecrackers celebrating Diwali, the festival of lights, on November 7.

An Indian man sells face masks at the roadside amid heavy smog in New Delhi [Nasir Kachroo/NurPhoto/Getty Images]

Doctors in New Delhi are sounding the alarm, warning people to avoid outdoor exertion. 

“Such levels of pollution will shorten your lifespan. Today, we are talking of levels over 600, so 60 times over the normal level,” Dr Krishan Kumar Aggarwal, president of the Heart Care Foundation of India, told Al Jazeera.

“Everybody, including healthy people are impacted now. All sudden deaths and acute heart attacks during this period in the city should be linked to pollution.” 

“PM 10 is harming our lungs and PM 2.5 and PM 1 is attacking every organ of our bodies,” the cardiologist warned.

“With an air purifier and an air conditioner indoors, still registering PM 2.5 levels over 300, so no place to turn to. It is an extreme situation. Why is there no emergency action from authorities? They mobilised the army when there was a flood in Kerala. Today, there is a flood in Delhi, a flood of pollution. This is a natural disaster of equal gravity,” he added.

While Delhi chokes, @narendramodi TL would make you think there’s an alternate reality that exists in the rarified air of 7 Lok Kalyan Marg – not a word fm the PM about the toxic fumes Delhi is inhaling

There’s a pollution crisis again. And its unforgivable – Mr. Prime Minister.

— barkha deva (@barkhad) November 5, 2018

A latest World Health Organization (WHO) report says India tops a list of countries that recorded high numbers of child deaths linked to air pollution in 2016.

At least 14 of the 20 most polluted cities of the world are in India, according to the WHO.

A senior environmental official said last week that the South Asian country may halt the use of private vehicles in New Delhi if air pollution gets worse.

New Delhi’s main pollutants are missions from vehicles and thermal power stations, as well as construction dust. Crop burning and industrial pollution from adjoining states also add to the bad air in New Delhi, say experts.

According to the Haryana Pollution Control Board, farmers in northern states like Punjab, Haryana and Rajasthan burn millions of tonnes of crop waste around October every year to clear farmland before sowing the winter crop.

An estimated 35 million tonnes are set afire in Punjab and Haryana every year, which contributes to the haze and smog in New Delhi.

Monday’s worsening air quality is despite some steps being taken to battle pollution since last month.

“This winter we have some advantages. Some pre-emptive actions have been taken in Delhi already. Since October authorities have shut down coal-powered plants, brick kilns and stone crushers and hot-mix plants. If it worsens, emergency action has to be stepped up,” Anumita Roychowdhury from the Centre for Science and Environment, a non-profit organisation, told Al Jazeera.

“This October did not breach severe levels, but November is going to be much tougher. We need disciplined implementation of a comprehensive action plan which has already been notified,” she added.

A policeman wearing a mask to protect himself from pollution in Delhi [Nasir Kachroo/NurPhoto/Getty Images]

Last year, the Supreme Court temporarily banned the sale of firecrackers in and around New Delhi during the festival of Diwali sparking debate over the decision. It also outlawed the sale of luxury diesel vehicles and ordered a tax on trucks entering the city.

This year it declined to order a blanket ban on Diwali firecrackers.

But the grim health warnings are not likely to be heeded by everyone. For some residents of the city like Dilip, a 32-year old cleaner, there is no escape from breathing in the toxic air as he is forced to work outdoors.

“I cough a lot, my eyes are watering, I have had to go to the doctor twice this last week. I know the air is bad. But I can’t stay indoors, who will work and earn for me?” he asked.

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‘King of the world’: Trump to ditch D.C. for Paris days after midterms


President Donald Trump waves as he arrives for a meeting with French President Emmanuel Macron at the Elysee Presidential Palace.

Experts predict that President Donald Trump and French President Emmanuel Macron will discuss trade and tariffs, climate change, immigration, and relations with Russia. | Thierry Chesnot/Getty Images

White House

The president’s long-planned visit to France could be a convenient escape from a potential election bruising, and a chance to refocus on his foreign policy agenda.

Even if the Democrats take back the House in this week’s midterm elections, President Donald Trump will still have Paris.

Just three days after Tuesday’s vote, Trump will skip town and fly to France for a military celebration marking the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I. He’ll be joined by his top national security officials, along with First Lady Melania Trump, for a weekend getaway that could also be an escape from bruising election results.

Story Continued Below

It will also be a chance for Trump to refocus on foreign policy after a midterm campaign mostly focused on domestic issues. Trump may meet with Russian President Vladimir Putin, who will also attend the celebration at Paris’s Arc de Triomphe. French President Emmanuel Macron will likely want to discuss fresh U.S. sanctions Trump has slapped on Iran which Paris and other Western European allies strongly oppose.

Two weeks after his return, Trump will head abroad again for a G20 summit in Buenos Aires, where he plans to talk with Chinese leader Xi Jingping amid a burgeoning U.S.-China trade war that has rattled global markets.

Foreign policy experts predict he’ll use his bully pulpit to shift the conversation to foreign policy and national security, especially if Republicans lose the House as many Republicans expect and suffer loses at the state level. This will give the chance to remind the world he’s commander-in-chief regardless of any election results.

”He’ll blame Paul Ryan, congratulate Mitch McConnell, and get on an airplane [to Paris] and still say: ‘I’m king of the world.’ Of course, elections being so volatile, if he loses both houses, his ability to lead on the world stage will be vastly circumscribed,” said Wendy Sherman, a former senior State Department official under President Obama.

Foreign policy has often been a refuge for presidents dealing with scandal or a hostile Congress. Presidents have wide authority to direct diplomacy and the military without Congressional approval. Should Democrats win the House, quashing hopes for new GOP legislation, Trump could put more energy into projects like nuclear talks with North Korea and his “maximum pressure” campaign against Iran.

First will come a reunion with Macron, last seen embracing Trump personally during an April visit to the White House before a speech to Congress denouncing Trump-style politics.

Experts predict that Trump and Macron will discuss trade and tariffs, climate change, immigration, and relations with Russia. Macron will also likely share his frustration over Trump’s clampdown on Iran, which France fears could lead Tehran to abandon the 2015 Iran nuclear deal in which Paris played a key negotiating role.

Already European allies are trying to circumvent the administration’s new oil sanctions on Iran. On Friday, top officials from France, the European Union, Germany, and the U.K. condemned these new sanctions in a joint statement for failing to deliver results in the same way as the nuclear deal, negotiated under President Obama.

Trump arrives in Europe as the continent struggles with its own massive political shifts – from German chancellor Angela Merkel’s decision to step down in 2021 to a March deadline for Great Britain’s ‘Brexit’ from the European Union to Macron’s slumping approval ratings.

“All of our key partners in Europe are distracted by matters internal to Europe at this point. That is one challenge. But that may suit the president just fine. There will probably be a little less contesting in the areas where he has taken stands opposed to their interests,” said Anthony Blinken, former Deputy Secretary of State and Deputy National Security Adviser under President Obama.

White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders did not respond to a request for comment.

Yet the Paris trip is also the chance for Trump to revel in a pomp-and-circumstance military parade. Trump loved watching the traditional Bastille Day parade in Paris in July 2017, in which thousands of French troops and tanks made their way down the Champs-Élysées.

Trump later told the New York Times in an interview that the celebration was “one of the most beautiful parades I have ever seen,” and he wanted to plan something similar down Pennsylvania Avenue to honor U.S. military veterans — until top officials estimated such an event would cost $90 million.

He scrapped the idea in a Tweet in August, saying he instead looked forward to Paris parade in November.

Administration aides and advisers say Trump derives immense satisfaction from the military trappings of the presidency, such as being surrounded by uniformed personnel, helicopters, and planes.

A grand Parisian ceremony would also provide Trump a mental break from the flood of potential investigations his White House will face if Democrats win the House. That could include everything from Democratic efforts to obtain his tax returns to probes into the ethics of Cabinet officials. Trump’s foreign and trade policies could also come under tough scrutiny.

“If one assumes the House will go Democratic, you will see a lot of activity in the Ways & Means Committee on trade, the budget, and the tariff war. There is bipartisan support for being tough on China, but not bipartisan support for the way the president has gone about it. How we are dealing with China will garner a lot of attention,” Sherman said.

However much Trump might enjoy a foreign getaway after a potentially depressing election, though, he remains deeply unpopular in France and throughout Western Europe. Some Republicans think he should spend more time in the coming months visiting countries — including Poland, Hungary and Italy — that are run by like-minded populists.

“The president’s friends are really in Southern and Central Europe. Those are the places for America to move the ball,” said James Carafano, a former Trump transition official and top foreign policy scholar at the Heritage Foundation.

“Honestly, Europeans are not going to change what they think about Trump,” he added. “If president wanted to move the ball forward, he should be in Warsaw and Budapest, not Paris.”

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Gordon Ramsay’s kids cook for him and his reaction is not what you’d expect

By Rachel Thompson

Gordon Ramsay is probably the scariest person to cook for on the planet. Set aside every kitchen tantrum you’ve seen him throw, though, because his reaction to his kids cooking for him will surprise you. 

For the TV chef’s 50th birthday, his children rustled up a birthday feast that looked fit for a Michelin Star, frankly. His kids, Matilda and Jack, cooked ravioli for the first course. “It looks beautiful. The pasta is so nice and thin,” said Ramsay. “Tilly, it’s beautiful.” 

For the main course, the kids served a filet de boeuf. “Wow, a nice sear on the outside and pink in the middle. The perfect way to eat filet,” said Ramsay. The meal was polished off with a melting chocolate ball, which Ramsay hailed “delicious.”

Praise indeed! 

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Saudi ‘cover-up team’ sent to dispose of Khashoggi body: report

Saudi Arabia deployed a chemist and toxicology expert to Istanbul after the murder of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi in an attempt to cover up evidence of the killing, according to a Turkish newspaper.

Pro-government daily Sabah reported on Monday that Saudi Arabia sent an 11-member “cover-up team” to Istanbul on October 11, nine days after the Washington Post contributor vanished after entering the Saudi consulate to obtain paperwork for his marriage.

The paper said chemist Ahmad Abdulaziz al-Janobi and toxicology expert Khaled Yahya al-Zahrani were among “the so-called investigative team”, which visited the consulate every day until October 17, before leaving Turkey on October 20.

The newest details may explain why Saudi Arabia did not allow Turkish police to search the consulate until October 15.

Turkish authorities have released gruesome details of a killing that President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has said was a targeted hit.

Missing body

While Riyadh officials have admitted the murder was planned, they have so far declined to release details of the whereabouts of the 59-year-old journalist’s missing body.

Turkey‘s chief prosecutor said last week that Khashoggi was strangled as soon as he entered the consulate and also confirmed the body was dismembered.

Yasin Aktay, an advisor to Erdogan, hinted in an article published on Friday that the body may even have been dissolved in acid.

Khashoggi’s body parts transported in suitcases: Report

In an editorial published in The Washington Post, Erdogan accused authorities in Riyadh of refusing to answer key questions about the murder, despite their arrest of 18 suspects a fortnight ago.

He said the order to murder the journalist came from “the highest levels” of the Saudi government, adding that he did “not believe for a second” that King Salman was to blame.

But he pointedly failed to absolve Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman of responsibility for unleashing a “death squad” against the outspoken Saudi journalist.

The murder has badly tainted the kingdom’s de facto ruler.

Saudi Attorney General Sheikh Saud al-Mojeb met with Turkish authorities last week in Istanbul but refused to share information from Riyadh’s own investigation, according to Turkish officials.

On Monday, Turkish Vice President Fuad Oktay said that reports of Khashoggi’s body being dissolved in acid needs to be investigated.

Oktay told Turkey’s Anadolu news agency it was now accepted that Khashoggi was targeted in a pre-meditated murder.

“The question now is who gave the orders. This is what we are seeking answers to now,” Oktay said.

“Another question is where the body is… There are reports of [the body] being dissolved with acid now. All of these need to be looked at.”

Khashoggi murder: Awaiting justice

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Following the money: Using tech to tackle corruption in Nigeria

In 2012Nigeria witnessed the worst flood in nearly five decades. Two million people were displaced and around 363 killed. Crops, homes, and entire communities were destroyed. 

The central government swung into action and disbursed around $110m to affected states in October that year. Additional funding flowed from a public-private relief fund and the international community, including Canada, the European Commission, Japan, Norway and Sweden.

Back in Lagos, the team at BudgIT, a civil society organisation founded in 2011, watched closely. In September 2013, it sent a small research team to tour 12 affected states for a period of five months to find out whether the funds released were put to good use. 

“We discovered that these funds went into the wrong hands and people never benefited,” says Uadamen Ilevbaoje, who was part of the team.

Several decades of corruption have slowed progress in Nigeria, which is the largest oil producer in Africa. Public funds allocated for projects and services often go unaccounted for; mismanagement and corruption have fuelled inequality and poverty.

After deadly floods in 2012, BudgIT sent teams to check if donations were reaching the victims [Linus Unah/Al Jazeera]

By the end of May, Nigeria became host to the world’s largest population of people in extreme poverty with some 87 million in crisis, overtaking India’s 73 million.

Across the country, but especially in remote areas, abandoned projects dot the landscape.

Citizens live without basic amenities like roads, housing, schools, potable water, hospitals and sanitation facilities.

In Maito village, in central Nigeria’s Niger state, residents continue to use a dilapidated health centre with a roof covered by bats, despite the National Primary Health Care Development Agency having approved 22 million nairas ($60,600) for a better facility.

In the rural village of Akere, in the southwestern state of Ogun, schoolchildren learn under the shade of a tree and sit on bare floors in overcrowded classrooms, despite funding of $82,000 provided for refurbishment.

According to a UN report, roughly $4.6bn is spent on bribes in Nigeria each year.

The Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission reported that 60 percent of corruption cases in the country take place in procurement.

Poor transparency and accountability have allowed corruption to flourish, and a few civil society groups are trying to change the opaque environment.

Pressuring the government

In June 2014, BudgIT started the Tracka initiative to follow public projects and help communities ask serious questions that would enhance efficiency. 

Tracka staff extract capital projects from the budget and design a pamphlet containing the project title, amount and phone number of public officials for each of the 22 states where it operates.

Armed with these details, tracking officers who have been recruited and trained visit the communities, hold town hall meetings with communities and help them ask government agencies and legislatures to complete projects which have either been abandoned or yet to start.

Tracking officers also take photos and upload them on Twitter and Facebook, adding pressure on government ministries to act transparently.

Through its work, Tracka was able to speed up the construction of a school in Iwoye Ilogbo in Ogun state, a primary healthcare centre in Delta state and boreholes in Edo and Anambra states.

The team at Tracka work on reports submitted by tracking officers [Linus Unah/Al Jazeera]

In addition to Tracka, there is the Public and Private Development Centre (PPDC), which is working to promote citizen participation in governance.

It uses radio and social media to monitor public procurement processes and push for greater access to information on public projects following the passage of the Freedom of Information (FOI) Act in 2011.

“As soon as the FOI Act was passed, we jumped on it and began to use the provisions of the law to advocate and litigate for improved disclosure of public information,” said Nkem Ilo, head of PPDC.

“With more use of the FOI, we began to receive more responses to our requests, which meant the availability of datasets.”

In 2015, using data acquired from procuring entities over the years, PPDC worked with the Premium Times Centre for Investigative Journalism and the School of Media and Communication at the Lagos-based Pan-Atlantic University to develop a web-based platform known as Budeshi, which means “open it” in the Hausa language.

Budeshi links budget and procurement data to public projects in a structured format, opening up publicly funded services for scrutiny.

Citizens can now look up public services by searching for the procuring entity – usually government ministries and agencies – as well as the project title, the state where the initiative is being implemented, or the year, and even pick from a list of contractors.

So far, Budeshi has data on 6,571 contracts in Nigeria from more than 100 public institutions. Budeshi is now fully deployed in Uganda and plans to start the platform in Kenya and Malawi are under way.

Every year, on the International Right to Know Day, September 28,- PPDC ranks government ministries, departments and agencies based on their responses to freedom of information requests mostly on public expenditure; the corporate affairs commission is currently first.

Much of the funding for these organisations comes from institutional and private donors, including the UK Department for International Development, the MacArthur Foundation, Omidyar network, Indigo Trust and National Endowment for Democracy.

These initiatives are the future for a good governance drive and I appreciate they all do in this risky political space.

Olajide Oluwaseun, architect in Lagos.

Hamza Lawal, a tech-savvy activist, started the Follow the Money campaign in June 2012, following the deaths of hundreds of children from lead poisoning in the northern Nigerian state of Zamfara. 

Though several villages had been cleaned up by late 2012, one – Bagega – caught Lawal’s attention because, by January 2013, money released still hadn’t reached the victims.

Using the hashtag #SaveBagega, the campaign was able to get clean-up operations started in the village, helping hundreds of children to receive care. 

In December 2013, Lawal started a full-fledged movement known as Connected Development (CODE) with Follow the Money. With a team of nearly 40 people and community reporters in Nigeria 36 states, CODE’s campaigns are driven by hashtags connecting the name of community and the project that needs to be tracked.

“The idea of using hashtags is to be able to document projects and track them on social media,” said 31-year-old Lawal, now the CEO of CODE, “and this repository would be online so that other young people can learn from it.”

Follow the Money now has over 2,000 members and this year expanded to Kenya and The Gambia. Last year, it won the One Africa award which came with $100,000 to support their work.

The Socio-Economic Rights and Accountability Project (SERAP, meanwhile, which is concerned with promoting transparency and accountability in government, including public expenditure.

Using the Freedom of Information Act, SERAP requests information on contracts awards and has even sued ministries and agencies that refuse to release information. 

Through a partnership with BudgIT, it was able to get the public procurement agency in Lagos to make available the Lagos State Procurement Journal from 2012 to date. 

SERAP has been published several reports on health, education, electricity and water sectors. 

It has also partnered with CODE and the Paradigm Leadership Support Initiative, which was started in 2016 to help citizens track and report development projects in their communities.

Some citizens are happy that things are changing, albeit slowly. 

“Tracka, Udeme and Budeshi are checking public expenditure which over the years have been full of excesses, misappropriation and greed by inflation of contracts,” says Olajide Oluwaseun, an architect in Lagos.

“These initiatives are the future for a good governance drive and I appreciate they all do in this risky political space. We need and must build an alliance, not a political party, an alliance of voices that want and need to be heard.”

Hamzat Lawal of CODE teaches miners in Niger state how to access information on their mobile phones [Courtesy: CODE]

But some challenges remain.

Access to information on public expenditure is not always available upon request. Some ministries, agencies and departments either do not respond to freedom of information requests or completely ignore them. 

In addition, despite the presence of a procurement law passed in 2007 to ensure contractors follow due process, public procurement has been dogged by contract splitting; the use of fake documents by bidders, some of whom have multiple companies; government ministries and agencies collaborating with contractors to siphon money; and, importantly, delays in investigating and prosecuting cases of misappropriation or graft.

“We don’t have a culture of punishing offenders,” says Ike Fayomi-Awodele of the public administration department at Obafemi Awolowo University in Osun state.

To solve this, Uadamen Ilevbaoje, now the project lead of Tracka, believes more awareness is needed. 

“We need more and more sensitisation and awareness. If there is awareness, citizens would ask more questions and politicians would be forced to do the right thing.”

Uadamen Ilevbaoje of Tracka says awareness is needed to encourage Nigerians in rural areas to get involved in monitoring projects [Linus Unah/Al Jazeera]

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Brady and Rodgers May Be the GOAT QBs, but No One Is Better Than Belichick

FOXBOROUGH, MA - NOVEMBER 04:  Head coach Bill Belichick of the New England Patriots looks on before the game against the Green Bay Packers at Gillette Stadium on November 4, 2018 in Foxborough, Massachusetts.  (Photo by Maddie Meyer/Getty Images)

Maddie Meyer/Getty Images

The game was supposed to be about two legendary quarterbacks. Instead, it turned out to be about a singular legendary coach.

The story heading into Sunday night’s showdown between the Patriots and Packers was Tom Brady, the best quarterback of all time, and Aaron Rodgers, the best football player of all time.

But that matchup turned out to be, well, boring. Instead, the most glamorous, sexy and fascinating aspect of the Patriots’ 31-17 win at Foxborough was watching Bill Belichick totally, completely and without mercy dismantle Packers coach Mike McCarthy.

If the coaching matchup was a game, Belichick would have won it, 300-0.

In some ways, it’s unfair to expect McCarthy to match Belichick. Few coaches can. Truly, the only person who’s ever flat outcoached Belichick was Tom Coughlin in two Super Bowls.

But that’s it. Most of the time, almost all of the time, Belichick outperforms his counterpart.

Yet what he did to McCarthy was a coaching ass-whoopin’.

Rodgers and the Packers kept it close. A bullet he threw to tight end Jimmy Graham tied the score at 17 in the third quarter. Green Bay’s defense was able to confuse Brady for part of the game.

Aaron Rodgers did his best to keep the Packers close to the Patriots in Week 9, but ultimately New England's pressure and schemes took control of the game.

Aaron Rodgers did his best to keep the Packers close to the Patriots in Week 9, but ultimately New England’s pressure and schemes took control of the game.Maddie Meyer/Getty Images

The problem for Rodgers was that while he was competing in a bland, uncreative offense of McCarthy’s apparent design, he also was trying to overcome an organization built on extreme competence and innovation.

The Patriots were playing without tight end Rob Gronkowski (who’s dealing with a back injury) and their best running back in Sony Michel (who’s still recovering from a knee injury suffered a couple of weeks back). Most coaches (in fact, almost all of them) would run a conservative offense. That is what McCarthy would do.

Not Belichick.

The Pats offense opened transwarp fast, scoring on a drive that was 10 plays long but lasted just over three minutes.

Later, the Patriots ran a flea-flicker from James White back to Brady, who threw it 33 yards to Julian Edelman, setting up a field goal early in the second quarter.

NFL @NFL

.@Patriots’ Flea Flicker executed to perfection. 💯 #GoPats

📺: #GBvsNE on NBC https://t.co/HRZAWWlOnz

When White had to later leave the game because of an injury, Belichick did some of his best work. The only other running back on the roster was Kenjon Barner. So Belichick, as he’s done a few times before this season, put wide receiver Cordarrelle Patterson at running back. He scored from five yards out (en route to a 61-yard night on the ground) to give New England a 17-10 lead heading into halftime.

The Patriots were aggressive on defense as well. They were constantly in Rodgers’ face, and while he wasn’t sacked in the first half, he was pressured on multiple occasions. In the second half, the Pats finally got to Rodgers, sacking him once.

They weren’t done. Early in the fourth quarter with the game tied at 17, Brady threw to Edelman, who threw across the field to White, who rumbled for 37 yards to put Brady and Co. at the Packers’ 2-yard line.

Aggression wins in football. Not just in terms of physicality but in play-calling, too. And on Sunday, the Patriots had it; the Packers, well, if they had any, it wasn’t enough.

New England Patriots @Patriots

DOUBLE PASS ALERT‼

JULES ➡ JAMES

@Edelman11 | @SweetFeet_White | #GBvsNE https://t.co/ReqQcOZwSG

Green Bay suffers from a syndrome we can call GOAT Overreliance Syndrome. McCarthy has relied on Rodgers making so many plays, over so many seasons, that he hasn’t bothered to produce schemes that help Rodgers.

The Rams, the Saints, the Chiefs, the Patriots—all possess coaches who scheme receivers open, not just hope they can out-quick the secondary. Not McCarthy. He’s caught the GOAT Overreliance Syndrome and can’t shake it. 

It’s a shame, really, as it took away from a duel of two of the NFL‘s greatest players, one built on mutual admiration. All week leading into the game, Brady and Rodgers talked about that fondness openly rather than trying to downplay it.

Once, at Packers training camp not long ago, Rodgers was sitting at his locker, talking football, when the subject of Brady arose. Rodgers’ face suddenly lit up. He saw Brady as one of the prototypes for the position. He was, Rodgers made it clear to me that day, what every quarterback aspired to be. Including Rodgers.

Rodgers and Tom Brady made no secret of the fact they admire each other's games in the week leading up to their Sunday night matchup.

Rodgers and Tom Brady made no secret of the fact they admire each other’s games in the week leading up to their Sunday night matchup.Steven Senne/Associated Press/Associated Press

Rodgers is that sort of guy now. It’s too bad there wasn’t much to admire from his sideline.

The Packers and Patriots aren’t scheduled to play again until the year 2022. That means that unless the two teams meet in the Super Bowl this year, Sunday likely was the last time we’ll see Brady and Rodgers play each other.

So enjoy this moment.

And remember that no matter how good these two QBs are, there may be only one coach who could overshadow them, and he did just that Sunday night.

Mike Freeman covers the NFL for Bleacher Report. Follow him on Twitter: @mikefreemanNFL.

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