Sony Xperia Z4 first batch of specs leaks

Just after Sony launched the Xperia Z3 here in the Philippines, we’re now introduced to the first leak of its successor’s specifications among other interesting information. Scroll past the break for the details.

The Xperia Z3 during its local launch.

The Xperia Z3 during its local launch.

According to AndroidOrigin’s reliable sources, the previously-rumored Xperia Z3X isn’t really in the works. Instead, the company is now prepping to release an Xperia Z4 by March of 2015. In addition, we could be expecting only one flagship for the whole year next year – meaning the company is veering away from releasing bi-annual flagships like what it did with the previous Xperias.

Sony Xperia Z4 leaked specs:
5.5-inch QHD display @ 2560 x 1440 resolution
2.8GHz Snapdragon 810 64-bit octa-core processor
Adreno 430 GPU
4GB RAM
32GB starting storage
20.7MP rear camera with curved Exmor RS CMOS sensor
LTE Cat.6
Bluetooth 4.1
Omni-balance design
Dedicated sound amplifier

What do you think about these specs? Also, what can you say about Sony’s possible new strategy of just releasing one flagship per year? Yay or nay? The comment box awaits.

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Nexus 6 has a ‘hidden’ feature not seen on its specs list

Google’s homepage for the new Motorola Nexus 6 details its specs and lists down its notable features, but there might be something that they have missed – mentioning that the latest Nexus phone is water-resistant as well.

nexus-6-water-resistant

The official landing page for the Nexus 6 missed this rather important feature of the device. Thankfully, Motorola’s page included this information. According to their site, the Nexus 6 can withstand splashes of water just like the Moto X. Do take note that it’s just safe from splashes and cannot go for a full submersion like the Xperia Z3 (see our hands-on here). If you would check the website under the Water Resistant category, Motorola listed it down as “Yes” with no IP certification.

Google’s official site might not have found this info to be essential to its users thus eliminating the need to list it down. Although not fully waterproof, it’s still good to know that minor contact with water is repelled by the Nexus 6.

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What are the do’s and don’ts

IN COVERING CHILDREN IN THE NEWS

TODAY ON OUR JOURNALIST’S TOOLBOX: Children in the news by the Center for Media Freedom and Reponsibility

This article was first published on the CMFR website on June 29, 2006. We are reprinting it today with the hope that it would serve as a valuable resource for journalists covering children in the news.

By Rachel E. Khan and Elena E. Pernia

ACCORDING to the National Statistics Office, children below 18 years old comprise about 43.4 percent of the estimated population of 84 million Filipinos.

At the same time, a United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (Unesco) country report dated October 2005 noted that the problems facing Filipino children today are “considerable and pressing.”

It noted four core threats to the well-being of children related to health, nutrition, education, and protection. In fact, the country report ventures to say that out of 100 Filipino children: eight will most likely die before their fifth birthday, 30 will suffer from malnutrition, 26 will fail to be immunized against basic childhood diseases, 19 will lack access to safe drinking water and 40 to adequate sanitation while more than 10 suffer from some physical or mental disability or developmental delay, and 17 will never go to school.

CHILDREN search for what remains of their belongings after fire gutted scores of houses on November 1, 2009 in Bacolod City. Seventeen people were killed, most of them children | Photo by Julius D. Mariveles

CHILDREN search for what remains of their belongings after fire gutted scores of houses on November 1, 2009 in Bacolod City. Seventeen people were killed, most of them children | Photo by Julius D. Mariveles

Yet, despite these pressing issues, news items about children revolve around only two themes: children as “victims of abuse” or “in conflict with the law.”

Covering children
Last January, the Center for Media Freedom and Responsibility (CMFR) conducted a study to assess the coverage of children in the local print and broadcast media. A content analysis was made of two nationally circulated dailies and two regional newspapers as well as two evening news programs and three public affairs programs on national television. The content analysis was augmented by focus interviews conducted among media practitioners in six provinces spanning the country. Coverage period for the study was Nov. 15 to Dec. 15, 2005 for print and October to December 2005 for broadcast.

CMFR chose to use the Department of Justice’s (DOJ) “Guidelines for Media Practitioners on the Reporting and Coverage of Cases Involving Children” as basis for measuring the media’s awareness of the need to protect the rights of children. Even if the guidelines do not have the force of law, the responsibility to adhere to it is the test of ethical journalism.

This responsibility falls on both the reporter covering the story and the editor or producer who opts to use it.

CLICK ON THE PHOTO TO CONTINUE READING THE ARTICLE ON THE CMFR WEBSITE.

A CHILD WATCHES as adults wait in line at a relief goods distribution center in Tacloban City. This photo was taken a week after Typhoon Haiyan struck Eastern Visayas | Photo by Julius D. Mariveles

A CHILD WATCHES as adults wait in line at a relief goods distribution center in Tacloban City. This photo was taken a week after Typhoon Haiyan struck Eastern Visayas | Photo by Julius D. Mariveles

Rights groups alarmed over WB revision

Of its social and environmental safeguard policies

By Cong B. Corrales

International human rights groups have sounded alarm bells over a leaked draft of the World Bank’s proposed revision of its safeguard policies since it is seen to endanger local communities affected by the bank’s funded projects—specifically indigenous people’s communities.

The World Bank is currently revising its social and environmental safeguard policies. These are policies designed to prevent people and the environment from being harmed by Bank-funded projects.

Human Rights Watch (HRW) expressed concern over the leaked draft policy because it includes a provision that would allow governments to “opt-out” of applying specific protections for indigenous peoples if the latter believes such requirement would raise ethnic conflict or contravene constitutional law.

“(It is) essentially rendering protections for indigenous peoples optional,” the HRW said in a press statement.

Human Rights Watch is a non-profit, non-governmental human rights organization made up of roughly 400 staff members around the globe. Its staff consists of human rights professional including country experts, lawyers, journalists, and academics of diverse backgrounds and nationalities.

While the intention of the World Bank in revising its safeguard policy may be good, it is the lack of consultation that has generated concern among local indigenous peoples.

In an online interview, National Anti-Poverty Commission for Indigenous Peoples Basic Sector Council Member Bae Rose Undag told PCIJ that she sees no problem with the World Bank revising its safeguard policy but it could have conducted consultations with the stakeholders.

“I think their intention is good, in particular with Land Bank because they mentioned that they respect the FPIC (Free, Prior, and Informed Consent) mechanism. But it would have been better if we were included in the consultations so that we could discuss collectively arrive in a more transparent process,” Undag said in the dialect.

However, she added that she will consult her members regarding the World Bank’s intention in revising its safeguard policy so they can come up with a collective stand on the issue.

A MOUNTAIN STILL STANDING GAZES at what could be its fate should mining operations resume in Sipalay City. At the foot of the mountain is the old millsite of the Maricalum Mining Corporation. What seems to be a lake is a former mountain, levelled then dug up by MMC. It is the open pit of the mine that has now filled with water. Estimated to be more than 20 hectares wide and more than a kilometer deep, this open pit mine is the source of copper of the mine for decades until its closure in the 90s. Image taken May 2011 in Sipalay City, Negros Occidental.

A MOUNTAIN STILL STANDING GAZES at what could be its fate should mining operations resume in Sipalay City. At the foot of the mountain is the old millsite of the Maricalum Mining Corporation. What seems to be a lake is a former mountain, levelled then dug up by MMC. It is the open pit of the mine that is now filled with water. Estimated to be more than 20 hectares wide and more than a kilometer deep, this open pit mine is the source of copper of the mine for decades until its closure in the 90s. Image taken May 2011 in Sipalay City, Negros Occidental.

“As far as I know this has already starting (revision of World Bank’s safeguard policy). This was one of the issues we discussed during the WCIP (World Conference on Indigenous Peoples of the United Nations) last September,” she said in the dialect.

Undag represented the country in the first World Conference on Indigenous Peoples which was held in New York City, September, this year.

The meeting was designed for delegates to share their perspectives and best practices on the realization of the rights of indigenous peoples. The discussions also included engaging the objectives of the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples.

World Bank-funded projects in the Philippines include the Post Typhoon Recovery Loan, Cebu Bud Rapid Transit (BRT) Project, Philippine Rural Development Project, and the Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative Implementation Project.

HRW also cited the Bank on Human Rights reiteration of the World Bank and its member countries’ obligation to ensure that investments in dams, roads, or other projects do not result in forced evictions, labor abuses, or other rights violations.

“Instead, the Bank appears to be moving to a blank-check system, where communities will have no clear protections and little ability to seek recourse if their rights are violated,” Gretchen Gordon, Bank on Human Rights coalition coordinator, said in its

“The release of the new draft safeguards has caused considerable concern. Despite some improvement, the new framework proposes to remove much of the procedural requirements and enforceability of the current safeguards, including critical protections for indigenous peoples and forest-dependent communities, and communities which may be resettled because of development,” the Bank on Human Rights said in its separate statement on the World Bank policy draft.

Bank on Human Rights is a newly formed global coalition of social movements, civil society organizations, and grassroots groups working to ensure that all development finance institutions respect human rights.

The HRW advisory quoted Forest Peoples Programme Director Joji Carino as saying that the indigenous peoples’ recommendations to strengthen World Bank standards and bring them into line with the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples have fallen on deaf ears.

“World Bank pledges on ‘no-dilution’ of existing policies are being broken with this proposed ‘opt-out,’ despite advances made in other substantive areas of the new proposals,” HRW quoted Carino as saying.

Forest Peoples Programme was founded in 1990 in response to the forest crisis, specifically to support indigenous forest peoples’ struggles to defend their lands and livelihoods.