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tv   The Papers  BBC News  February 24, 2019 10:30pm-11:01pm GMT

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hello. back in 2016, we visited the company is keen this is bbc news. the cybathlon in zurich, for to me to experience we'll be taking a look at tomorrow a competition where people this from the inside, morning's papers in a moment — and so am i. with limited mobility competed first, the headlines: against each other with some so in order to try the device, and as we head towards the weekend, theresa may says mps will be able of the most sophisticated augmented i need to be measured for it. to have a final say on her brexit there is the increasing motion devices on the planet. these measurements are essential chance of some rain. deal by march 12th, it will turn a bit cooler. ruling out a meaningful to find the recommended gait vote this week. for someone of my height and weight. on trial were robotic arms, it is a heavy computing task, the news emerged as the prosthetics and exoskeletons, so calculations are done prime minister travelled on a server outside the suit. to egypt for a summit between eu all being used to help with some the most challenging tasks faced and arab league leaders. this is bbc news. by people with disabilities. the results are then i'm julian worricker. labour's deputy leader, sent to the exoskeleton. the headlines at 11:00: tom watson, warnsjeremy corbyn there was also a surprising amount he has to act urgently if the party and a couple of years ago we saw of computing going on in the device. theresa may arrives at a summit as well as the basic form of motion, in egypt with a promise that mps the exo can make its own decisions, will be able to have another say is to stay together. an exoskeleton helping people lift so something unexpected happens — on her brexit deal by march 12th, heavy items in a hardware ruling out a meaningful store in america. say, my foot hits the ground too and now one french company vote this week. is using the tech to rehabilitate we wa nt and give paraplegic patients we want to leave the european union pope francis promises on the 29th of march with a deal. that the roman catholic church the chance to walk again. late or someone pushes it, will do more to tackle child sex lj rich went to visit. it works out how to respond. that is what we are working for. we lean forward, and push up. abuse at the end of a vatican wow. have had good progress, constructive summit on paedophilia. that's. .. celebrities begin to arrive that's amazing. discussions with the european union, on the oscars red carpet i can even lean sideways and crouch. and we will be continuing that work for a ceremony that's due to be full i can also change the direction of suspense, with all eyes so we can and we will be continuing that work so we can leave and we will be continuing that work on the award for best picture. i move in by leaning my so we can leave on and we will be continuing that work so we can leave on the 29th of march and leave the deal. -- leave with a body whilst walking. i'm going to aim towards the right point.
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oh, i can feel it going that way. deal. labour's deputy leader tom watson the start—up has grown warnsjeremy corbyn he has to act to around 50 employees, urgently if the party many motivated by family members is to stay together. who are or will soon pope francis promises hello and welcome to our look ahead be unable to walk. that the roman catholic church will do more to tackle child sex to what the the papers will be bringing us tomorrow. abuse at the end of a vatican so one of the key things we are working on at the moment summit on paedophilia. celebrities have started arriving with me are economic advisor floriane has tried several for hollywood's biggest night is allowing stroke patients to get ruth lea and the deputy political exoskeletons, but liked this one editor of the independent, so much, she is now working inside the exo and retrain rob merrick many of tomorrow's front their walk with the exo. pages are already in. they slowly regain their ability to move so you've got to tune for the company. the exo down in the assistance it the guardian reports eu officials are exploring plans brings over time. to postpone brexit until 2021. it is a practically hands—free exo so as well as walking, the company clearly has ambitions beyond this, she can do this. its first exoskeleton, and floriane is looking forward to shaping its future. the financial times leads back the vote on her brexit deal to as late as march 12. the device aims to improve movement for people with total or partial paralysis and after 18 months of trials, the latest version this is a fairly straightforward is finally ready to sell to rehabilitation centres. the design that we are trying reporting by the financial times is about 6—7 years of work meaning she will have a meaningful and they are hoping to release a personal exo in a couple of years or so and that is currently secret vote by march the 29th. the reaction
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and right behind me. brilliant. i might take a peek. that was lj rich in paris. by business, the cba and the institute of directors is one of now, during our christmas special last year, we show it the first hands—on despair. they want to know what is yep. going on. uncertainty at the best of oh, yes. with the new flexible phone. times is difficult for business, but created by chinese firm royole, its first phone has been five under these circumstances, it years in the making. one of its tricks is to unfold, becomes unmanageable. she is saying this small remote activates the suit. the 29th of march is within our creating a tablet. leaning forward at the right grasp, implying she still might be speed and angle activates able to get the legislation through back injanuary, i caught up an accelerometer on the back. with the firm's boss, bill liu, she need to do if there is a deal. this starts the system walking. and asked him how he'd managed but there is a question over there. to beat the likes of samsung and lg i think businesses are spitting the more you use it, to create the world's is it becoming easier first bendable phone. we focused on the flex release phase feathers over this one. within our or was it easy straightaway? because it's so hard, it's easy, because we are not so difficult to make it happen. grasp, is that as confident a line from a technology innovation point as we have had before? she tends to pained, not fatigued, of view, you have to do a lot of innovations from the fundamental say we intend to leave on march the and it's good for my arms materials, process, device designs, certain design and then later and shoulders because product design so that is why 29. as we invested $1.7 billion say we intend to leave on march the 29. as you have said, she is giving we have no crutches. in shenzhen, china, to build up a much softer version of that the 11.5 million square feet production facility for the mass situation. that isjust inevitable. the one thing that is certain about production of the flexpai. brexit, we will not leave on march
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the 29th. you think it is certain? i'd love to know whether the main problems is the fact we will only leave on that date if that the connections break or the main problem is that you can't get the colours right there is no deal. if no deal, even on the bendy or obviously you need if mps agree a deal, which looks a replacement glass, you can't have glass. the most challenging part is you have to manufacture millions of transistors, tiny circuits on top of the super unlikely, there will be a delay thin flexible film, and the film because it will take much longer to get the legislation through than is only several micrometres. march the 29. it looks like parliament will take back control it is thinner than our hair and vote to compel the prime minister to seek and vote to compel the prime ministerto seeka and vote to compel the prime diameter, and it has to be very, minister to seek a delay. she is perhaps letting everybody down very precise position. gently. looking at what happened today, the prime minister catching at the moment, the royole flexpai is only available to buy in china but they're not the only some winter sun today, the prime minister catching some wintersun in today, the prime minister catching some winter sun in egypt. she is ones going bendy. having to accept her failure of not take a look at this tablet that folds twice to create a phone. achieving anything with its makers, xiaomi, say it is only renegotiation with the eu. she has an engineering model at the moment, though. not made any progress at all on the irish backstop, which has held another chinese firm, lenovo, has also previously teased that it's working on a similar product. for royole, though, this isn'tjust
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about wearables and phones. things up. we have to remind their vision is that flexible electronics will change the way ourselves what the brady amendment we interact with the smart home said on the 29th of january. it was and technology generally. replacing the backstop, alternative there is the age of internet arrangements. we are a long, long of things, so flexible displays, way from that at the moment. let's flexible sensors, flexible electronics, break the limitation move through them. they have a of the phone factor, of the surface. slightly different take on it. rob, eventually, all of these the telegraph is talking about the things will be smart, prime minister drawing up plans to will be intelligent. delay brexit by two months?m that is where we see prime minister drawing up plans to delay brexit by two months? it is the flexible display‘s future. theissue now we've heard rumours of samsung delay brexit by two months? it is the issue we were just talking making a flexible phone for some time and this week, we finally got our answer about. whatever happens, the exit at their latest launch. here's jen copestake. in a big surprise, samsung not only unveiled a folding phone date will have to be pushed back. on but announced it would go on sale in two months time, at a staggering cost ofjust under $2,000. wednesday, mps will almost certainly vote for this amendment which would compel the government to seek an extension to article 50. the prime minister has a very difficult choice called the galaxy fold, to make ahead of wednesday. does she the phone opens up to make sack ministers who break ranks and a 7.3—inch tablet display capable vote in favour of that? would be
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very difficult for her to do. will of running three apps at once. she give them a free vote, possibly? it includes a new type of hidden will she make before wednesday, a hinge which they say can handle thousands of folds and unfolds, unilateral announcement she will seek an extension. we are talking with a battery on each side to extend runtime. about the yvette cooper and oliver left wing amendment. what you are the eye—watering price seems hinting at there, in the daily mail unusual, if not risky, over the last couple of days, gregg given the company said the cost of its s9 phones led to lower—than—expected sales. clark, amber rudd wrote what they but they say this is a luxury item, did about where they might go. your and a new category of device. also launched were the s10 series reading of that is they will vote phones, the mid—range x10, for that? i think they have to. what cheaper s10e and the s10 plus. she is doing by promising another each new model of phone comes vote by march the 12th is trying to with a super—wide camera so you can persuade them to hold fire and what get 123 degrees of vision, basically the same as a human they threaten to do, give her more eye if you want that. the camera also allows you to use some artificial intelligence time. there is no sign of any progress with brussels. i cannot capabilities to improve the way believe those cabinet ministers believe those cabinet ministers believe two weeks will make any you take photos. difference. it is notjust the three you can still unlock the phone with facial recognition, cabinet ministers, there are various
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ministers across the government but samsung have done away telling the prime minister they will with the iris scanner and they say vote for yvette cooper's amendment. this was to maximise she can play hardball and sack them the end—to—end display, all. what would that do to her which seems to be all the rage these days. the screen is maximised with a hole—punch camera and features a new security option. in—screen fingerprint sensors are becoming more and more popular government? she offers them a free and samsung says they have got vote or she gets out in front of it something unique called an ultrasonic fingerprint sensor. and says, before wednesday i will seeka and says, before wednesday i will it's different to a typical seek a delay if i have not passed my optical sensor, which takes deal. we have to remember that at the end of january when yvette a photograph of your thumb. cooper had her amendment than it did instead, it measures actually fail. it did. i am not sure the contours of your thumb. they say this will make it even more secure against spoofing so it's not it will get through on wednesday but possible for someone to take we will wait and see what happens. a photocopy of your thumb and use it ministers are in a different to open your device. position now. the delay? if there is one more surprise was the unveiling of samsung's 5g—ready phone. we didn't get a price, a deal and she cannot get her but we can guess it won't be cheap. required legislation through by the 29th of march, the implication is a 5g—ready phone might give samsung that there will be some technical a strategicjump on competitors like apple but with widespread delay. businesses will be tearing roll—out of the network not their hair out after this because it expected any time soon, they probably won't be flying off the shelves.
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that's it for the short looks so thoroughly incompetent. the version this week. the full—length version is waiting delay might be until 2021? for you right now on iplayer. don't forget, next week we are at the mobile world congress in barcelona. looks so thoroughly incompetent. the delay might be until2021? having said we might have a delay of two and you can find us social media months, we get to the guardian and on facebook, youtube, instagram and twitter at @bbcclick. they say, you cannot have a delay of thanks for watching two months, we want to extend your membership until the end of december and we will see you soon. 2021 which covers the transition period in the withdrawal agreement. i think what credibility the government would had would fade into shreds. the only thing with this story, plans are being extolled by good evening. the eu's senior officials, you have this time last year we were starting to feel the effects of the so—called to read between the lines of those beast from the east but not this year. there is still some cold air across siberia but we are not bringing it in our direction, phrases as to how realistic it is? instead we are importing air they do seem to be saying no thank from the south west, you to the two months. that is the very mild and even warm source telegraph story thrown out by the guardian story. we are talking about of air which pushed temperatures today up above 19 degrees. the two different sides. in this 19.1 in parts of wales, that is country we tend to think sometimes, a new february record for wales.
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it is an issue whether parliament there is some more of that weather to come through the first part of the week ahead, more warm sunshine but with frosty compels the prime minister to seek a nights and a foggy mornings, by the end of the week, things will start to turn more unsettled, but not from the east, from the west. as we go through tonight, delay, as if it will automatically those temperatures after such be granted by the eve. but it a warm day will dip away, requires the agreement of all 27 particularly towards the south, countries. they are desperate not to getting all the way down have a short delay because it will to minus six degrees, not solve anything. this has been not as cold further north and west partly because of this extra cloud whispered before, they effectively and because of this rain, carry out the trade negotiations that will gradually while the uk is in the eu rather slide away north. than force the uk to sign the also starting tomorrow with fog across parts of yorkshire up into north east england, withdrawal agreement and become a some of that could be dense and quite slow to clear, but for the majority, third country and then stop the tomorrow is another blue sky day trade agreements. you are talking with lots of sunshine to be had and once again, about two different types of delay. it will feel warm, unseasonably warm, 15—18d, one or two places could get up to 19 degrees. nine would be more typical one is the projected two months to for this time of year. it is all because of high pressure but because it remains in charge get through the necessary legislation. the eu is talking about on monday night into tuesday, something very different which is an it will turn chilly and i don't extension of the membership. it does think we will have much of a problem echo what you said about business? with fog at this stage. most places on tuesday will have more fine weather and sunshine, absolute despair, especially if it just a bit more cloud scraping across the far north—west and again
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is 21 months. it becomes impossible. those temperatures widely 15—18 degrees, a few spots warmer than that. fog looks likely to be a problem businesses have made a lot of on wednesday morning, particularly in east anglia down towards the south and some of that contingency plans for no deal, they could be slow to clear. just want to get on with it and know more dry weather with some extra where they are. let's move on to cloud, the odd spot of rain for northern ireland and the west other stories. rob, this is the of scotland, temperatures may be guardian and the story about the coming down a little pope and the vatican? you are bit, but not much. the bigger change comes through the second half of the week, first of all this area of low pressure on thursday. that could introduce showers just about anywhere in the uk challenging us to review a story and as we head towards the weekend, there is their increasing where we have only had a headline. chance of some rain. it will turn a bit cooler. there has been this major summit at the vatican, about 200 bishops brought together and they have heard traumatic testimony from the survivors of child abuse carried out by senior clergy in the catholic church. i gather those survivors are intensely disappointed and angry about what they heard from the pope. they expected to hear a zero tolerance approach to any abuse, but instead the pope has a quiver catered and talked about child abuse being a problem in wider society.
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almost as if he was suggesting it wasn'tjust something almost as if he was suggesting it wasn't just something the catholic church should be focusing on. but hisjob as head of church should be focusing on. but his job as head of the church should be focusing on. but hisjob as head of the catholic church is to make sure nobody is doing it in the catholic church. church is to make sure nobody is doing it in the catholic churchm is of no comfort to the survivors. he is pushing the issue away from his cell. all the sea is the headline. it is quite telling that isn't more on the front page because in other circumstances, they would have been. they had one of the survivors interviewed and he was furious. they are trying to push this issue away and not do anything about it. they are making platitudes, but not making any great decisions and that was the implication. let me stay with you in china, "threat it needs scrutiny". it is gchq, which is suggesting they are stepping up the concerns over the security risks when you use chinese firms. in the next
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generation of mobile networks. but earlier this month, they said there are security risks about using these firms but they are manageable in new zealand and australia have banned them from the telecoms infrastructure. we are falling into line with what the us, australia and new zealand have decided, the security risks are too great. what are your thoughts, rob? that is exactly the story. there does seem to be some confusion in the intelligence services. it was only this month the intelligence chiefs we re this month the intelligence chiefs were saying it was manageable. now
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the head of gchq is saying something different. it is confusing. the head of gchq is saying something different. it is confusinglj the head of gchq is saying something different. it is confusing. iwonder if they have been talking to donald trump? it is to an extent, caught up in relations between the us and china relations. they are talking about the issues between china and the us, notjust harris but this as well. there is a photograph on the front of the telegraph. is this the one who got married last year? that is my basic level of knowledge about the royals. the duchess of sussex has had a henna tattoo.|j the royals. the duchess of sussex has had a henna tattoo. i am thrilled. it is a good job we have only got 30 seconds. that's it for the papers this hour. ruth and rob will be back at 11:30 for another look at the papers. next on bbc news it's click.
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