tv Click BBC News March 7, 2019 3:30am-4:01am GMT
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i do believe this is a very warm welcome to bbc news, what you have been waiting for — broadcasting to our viewers 0ppo‘s first 5g smartphone. in north america and around the globe. my name is mike embley. the chinese telecoms giant huawei our top stories: huawei isn‘t backing down. has announced it is suing the chinese technology giant the american government — announces that it‘s suing because federal agencies have been the us government. barred from using its products. this as the company's chief financial officer, who's being detained republican senator martha mcsally at the request of the us, as the market gets more crowded appeared in court in canada. with similar looking phones, says she was raped by a senior the us is seeking her extradition the battle to cram in officer while serving in the military. on charges of bank and wire fraud i blame myself. relating to sanctions against iran. more functionality continues. i was ashamed and confused. i thought i was strong. a us senator, who was the first the second iteration of microsoft's hololens but felt powerless. woman to fly in combat created quite a stir here. for the air force, has said it's lighter than the original hololens, but at the same time, she was raped by a superior officer while serving in the military. it sort of feels more solid. let's see what martha mcsally said she didn't the experience is like. report the attack at the time there we go. a week into disruptions because she lacked on the uganda—rwanda border — we hear from some of those finding alternative ways to get across. faith in the system. why many foreign students are choosing australia rather the american singer r kelly is back in custody after a court hearing in chicago on unpaid child support. after a brief set—up, officials said he'd be detained i found myself until he paid more than $160,000 working in construction — albeit of the mixed reality variety. that were owed. he's also facing separate the upgrades include charges of sexual assault — which he denies. an improved display, doubling the viewing range, adding voice control, a muslim convert has been given a life sentence for planning to kill dozens of people in central london.
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lewis ludlow, who's 27 and from kent, was described by his own lawyer as naive and vulnerable. and more precise hand gestures. lewis , who called himself ‘the eagle‘ and ‘the ghost‘, swore allegiance to the islamic state group and had identified oxford street as an ‘ideal‘ target. he had previously admitted his guilt at the old bailey to plotting an attack in the uk, as our home affairs correspondent they allow you to stretch, rotate, daniel sandford reports. and move what is in the virtual world, or as was demonstrated at the launch, do something as detailed as play the piano. or i can play the keys one at a time. i am the eagle and i pledge the field of view is wider, but the experience is definitely allegiance to dawlatul islam. better when i'm standing further back, the moment when white convert which, initially, when i was trying lewis ludlow swore loyalty to move things on the table, to the islamic state group. that wasn't ideal because i was having to go forward. but right now, i can move we love death as much the timescale just here to take as you love life. a look at how the building work i have nothing for this country. was going at each point. 0k. that's pretty cool. this still isn't a consumer product, though, it's squarely aimed at professionals, with a price tag to match of $3,500. so all the demos are of this nature. together with his islamic state accomplice in the philippines, well, whilst it's easy to get caught this man, eyadzhemar abdusalam, he was planning to kill up to 100 up and trying to get the knack people in central london. of the gestures, the visuals it was the end of a ten—year are actually quite amazing. journey of radicalisation microsoft wouldn't say if its future for the awkward young man. plans include a less pricey consumer version, but speculation was rife amongst the crowd that hololens 3 could
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he's seen here with anjem choudary, who played a big role in drawing him into extremism. i used to be a fascist, a proper fascist. i mean, i used to be a holocaust denier as well. find its way into our homes. in this video he made, aged 19, he described his path from neo—nazism to radical islamism. counterterrorism detectives had watched him for years. he'd been through the government's de—radicalisation programme but nothing worked. last february, police stopped him going to the philippines where his is contact was based. hello and welcome to the week in tech. it was the week that facebook took down the page of anti—islamic activist tommy robinson for violating its policies on hate speech. it also removed his instagram profile and said he would not be allowed back on the platforms. then he was spotted by an undercover team taking pictures in central elon musk‘s tweets landed him london. in hot water — again. he is a man who has gone regulators in the us have asked from spending the vast majority of his time in his bedroom at home a judge to find him in contempt of court after they said he breached online to somebody who is travelling an agreement from last year into london, taking photographs to have his tesla—related of iconic locations. that started to get tweets vetted in advance. the hairs on the back and the bbc and itv have announced plans to launch of our necks standing up. counterterrorism detectives found a new subscription—based streaming service. the pictures he had taken called britbox, it will contain on his reconnaissance trip archive content for both on a phone he had dumped in a storm broadcasters, as well as original commissions. it was also the week drain, including this picture taken that two companies unveiled outside the flagship disney store. police also recovered a chilling just what we need —
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handwritten note ludlow had made. new military drones! yay! in it he proposed using a truck, perhaps with a home—made bomb on to ram into pedestrians here on oxford street. he said that way, nearly 100 people could be killed. he listed other potential attack weapons maker kalashnikov announced a new kamikaze drone that explodes on impact. meanwhile, boeing announced it's sites too, including madame tussauds developed a newjet plane sized uav codenamed loyal wingman, which i'm sure is intended to be reassuring. fedex is the latest firm to trial a new autonomous delivery robot. based on technology from powered and st paul's cathedral. wheelchairs for disabled people, the delivery company claim that the sameday bot can navigate on paved surfaces, kerbs and even steps. no word as yet, though, on its capacity for "sorry we missed you" cards. and, finally, do you have trouble sleeping? have you always craved a robot pillow that breathes like a baby? but his is contact was using encrypted messaging to team him up then you're in luck. with someone who turned out to be an undercover police officer dutch engineers have created something and ludlow was arrested. to fill this particular at first he denied everything. niche in the market. but then police showed him the video somnox weighs as much as a cat. they'd recovered of his oath of allegiance to the islamic state group. we love death as much it also plays music as you love life. and aims to calm your breathing. he is now starting a life sentence sweet dreams. of which he will serve a minimum away from the show floor,
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of 15 years in prison. daniel sandford, bbc news, central london. now on bbc news it's time for click. this week, nick kwek has been talking rubbish, but at least he went this week: bending the rules, to sunny dubai to do so. breaking the rules, dubai, the persian gulf. and cleaning up the mess. year—round sun, scorching temperatures. er. . . not exactly the weather i was hoping for. a bit of winter sun, they said. ah, well, despite being soaked to the core, the show must go on. it's that time of year again. we head on our annual pilgrimage in these unsuspecting waters lingers a cunning creature — to the world's biggest mobile event, mobile world congress in barcelona. a wide—jawed wading guzzler on the hunt. meet the wasteshark. this aqua drone sails around marinas and coastlines scouring the surface for plastic waste, debris, the stands are filled with an array of gleaming rectangles.
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but on the whole, they look quite similar — on first glance at least. seaweed and other pollution. well, there are plenty of great phones here, but mine does a lot already. and it's off, setting sail on a mission to gobble up as much garbage as possible. it essentially works like a giant roomba vacuum, hoovering up so, would i really want to upgrade floating rubbish in its path. just for a slightly bigger screen and a slightly better camera? the wasteshark is the world's well, probably not. and it seems that plenty of other first autonomous marine waste and data collection vessel. people are in agreement with me. 80% of waste that reaches two of the biggest brands, the marinas, the marine environment both apple and samsung, and the ocean is from the land. have seen sales slow down. so we need to approach the issue of marine protection and ocean sustainability from multiple angles. so this trash sucker is designed but where there has been innovation, to patrol marina waterways like 56 or foldable screens, the prices are eye—watering. huawei showed off its mate 10, for up to 16 hours which has an 8—inch amoled display. when we saw the device fold, before the battery inside it was a wow moment. the screen is thinner than rival samsung's, requires recharging. as the company proudly pointed out, it's actually designed most of the components live to the side. up to the whale shark. with no release date yet, its big mouth being able to suck up it did feel very much 200 litres of trash at one time. like a concept phone, though. its black plastic zip tie teeth we were told to keep our mitts off, keep bits and bobs inside its mouth, but on a brief moment of holding, handy when needing to reverse.
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it did feel a little weighty. three independent thrusters control but if you're loving the idea the sharks direction and speed. of getting that extra real estate this current model on your phone but you don't is actually being remote—controlled by its captain on the pier, want to indulge in buying a full but other models foldable, well, lg have a dual display. have lidar sensors on them, although it will initially allowing them to autonomously navigate waters. be sold as one package, they also have a collision it's actually a phone case that avoidance system aboard too so they can detect nearby objects has a second screen as part of it, and, if necessary, allowing you to maybe play a game with a separate control pad or simply message a friend your location with two apps open. move out of the way. but if you don't want to fork out thousands on your device, then this is what's happening elsewhere. there are big trash skimmers that as always, camera functionality are very expensive to buy, to operate, they use fossil fuels, is where everybody is trying to make a splash. they don't reach into so the back of the devices are adorned with an increasing number of lenses. hard—to—reach places. the nokia 9 pureview really went for it, though, it's not the only waste eater with five cameras — two colour and three that's cleaning up waterways. at monochrome lenses — all working in unison over in the us, to capture an image the baltimore—based mr trash wheel so the focus can be changed sucks in and processes after the fact. heaps of rubbish. some devices attempt to do this with the help of a depth camera, so far, it's cleared well over but the results are less precise. and it's been all about minimising 500 metric tons of the stuff. the notch, that black bit at the top, to provide and in chicago, an unobstructed screen, the inventively named trash robot samsung and huawei upped the ante is another remote—controlled robot by introducing the discreet punch—hole, which other manufacturers will no doubt follow soon.
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tackling pollution. designed by dutch partner ranmarine, the wasteshark is just one of the solutions being used by ecocoast another illustration of how hard to improve dubai's waters. the company has also deployed bubble curtains to prevent silt and other contaminants left over from construction reaching the ocean, it is for big players to stay ahead a real problem due to dubai's ever evolving landscape. the bubbles behave like a barrier, of rivals like 0neplus. restricting the movement of floating this is their latest model, and subsurface pollution. and it looks and feels pretty much like one of the high—end phones. it has facial recognition, almost an edge—to—edge screen, and it has a fingerprint sensor for us what's very important built in to the screen. is what solutions will prevail but this uses an optical sensor in the future. instead of the more premium you'll have pods of wastesharks that ultrasound sensor are cleaning the waterways that found in the galaxy s10. are autonomous, that are self and more chinese brands charging, self emptying, are expanding into the west. and they're constantly feeding back xiaomi started selling its handsets last year. 00:07:49,885 --> 2147483051:40:39,657 and 0ppo showed off 2147483051:40:39,657 --> 4294966103:13:29,430 its latest high—end device. data to the end users. gathering data on water quality and areas of high contamination could help marina owners and local
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governments record and know more about the state of their shores. dubai municipality has just adopted two that will begin patrolling public waterways in a couple of weeks. a noble effort, but with an estimated 800 million metric tons of plastic ending up in our oceans every year it's tough to see how these tiny trawlers will make much of a difference. but at least for now, bottle by bottle, it's helping us protect our planet. back in barcelona, i was once again surrounded by 5g signs, the same as previous years. but this time, it really felt like the tech was a lot more ready to make its mark. a few 5g—enabled phones are hitting the shops this year, but 5g is not really about a faster connection with our mobiles. it's more about connecting the things that we've never connected before. stands were full of ideas
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about what that could mean for the future. a robot that can instantly mimic its driver's moves. imagine this happening when they are thousands of miles apart, and this is the kind of collaboration that 5g promises to unlock. wearing ar goggles can let you interact with the same 3—d environments, but without the kind of uninterrupted connection 5g should provide, the experience will always fall short. so frustrating. this collaborative game is set up on wi—fi at the moment, the reason being to demonstrate how the haptic feedback is a little bit delayed. whereas once it's on 5g, well, it should all be happening at the right speed, exactly as i do things — although i don't think it's going to improve my skills. and it can truly unleash the power of ar. we already have ai capabilities in our devices. image recognition, for example, helps to enhance our photos. i played a simple game which shows the speed that our devices can
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recognise an object in an image. i'm really trying my best here, but no matter how quick i feel like i am, the computer is a lot quicker. the only thing is, at least i get it right every time. if you pull it all together with 5g, suddenly you have a very, very highly performing device that's connected to the cloud with a very low latency. so you can actually have almost immediate responses based on where you are, your context, and that changes the way your device interacts and what you can do with it. for example, if you were actually going on a run and you actually — now, your phone is capable of giving notjust canned exercises,
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but training as you go along, that is tuned to how your body is responding to it. 5g might make the relationships with our phones a bit more personal. on a grander scale, the entire travel infrastructure around us could be transformed. this is part of millbrook proving ground, the place where cars and their components are put through their paces. but right now, it's serving as a testbed for 5g, and what that could mean for autonomous and connected vehicles. while 4g radios still need to be used at the moment, the rest of the trial sees movements and interactions tracked on a 5g network. it replicates what could
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in the future keep traffic safe and well managed. the number of cars today which have it in them, that will evolve into algorithms that help those sensors connect. i think the really key thing is how are you going to use the data to be able to help make the end user's life easier? and that is what is being looked at here. can we get the vehicle to be connected, can we make sure that we're transferring the data? can we do that in a safe and secure environment, so that the data itself is secure? then, can we make sure that the cars themselves are secure from each other, but also are they secure from unexpected events? the much—talked—about low—latency aspect of 5g means no delay, and that is of course vital when we're talking about moving traffic. this mclaren is travelling at 160 mph. but, in a 200 metre radius, the cars would be able to wirelessly track each other too. even here it feels like there were a lot of vehicles moving very fast, but of course, in the grander scheme of things, these are just a few. we're looking at all of the vehicles
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on all roads being tracked in this way, and that is a big job. when we talk about millions of devices to be connected to the network per kilometre square, then we talk about cars, homes, streets, hospitals, factories. what we are exploiting here, the technology, it's parallel computing and parallel signal processing. so we have a large number of processing units in parallel, to do the number—crunching in the minimum amount of time. in terms of ai, when we talk about the automation part of the 5g, when robots are connected or devices are connected, ai plays a very important role in terms of understanding what the device wants to do, or what the device should be doing, and forecasting and predicting in future. but, if all of these vehicles and all cars on the road are relying on that mobile phone network, what happens if it goes down?
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well, i think what we do as a mobile operator is we continue to look at our network. we did suffer an outage with one of our partners, and that was quite public. we're looking constantly at how we can make sure our network is more resilient in the future, and i think one of the things that will come out of here is how do we make sure that the vehicles themselves are resilient, from a network point of view? before we reach a state of fully connected autonomy, though, 5g could have its work cut out on road and rail, providing more accurate live tracking and information. we know that, from some of the work we've done on our smart cities report, that from a train transportation point of view, rail sensors working on preventative maintenance can take out £450 million of lost productivity, and that equates to about 2.6 hours per commuter per year of time saved. and then, from a road point of view,
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having a really good, connected 5g road management system could help take out 10% of time waiting in traffic. and that, you know, for 5.6 million commuters on the road, that would be a real saving. so many phones, so many promises. but do they all live up to what they're offering? 0mar mehtab has been putting one to the test. this is the agm a9 smartphone. it has features you would expect of many top—brand devices — quick—charging, fingerprint id, big screen. but it's also quite solid. now, this phone isn't for your average user. it is designed to survive the toughest of conditions, so tough, in fact, that the company say it is unbreakable. agm advertise their phones as being able to survive quite some punishment, such as being able to be kicked like a football. so we asked the company if it
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could survive a hammer. they said yes. ah, right. that didn't take much. right. that's broken. that is smashed, but to be fair, maybe it wasn't designed to actually take a hammer to it. it's gone completely. 0k, ok, that's just the screen. it's easily replaceable, no problem at all. and the back of the phone was proving a lot tougher, so i got some help. be careful. oh, yeah — and don't try this at home. 0k, you've done it. you've cracked plastic. look at that. oh, it's lifted completely. so despite saying that we could use a hammer, agm came back to us and said that the military—certified phone can endure a lot, being waterproof, shockproof, dustproof, but a hammer will compromise it.
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look at that. so he broke the camera lens. yes, a long way off from unbreakable, like the company said. 0mar there, having a smashing time. but you don't need to go that far to disconnect. so how about this — a phone which will keep you connected when you need to be, but doesn't provide all of the distractions of a smartphone? now, don't think that this is just the basic device that can't do much. the idea is actually that it's a premium product. it has up to 270 hours‘ battery life, blackberry security, and a rather bold pricetag of £295. the company anticipates it will be bought by those who already have a smartphone, but fancy the option of some calmer moments.
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well, that‘s it for the mwc special. you may not be able to do it on here, but if you want to keep track of the team throughout the week, you can find us on facebook and twitter. thanks for watching. hello. a vigorous jet stream pushing areas of low pressure right across the uk is the weather pattern we‘re in. you can see the swell of cloud, one area pulling away from the uk. around it, as it moves away, colder
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airdrawn around it, as it moves away, colder air drawn down from the north so it will feel colder during thursday and that comes on a pretty strong wind as well. very gusty. this is how it is looking to start the day. nothing particularly cold to stop the temperatures going down too far. wet across northern ireland and scotland. all this pushing further south, not too much in the way of wet weather reaching the south. at three o‘clock in the afternoon, when gusts in excess of a0 miles per hour quite widely. feeling colder in the wind. any showers will be wintry, at least on hills. northern ireland, sunny spells developing. 0utbreaks of rain moving south. not too much to the south. the odd passing shower in southern england. wet the winds
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easing under clearing skies into friday morning, it will be colder and a frost around, widespread. —6 in areas. maybe the odd mist and fog patch. the fine weather not last. cloud increasing from the west. quite windy. 0utbreaks cloud increasing from the west. quite windy. outbreaks of rain pushing eastwards. again, some hill snow in scotland so keep that in mind if you are planning to travel in higher routes. wind the most of the time for the weekend. at least the time for the weekend. at least the showers around. longest reign patches. still something to play for in their detail about the weekend so we will keep you updated but it is worth bearing in mind that could be some sunshine at times. —— there
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