How to keep plastic out of the world’s oceans

Plastic is kind of like a Twitter reply guy: It never goes away. And there’s more coming in. 

Each year, 8 million metric tons of plastic go into the ocean (that’s equal to about one garbage truck per minute), according to a 2016 report by the World Economic Forum, the Ellen MacArthur Foundation, and McKinsey & Company.

“Plastic is a substance that once created essentially exists almost in perpetuity and just breaks down into smaller and smaller pieces in the environment,” says Graham Forbes, the global plastics project leader at Greenpeace, an international environmental organization. 

It’s vital to pay attention to the plight of plastic and implement small changes in your daily life to keep plastic out of the world’s oceans. World Water Day may be Friday, but we should be working to minimize the harm of plastics every day. 

SEE ALSO: Here’s a running list of all the ways climate change has altered Earth in 2019

Plastic pollution impacts sea creatures in a huge variety of ways. As National Geographic notes, about 700 species of marine animals have been found to eat or become ensnared by plastic. Sea turtles swallow it thinking it’s jellyfish. A whale was found with plastic bags in its stomach. Birds like albatrosses eat plastic believing it’s food, according to Smithsonian. And as marine biologist Matthew Savoca told National Geographic, anchovies eat algae-covered plastic because it smells like a meal. 

Jacqueline Savitz, the chief policy officer for North America at Oceana, an ocean conservation nonprofit, says that “if we don’t figure out a way to turn the tide on plastic,” we’ll continue to poison these sea creatures. 

But don’t panic … yet. “The good news is that there’s something everyone can do,” says Forbes. “A lot of people understand that it’s a problem and want to do something about it.” 

Here are five ways you can help reduce the amount of plastic that’s produced, as well as keep the plastic that already exists out of the world’s oceans. 

1. Ditch single-use plastic and buy reusable items 

Be a conscious consumer and steer away from single-use plastic items. Instead, buy in bulk or opt for reusable items like bottles or cups. The impact of this choice extends beyond your own home: Your money has leverage. When you change your spending habits, companies and governments will start to pay attention, says Forbes. 

To make a real impact, however, you’ll need to make sure you get the most from your reusable item. 

“In the end, the key for those reusable materials, for them to truly be holistically environmentally better, is the actual reuse of them — many, many times,” says Erin Simon, the director for sustainability research and development at World Wildlife Fund. 

2. Pressure big business to produce less plastic

It’s important that individuals do what they can to reduce plastic waste, but there also needs to be a systemic change, meaning big companies have to change the way they package their items. 

“At some point, we have to shift and demand the big businesses creating all of this plastic, just produce less of it to begin with because a lot of it is just completely unnecessary,” says Forbes. 

Similarly, Savitz encourages individuals to put the responsibility on companies who don’t offer consumers plastic-free options. 

“I don’t want people to feel bad if they’re drinking out of a plastic container when they weren’t given a choice,” she says. 

To hold large grocery retailers, in particular, accountable, Greenpeace recommends individuals complete this survey about the amount of plastic in their local grocery store. The data will help Greenpeace rank 20 top supermarkets based on their plastic usage. For tips on how to complete the survey, check out this toolkit. 

The organization also suggests people deliver this sample letter to grocery store managers, which asks them to “introduce transparency by publishing yearly audits of single-use plastic use, set annual targets to reduce your single-use plastic footprint, eliminate unnecessary and non-recyclable plastic packaging in 2019, and invest in reuse and new delivery systems.”

If you don’t feel comfortable with in-person confrontations, Greenpeace suggests taking a photo of the excessive plastic on grocery store shelves and then posting it on social media, making sure to tag the company and add the hashtag #pointlessplastic.

Dianna Cohen, the CEO and co-founder of the Plastic Pollution Coalition, recommends people take part in a brand audit, which requires volunteers to record data about the trash collected at a community or beach cleanup, including the brand name and manufacturer of each plastic item. 

“This tells us which companies are creating the most plastic pollution and helps us put pressure on those companies to reduce their plastic footprint on the Earth,” Cohen wrote in an email. 

3. Tell local governments to improve waste management infrastructure

Change is going to occur where individuals have the most leverage: at the local level, Simon and Forbes say. 

In fact, there’s already been some progress. In January, the Berkeley City Council passed a ban on non-compostable food containers. 

“I think the more people are connected to each other and looking at some of these examples in other cities, you can start to see a roadmap for how to really make a difference in your own community,” says Forbes.

To email your representatives about passing policies that reduce the production of single-use plastic or sign a petition to demand that the Association of Volleyball Professionals stop using single-use plastic water bottles on beaches across the U.S., visit the Take Action Center, provided by the Plastic Pollution Coalition. 

For even more ideas on how to get involved, whether that means writing a letter to the editor for your local newspaper or starting a plastic-free community group, refer to Greenpeace’s Million Acts of Blue toolkit

4. Take initiative wherever you are

Savitz says people can make demands to reduce plastic at companies they work for or purchase from, universities, churches, synagogues, mosques, or other areas. And don’t feel like you have to wait for organizations to start a campaign. Speak up and let companies know that you are a valued customer. 

“Don’t feel like you can’t be a leader because this is really going to take a lot of campaigns — maybe not 10, maybe hundreds of individual campaigns with different targets,” says Savitz. 

5. Think beyond recycling

Forbes and Savitz agree that recycling is not the end-all-be-all solution to plastic pollution. It’s not enough for companies to say they’ll recycle as much plastic as much as they put out. To begin with, many American towns and cities have cancelled their recycling programs or limited what they accept from residents, according to the New York Times. Meanwhile, China is no longer accepting most foreign recycled materials.

“The fundamental reality is that there’s no way for us to recycle our way out of this problem, and we just need less plastic,” says Forbes. “Pushing companies to produce less plastic and governments to incentivize away from endless single-use plastic is really what it’s going to take to get us to healthy, clean oceans where marine life can thrive, people can enjoy it, and protect our food systems, as well.” 

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Brazil’s former president Michel Temer arrested: reports

Temer was president from 2016 to 2018 [Evairisto Sa/AFP]
Temer was president from 2016 to 2018 [Evairisto Sa/AFP]

Brazil’s former President Michel Temer was arrested on Thursday as part of the sweeping anti-corruption investigation known as “Car Wash”, a source involved in the case told Reuters news agency. 

Local media have also reported the arrest. 

A spokeswoman for the Prosecutors Office in Rio de Janeiro told The Associated Press on Thursday that Judge Marcelo Breitas had issued an arrest warrant.

Breitas is a Rio judge overseeing part of a sprawling corruption probe involving kickbacks to politicians and public officials.

Temer, a longtime legislator, was hit with corruption charges during his presidency which were blocked by allies in the lower house Congress. The legislative body must authorise charges against a sitting president.

Temer has repeatedly denied any wrongdoing. 

Since launching in March 2014, the Car Wash investigation has led to the jailing of top businessmen and politicians, including ex-President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva.

Temer was president from 2016 to 2018, taking office following the impeachment of Dilma Rousseff. 

More soon…

SOURCE:
News agencies

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Ernst: Trump ‘needs to stop’ attacking McCain


Joni Ernst

Sen. Joni Ernst is the latest Republican Senator to break with the president over his recent comments on John McCain. | Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

ADEL, Iowa — Sen. Joni Ernst (R-Iowa) on Thursday urged President Donald Trump to stop disparaging the late Sen. John McCain, calling the Vietnam war hero “a dear friend” and defending him against the president’s criticisms.

Trump has spent almost six days attacking the late Arizona senator, prompting a backlash from some Republican Senators. The president has repeatedly criticized McCain for voting against the skinny repeal of Obamacare. But on Wednesday he took the broadsides a step further by complaining that he wasn’t thanked for giving McCain the “kind of funeral that he wanted.

Story Continued Below

Ernst’s remarks came during a town hall meeting at a high school in Adel, Iowa, where several attendees voiced anger about Trump’s attacks about McCain. One attendee described McCain as a “genuine war hero” and called Trump’s comments about McCain “cowardly.”

“I do not appreciate his tweets,” Ernst said, when pressed by the attendee why she didn’t previously speak out more forcefully. “John McCain is a dear friend of mine. So, no I don’t agree with President Trump and he does need to stop.”

Ernst added that while she supports Trump “when he’s right about policy,” she said that she “[breaks] ranks with President Trump quite a bit.”

Over the weekend, Trump sent a series of tweets ripping McCain, falsely claiming that the Arizona senator was “last in his class” at the Naval Academy in Annapolis and condemning McCain for flagging to law enforcement an explosive and unverified dossier from ex-British intelligence officer Christopher Steele alleging tied between the president and Russia. Trump attacked McCain again Wednesday in a speech, saying “I never liked him much.”

“This really gets under people’s skin,” Ernst said in an interview after the town hall. Ernst said she still keeps a photo of her and McCain in her office from the 2014 election.

“He’s dear to me,” she said. “I can’t stop the president, what I can do is say Mr. President — I don’t appreciate it.”

Ernst is the latest Republican Senator to break with the president over his recent comments on McCain. Sen. Johnny Isakson (R-Ga.) said this week that “the country deserves better” and described his comments as “deplorable.” Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.), who was close friends with McCain as well as a Trump ally, said Wednesday that “the president’s comments about Senator McCain hurt him more than they hurt the legacy of Senator McCain.” But many Republicans have been muted in their response.

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The rumored disc-less Xbox One S could be out by May 7

Imagine an Xbox One S that looks like this, except without the drive opening.
Imagine an Xbox One S that looks like this, except without the drive opening.

Image: Adam Gasson/Future/REX/Shutterstock

2016%252f09%252f16%252f63%252fhttpsd2mhye01h4nj2n.cloudfront.netmediazgkymde1lza2.c97cf.jpg%252f90x90By Adam Rosenberg

Get your salt shakers out: It’s time for something that might not be true!

Microsoft’s rumored disc-less Xbox One S — or the Xbox One S All-Digital, as it will apparently be called — could be coming on May 7. That’s what Windows Central claims, citing product photos and supporting documents it received from an unnamed source.

The site’s coverage uses Photoshop mockups of the product photos in order to protect the source, so you’ll have to take their word for it. The digitally recreated console looks like you’d expect it to: an Xbox One S without the opening where a disc would go.

The disc-less Xbox One S would also reportedly pack in a bundle of download codes for three games — Sea of Thieves, Forza Horizon 3, and Minecraft — as well as a 1TB hard drive. 

Microsoft is reportedly planning an April reveal, ahead of the global launch on May 7. There’s no word on price, but previous reporting (as well as common sense) suggests that the disc-less Xbox is meant to be a cheaper option in the Xbox lineup.

The current Xbox One S sells on Microsoft’s website for $300 with a bundled game, though a quick look at Amazon shows older bundles selling at closer to $250 (and in some cases lower than that). A disc-less S would have to sell for no more than $200, though an even lower price isn’t out of the question.

SEE ALSO: Xbox Live is coming to the Nintendo Switch and more

That’s because Microsoft’s big bet these days is on Xbox Game Pass. The subscription service gives all users access to a large library of on-demand games — more than 170, as of March 2019 — that they can download whenever they wish.

The Game Pass library includes a number of major games released by publishers other than Microsoft, but perhaps the biggest draw is access to new releases. All subscribers are able to play Xbox One console exclusives the day they come out, from small-studio indies like Below to the future next chapters in the Halo and Gears of War series.

A disc-less Xbox One S would obviously have no problem connecting users with Xbox Game Pass. Microsoft probably wants to make it feel like subscribing to the $9.99/month service is a no-brainer — which, really, it is for any newcomers to the Xbox ecosystem.

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People are sharing their best spill videos after one woman spilled 22 quarts of ranch dressing

2016%252f09%252f16%252f8f%252fhttpsd2mhye01h4nj2n.cloudfront.netmediazgkymde1lza3.f09f1.jpg%252f90x90By Marcus Gilmer

A video of a woman accidentally spilling a giant tub of ranch is bringing Twitter users together to share different stories of their own disasters. 

It all started when Twitter user @BorboaGrant shared video of a coworker’s spectacular spill of 22 quarts of ranch.

SEE ALSO: At long last, Welding Twitter gets its moment in the sun

That clip inspired others to share their own videos of spills caught on camera. The result? Perhaps the greatest thread in Twitter history, and I’m only being slightly hyperbolic. 

The thread is full of more spills and thrills from restaurants all over the world and is well worth perusing. But perhaps the most commonly used video is a classic clip from The Office where in Kevin spills a giant vat of chili. 

Undercook the onions, folks. 

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‘Dozens killed’ as ferry sinks in Tigris River near Iraq’s Mosul

Dozens of people have died after a ferry carrying families celebrating the Nowruz holiday capsized in Tigris river near the Iraqi city of Mosul, according to officials.

Husam Khalil, the head of Mosul’s Civil Defence Authority, was quoted as saying by news agencies that at least 40 people were killed in Thursday’s accident.

Most of the casualties were women and children who could not swim, Halil said.

The apparently overloaded vessel is believed to had been carrying around 200 people celebrating the holiday of Nowruz, which marks the Kurdish new year and the arrival of spring, when it sank. The holiday is celebrated as the Persian New Year in Iran.

Al Jazeera’s Natasha Ghoneim, reporting from the Iraqi capital, Baghdad, said footage posted on social media showed “a very distressing picture” at what appeared to be a theme park.

“We are seeing video of what it appears to be a ferry upside down … people jumping into the Tigris river in an attempt to rescue others. We can hear people along the banks screaming and we can see several people swimming furiously in what appears to be a rather swift current.”

More to follow…

SOURCE:
Al Jazeera and news agencies

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Apple iPad mini (2019) review: Reliable, not revolutionary

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.

Apple’s new iPad mini is reliable, not revolutionary

It’s still the best small tablet there is.

by Raymond Wong

Apple’s new iPad mini is reliable, not revolutionary

It’s still the best small tablet there is.

by Raymond Wong

After three long years, Apple’s smallest tablet, the iPad mini, is back.

But the new iPad mini isn’t completely new the way the iPad Pros are. Like someone returning from years spent abroad, the new iPad mini is still mostly the same tablet as the iPad mini 4 released in 2015 — it looks identical (bezels and all) and works with all previous accessories — but its skills have leveled up.

Powered by the A12 Bionic chip found in the iPhone XS, XS Max, and XR, the new iPad mini has the performance to go the distance. Not just for today, but for years to come. Moreover, Apple Pencil support evolves the new iPad mini beyond being a tablet for consuming content and into one for creating it.

The $399 sticker price won’t appeal to everyone — good thing there’s also the $329 9.7-inch iPad — but for certain users, rare as they may be in these days of giant iPhones, the combination of compact form factor and performance is just enough to make the small tablet worth it.

Apple iPad mini (2019)

$399 (starting)

The Good

  • Class-leading performance
  • Excellent battery life
  • Works with all previous iPad mini accessories
  • Supports Apple Pencil (first-gen)

The Bad

  • Aging design
  • No Face ID
  • No portrait mode despite Neural Engine
  • Pricer than 9.7-inch iPad

The Bottom Line

With a powerful A12 Bionic chip, the new iPad mini (2019) is still the most powerful small tablet yet, and will likely remain so in the coming years.

Cool Factor3

Learning Curve5

Performance5

Bang for the Buck3

Who exactly is the new iPad mini for, though? When the original iPad mini came out in 2012, big iPhones didn’t exist yet and a 7.9-inch tablet made sense, filling the gap between the 4-inch iPhone 5 and 9.7-inch iPad 4

But as iPhones grew, starting in 2014 with the first plus-sized iPhone 6 Plus and its 5.5-inch screen, the need for an iPad mini became less necessary.

In 2019, three years after I reviewed the iPad mini 4, the answer to the question of who the new iPad mini is for remains the same: somebody who wants it.

Apple told me in a briefing that its research shows the form factor is “beloved” and many previous-gen iPad mini owners wanted a new one with faster guts that’s compatible with existing accessories.

After using a 256GB Wifi + LTE iPad mini in space gray (it’s also available with 256GB of storage in silver or gold) for the last couple of days, I have to agree that it’s really not for everyone.

People who are probably happy the new iPad mini exists:

  • Kids who have smaller hands (anecdotally, I know a couple of parent friends with very young children under the age of 5 who love their iPad minis)
  • Big people, like my colleague Stan Schroeder who uses his iPad mini like a larger iPhone (yes, these people exist!)
  • Small businesses where space might be tight and an iPad mini is used as a kiosk or payment terminal
  • Enterprise such as field workers or IT professionals who need a small and powerful tablet that’s easy to carry between locations
  • Existing professionals such as pilots who use it in place of hefty manuals or as a maps or navigation display
  • Designers who are increasingly using AR to visualize objects in real spaces

These are just some examples of the type of consumers and professionals I believe the new iPad mini is courting. I admit it’s not the most satisfying answer, but it is realistic. The new iPad mini is more function than form. You don’t have to get an iPad mini if you think it’s too small or serves no purpose in your life. But it’s there if it does.

The new iPad mini (2019) looks identical to the previous iPad mini 4.

Zlata Ivleva / Mashable

There’s really no way to spin the new iPad mini’s design: It’s old. Apple’s selling a 3-year-old design — 6 if you want to go all the way back to the original iPad mini with a non-laminated display and regular non-Touch ID home button — as if it’s no big deal.

But truth be told, it kinda is. Though I’ll agree the new iPad mini’s unibody aluminum body and curved sides have aged well some 6 years after the first-gen iPad mini launched, it still looks dated when placed next to an 11-inch or 12.9-inch iPad Pro. The differences immediately jump out.

If it ain’t broke…

Zlata Ivleva / Mashable

Where the iPad Pro has a flat sides, thinner and equal-sized bezels surrounding the screen, and rounded display corners, the iPad mini still sports chunky “forehead” and “chin” bezels above and below the screen. On the bright side, though, the new iPad is still 6.1mm thin and weighs a less than a pound.

Headphone jack is still alive on the iPad mini!

Zlata Ivleva / Mashable

No USB-C, though. Just the reliable ol’ Lightning.

Zlata Ivleva / Mashable

The new iPad mini has Touch ID instead of Face ID. It has a Lightning port instead of a USB-C. It has a headphone jack whereas the iPad Pros don’t.

The new iPad mini doesn’t come with a flashy new design or features, but it gets the job done — and better than any competing tablet in the same class size. It is nothing if not very reliable.

The 7.9-inch Retina display now supports wide color gamut, True Tone, and is brighter than before.

Zlata Ivleva / Mashable

The laminated 7.9-inch Retina display with 2,048 x 1,536 resolution and 326 pixels per inch (ppi) is as stunning as before and viewing angles are fantastic. 

There are a couple new features for the display, though: wide color gamut (P3) support, True Tone, and increased brightness. Wide color gamut lets the screen display more colors so photos have more dynamic range and look more vibrant. True Tone allows the screen to automatically adjust the color temperature to that of the surrounding environment so that content looks more natural and pleasing to the eyes. And lastly, the new iPad mini’s screen is 25 percent brighter than the iPad mini 4’s display.

Below the screen is the good ol’ Touch ID home button. It’s no Face ID, but the fingerprint reader is as snappy as ever, unlocking the tablet quickly when touched with a fingertip.

Touch ID is great, but it’s time to ditch it for Face ID so the bezels can slim down.

Zlata Ivleva / Mashable

Reducing the bezels and modernizing the iPad mini with Face ID would have made the new iPad mini even more portable and an easier fit inside of jacket pockets. But keeping the same design has at least one benefit reduced cost: accessory compatibility. 

Got an old iPad mini cover or case? It works with the new iPad mini.

Zlata Ivleva / Mashable

With no physical changes, the new iPad mini works with all previous accessories, including cases, wireless keyboards, camera rigs, etc.

This is great for small businesses, like boutiques that might have already invested in stands or mobile payment terminals for an old iPad mini and can simply upgrade to the new iPad mini without buying new gear.

Drawing on iPad mini with Apple Pencil is every bit as precise as on larger iPads.

Zlata Ivleva / Mashable

Besides of the new A12 chip, which I’ll get to in a minute, the new iPad mini’s other most notable new feature is Apple Pencil support.

Note: It’s support for the first-generation Apple Pencil and not the second-generation model that works with the latest iPad Pros. This is important because you don’t want to buy the new one only to have to return it because it won’t connect to the new iPad mini.

Last year, I admitted to not understanding the value of an Apple Pencil prior to reviewing the 9.7-inch iPad. A year later, I’m a full-blown convert. I use an Apple Pencil every day with an iPad Pro and dare say iPads are better with one. They go hand-in-hand like a desktop computer with keyboard and mouse.

The Apple Pencil’s strength as an instrument for drawing and taking notes is obvious. But its precision tip is good for many other things too, such as scrubbing through timelines and splicing clips in video editing apps like LumaFusion, iMovie, or Adobe Premier Rush. I’ve also found Apple Pencil really useful for editing photos, where the tip is better than my fingers for adjusting sliders, making selections, and masking out certain areas.

The only downside to using Apple Pencil on the new iPad mini is its smaller screen.

Zlata Ivleva / Mashable

Similar to Apple Pencil on the 9.7-inch iPad, Apple Pencil on the new iPad mini is every bit as accurate and precise as on the rest of the iPad family. Whether you’re drawing, writing, or selecting, Apple Pencil is responsive. It’s better than a Surface Pen for the Surface Pro and any stylus Samsung’s ever released for its Galaxy tablets.

That said, the main downside to using Apple Pencil on the new iPad mini is screen size. With a 7.9-inch screen, you’re not getting a lot of digital canvas to draw or take notes on.

In an illustrating app like Procreate, the iPad mini’s screen can sometimes feel cramped. Compared to a 9.7-inch or 10.5-inch iPad, I had to do more pinching and zooming to expand a document to add details. Drawing on the iPad mini with Apple Pencil is by no means impossible, but it’s not nearly as convenient on a smaller screen. Children with smaller hands may feel otherwise, though. To them, an iPad mini is big, and an iPad or iPad Air is massive.

This is still the most inelegant charging solution ever for a stylus.

Zlata Ivleva / Mashable

The other cons of Apple Pencil on the iPad mini aren’t exclusive to the little tablet and apply to the 9.7-inch iPad and 10.5-inch iPad Air as well. Charging the Pencil by jamming its Lightning plug into the iPad mini’s charging port is still ridiculous and puts me in a state of unease for fear of accidentally snapping the Pencil; the Apple Pencil’s cap is easy to lose; it can roll off a table; and there’s no way to clip the Apple Pencil to the iPad mini for storage.

All of these shortcomings don’t exist for the second-gen Apple Pencil, which magnetically clips to the side of the iPad Pro (which wirelessly charges it), doesn’t come with a cap, and has a flat side to keep it from rolling away.

The new iPad mini doesn’t scrimp on performance; it’s as powerful as the iPhone XS and XR.

Zlata Ivleva / Mashable

Three years since its last update, the new iPad mini is now in a performance class of its own. Where there once were a few Android tablets that came close to giving the iPad mini a run for its computing power, there are now none.

The new iPad mini is powered by the same A12 Bionic chip inside of the iPhone XS, XS Max, and XR. As you may have read in our reviews for the iPhones, the A12 Bionic is insanely fast. Even the latest Qualcomm Snapdragon chips in the best Android tablets don’t come close to what Apple’s custom silicon is capable of. And the only mobile chip that’s even faster is the A12X Bionic inside of the iPad Pros.

To confirm the new iPad mini’s power, I ran my usual Geekbench 4 benchmarks to see where the new iPad mini slots in. As expected, the new iPad mini is just as powerful as the XS, XS Max and XR, scoring 4,817 on single-core and 11,483 on multi-core. These scores match Apple’s claims of up to 3x faster CPU performance compared to the iPad mini 4.

The A12 Bionic also comes with greatly improved graphics performance compared to the A8 chip inside of the iPad mini 4. Apple says GPU performance is up to 9x faster. I can’t verify this increase, but I can say 3D games run great on the iPad mini. Big games such as Asphalt 9 (which keeps getting better and prettier with new updates), Fortnite, and Skyforce Reloaded all played great. The back of the new iPad mini did get just a little bit warm at times, but never hot to the touch.

Adobe Premiere Rush CC works as well as on iPhone XS.

SCREENSHOT: RAYMOND WONG / MASHABLE

Editing photos with Pixelmater is easier with Apple Pencil.

SCREENSHOT: RAYMOND WONG / MASHABLE

To really push the iPad mini’s A12 Bionic chip, I opened up the same 3-minute video project consisting of 4K video clips, transitions, and effects in Adobe Premiere Rush that I used in our iPad Pro review and then exported the project in 1080p. Also as expected, the new iPad mini completed the video export in 1 minute and 14 seconds on average, which was just a second behind the iPhone XS. In other words: The new iPad mini isn’t throttled in any way compared to the latest iPhones.

Also not surprising: battery life is terrific. I got up to 10 hours on a single charge with mixed usage, which include lots of reading news in Feedly, watching videos on YouTube and Netflix, streaming music via Spotify and Apple Music, and the usual Twitter and Instagram (yo, Instagram, will we ever get an iPad app?).

The only thing I dislike about the new iPad mini relating to its battery is the included power adapter. It’s a 12-watt power brick, but it’s USB-A-to-Lightning. It would be great to see Apple ditch USB-A for USB-C. 

The new iPad mini’s rear camera has the same 8 megapixels as the camera on the iPad mini 4.

Zlata Ivleva / Mashable

The new iPad mini’s cameras are… still average. There’s an 8-megapixel camera on the rear with f/2.4 aperture, which is the same as on the previous iPad mini 4.

Now, I didn’t have an iPad mini 4 on hand to shoot any comparisons shots so I can’t say for sure if there are any big noticeable improvements to image quality despite the same resolution camera sensor. But I can say the images are as good as you can expect from iPad cameras. If you want great photos, get any of the latest iPhones. Leveraging the A12 Bionic chip and Neural Engine, the new iPhones can take some impressive photos with the Smart HDR feature.

You can see some sample images below (click on them for full res). As you can see, there’s not a lot of dynamic range, HDR is pretty weak, and sharpness is lacking. In most cases, you’ll probably end up using the rear camera to scan documents more often than taking photos.

The front-facing FaceTime camera is improved, though. It’s a now 7-megapixel shooter with f/2.2 aperture compared to the 1.2-megapixel selfie camera on the iPad mini 4. This means higher-resolution selfies and FaceTime video calls that look better because it captures in 1080p resolution as opposed to 720p.

Mostly, the new camera is really good for one thing: augmented reality. The rear camera is powerful enough to reliably track 3D space to place virtual objects on top of the real world. AR tracking isn’t quite as good as through the cameras on my iPhone XS or iPad Pro, but  I found it more capable compared to the 9.7-inch iPad, which has an older and less powerful A10 Fusion chip.

It’s not as spacious as larger iPads, but running two apps at once is possible on the new iPad mini.

Zlata Ivleva / Mashable

iOS is, of course, still iOS. It works exactly like on any other iPad and comes with all of its limitations as well. If you don’t like iOS 12 because it doesn’t provide enough customization, or that it doesn’t support a wireless mouse, or that its multitasking isn’t as robust as a desktop operating system such as Windows 10 or Chrome OS, the new iPad mini probably isn’t for you.

For the most part, iOS on the new iPad mini works great. Everything that works well on a 9.7-inch or larger iPad functions exactly the same here. Everything that feels deficient on larger iPads, like drag-and-drop, feels deficient here. Maybe iOS 13 will make iPads work more like macOS with a better file system and windowed apps, but for now, we’re stuck with what we have.

In portrait mode, the dock of apps is just too small if you fill them up.

Screenshot: Raymond Wong / Mashable

Nine years later and Instagram still doesn’t have a proper iPad app. Here’s the iPhone app blown up to 2x.

Screenshot: Raymond Wong / Mashable

If I have any one complaint about iOS 12 on the new iPad mini, it’s the dock. You can include up to 11 apps (not counting the three recently opened apps to the dock’s divider on the right) compared to 13 apps on the 9.7-inch iPad and 10.5-inch iPad Air and 15 apps on the 12.9-inch iPad Pro, which is great. But doing so makes the icons in the dock really small. I don’t have chubby fingers or anything and even my skinny fingers accidentally tapped the wrong icon on more than a few occasions.

This isn’t as much of a problem in landscape position, but in portrait mode, the icons really are too small. Sure, I could just put fewer apps in the dock, but it really highlights just how cramped the 7.9-inch screen can be.

Three apps running on the iPad mini at once: YouTube and Safari in Split View, and Twitter with Slide Over.

Screenshot: Raymond Wong / Mashable

Despite all of the limitations of iOS, I have to applaud Apple for how well it runs on the new iPad mini. Thanks to the A12 Bionic chip, it’s not a second-class tablet to its larger siblings.

The whole operating system is buttery smooth and responsive and I had no problems running two apps side-by-side in Split View on the iPad mini 4 or having third app open on top via Slide Over. From pulling up the dock while an app is open to launching the multi-tasking window of recently opened apps with four fingers, all of iOS’s gestures translated perfectly on the new iPad mini.

Screen size is personal. From left to right: 10.5-inch iPad Pro (2017), 9.7-inch iPad (2018), 7.9-inch iPad mini (2019), and 6.5-inch iPhone XS Max.

Zlata Ivleva / Mashable

Three years ago, I called the iPad mini 4 “arguably the best tablet under 10 inches.” Three years later, it’s remarkable that nothing has changed. The new iPad mini is still the best tablet under 10 inches (I round the 9.7-inch iPad up so it doesn’t qualify).

There simply isn’t a tablet as powerful as the new iPad mini with the same or similar dimensions. You can get a 7-inch Kindle Fire for $50, but it’s demonstrably inferior in every way from the construction, to the app selection, to the performance, to the storage, to display, and etc.

Samsung’s sub-10-inch Android tablets make up the middle ground between the throwaway Kindle Fires and the new iPad mini and can cost a few hundred bucks less depending on the specific model. But they’re not future-proof the way the new iPad mini is. Most of these tablets will never get the latest version of Android — why Samsung is still selling tablets running Android Lollipop and Marshmallow is beyond me — and are, frankly, mediocre.

$399 is not throwaway territory, nor is it low enough to be an impulse buy. “The combination of specs and pricing seem targeted at a very specific customer,” I wrote in my iPad mini 4 review. This is still true for the new iPad mini.

The iPad mini is not a revolutionary new tablet. But it is a very reliable tablet, and for a certain kind of user, that’s more important than a thinner profile and slimmer bezels.

  • Senior Tech Correspondent

    Raymond Wong

  • Assistant Editor

    Keith Wagstaff

  • Photography

    Zlata Ivleva

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Report: Legend Ichiro Suzuki to Retire After Nearly 30 Years in MLB, Japan

Seattle Mariners Ichiro Suzuki runs to the first base in the top of the fourth inning at the Major League Baseball Japan Opening Series in Tokyo on March 21, 2019. (Photo by Kazuhiro NOGI / AFP)        (Photo credit should read KAZUHIRO NOGI/AFP/Getty Images)

KAZUHIRO NOGI/Getty Images

Ichiro Suzuki will retire following Thursday’s game against the Oakland Athletics at the Tokyo Dome in Tokyo, Japan.

According to ESPNKyodo News was the first to report prior to the game that it would be Ichiro’s final contest as a big-league player, and it was later said on the ESPN telecast that Ichiro informed the Mariners of his decision.

Suzuki got the start in right field for the second day in a row and batted ninth in front of his home-country fans, going 0-for-4. After grounding out in the top of the eighth inning with the score tied 4-4, Ichiro was allowed to take the field for the bottom of the eighth before exiting amid thunderous applause from the crowd:

MLB @MLB

Heroes get remembered. #MLB開幕戦 https://t.co/Wv5eRpzOPE

Seattle Mariners @Mariners

Legend. https://t.co/CgnaEpmLYP

The rest of his Mariners teammates left the field, which allowed Ichiro to soak in the special moment:

MLB @MLB

Ichiro exits in the 8th inning to a standing ovation in the Tokyo Dome. 👏

#MLB開幕戦 https://t.co/uXtp0mQkuv

When Ichiro reached the dugout, he embraced his teammates and coaches, as well as fellow Mariners legend Ken Griffey Jr., who met him with a hug:

Cut4 @Cut4

Our allergies just started acting up real bad.

#MLB開幕戦 https://t.co/TgZfOjjXta

Ichiro also started Wednesday in Seattle’s 9-7 win over Oakland, finishing 0-for-1 with a walk. In order to ensure he would get a standing ovation from the crowd, Mariners manager Scott Servais lifted Suzuki from the game in the fourth inning and allowed him to trot off the field:

Bleacher Report @BleacherReport

Fans show all the respect to Ichiro at the Tokyo Dome as he comes out the game 🙌

(via @Cut4)

https://t.co/MqsH8YgHtm

The 45-year-old Ichiro is the greatest Japanese player in MLB history and a surefire, first-ballot Hall of Famer when he becomes eligible. He is set to retire as a 10-time All-Star, 10-time Gold Glove Award winner, one-time American League MVP and a member of the 3,000-hit club.

Former A’s pitcher Dallas Braden pointed out the significance of Thursday’s game, with Ichiro playing for the final time and Japanese countryman Yusei Kikuchi making his MLB regular-season debut on the mound for Seattle at the Tokyo Dome:

Dallas Braden @DALLASBRADEN209

News sources have confirmed the retirement of Ichiro following the game today. I’m glad baseball lends itself to storybook moments such as these. A young Japanese ace makes his MLB debut in his home country while fellow countryman Ichiro is celebrated by fans home & abroad.

Fittingly, Ichiro and Kikuchi shared a special moment when Suzuki came off the field for the final time:

Marcus Gilmer @marcusgilmer

A tearful embrace from Kikuchi, a final wave to the crowd, and a hug from The Kid. Goodbye, Ichiro, you’re one of the greats. https://t.co/yte8jNwrB0

Ichiro could not muster a hit over his final two MLB games, but his legacy was already established long ago over the course of his 19-year MLB career with the Mariners, New York Yankees and Miami Marlins.

Suzuki appeared in just 15 games for the Mariners last season before becoming a special assistant in the team’s front office. Ichiro announced his comeback by signing a minor-league deal with the Mariners in January, which gave him the opportunity to go out on ideal terms in his home country.

Ichiro owns a career batting average of .311 with 117 home runs, 780 RBI, 1,420 runs scored and 509 stolen bases. In addition to his 3,089 career hits in Major League Baseball, Suzuki had 1,278 hits in the Japanese Nippon Professional Baseball league, making him the most prolific hitter in major professional baseball history.

His 4,367 career hits across MLB and NPB are 111 more than MLB hits king Pete Rose had during his MLB career.

Ichiro is an all-time great player, and he has also long been one of baseball’s best ambassadors due to his approach to the game and passion for it.

With Suzuki stepping away from baseball for good as a player, it opens up a world of options for him in terms of working in the Mariners’ front office again or becoming a liaison of sorts between Major League Baseball and Japan.

Whatever the case, Ichiro had a special career, and the manner in which he ended it is something baseball fans will likely remember for a long time to come.

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Political divisions widen in Albania as EU decision nears

Political divisions are deepening in Albania as the opposition steps up demonstrations against the socialist government of Prime Minister Edi Rama, which it accuses of using drug money to control the country.

The opposition Democratic Party left parliament last month and began a series of protests outside Rama’s office. On Thursday it is inaugurating a new practice of demonstrating outside parliament every time there is a debate.

The perception that Edi Rama’s socialist government has embraced special interests, and especially the illegal drug trade, is widespread in Albania.

Two interior ministers have resigned under suspicion of taking bribes from organised crime.

Democratic Party leader Lulzim Basha believes the socialists have used drug money to buy votes and effected “state capture” – complete control of the executive, the legislature and the judiciary, which does not pursue high-profile corruption cases.

Esentially ignored

He is calling on Rama to step down and allow a transitional government to pave the way for an early general election in the autumn.

The opposition said it stopped working in the legislature because it was essentially ignored.

“Amendments we proposed were voted down without discussion. Whenever ministers were called to report before parliamentary commissions, they declined,” Basha told Al Jazeera.

He said investigative committees didn’t work either “because contrary to the law they (the Socialist Party) refused to submit evidence of investigations we initiated of collusion between organised crime and senior ministers”.

Basha has said the government rigged the 2017 election that reelected Rama.

The Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE), which helps monitor Albanian elections, said there had been signs of voter intimidation, double ballot-casting and fraud in the vote. But all parties accepted the result and the European Union (EU) did not question it.

“Why are they complaining about vote-rigging two years later, and just before local elections?” said socialist chief whip Taulant Balla and urged the opposition to return to parliament.

“They need to resume their seats. In representative democracy, if you don’t represent, you lose your authority.”

The political turmoil comes as the EU is to announce whether it will start membership talks with Albania in June. A key criterion is whether Rama’s government will complete a judicial reform to root out corrupt judges and provide a balance to executive power.

Transit country for ‘hard drugs’

Even the European Commission, which supports opening talks now, makes this conditional on judicial reforms that will put more serious criminals in jail, especially those involved in the drug trade.

“Albania remains the main source of cannabis herb trafficked to the European Union,” and, “is also considered a transit country for hard drugs such as heroin and cocaine,” the Commission’s latest report said.

“While there is an increasing number of offenders being arrested for drug trafficking, the number of final convictions remains negligible,” it said.

If anything, crime figures suggest that the drug problem is worsening. Four years ago, more than half of serious crimes related to the production and cultivation of narcotics. That rose to two thirds in 2016 and almost three quarters in 2017.

Judicial reform was one of the campaign issues that propelled Rama to victory in 2013, but he did not seriously tackle for several years.

Balla said in 2016 the socialists ended a practice that allowed politicians to appoint judges “who will investigate and imprison politicians. So there is no control from parliament or the government over the justice system,” he said.

A key part of the socialist’s reform was checking judges’ wealth against earnings. At least 17 senior judges did not pass the test. Some resigned when they received their summons to the vetting committee.

This has left Albania without a functioning Constitutional Court or a Supreme Court. Even though the socialists vow to rectify this by June, some question whether the delay was deliberate, as it gave the government a year-long window of unchallenged rule.

During this time it has issued executive orders without parliamentary or presidential approval. The most controversial of these placed 137 hectares of prime beachfront property under eminent domain, allowing the government to expropriate it for a fraction if its estimated $800mn-$1.5bn value.

The government says it is verifying the titles of hundreds of owners, mostly ethnic Greeks, who have come forth.

Their legal challenges remain stuck in the semi-functional court system. But in the meantime the government has started handing the land to contractors.

“Our main challenge remains the development of tourism,” said Balla.

“Big companies, from Germany, from Italy… cannot come to invest in Albania  (if)  they are not guaranteed property titles,” he said. 

Basha said this is another example of the partisan economy.

“What we have is a government that is plotting on a daily basis to take away private and public property and give it to a handful of oligarchs which are, effectively, predatory cronies of the government.”

High unemployment

In June the socialists also face a test of their popularity in local elections. They are plowing public money into large infrastructure works including roads, schools and hospitals. But there are signs that these are failing to impress people who cannot find a job.

Official unemployment stands at 13 percent despite four-percent growth on paper.

Per capita earnings, at under $5,000 a year, stand at 29 percent of the EU average. Albanians who went abroad send $1.25bn home in remittances – a tenth of GDP – and many more are trying to leave, legally or illegally, rather than remain in a job market they consider politically slanted.

Factional capture of the economy is not unique to Albania. If anything, it is the Balkan norm, ensuring that at any given moment, at least half of society suffers from discrimination by the state and by private interests  under state pressure. But the Socialist Party may have breached the tacit understanding that it will not entirely disenfranchise the opposition economically and politically.

All parties support EU membership, but they are even divided on Albania’s chances of success.

“We know the EU will not open negotiations with a country that many European media call ‘the Colombia of Europe,’” says Basha.

The socialist Taulant Balla takes the optimistic view. “As things are now, it is almost sure that with the continuation of these reforms we will get another positive report from the Commission.”

Supporters of the opposition party hold a national flag and a banner during an anti-government protest [Florion Goga/Reuters]

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