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Mahershala Ali and Janelle Monáe on the Oscars rarity of appearing together in two best-picture contenders

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These two actors share the screen in two films — ‘Hidden Figures’ and ‘Moonlight’ — which are both up for best picture. Jen Yamato talks with Ali and Monae about the films and working together.
The most potent acting pair to grace the films nominated for this year’s best picture Oscar  aren’t Ryan Gosling and Emma Stone, singing and dancing their way across “La La Land,” or even Denzel Washington and Viola Davis powering through August Wilson’s stage-to-screen prose in “Fences.”
That honor goes to Mahershala Ali  and Janelle Monáe, two breakthrough stars who helped drive not one but two best-picture contenders in the same year: Barry Jenkins’ gay coming-of-age drama “Moonlight” and Theodore Melfi’s inspirational tale “Hidden Figures,” about three black women fighting for equality at NASA in the 1960s.
Ali’s exceptionally fruitful year saw his 16-year career skyrocket in 2016 with an Emmy nomination for his fourth season as “House of Cards’” Washington insider Remy Denton, an acclaimed run on Netflix’s “Luke Cage” and a role in “Hidden Figures” as a charming Army officer who with Monáe’s encouragement romances Taraji P. Henson — after first making the mistake of underestimating her.
But it was his riveting turn as an empathetic drug dealer who takes a fatherless young boy under his wing in “Moonlight” that earned Ali his first Oscar nomination (along with co-star Naomie Harris, who is up for supporting actress) and sent the actor on a whirlwind awards tour collecting one trophy after another, including the Screen Actors Guild award for supporting actor.
A week and a half before the Academy Awards, Ali, 43, was happily taking a break from the madness of his first awards season. He’d flown home from shooting a film in Austin, Texas, in time to join his wife, the artist, actor and musician Amatus Sami-Karim, on baby watch. The couple were anticipating the arrival of their first child.
“It is its own award season,” laughed Ali, “equally demanding of your presence.”
The break, however, gave Ali what most Oscar nominees rarely get ahead of their first Big Day: A moment to take it all in.
I’m an artist, and I want the space to be able to do my work and keep certain things private. But I felt a responsibility to shed light.
— Mahershala Ali
“It’s carved out space for me to stop and tend to some other parts of my life,” said Ali from the couple’s home in Venice. “Suddenly I feel like I’ve found a little bit of my equilibrium again. As appreciative as I am of the experience and how generous awards season has been toward me personally, and toward ‘Moonlight’ … you don’t want an experience like this to pass you by without a few moments to take inventory and chart your growth.”
Ali was already enjoying a solid working actor’s career  when producer Adele Romanski recommended him to her old friend Jenkins for “Moonlight.” Romanski had worked with Ali on the Bay Area-set independent drama “Kicks.”
Jenkins, making his sophomore feature (after 2008’s “Medicine for Melancholy”), cast Ali as Juan, a dealer in Miami’s Liberty City neighborhood, who sees in a young boy named Chiron a desperate need for guidance and protection.
It’s a quietly powerful performance that makes Ali’s presence felt throughout “Moonlight” long after his character departs the story.
“Juan felt like heart and good intentions to me,” said Ali, who credits years of working in supporting roles with teaching him to make the most of even limited screen time. “He felt like love. Even though it’s not spelled out on the pages, you can feel it and sense it in some of his actions. Upon reading it I got really excited because I felt I had something to offer this part — I know I’ve learned how to be present without necessarily having a lot to say.”
I hope it inspires not only creatives but the studios to really invest in a range of ideas and narratives that feature people of color — in leading roles.
— Oscar nominated ‘Moonlight’ actor Mahershala Ali
Monáe, 31, had a similar instinctive pull toward “Moonlight” the moment she read the script by Jenkins, who is up for two of the film’s eight Oscar nominations (adapted screenplay and director).
The Grammy-nominated singer, songwriter, music producer and actress hadn’t acted onscreen prior to “Moonlight,” but makes an indelible mark as Teresa, who with Ali as her partner, Juan, provides a nurturing safe haven for Chiron and his questions of sexual identity.
“Teresa is very similar to who I am as a human being to those who are often marginalized, from the LGBTQ community to women, to the excommunicated, to immigrants, to those who don’t feel a part of the American story,” Monáe said. “I’ve always tried to lend a voice through my music, and I thought it was also important to do that in film.”
On the “Moonlight” set for one of their most difficult scenes together, there was little rehearsing. In it, young Chiron, nicknamed “Little” (played by then 10-year-old Alex R. Hibbert), asks his surrogate parents difficult questions about why other kids bully him, and holds up a mirror to Juan that forces the man to acknowledge the repercussions of his own actions. 
“I responded the way I would want someone to respond to my future son or my nephew,” remembered Monáe. “One of the things that Barry Jenkins said to me was, ‘As long as you’re leading with your heart, there’s no wrong way — every step you choose is the right way.’ Mahershala and I both led with our hearts.”
“It’s Little’s greatest moment of disappointment,” Ali said, “but it’s also the scene that will potentially set him free later in his life. When there’s another opportunity as an adult for Chiron to be at peace with himself, a lot of that starts with the early conversations that Juan and Teresa have with him. So that scene is important in many ways. There is a small offering of comfort, a seed of understanding in that moment.”
A few months after filming “Moonlight” on location in Miami, Ali and Monáe got Allison Schroeder and Melfi’s script for “Hidden Figures.”
“I thought, finally, we have a story that won’t just be highlighting our beauty as black women but our brilliance. I was in tears reading about the amount of obstacles these women had to go through as they were trying to send our first Americans into space. I was truly proud of how they maneuvered through that matrix in the 1960s and late ’50s. They were able to achieve the extraordinary during a time when African Americans and African American women did not have the agency that I have now.”
She won the role of Mary Jackson, a gifted scientist who must navigate racist segregation laws to become NASA’s first black female engineer, by auditioning with a memorable scene in which Mary shrewdly wins over a white judge in order to gain access to the classes she’s required to take for advancement.
Alongside costars Octavia Spencer, who has earned an Oscar nomination for her role as NASA supervisor Dorothy Vaughan, and Henson, who plays mathematician Katherine G. Johnson, Monáe struck a sisterly bond that helped carry her through emotional times on set confronting the gravity of the racism and sexism their characters faced — as well as issues of inequity in Hollywood.
I thought, finally, we have a story that won’t just be highlighting our beauty as black women but our brilliance.
— Actress and singer Janelle Monáe
“Taraji would cook for us, we’d hang together, cry together and we spoke about many of the things we want to see changed in this industry,” said Monáe, who recently launched Fem the Future, an organization dedicated to creating more opportunities for women in film, television, music, media and tech. “We see what’s going on, and we’re looking for solutions. That was a great thing about ‘Hidden Figures’ — there was a sisterhood there.”
And while their stories are different, Monáe sees common ground linking the two first major film roles of her career, “two queens” from disparate worlds: “These are the voices that are oftentimes erased, oftentimes defanged, oftentimes left out of the history books. I didn’t want them to not shine anymore, and I didn’t want them to be hidden anymore.”
Ali is thankful for his meatier film roles, even if it’s meant he won’t be joining the fifth season of “House of Cards,” a show he speaks of with humble appreciation.
The opportunities Monáe, Ali and all of Hollywood have had this season to combat the political policies and rhetoric of the current administration by amplifying marginalized voices have not been lost on either star. But the most personal and powerful moment any of Tinseltown’s finest had onstage this year might have been when Ali took the podium to accept his SAG award for supporting actor.
Delivering an emotional message of unity and acceptance just days after President Trump ordered a travel ban on immigrants from seven Muslim-majority countries, Ali declared to the world, “I am a Muslim.”
“It was a very hard decision to make,” said Ali. “There’s nothing more personal than our ideology, and in some cases our theology. I’m an artist, and I want the space to be able to do my work and keep certain things private. But I felt a responsibility to shed light on how personal this position is for me, and perhaps draw a tie for everyone by personalizing the struggle within my own family of having a different point of view.
“I normally wouldn’t do that,” he added. “I’m not one to reveal a bunch of things about my personal life. I really just want to do this work. But I felt that was appropriate because I thought there was something there that I could offer people in what is a really challenging time, for Muslims and for everyone. And I took that opportunity very seriously. I was nervous about it but it felt necessary.”
“We all were teary-eyed and extremely proud of him,” said Monáe. “Very proud that he used his award speech to figure out a way for us to understand that we’re all in it together, that we need each other, and that we have choices.”

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'Resident Evil: The Final Chapter' Makes Record-Breaking Debut in China

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The Milla Jovovich starring zombie film “Resident Evil: The Final Chapter” has made a record breaking debut at the Chinese box office with a $33 million haul on the first day of its release. The grand debut has officially given the movie the prestigious title…
The Milla Jovovich starring zombie film “Resident Evil: The Final Chapter” has made a record breaking debut at the Chinese box office with a $33 million haul on the first day of its release. The grand debut has officially given the movie the prestigious title of being the third-largest Hollywood debut ever in China, followed by Universal studio’s “Furious 7” and Legendary studio’s “Warcraft. ”
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The amazing thing is that Resident Evil’s first-day collection at the Chinese box office is considerably more than it has in the entire North American territory. Interestingly, this is the second-straight Hollywood release, after “xXx The Return of Xander Cage,” which is having a better run in China than in its home territory. 
Beijing-based Leomus Films, which distributed the movie across China, told The Hollywood Reporter that they have increased their full-weekend forecast to just below $85 million (520 million RMB).
“The Resident Evil: The Final Chapter” is the sixth and the final edition in the long running Resident Evil’s franchise. The previous five editions grossed $1 billion  on the box office worldwide, making it arguably the most successful video game movie franchise ever.  
However, not all previous installments were released in China, with the Final Chapter being only the third installment to be released in the Middle Kingdom. The zombie movie made its debut in China back in 2010 with “Resident Evil 4. ”  Back then the Paul Anderson directed movie faced big odds given that subjects like zombies are deemed as “taboo” by Chinese censors. But the movie had the last laugh as it romped $21.6 million at the Chinese box office, a pretty big number at that time.
The latest Resident Evil’s franchises’ grand debut once again vindicates the growing clout of Chinese box office. The growing lure of the Chinese movie market has forced almost all the big Hollywood studios to line up their releases. But the Chinese movie market, the second biggest movie market in the world, comes with its set of challenges for American studios.
This was partly reflected in IMAX China Holding’s full year result for 2016, which was released earlier this week. IMAX China announced a steep 13 percent fall in its profit for last year on account of poor performance recorded by Chinese box office.

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Ethics concerns lead second of Trump’s armed services secretary nominees to withdraw

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For the second time, one of President Donald Trump’s appointees to head one of the nation’s armed services has withdrawn, citing difficulty meeting ethics requirements.
For the second time, one of President Donald Trump’s appointees to head one of the nation’s armed services has withdrawn, citing difficulty in meeting ethics requirements.
Philip Bilden, a former private equity investment manager who operated in Asia, had been nominated to be secretary of the Navy. He withdrew his nomination Sunday, three weeks after Vincent Viola, a New York billionaire and owner of the Florida Panthers hockey team, withdrew his nomination to be secretary of the Army, also citing difficulty disengaging from his businesses.
“This was a personal decision driven by privacy concerns and significant challenges he faced in separating himself from his business interests,” Defense Secretary Jim Mattis said in a statement on Sunday evening. ”While I am disappointed, I understand and respect his decision.”
A former military intelligence officer in the U. S. Army Reserve, Bilden has spent the last 25 years with private equity firm HarbourVest Partners’ Asian subsidiary in Hong Kong. His nomination garnered criticism given his lack of direct experience with Navy issues, although he served on the Naval Academy board and has donated to the U. S. Naval Institute.
“I have determined that I will not be able to satisfy the Office of Government Ethics requirements without undue disruption and materially adverse divestment of my family’s private financial interests,” Bilden said in a statement.
Mattis spoke with Bilden last week following reports that he was considering withdrawing his name, and the Pentagon released a statement saying that the nominee remained “fully committed to serving as Secretary of the Navy.” White House press secretary Sean Spicer also shot down reports that Bilden was likely to withdraw.
“Those people would be wrong. Just spoke with him and he is 100% commited to being the next SECNAV pending Senate confirm,” Spicer tweeted last week.
Trump’s Navy secretary will be charged with following through on the president’s campaign promise to expand and modernize an aging fleet, including surface ships and submarines. Trump has vowed the largest naval buildup since the Cold War, from the current fleet of 274 ships to 350 ships.
Mattis said he would be making a recommendation to the president on who to nominate for the post in the coming days. Trump also considered former Republican Virginia Rep. Randy Forbes, who advised his campaign and served as chairman of the House Armed Services subcommittee on seapower, for the post. Forbes is a strong proponent of Trump’s Navy buildup.
With Viola and Bilden withdrawing their names, the Pentagon is left with only one service secretary nominee. Trump’s pick for Air Force secretary, former New Mexico representative Heather Wilson, has yet to be scheduled for a Senate confirmation hearing.

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正男氏暗殺 防護服で厳重警戒 部屋から化学物質、消防局など捜索参加 (産経新聞)

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【クアラルンプール=吉村英輝】 北朝鮮の 金正男(キム・ ジョンナム)氏殺害事件で、 犯 – Yahoo!ニュース(産経新聞)
産経新聞 2/27(月) 7:55配信
金正男氏殺害事件で、マレーシア警察が23日に家宅捜索した高層マンション =26日(吉村英輝撮影)(写真:産経新聞)
【クアラルンプール=吉村英輝】北朝鮮の金正男(キム・ジョンナム)氏殺害事件で、犯行に使われた猛毒の神経剤VXとの関連が疑われる化学物質が押収されたのは、首都クアラルンプールの高層マンションの一室だった。部屋はすでに逃亡したとされる北朝鮮国籍の4容疑者が借りていたとされ、近隣住民らには26日、不安が広がった。
中心部から車で20分の好立地に建つマンションの正面には、大きな「貸し出し中」の垂れ幕がかかっていた。ネット広告では、寝室2部屋で日本円で月6万円台などと、長期滞在者向けの物件案内もある。
関係者によると、家宅捜索は23日の日中、マンションB棟5階で、数時間にわたり行われた。地元消防局の危険物処理班などが参加した。当初は「訓練」と伝えられていたという。
地元メディアは、捜索当時の写真を掲載した。防護服とガスマスク姿の要員が、押収物を入れた半透明のプラスチックの箱数個を運び出している。
押収した化学物質について警察は「分析中」と発表。VXは、毒性の低い物質をそれぞれ混合して生成する方法があるとされる。このマンションが、VX調合に向けた事前準備の拠点に使われていた可能性がある。
最終更新:2/27(月) 8:01

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SoftBank is in talks to invest up to $4 billion in WeWork

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SoftBank is being linked with an investment that could value WeWork at more than $20 billion. CNBC reported that the Japanese telco giant is gearing up to..
SoftBank is being linked with an investment that could value WeWork at more than $20 billion.
CNBC reported that the Japanese telco giant is gearing up to make an initial investment of $2 billion into WeWork, with a view to putting nearly $1 billion more into the firm. The publication said the secondary investment could reach $2 billion, which would put SoftBank’s total input at $4 billion overall.
So far to date, the seven-year-old company has raised $1.4 billion from investors.
A source close to WeWork confirmed that it’s in talks with SoftBank over an investment per the report. However, the person added that the Japanese had also held discussions with a view to participating in its $150 million Series C (2013) and $355 million Series D (2014) rounds, deals that it was ultimately not a part of. This time around a deal seems more probable, but it isn’t final. One issue that is holding things up is that SoftBank’s Vision fund is still seeking commitments from investors, and in particular prospective LPs in the Middle East, our source added.
A $20 billion valuation would represent a slight jump on the $17 billion valuation that WeWork earned when it raised its $430 million Series F round last March. Last year’s capital raise was led by two prominent VC firms in China — Hony Capital and Legend Holdings — and marked WeWork’s first push into China, and Asia. Later that month, the firm announced plans for its first co-working spaces in Shanghai and Hong Kong. WeWork has broadly said it intends to be present in major cities across Asia but it declined to give more specific expectations. Bagging this mega round from SoftBank could be the catalyst it needs to make good on those regional ambitious and extend its strong presence in the West to the East.

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Chat app Line doubles its stake in Snapchat clone Snow

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Ahead of Snap’s eagerly-awaited IPO, Line, one of the U. S. tech IPO highlights of 2016, has doubled down on sister service and Snapchat clone Snow. Line..
Ahead of Snap’s eagerly-awaited IPO , Line, one of the U. S. tech IPO highlights of 2016, has doubled down on sister service and Snapchat clone Snow.
Line and Snow both share the same parent company — Naver — but the two firms have increasingly become financially entwined. Line bought up 25 percent of Snow last September for $45 million , and now it is nearly doubling its equity to 48.6 percent, according to a filing. Line didn’t reveal the valuation of the stake, but a Naver representative did confirm that it was calculated by a third party auditor.
Line went public in a dual U. S.-Japan IPO that raised $1.1 billion. Shares initially popped 50 percent on the firm’s Tokyo debut, but there’s been little to celebrate since then. Line saw user numbers dip for the first time in January — despite a record year of revenue in 2016 — while its userbase increasingly limited to four countries: Japan, Indonesia, Taiwan and Thailand. Expanding its presence is an area where it feels that increased collaboration with Snow could bear fruit.
As part of this new deal, Line has agreed to give its photo app business to Snow — that includes selfie app B612, its core Line Camera app, food-focused Foodie, and its makeup preview app Looks — in order to “consolidate and improve the efficiency” of the services.
Line said in another filing that it has been working closely with Snow since its September investment but the competitive nature of photo and video apps means that this deal to combine many of their resources will help both Snow and the Line apps to grow.
Snow reached 40-50 million active users in January , with the app particularly popular in Japan, Korea and China. ( Its rising popularity triggered investment interest from Facebook , which was rebuffed.) While Line hopes it may be able to tap into that success to boost its core chat app, it said that the camera apps have proven to be popular in markets like China, Japan, Vietnam, Indonesia, Brazil and Mexico. Given that each one ties back into Line — although they can be used without a Line account — it is also betting that it can reverse its globalization struggles by giving these apps more freedom to grow via this deal.
Investors certainly seemed bullish. Line’s Tokyo share price reached 3,895 JPY at close on Friday, when Line made the announcement. That was up from 3,660 JPY at the start of the day. However, the share price dropped more than two percent when the market reopened on Monday.

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Samsung just proved it doesn’t need the world’s largest mobile conference anymore

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Mobile World Congress is underway in Barcelona. By most metrics it’s the largest conference in the world dedicated mostly to mobile technology and gadgets…
Mobile World Congress is underway in Barcelona. By most metrics it’s the largest conference in the world dedicated mostly to mobile technology and gadgets. And Samsung just punted. Mobile World Congress needs Samsung more than Samsung needs Mobile World Congress.
Samsung just held its MWC press conference and what’s interesting is what wasn’t announced: The Galaxy S8. Instead, Samsung chose to announce several passé tablets and a new VR headset, because in the end Samsung doesn’t need a third party to facility interest.
Yet during the presser, Samsung sent out an invite announcing the S8’s announcement, which will happen March 29 in New York City. Said another way, Samsung announced an announcement at another announcement.
MWC, CES, E3 and every other industry-specific event like auto shows have long existed to bring manufacturers and distributers together under one event. C-suite executives from both sides meet in hotel rooms and bars and local golf courses and chat about how they can work together. The press just shows up for the ride.
Samsung isn’t the first to pull back from announcing flagship devices at an industry trade event. Apple stopped using Macworld as a launch platform years ago — and the event withered and died because of it. Even Microsoft used Comdex to unveil major features including Window’s USB support.
The idea is to lean on these trade event’s critical mass of fans, press and industry insiders. But eventually a few companies grow so large, like Salesforce and Apple, that they have to start throwing their own events to remove themselves from the timeline dictated by trade events.
Samsung’s mobile devision has been teetering on needing their own event for years. The company tried to pull this off in the past with the Galaxy S4 launch. That phone was announced with a cheesy and sexist off-Broadway event. It was terrible. Just so bad. Samsung returned to MWC to announce the S5, S6 and S7.
But not the S8.
There could be several reasons why. Perhaps the timing of MWC is wrong this year and the S8 needed a few more weeks in the oven. Or maybe Samsung decided to remove itself from the scrum of Mobile World Congress to curate a different experience. The reason is irrelevant. Samsung doesn’t need to launch the S8 at a trade event. It will have no problem getting the entire industry to pay attention for the S8 launch.

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Samsung announces updated Gear VR headset with handheld controller

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Samsung’s mobile virtual reality effort, the Gear VR, has been an important product to the company in terms of drumming up excitement around the company’s..
Samsung’s mobile virtual reality effort, the Gear VR, has been an important product to the company in terms of drumming up excitement around the company’s innovation on next-gen platforms.
Since the earliest version of the headset was first announced in 2014, we’ve seen a few largely incremental updates to the company’s VR platform. Today, we see another.
At Mobile World Congress, Samsung teased a new version of its Gear VR and while details were mostly scant, the highlight of the announcement is definitely the new handheld controller.
At this point, Samsung is really just playing catch-up to Google’s Daydream View headset which also includes a motion controller. Much like the offering from Daydream, the new Gear VR controller isn’t going to deliver the level of precision that one gets from using the controllers on the HTC Vive or Oculus Rift with Touch. The purpose of this controller is to give players a couple more methods if navigating menus via wiimote-esque gestures while also moving controls away from the side of the Gear VR which was a bit of an awkward place to have them in the first place.
Samsung has tried to push forward use of external gamepads on the Gear VR, especially for more complex titles like Minecraft, but adoption hasn’t been all that significant.
The new Gear VR will be compatible with the Galaxy S7, S7 edge, Note 5, S6, S6 edge, and S6 edge+.
Samsung really didn’t give too many details out about the device in terms of pricing or availability, though the company said it would be opening up and SDK to developers in the coming weeks. This announcement was likely a bit premature but given the lack of a smartphone launch for Samsung at MWC, there was probably some need for a little VR excitement.

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Huawei’s shiny P10 flagships come in (almost) all the colors of the rainbow

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If you’re bored of the same old monotone/metallic smartphone color choices, Chinese mobile maker Huawei has been thinking a little differently for its just..
If you’re bored of the same old monotone/metallic smartphone color choices, Chinese mobile maker Huawei has been thinking a little differently for its just announced P10 and P10 Plus flagship handsets — and is offering a spectrum of shades, including a striking deep blue option and a pale green.
Which mostly underlines how tricky it is for Android OEMs to stand out in such a packed and competitive space these days where phone buyers really are spoilt for choice.
As well as colorful hardware, Huawei also talked up software themes customized for each of the external shades. There’s also three different hardware finishes available, from high gloss to a more textured-look sandblast.
Elsewhere you’d be hard pressed to distinguish these high end Androids from scores of others. Which is really a comment on the incremental nature of smartphone innovation these days. Essentially hardware quality is very high across the board now, even as software differences have shrunk. The days of clunky Android skins are thankfully in the past.
Aside from some eye-catching colors, other features flagged by the world’s third largest smartphone maker during its press conference here at Mobile World Congress in Barcelona included camera tech, with Huawei continuing to lean on a Leica-branded partnership that lets users do things like style photos to have a Leica-ish film look.
It’s also been working with GoPro for a mobile editing tool called Highlights that lets users mix images and video with transitions and music.
Both devices have dual lenses on the rear, a 20MP monochrome and 12MP RGB lens, to support photo-processing features such as a bokeh effect that blurs the background. The Plus also gets boosted low light performance thanks to an f1.8 aperture lens.
Huawei also talked up a selfie feature for the front-facing lens which automatically adjusts to fit more than one person in a shot — handy if you’re trying to get a well composed group shot.
It also noted “no camera bump at all” — a little side-swipe at the iPhone’s ongoing lens bump.
The P10 has a 5.1inch screen but Huawei touted a “super narrow bezel” which allows for a “compact design” and dimensions that are “similar to the iPhone” — while also packing a larger battery. The larger P10 Plus has a 5.5in screen, is a little wider but no thicker.
Huawei also notes it has incorporated the fingerprint sensor directly into the front screen, removing the navigation bar to make yet more screen space.
Both devices are also apparently waterproof. And have fast-charging technology — it touted a full day’s usage off of 30-minutes of charging.
Despite rumors of the company working on its own voice assistant , Huawei did not dwell on voice assistants during the presentation (despite also announcing an Amazon Alexa-loaded phone at CES ). So if it’s cooking something up there, it’s not yet ready to load it onto its flagships.
Notably it’s also not clear whether the new flagships are coming to the US. They certainly are not going to be available in the first wave, with the handsets listed to come to a wide variety of countries in Europe, the Middle East, Asia, South American, South Africa and Australia from this March — but not, apparently, to the US. We’ve asked whether there will be a release and will update this story with any response.
Pricing wise, in Europe the P10 starts at €649, while the P10 Plus starts at €699.

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The LG G6 has a built-in Frontback feature

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Oh boy, I miss Frontback. The mobile app created an interesting photo format with two square-ish pictures to share what you have in front of you and a selfie…
Oh boy, I miss Frontback. The mobile app created an interesting photo format with two square-ish pictures to share what you have in front of you and a selfie. While you can still download the app, it’s been stagnant for a few years. But LG implemented a Frontback feature into the new G6 called “Match Shot.”
The big new feature of LG’s phone is the taller display. The company has replaced the 16:9 display by a 2:1 display. It’s exactly two squares on top of each other.
LG wanted to showcase what you could do with this different screen format. So there’s a new Square Camera app. For instance, you can take a square photo and preview it instantly in full size below the viewfinder. This is great if you want to make sure that you got the perfect Instagram shot.
But I’m even more interested by the Match Shot feature. With this mode, you take a selfie, and you take a photo of what you’re looking at. It’s two perfect squares on top of each other. It’s basically Frontback.
On the one hand, I’m so excited to have a sort of Frontback feature on a phone again. On the other hand, it says something about new media formats.
Many startups have tried to create a new format, from Vine to Mindie, Frontback and more. But is it enough to build a startup around it? In many cases, formats can be interesting but it’s difficult to turn them into a business. Only Instagram and Snapchat have become sustainable. Countless of others have failed.
And then they end up on a Korean phone…

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