Although Queen built up to their legendary 1985 Live Aid performance at Wembley Stadium over years and years of success and turmoil, the Bohemian Rhapsody cast had to jump right on stage on day one.
Rami Malek, who plays legendary Queen frontman Freddie Mercury in the film, told Jimmy Fallon on Monday night that it was the first point of call for the producers.
“You’re not going to believe this, but one of the greatest rock performances in history, it’s considered maybe the greatest, for some reason our producers thought it would be a good idea to start with that on day one,” Malek told Fallon in an interview.
“But I thought they must have a reason for doing this,” he added. “Because you know, if halfway through we get through this and we suck, they’ll just pull the plug on the whole production, pack it up, and go home, save $60 million and we don’t have to watch this B-rate version of Queen for three months.”
James White should be a household name after he set a Super Bowl record with 14 receptions and scored the game-winning touchdown in overtime less than two years ago against the Atlanta Falcons.
Somehow, he isn’t. The fact he’s so often overlooked—not just as a top running back, but as the New England Patriots’ top offensive threat—is inane.
White goes about his business each and every week and never receives the credit he truly deserves, because everyone outside the organization worries more about others on the roster.
The reason is simple: Tight end Rob Gronkowski is a future Hall of Fame inductee and maybe the best ever to play his position, Josh Gordon presents a truly tantalizing set of skills and Julian Edelman has an already established record as Tom Brady‘s favorite target in crucial situations.
They’re hot rods revving their engines. White, on the other hand, is the Honda Civic that racks up a ton of mileage because it’s so damn dependable.
“James is like that guy that does no wrong,” safety Devin McCourty said, per the Boston Globe‘s Ben Volin. “… For us as a defense, we know when we go out there on Sunday, if James is in there on any capacity, any role, we have complete confidence, even if we don’t know what that is, just because of the type of worker he is and how consistent he is.”
Well, the Patriots played on Monday this week and managed a 25-6 victory over the Buffalo Bills at New Era Field. White once again did what he does even though New England experimented with a different look before utilizing their top back.
Wide receiver Cordarrelle Patterson actually opened the contest in the backfield behind Brady. Patterson carried the ball 10 times—two more times than White—for a measly 38 yards.
When Brady needed a play, though, he knew exactly who to target.
A closer inspection under the hood reveals a little more than a basic engine; it’s the turbo edition. White is an ideal running back for the modern game. He’s not an old workhorse ready to carry the ball 20-30 times per game as he plows his way through defense. Although, he’s capable of getting tough yards when necessary, as seen during the game’s only offensive touchdown, courtesy of Pro Football Focus:
Pro Football Focus @PFF
The Patriots are FINALLY able to get a touchdown with James White breaking through!
His production should be measured by touches, not carries.
White caught 10 passes for 79 yards to go along with eight carries for 15 yards, including the aforementioned one-year touchdown plunge.
“We don’t want to overload him, but at the same time he’s certainly capable of doing a significant amount for our football team in a lot of different ways,” head coach Bill Belichick said. “So, we try to find a way for him to be productive without putting it all on his shoulders.”
The 26-year-old back falls into a category reserved for the Los Angeles Rams’ Todd Gurley, Carolina Panthers’ Christian McCaffrey, Pittsburgh Steelers’ Le’Veon Bell (when he’s actually on the field), New Orleans Saints’ Alvin Kamara, Cleveland Browns’ Duke Johnson and now New York Giants rookie Saquon Barkley. They’re more than running backs; they’re offensive weapons.
The value of each increases exponentially based on their ability to contribute in the passing game. White is as productive as any of them when used as a wide receiver, according to NFL Next Gen Stats:
Next Gen Stats @NextGenStats
James White ran 13 routes from out wide, the 2nd-most by a running back in a game this season behind Alvin Kamara in Week 1.
Only Kamara (60) has run more routes from slot/wide alignment this season than White (59) among running backs.
White has led or tied for the team lead in receptions in six of eight contests this season. In fact, his 55 receptions through eight games are the third-best performance by a running back in league history, according to ESPN Stats & Info (via ESPN.com’s Mike Reiss). Currently, the fifth-year back ranks seventh overall in receptions ahead of standout wide receivers like the Atlanta Falcons’ Julio Jones, Houston Texans’ DeAndre Hopkins, Green Bay Packers’ Davante Adams and Browns’ Jarvis Landry.
“He’s got to start sharing,” Gronkowski said earlier this month, per Henry McKenna of USA Today‘s Patriots Wire. “No, it’s well-deserved. The way that he focuses on his detail, on the route, the way he knows how to get open and just the little tiny details he knows how to do exactly on point to get open.
Gronk’s comments were made in jest, but a kernel of truth exists in his initial statement.
The tight end has been the focal point of the offense for an extended period of time due to his ability to create mismatches. He’s still a very large part of the pass game, but the Bills found a way to disrupt his rhythm and overall effectiveness by manhandling the 6’6″, 268-pound target. Buffalo linebacker Matt Milano bullied him to a degree. Gronkowski didn’t get any free releases and fought with Bills defenders all the way down the field. It took him out of his element since he’s usually the one determining the level of physicality.
Gregory Shamus/Getty Images
Gronkowski managed only three receptions for 43 yards Monday.
Furthermore, the four-time first-team All-Pro isn’t the most reliable option. He missed last week’s contest against the Chicago Bears due to a back injury. A litany of injuries continue to mount, and he hasn’t played a full 16-game slate since the 2011 campaign.
Gordon, meanwhile, isn’t reliable in general. He wore out his welcome in Cleveland long ago due to numerous suspensions and missteps along the way. NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport reported Gordon would be disciplined during the Bills contest because of tardiness, yet the mercurial wide receiver was on the field in his usual starting spot when the contest began.
However, the thought of “Here we go again” had to arise within the Patriots’ fan base. The 27-year-old receiver is truly gifted, and he’s performed well since the trade. Although, he’s only one screw-up from never playing again.
Even Edelman, who led the team with 104 receiving yards Monday, hasn’t been the same consistent presence after serving a four-game suspension due to a violation of the policy against using performance-enhancing drugs. He averaged 49 receiving yards per game before his breakout against the Bills.
As good as each of those three options are, White is the true difference-maker. His eight total touchdowns lead the Patriots, while his six receiving scores top running backs across the league.
White is a perfect fit in New England’s scheme and delivers in each contest. The Patriots know he’s the driving force behind their current offensive success.
“We have a ton of confidence in James,” Belichick said, per Volin. “He does everything well for us.”
Brent Sobleski covers the NFL for Bleacher Report. Follow him on Twitter:@brentsobleski.
It’s no secret Ariana Grande is wickedly talented, just like Idina Menzel.
The pop star swung by NBC’s A Very Wicked Halloween Monday night, celebrating 15 years of Wicked on Broadway (which doubled as drumming up some excitement for the long-in-the-works movie adaptation).
Grande — donning a green bustier and some seriously shimmery green makeup — performed “The Wizard and I,” following a sweet intro from original co-stars Kristin Chenoweth and Menzel.
One vision almost like a prophecy? Though this tune is sung by the character Elphaba, expect Grande, with her huge fan base and professed love of the musical, to be on the shortlist for Glinda once casting for the film finally rolls around.
Nothing about the company’s boring smartphone lineup in, say, 2013, indicated that Huawei might one day produce phones that can hold their own against the best flagships around.
But Huawei kept refining its approach with each launch. Its phones got good. Then really good. In April this year, Huawei was the first major smartphone manufacturer to launch a phone with a triple rear camera, an all-around great device called the P20 Pro. And it’s been selling well. Despite being effectively banned from selling its phones in the U.S., Huawei has overtaken Apple to become the second largest smartphone maker in the world.
Now, with the launch of Mate 20 Pro, Huawei — perhaps for the first time — is a legitimate contender for the position of the best smartphone around, period.
The Mate 20 Pro is a big upgrade to the P20 Pro. It, too, has three rear cameras (with major differences, though; more on that later), but it has a bigger, better screen, a faster processor, better water resistance, a bigger battery, and wireless charging.
Huawei went beyond a spec bump, though. The Mate 20 Pro also has an under-the-display fingerprint scanner and reverse wireless charging (meaning you can charge other gadgets simply by placing them onto the phone’s back). You won’t find either technology on flagships from Apple or Samsung.
A phone is more than a list of specs, certainly. But I’ve used the Mate 20 Pro as my primary phone for a week, and it’s lived up to the promise. It’s fast and powerful, and it has every bit of tech I ever wanted from a smartphone — not to mention it took stunning photos and its battery lasted forever.
A little bit of everything
The phone has a big screen, but it feels just right in my hand.
Image: Stan Schroeder/Mashable
The Mate 20 Pro’s display is excellent. It makes the phone look like the Samsung Galaxy Note 9 had a baby with the iPhone XS. It has a notch on top, rounded edges on the sides, and a small but noticeable chin on the bottom. I like the look, but it’s essentially an imitation of not one but two famous phones, which may be a good or bad thing, depending on your perspective. Original it is not.
On the back, the phone’s three cameras and flash are organized in a rectangle that’s unique. The phone can be had in the “Twilight” color, which is a beautiful purple-to-blue gradient, first seen on the P20 Pro. You can also get it in “Emerald Green” or, like my review unit, “Midnight Blue.” Both have a subtle line pattern on the back that glitters when moved under a light source. I liked the color, but when you’re in a dark room, it doesn’t really shine as it does in Huawei’s promotional materials. Finally, you can get the phone in black; I haven’t seen that one, but it appears to be the least exciting of the four colors.
Details like the red power button, tapered edges, or a (very) subtly textured back that should improve grippiness (it does, but ever so slightly) give the phone a premium feel. And just like most Huawei flagships of late, the Mate 20 Pro oozes quality and precision.
The phone’s size hits a perfect spot for me. It sounds big — a few years ago, 6.4-inch phones were enormous beasts — but due to its tiny bezels and display that’s curved on the sides, the Mate is actually slightly smaller than the 6.5-inch iPhone XS Max.
Overall, the Mate is unique in some ways and yet derivative in others, but even then, it’s unique on the market, as no one else has copied both the iPhone and a Samsung Galaxy phone at the same time. Bottom line: It looks and feels very nice, and this, I assume, is what most users will care about.
Incredibly sharp display
The Huawei Mate 20 Pro’s display is beautiful, but reflections along the curvy sides can be annoying.
Image: STAN SCHROEDER/MASHABLE
Huawei Mate 20 Pro’s display is a crisp 6.39-inch OLED with a 3,120 x 1,440 pixel resolution and HDR10 support. I’ve compared it directly to the iPhone X (unfortunately, I didn’t have an iPhone XS for a direct comparison), and it’s noticeably brighter, with better contrast and more vivid colors.
Not everything’s perfect, though. The Mate 20 Pro’s colors pop more, but somewhat unnaturally so. The display’s color mode is “Vivid” by default, which makes this worse, but even after you change it to normal, the colors were still a bit too much to me. Check out the example below; on the iPhone X’s screen the color of the guitar appears natural. On the Mate 20 Pro, it’s nearly orange. Sure, the Mate’s display looks flashier at first, but some will prefer the iPhone X’s more natural colors.
Furthermore, there’s quite a lot of color shifting to blue when you tilt the phone forwards, backwards or to the sides; far less so than on the iPhone X.
Huawei has an interesting (and, to my knowledge, unique) feature that automatically reduces screen resolution when it’s not needed. Furthermore, the phone has a lower, 2,340 x 1,080 pixel resolution enabled by default; you need to manually switch to 3,120 x 1,440 pixels if you want the highest resolution. In regular use, you’ll have to look closely to notice any difference, so leaving this setting on default is probably the way to go, as it saves battery.
The display has all the bells and whistles you’d expect from a modern flagship. A feature called “Natural tone” adjusts color temperature based on ambient lighting, similar to the iPhone’s “True Tone” setting. Additionally, you can reduce the screen’s blue light emission for a better nighttime reading experience, although the iPhone still does a better job at this. You can also hide the notch with a black bar, if you want to. And, just like on LG’s recent flagships, there’s also an “Always on display” setting, which displays time and date even when the screen is (mostly) off.
One minor drawback: The screen’s curved edges look gorgeous, but they don’t serve a particular purpose. And since the screen is quite reflective, you’ll often see distorted reflections along the edges, which can be distracting. It’s not a deal-breaker, but it is something to consider.
Excellent performance and a battery that refuses to die
The Mate 20 Pro’s battery comfortably lasted a day and a half in my testing.
Image: Stan Schroeder/Mashable
Huawei claims its Kirin 980 chipset — which is built with a 7-nanometer manufacturing process, just like Apple’s A12 — offers a 75% CPU performance upgrade and a 46% GPU performance upgrade over Kirin 970, while consuming significantly less power. It’s hard to test these numbers in real-life usage, but the Mate 20 Pro is definitely very, very fast.
These days, most smartphone flagships perform excellently, but the Mate 20 Pro had that little extra oomph, occasionally surprising me with how fast it was. Touch anything on the phone, and it’ll launch immediately. This especially goes for the camera, which launches roughly as fast as the camera on the iPhone X. Thanks to Huawei’s new Kirin 980 chipset and 6GB of RAM, the Mate 20 Pro never stuttered, no matter how many apps I had open.
In the Geekbench performance testing software, the Mate beat every other Android phone except the Galaxy S9+ in the single-core test with a score of 3,264, and every other Android phone in the multi-core test with a score of 9,684. And when I manually put the phone in “Performance” mode, which optimizes the phone’s settings for maximum performance, the numbers climbed to 3,334 and 10,096.
Image: Stan Schroeder/Mashable
Apple’s iPhone XS is still far ahead of everyone with scores of 4,796 and 11,222, respectively. Note that several manufacturers, including Huawei, have been caught cheating at these tests, so I wouldn’t put too much faith in them, but the numbers do confirm that this is one of the fastest phones around in terms of performance.
Huawei managed to stuff a 4,200mAh battery into the Mate 20 Pro. That’s better than the iPhone XS Max, better than the Samsung Note 9, better than the company’s own P20 Pro. And battery life was certainly excellent. The phone lasted a day and a half of heavy use, which is in line with the best phones I’ve tested. In normal use, I could see it comfortably lasting two days or more.
The phone supports quick charging, and, unlike the P20 Pro, it also has wireless charging on board. But Huawei took it a step further with reverse wireless charging, which turns the phone into a wireless charging pad. Place a device that supports wireless charging on top of its back, and the Mate will charge it.
The feature wouldn’t make sense on most phones, but the Mate has a battery so juicy that I could easily imagine a situation in which lending some of its battery life to a pair of earphones or even another phone could be a good idea. In any case, you won’t mind having the option, and you can turn the feature off if it bothers you for any reason.
A new take on the best smartphone camera
The camera is excellent, but there are phones who offer a more straightforward experience.
Image: STAN SCHROEDER/MASHABLE
This is going to be a long section — there’s just so much to cover that I can’t make it any shorter. But the TL;DR is this: The Huawei Mate 20 Pro’s camera is the best smartphone camera I’ve ever used.
Now, for the details.
While the Mate 20 Pro’s camera setup sounds similar to the one on the P20 Pro, it’s actually different with one key regard. On the Mate, Huawei ditched the monochrome sensor and replaced it with an ultra-wide sensor. So the cameras are now, in order: a 40-megapixel f/1.8 sensor, a 20-megapixel f/2.2 ultra-wide sensor, and an 8-megapixel f/2.4 telephoto sensor.
This versatile sensor array enables Huawei to do a ton of cool tricks. By default, the camera takes 10-megapixel photos, and Huawei combines input from all three sensors to get more features than you’ll find on any other phone. The best thing about these is how seamless it all is for the user. Fire up the camera, and in normal mode you’ll be able to choose between 3x zoom, 5x zoom and 0.6x zoom (which is ultra-wide mode). Sure, that 5x zoom isn’t really optical zoom; rather, the software is combining the image coming from the telephoto sensor with the information gathered by the 40-megapixel sensor to create a hybrid optical/software zoom effect. But here’s the thing: It just works, and you’ll be taking 5x zoom photos that actually look decent in no time.
The bird was 15 feet away, but using Mate 20 Pro’s 5x zoom, I easily took several beautiful photos before it flew away. There’s no way I’d get a photo this good with any other phone.
Image: Stan Schroeder/Mashable
Here’s another example, just to show what that hybrid zoom can do. The photo on the left was taken at 1x zoom, while the photo on the right was taken from the same position at 5x zoom.
Image: STAN SCHROEDER/MASHABLE
Image: STAN SCHROEDER/MASHABLE
Switching to 40-megapixel resolution shuts down most of these extra features, but sometimes, when the conditions were good, I was able to take some stunningly detailed photos in this mode.
Zoom in as much as you like. That’s 40 megapixels for you.
Image: Stan Schroeder/Mashable
Inexplicably, Huawei has HDR stashed away as a separate photo-taking mode, accessible only through the camera’s “More” menu. As you can see in the comparison below, HDR is pretty useful and it would’ve been nice if I were able to enable it with a single tap from the main camera’s screen.
Then there’s the AI. I don’t care much for the scene selection feature (which is enabled by turning on the “Master AI” option in the settings; it’s clever to see the camera recognize various scenes and adjust accordingly, but I’ve often found that these adjustments go a bit too far.
Unfortunately, you won’t be able to just turn the Master AI off and be done with it. Without it, the phone won’t fire up certain important features as the super-cool Super Macro mode, which lets you go really close to the subject and take a macro photo.
The phone’s AI capabilities also enable features like the Night Mode, which lets you take gorgeous photos in low-light scenarios. Sure, most of it is software wizardry and it takes a few seconds to take a photo, but the results are stunning. I wasn’t able to replicate this with any other phone I had on hand.
Huawei’s Night Mode takes roughly 5 seconds to take a photo, but you’ll often get great results with very little light.
Image: Stan Schroeder/Mashable
And, if you were wondering, you can combine Night Mode with the ultra-wide screen mode or the 3x/5x zoom mode.
Unfortunately, Night Mode sometimes generated ugly artifacts on my photos. The photo below would’ve been great given the conditions — if it weren’t for that horizontal line in the upper half of the image. Worse, the line was persistent; I took several photos from the same position, in both vertical and horizontal mode, and I couldn’t get rid of it. I hope this is either an anomaly on the unit I’ve had, or something Huawei can fix via a software update, as it renders Night Mode nearly unusable.
Just like on the Huawei P20 Pro, the Mate 20 Pro’s Night Mode sometimes leaves ugly artifacts on the photo.
Image: Stan Schroeder/Mashable
Obviously, you’re not always going to take photos in Night Mode; it’s just too slow. But the Mate 20 Pro does a decent job of snapping low-light photos from its default camera mode. In the comparison below, the Mate took a sharper photo with more realistic colors than the iPhone X — though, in fairness, the iPhone snapped that photo in a fraction of a second, while the Mate instructed me to hold my hand steady for a second or so.
Image: STAN SCHROEDER/MASHABLE
Image: STAN SCHROEDER/MASHABLE
Portrait mode takes photos that are oddly soft, and while not everyone will be a fan of the look, I was overall happy with the photos I’ve gotten. You can choose between 1x and 3x zoom in this mode — something you can’t do on the iPhone.
Portrait mode photos are soft and, in low light conditions, oddly hazy. Call it a style.
Image: Stan schroeder/Mashable
And while Portrait mode is only for taking photos of people, Aperture mode will let you take photos of any object with various degrees of bokeh. It’s a hit or miss, as you can see in the photo below (left) which is blurred in all kinds of weird ways. But guess what: If the photo’s not perfect, you can go in afterwards and change both the focal point and the amount of bokeh applied.
The parts of the stone monument are blurry, and they shouldn’t be.
Image: STAN SCHROEDER/MASHABLE
Now the agave is in focus.
Image: Stan Schroeder/Mashable
The 24-megapixel selfie camera takes excellent, extremely detailed selfies. In portrait mode, the resulting photos are, again, way too soft to my liking, but are generally pleasing to the eye. In low-light scenarios, the phone will do the familiar trick of turning its big, bright screen white and thus lighting up your face, which won’t result in beautiful selfies but it’s better than nothing.
Can’t argue with 24 megapixels.
Image: STAN SCHROEDER/MASHABLE
The Mate 20 Pro can, at best, take 4K video at 30fps — this is one area where even the iPhone X, which is a year old, is nominally better, as it can take 4K video at 60fps. And, overall, the Mate’s video capabilities are a mixed bag. I took an evening video while walking, and the video was very bright but also unbearably twitchy as the device apparently tried and failed to stabilize the image.
The iPhone X’s video (below) was the opposite: Better (though still far from perfect) when it comes to image stabilization, but not nearly bright enough.
Daylight videos with the Mate were gorgeous, but basically every flagship these days will produce something similarly good. Bonus points for Mate: Even in 4K mode, you can use some of its multi-camera tricks to take a wide-screen or a zoomed-in video.
Overall, the Mate’s camera isn’t perfect. You’ll get photos that blow everything else away, yes, but the overall experience won’t be as straightforward as it is on an Apple phone or even a Samsung. Still, the Mate matches every other phone out there on features and does OK even in areas where it’s just copying others, like the bokeh mode. And none of the other new flagships — even the myriad ones that came out this fall — can take 40-megapixel photos or photos with 3x optical zoom.
Can we please just stick with Google?
Huawei’s EMUI software, which comes in version 9.0 on the Mate 20 Pro, is better than most Android skins, but it’s not perfect. There’s a zillion options on offer; a dark version of the entire UI, iOS-like task switching, granular battery optimization and a built-in password manager are among the highlights. There’s also a wide choice of wallpapers and themes, though downloading new themes requires signing up for a Huawei ID (more on that later). And it’s all based on Android 9 Pie, so you’ll find the latest bells and whistles from Google under the hood as well.
There are also bugs, most of which have to do with the notch, which will sometimes obscure parts of content, and which definitely doesn’t leave enough space for icons. Huawei sort-of addresses the latter issue: When you swipe down from the top of the screen, the shortcut menu will show up and the status icons will drop below the notch, which means you’ll finally be able to see all of them. Mercifully, zoomed YouTube videos extend over the entire surface of the display, which isn’t the case on many of Mate’s Android competitors.
Hello darkness, my old friend.
Image: Stan Schroeder/Mashable
Sometimes the UI’s look was inconsistent. I’ve paired a dark grayish theme I liked with a blue wallpaper, and yet as I swiped from the middle of the screen to get the search field, the phone’s blurred background would go purple, as if the device is confused on which theme it’s using.
None of these quirks bother me much; perhaps I’ve gotten used to user interfaces by Chinese smartphone manufacturers, all of which are similar, all of which slap some iOS features onto Android, and all of which are slightly buggy. But Huawei’s software is definitely a class below Samsung’s or Apple’s.
The biggest issue I have with Huawei’s phones (not just the Mate) is the company’s insistence of drawing users into its services ecosystem. While accessing various features and pre-installed apps on the phone, Huawei offered me to create a Huawei ID and sign up for Huawei Cloud or HiCare. I’m already way too invested in Google’s ecosystem of services to bother with any of these, and I suspect most users outside of China are, too. And while you can certainly ignore all of these and use 99% of the phone’s features, frequent prompts to sign up for Huawei this or that will surely alienate some users.
So many extras
The red power button on the phone’s side is a nice touch.
Image: STAN SCHROEDER/MASHABLE
I’ve already mentioned the reverse wireless charging, which is a nice, albeit minor, feature. But this phone has plenty more surprises in stock. Its face unlocking capabilities are excellent in all conditions. It didn’t matter if I had my sunglasses on, or whether I was under direct sunlight, both of which cause trouble to the iPhone X’s face unlocking system. It’s hard to judge how secure Huawei’s system is, but it sure as hell beats Apple’s on practicality.
Should you desire it, you can also set up a fingerprint unlocking scheme, with the fingerprint scanner residing under the display. It’s the first time this actually worked well for me, and I’ve tried similar scanners on a bunch of other phones. But the feature, long-rumored to be coming to Apple and Samsung phones, feels like an afterthought. The face unlock works so well that I turned fingerprint scanning off after a day — I simply didn’t need it.
In fact, I dare you to find a feature the Mate 20 Pro doesn’t have. AptX, hi-res Bluetooth sound is on board, as are stereo speakers (though they aren’t very loud). IP68 dust and water resistance, dual SIM, memory card support (Huawei’s proprietary nano memory cards are used instead of the ubiquitous microSD standard), NFC, dual-band GPS, a fast LTE Cat.21 chip, an infrared sensor — the Mate 20 Pro has them all. The only thing I found lacking — and for me, it’s a serious offense — is the headphone jack; mercifully, Huawei includes a 3.5-mm-to-USB-C adapter in the box.
The Mate 20 Pro is, without a doubt, the most feature-packed phone ever.
Finally going Pro
It’s got everything you can ask from a smartphone, except the low price.
Image: Stan Schoeder/Mashable
The Huawei Mate 20 Pro is the best smartphone you can currently buy. But choosing a smartphone is not just about how feature-packed it is, or how nice it looks. Huawei doesn’t have the brand power of Apple or Samsung. And there’s the elephant in the room: the Mate 20 Pro won’t even launch in the U.S. For many users, this is more than a logistical problem — this is a problem of trust. Not to mention that finding a decent price and warranty might be an issue, too.
Finally, the price. The Mate 20 Pro costs €1,049 ($1,193) in Europe, which is less than the iPhone XS Max or even the XS (in Europe, not the U.S.), but it’s still a lot. All things considered, I can’t say the price is unfair, but it wouldn’t hurt it to be a little cheaper.
The Minnesota Timberwolves defeated the Los Angeles Lakers 124-120 at home Monday at Target Center in Minneapolis.
Karl-Anthony Towns has gotten off to a slow start this season but looked good against the Lakers. He had 25 points, 16 rebounds, six assists and four blocks, while teammate Jimmy Butler chipped in with a game-high 32 points.
Butler hit a three-pointer with 19.7 seconds remaining to help seal the victory.
LeBron James finished with 29 points, 10 rebounds and seven assists in the loss. Brandon Ingram scored24points in his return from a four-game suspension.
Butler’s Big Game a Reminder Why Wolves Shouldn’t Trade Him
Every star-level performance from Butler is a double-edged sword for the Timberwolves. He solidifies his trade value were Minnesota to move him, but he also shows how much the team’s season hinges on his contributions.
Dan Devine @YourManDevine
I’d say that Jimmy Butler’s driving up the price tag, but it can’t get much higher than Literally All The First-Round Picks You Can Offer
Butler had four points on 2-of-11 shooting in the Timberwolves’ 125-95 defeat to the Milwaukee Bucks on Friday. He was locked in Monday.
Vincent Goodwill @vgoodwill
In a more competitive game tonight, Jimmy Butler looks like he has something say, no?
The four-time All-Star played especially well in the fourth quarter. Gorgui Dieng tied the game at 99 with 9:42 left. Butler then scored 15 of Minnesota’s final 25 points. Even when he seemingly has one foot out the door, Butler can put the Timberwolves on his back and carry them to the finish line.
Ben Dowsett @Ben_Dowsett
Jimmy Butler out here destroying LeBron and the Lakers virtually singlehandedly, looking like he’d rather be basically anywhere else right now.
Minnesota may soon reach a breaking point where it has no other choice but to trade Butler. Towns is ultimately the franchise’s long-term foundation, and keeping Butler for the rest of the season could irreparably damage Towns’ development or lead him to seek a way out of Minnesota.
Towns didn’t look himself as the Wolves got off to a 2-4 start, and it wasn’t a coincidence his best offensive performance (31 points) came in Minnesota’s 140-136 loss to the Dallas Mavericks, when Butler didn’t play.
But having Towns go off in a defeat to a team that’s unlikely to reach the playoffs is an indication of how the year could unfold without Butler. Just look at how much the Wolves struggled to get into the postseason last season when Butler was out for a chunk of games in March.
Take Butler out of the mix entirely in an even stronger Western Conference, and a second trip to the playoffs would be unlikely.
Ingram, Kuzma Starting Lineup Flashes Big Potential
While Ingram was out suspended, Kyle Kuzma did nothing to warrant a demotion back to the bench. He averaged 22.7 points in Los Angeles’ last four games, a stretch that included a 37-point showing in the Lakers’ 143-142 loss to the San Antonio Spurs.
Prior to Monday’s game, Ingram indicated he expected to remain a starter when he returned to the court.
“I’m not coming off the bench,” he said, perBill Oramof The Athletic. “I don’t know the lineup, but I know I’ll be in it.”
Lakers head coach Luke Walton accommodated both players by putting them in the starting five, and the results were promising. In addition to Ingram’s solid performance, Kuzma posted 19 points and six rebounds.
Ingram and Kuzma played together a lot in 2017-18, but the Lakers became an entirely different team when James arrived in the offseason. The team’s priorities changed, and Walton had to start building his rotations with LeBron’s presence in mind.
It wasn’t lost on some how Ingram and James still have some kinks to work out.
Anthony F. Irwin @AnthonyIrwinLA
The Lakers might have to bench Ingram down the stretch if he and LeBron can’t figure it out together.
Laker Film Room @LakerFilmRoom
Brandon Ingram in the First Half
6:22 with LeBron on the court = 0 points
7:03 with LeBron off the court = 17 points
Silver Screen & Roll @LakersSBN
LeBron and Ingram should play together some, but the Lakers may get the most out of the latter by staggering their minutes. Starting both and sitting LeBron early like this may be the best way to do that.
But those are the kind of problems that come when you pair James with a younger player who had a starring role on a bad team. Shortly after he returned to the Cleveland Cavaliers in 2014, Jamesopenly discussedhow he was making a concerted effort to help Cavs players break bad habits they built from years earlier.
Walton should continue rolling with Ingram and Kuzma in the starting lineup over the next week or so to see whether it’s something that can stick over the rest of the season.
What’s Next?
The Timberwolves host the Utah Jazz on Wednesday night in what should be an intriguing matchup between Western Conference playoff hopefuls. The Lakers head home for a matchup with the Dallas Mavericks on Wednesday.
Now, Intel’s Mobileye autonomous vehicle tech division plans to roll out a similar autonomous car service in Israel early next year.
Announced Monday, Intel is building out an electric vehicle fleet with Champion Motors and the Volkswagen Group that will use Mobileye’s self-driving software to autonomously shuttle passengers around Israel.
The service will start in early 2019 and eventually grow into a fully operational service in 2022 with a few dozen cars at first and then hundreds of the self-driving EVs. That’s the plan, anyway.
Intel’s service could kick off with Level 4 autonomy cars, meaning human drivers aren’t necessary for the car to drive in nearly any scenario. It’s the same autonomy level Waymo’s been testing in suburban Phoenix. If these kick off, it’ll be the first commercial use of Mobileye’s AV Kit.
The new venture, known as “New Mobility in Israel,” is somewhat different to other programs around the globe in how accepting the Israeli government is of the service. It’s not a pilot program, but a full-blown commercial car service run by machines. Intel said Israel has offered regulatory support and will provide access to infrastructure as needed, along with traffic and other data.
The U.S. government is somewhat dubious of self-driving cars, but not resistant to the tech. Nevertheless, certain states like California, Arizona, Texas, Pennsylvania, Michigan, and others are moving ahead of federal programming and testing.
Even if the Intel self-driving car service is only happening in Israel, it shows that this tech isn’t an anomaly. What Cruise, Waymo and other startups are trying to do isn’t a one-off. The self-driving taxis are coming.
The Golden State Warriors are a modern-day dynasty with three championships in the last four years, but sometimes they flip a switch that is just unfair for opponents.
After the defending champions poured in an astounding 92 points in the first half of Monday’s contest against the Chicago Bulls, Klay Thompson set an all-time record with his 14th three-pointer in a single NBA game.
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K.C. Johnson of the Chicago Tribune noted the crowd at the United Center went “nuts” to see history after it clearly accepted its team’s fate well before Thompson broke teammate Stephen Curry‘s record of 13 triples in a game.
What made Thompson’s record all the more impressive was the fact that he did it in so little time. He scored 52 points and drilled 14 three-pointers in just 27 minutes and helped the Warriors decisively put the game away 149-124.
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Rodger Sherman of The Ringer and Ben Golliver of Sports Illustrated put the performance in context:
Rodger Sherman @rodger
Klay Thompson has more 3-pointers tonight than Larry Bird made in the 1981-82 season
Ben Golliver @BenGolliver
Most three-pointers in a game, NBA history
– 14: Warriors’ Klay Thompson vs. Bulls, 2018
– 13. Warriors’ Stephen Curry vs. Pelicans, 2016
– 12: Warriors’ Stephen Curry vs. Thunder, 2016
– 12: Lakers’ Kobe Bryant vs. Sonics, /2003
– 12: Raptors’ Donyell Marshall vs. Sixers, 2005 https://t.co/HvOcDrfdvC
While Curry garners plenty of headlines as arguably the best three-point shooter of all time and the central figure during the Warriors’ recent run of incredible success, Thompson’s hot streaks are a sight to behold. He also torched the net for a record 37 points in a single quarter during a January 2015 victory over the Sacramento Kings behind nine three-pointers.
He found that record-setting touch again Monday against a Bulls defense that resembles the Washington Generals against the Harlem Globetrotters. Chicago was 24th in the league in defensive rating coming into Monday’s contest, per NBA.com, and gave up more than 100 points in its first five games.
Curry’s record of 13 three-pointers in a game didn’t last long seeing how he set it in November 2016 against the New Orleans Pelicans.
Given the shooting prowess of both players, it wouldn’t be a surprise if they continue to one-up each other in the coming years.
Search teams scoured the sea off Indonesia on Tuesday for any signs of life and to collect evidence to determine what brought down a Lion Air flight with 189 people aboard.
Divers hunted for the main fuselage and deployed underwater beacons to trace the flight’s black box recorders in order to find out what caused one of the deadliest aviation incidents in Indonesia’s history.
The search was stopped for the night although sonar vessels and an underwater drone continued hunting for the downed airliner.
“Hopefully this morning we can find the wreckage or fuselage,” Soerjanto Tjahjono, the head of Indonesia’s transport safety panel, told Reuters news agency.
Lion Air’s plane was almost brand new though it crashed shortly after take-off from the airport in Jakarta, after the pilot reported he needed to return the aircraft to the ground.
The Boeing 737 was flown for the first time on August 15, and the airline said it had been certified as airworthy before Monday’s flight by an engineer who is a specialist in Boeing models.
Indonesia’s search-and-rescue agency said there was little hope of finding survivors. “[It] would be a miracle,” spokesman Yusuf Latif said.
The agency said on Tuesday that 10 intact bodies as well as body parts had been recovered.
‘Confused’
Lion Air Chief Executive Edward Sirait said on Monday the plane had encountered an unspecified “technical issue” on its previous flight, which was from the resort island of Bali to Jakarta, but this had been “resolved according to procedure”.
Indonesia plane crashes into waters off Jakarta
“We don’t dare to say what the facts are, or are not, yet,” he told reporters. “We are also confused about the why since it was a new plane.”
The Boeing 737 MAX 8 airliner was flying from the capital to the city of Pangkal Pinang at 1,113 metres above sea level when it lost contact with air traffic controllers.
The crash was the worst airline disaster in Indonesia since an AirAsia flight plunged into the sea in December 2014, killing all 162 on board.
One of the passengers was 22-year-old Deryl Fida Febrianto, who was married just two weeks ago and was on his way to Pangkal Pinang to work on a cruise ship.
His wife, Lutfinani Eka Putri, 23, said her husband messaged her from the aircraft at 6:12am, sending her a photo from the plane, and at 6:15am he stopped replying to her messages.
They had grown up together, she told reporters, showing a picture of the smiling couple on their wedding day.
“When I saw the news, I matched the flight number with the ticket photo Deryl had sent,” she said. “I immediately started crying.”
Some Pixel 3 XL phones are getting an second notch on the side of the phone’s screen. Of course, it’s a software notch, rather than the built-in hardware notch, which contains the front-facing camera and sensors.
A number of users posted the bug on social media, and there’s a Reddit thread of people who’ve noticed the issue too. The problem appears to be fixed with a restart or by tinkering wth the developer settings, so luckily it’s nothing too serious.
It does look hilarious, though.
A Google spokesperson told Android Police that a fix is “coming soon” for the bug. Keep your eyes peeled, unless you’re really into the double notch thing.