Nintendo announces raft of new games for Switch console

Several Final Fantasy games, including VII, IX and X will arrive on the Switch console next year, Nintendo has announced.

The Japanese firm also revealed a number of new Switch games, such as Animal Crossing and the latest in the Luigi’s Mansion series.

These would also launch in 2019, according to the company.

One analyst said it suggested Nintendo could have a strong year ahead, after relatively few titles came out in 2018.

Nintendo also unveiled wireless controllers based on the design of those made for the 1980s Nintendo Entertainment System (NES). These will be available exclusively to members of the soon-to-launch digital subscription service, Switch Online.

The service will let users play with friends online and access some older Nintendo titles.

It is due to open on 19 September.

Fees to access Switch Online start at £3.49 or $3.99 for one month, with a full year costing £17.99 or $19.99.

Some of the most significant, newly announced games coming to Switch are:

  • Final Fantasy VII, IX, X, X-2, XII: The Zodiac Age and XV Pocket Edition HD
  • Yoshi’s Crafted World
  • Luigi’s Mansion 3 (working title)
  • Animal Crossing
  • Super Mario Bros U Deluxe
  • Katamari Damacy Reroll
  • Board game titles including Pandemic, Carcassonne and Settlers of Catan

And a character from Animal Crossing, helpful secretary Isabelle, will soon feature in Super Smash Bros – Nintendo’s bouncy beat-em up.

Finally, a number of hardware bundles were unveiled for the first time, featuring Switch consoles with game-branded designs.

The Super Smash Bros and Pikachu-themed consoles will be sold with games included.

Piers Harding-Rolls, a gaming analyst at IHS Markit, said: “2018 has certainly been a bit slower in terms of really top-rated games on [Switch].

“Nintendo is obviously directing a lot of resources at the platform and is setting up for a strong 2019.”

He added that Nintendo would also be looking forward to a successful Christmas period, with Super Smash Bros and the newly announced bundles due to be released before the end of the year.

Switch Online was important to get right, Mr Harding-Rolls said, because it would show that Nintendo could drum up long-term customer investment in the platform via subscriptions.

That could be key for attracting larger game publishers’ online titles to Switch, he explained.

“The price point [of Switch Online] is low enough that I think people will adopt it,” he told the BBC.

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iPhone XR Confirmed: Release Date, Price & Specs

With the same design as the pricier iPhone XS and XS Max but with a 6.1in LCD screen, the new iPhone XR uses much of the same hardware including the A12 Bionic chip. It’s the new iPhone everyone will want, but it’s not the small and cheap iPhone SE 2 we were hoping for.

iPhone XR release date

You can pre-order the iPhone XR from 19 October, with the phone on sale on 26 October.

It’s available in a range of colours including white, black, blue, yellow, coral and red.

iPhone XR price

Starting at £749/US$749 with 64GB of storage, the iPhone XR is also available in 128GB (£799/$799) and 256GB capacities (£899/$899).

Click here to buy the iPhone XR.

iPhone XR

iPhone XR features and specs

The iPhone XR is very similar to the iPhone XS and XS Max, sitting between them in terms of size with a 6.1in screen. The key difference here is this is an LCD rather than OLED panel, which Apple has termed a ‘Liquid Retina Display’. 

It’s an edge-to-edge screen with 1.4m (1792×828) pixels and a pixel density of 326ppi. Although it’s larger than the screen on the iPhone 8 Plus, the phone itself is actually smaller. It’s built from 7000-series aluminium with IP67 waterproofing.

It has many of the same features, bar 3D Touch (it has Haptic Touch), such as the 120Hz touch-sensitive layer, wide colour display and tap to wake. It has no home button and instead is navigated using screen gestures.

The XR has the same Apple A12 Bionic processor as the faster models – a 7nm chip that Apple claims is faster than anything on the smartphone market with 15% greater performance on the CPU and 50% on the GPU than the Apple A11. It has just 3GB of RAM compared to their 4GB, however.

iPhone Xr

The camera setup is also the same… sort of. It’s a single- rather than dual-lens camera, but the one lens it does have at the rear matches that of the XS. This is a 12Mp wide-angle camera with a six-element lens, 1.4um pixels, f/1.8 aperture and an improved True Tone flash.

Also seen in the iPhone XS is the front camera setup. The XR has exactly the same Face ID system, and all the tech at the front including the 7Mp selfie camera, with a faster sensor and f/2.2 aperture, an IR camera and dot projector, is all present and correct.

Apple compares battery life to the iPhone 8 Plus and says it is an hour and a half longer.

iPhone XR key specs

  • 6.1in Liquid Retina HD LCD Display (1792×828, 326ppi)
  • iOS 12
  • Apple A12 Bionic six-core processor
  • 64/128/256GB storage
  • 3GB RAM
  • 12Mp, f/1.8 wide-angle camera with 5x digital zoom, 4K video
  • 7Mp, f/2.2 selfie camera
  • Face ID
  • A-GPS, GLONASS
  • Wi-Fi
  • Bluetooth
  • 25 hours talk time, 16 hours video playback
  • Qi wireless charging
  • IP67 waterproofing
  • 75.7×150.9×8.3mm
  • 194g

Read next: Best new phones coming in 2018 & beyond


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iPhone XS & XS Max Confirmed: Release Date, Pre-order, Price & Specs

The successors to iPhone 8 and 8 Plus have been officially confirmed as iPhone XS and XS Max, and they are available to pre-order now. Clad in surgical-grade stainless steel, they adopt the all-screen notch design introduced with last year’s iPhone X, and will be available in gold, silver and space grey.

They sound great, but we reckon it’s the cheaper iPhone Xr everyone will want.

The new phones squeeze larger screens into similar size bodies as their predecessors, now packing the biggest screens found on any iPhone to date. But the 5.8- and 6.5in screens are not just a lot bigger, but also infinitely better.

Marketed as ‘Super Retina Displays’, these are OLED panels with super-high resolutions (2.7m pixels XS; 3.3m pixels XS Max) and crystal-clear 458ppi density. They have 60 percent higher dynamic range than the iPhone X, 1m:1 contrast ratio, HDR10, Dolby Vision, 120Hz touch sensing and 3D Touch.

iPhone XS and XS Max

The new iPhones are also protected with the most durable glass used in any smartphone, and now support IP68 waterproofing, able to endure up to 2m of water for up to 30 minutes.

Nicely complementing the redesigned screen for multimedia and gaming is the implementation of improved stereo speakers for wider stereo sound.

As expected performance has also seen a bump, but it’s more of a push than a bump. The A12 Bionic SOC is, according to Apple, the world’s first 7nm chip (we’ll just forget about Huawei’s latest Kirin chip then). It is faster and more powerful than any of the competition, says the company.

The SOC builds in 6.9 billion transistors, and as before comprises a CPU, GPU and neural engine. Each of these components has been enhanced, with the two-performance cores of the six-core CPU running 15 percent faster and 40 percent more efficient than in the A11, the quad-core GPU an amazing 50 percent faster than in the A11, and the octa-core neural engine now able to process 5 trillion operations per second (up from 600 billion).

iPhone XS camera

Cameras have also been upgraded, with the iPhone XS fitted with a dual-camera at the rear that has two 12Mp lenses and dual optical image stabilisation. The wide-angle camera has a six-element lens, 1.4um pixels and an f/1.8 aperture. There’s also a telephoto camera with f/2.4 aperture and 2x optical zoom, and an improved True Tone flash.

Round at the front there’s a 7Mp selfie camera, with a faster sensor and f/2.2 aperture, an IR camera and dot projector. 

Battery life has improved too, and the iPhone XS lasts 30 minutes longer than the iPhone X, while the XS Max can last a whole hour and a half longer.

iPhone XS

iPhone XS price & release date

The iPhone XS is available in 64GB, 256GB and 512GB capacities, starting at £999/US$999. Available in the same capacities, the XS Max will start at £1099/$1099. See .

Here’s the full pricing:

  • 64GB iPhone XS: £999/$999
  • 256GB iPhone XS: £1149/$1149
  • 512GB iPhone XS: £1349/$1349
  • 64GB iPhone XS Max: £1099/$1099
  • 128GB iPhone XS Max: £1249/$1249
  • 512GB iPhone XS Max: £1449/$1449

Pre-orders begin today (14 September), with the new iPhones officially on sale on 21 September. Click here to buy the new iPhone XS.

There will also finally be a dual-SIM version of iPhone XS and XS Max available in China, but elsewhere there will be both single-SIM and E-SIM versions.

iPhone XS specs

  • 5.8in Super Retina HD OLED Display (2436×1125, 458ppi)
  • Apple A12 Bionic six-core processor
  • 4GB RAM
  • 64/256/512GB storage
  • 12Mp, f/1.8 + 12Mp f/2.4 dual-camera, dual optical image stabilisation, 4K video
  • 7Mp, f/2.2 selfie camera
  • Face ID
  • A-GPS, GLONASS
  • Wi-Fi
  • Bluetooth
  • 20 hours talk time, 14 hours video playback
  • Qi wireless charging
  • IP68 waterproofing
  • 70.9×143.6×7.7mm
  • 177g

iPhone XS Max specs

As above but:

  • 6.5in Super Retina HD OLED Display (2688×1242, 458ppi)
  • 25 hours talk time, 15 hours video playback
  • 77.4×157.5×7.7mm
  • 208g

Read next: Best new phones coming in 2018 & beyond


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Apple Watch 4 Confirmed: Release Date, Pre-order, Price & Specs

Apple has officially confirmed its fourth-generation Apple Watch during its September 12 event, which is available to pre-order today.

The new Apple Watch Series 4 has a redesigned screen that is more than 30 percent larger. It’s pushed right to the corners, so there have been minimal changes to the case size – the Series 4 is actually thinner than Series 3.

Other hardware changes include a speaker that’s 50 percent louder, and a re-engineered digital crown that builds in haptic feedback. There’s a new S4 64-bit dual-core processor that’s two times faster, while the black ceramic and sapphire crystal rear improves cellular reception.

Apple Watch 4

Apple has also redesigned the WatchOS software, and there are now eight complications. You can customise these with the things that are important to you, such as health and fitness data and different time zones.

Some of the more interesting new features are to do with health, however. The Apple Watch Series 4 is the first consumer product offered over the counter to allow ECG (electrocardiogram) tests wherever you are, important for helping to diagnose certain heart diseases. (This feature will not be available at launch.)

The Series 4 can also send notifications if your heart rate is too low, or if you have an irregular heart beat. And it can detect a fall – should you be immobile for a minute it will automatically trigger an emergency call and send a text with your location.

Apple Watch Series 4

Despite all these changes, Apple Watch Series 4 has the same 18-hour battery life as previously.

Apple Watch Series 4 price and release date

The new Apple Watch 4 costs from £399/US$399 with GPS, and £499/$499 with cellular. The Series 3 is still available from £279/$279.

  • GPS 40mm: £399/$399
  • GPS 44mm: £429/$429
  • Cellular 40mm: £499/$499
  • Cellular 44mm: £529/$529

Pre-orders begin today (14 September), with the new Watch on sale 21 September. Click here to buy the new Apple Watch.

Read next: Best smartwatches


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Church of England to keep Amazon shares despite Welby criticism

The Church of England has said it will keep its shares in Amazon – a day after the Archbishop of Canterbury said the firm was “leeching off the taxpayer”.

The Church Times has revealed Amazon was among the 20 biggest global investments by the Church last year.

A statement from the CofE said it considered the most effective way to seek change was to be “in the room with these companies” as a shareholder.

Amazon has repeatedly said it pays all taxes required in the UK.

Archbishop Justin Welby, in a speech to the Trades Union Congress on Wednesday, said: “When vast companies like Amazon and other online traders, the new industries, can get away with paying almost nothing in tax, there is something wrong with the tax system.

“They don’t pay a real living wage, so the taxpayer must support their workers with benefits.

“And having leeched off the taxpayer once they don’t pay for our defence, for security, for stability, for justice, health, equality, education.”

His comments came a week after he told the BBC there needed to be a fundamental rethink of how the economy works, including higher taxes on technology giants and the wealthy.

The 2017 annual report from the Church Commissioners, which deals with the Church’s investments, revealed Amazon Inc was one of its top 20 global equity investments.

A statement from the Church said: “We consider aggressive tax avoidance or abusive tax arrangements to be both a business risk and an ethical issue.

“As with other issues, we take the view that it is most effective to be in the room with these companies seeking change as a shareholder.

“We continue to work with other shareholders to tackle this issue via engagement with companies and their managers.”

The Church made a return of 18.6% on global equities in 2017.

In 2014, the commissioners sold around £75,000 of shares in the payday lender Wonga after the archbishop pledged to “put it out of business”.

He had admitted to being “embarrassed” and “irritated” when details of the link emerged in 2013.

Last week, Amazon briefly became the second US-listed firm to have a market value of more than $1 trillion (£779bn).

Archbishop Welby has also attracted criticism regarding comments he made about zero-hour contracts which he called the “reincarnation of an ancient evil”.

In a letter to the Times, the Reverend Ray Anglesea, a minister who worked on a zero-hours contract in a cathedral bookshop, said: “What the Most Rev Justin Welby did not disclose was how many of his cathedrals are zero contract hour employers and how many cathedral employees have no job certainty, no sick or holiday pay, and no maternity cover.”

The Church of England said advice to its parishes on zero-hours contracts was issued in 2013, and “does not reflect the current thinking” of the Church.

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Anker Nebula Mars II portable projector

A home cinema projector remains one of tech’s most tempting indulgences. Often the most affordable way to get giant-screen action into your home, they are however quite a commitment. Do you need to rearrange your furniture to accommodate it? Is there a screen or blank white wall easily accessible to project onto? Are the speakers up to scratch, or will you need to consider hooking up additional ones?

Projector installation can be a bit of a pain then. But Anker, best known for its portable mobile battery packs, is taking the fuss out of projection with its portable, Android-powered Nebula Mars II projector. It proves that a portable projector is not only now feasible, but worth buying, too.

Price and availability

The Anker Nebula Mars II projector is available now, priced at £469.99 ($499.99, around AU$850).

That’s about the going rate for a decent portable pico projector, but the Nebula Mars II is far superior to the majority of similarly-sized rivals on the market. The only comparable product we’d similarly recommend is Anker’s own Nebula Capsule projector (though the Mars II greatly refines that earlier offering).

Design

With its carry handle and dinky size, the Anker Nebula Mars II is about as portable a (functioning) projector as we’ve ever seen. Weighing just 1.79kg, we’ve played with larger Bluetooth speakers, making the boxy Nebula Mars II a superb option for those looking for an easy-to-transport projector.

The Anker Nebula Mars II projector looks a bit like a squashed cube, with its edges smoothly curved off. Around the front you’ll find the projection lamp, protected by a push down cover that also automatically turns the projector on when the lamp is exposed. 

There’s a selection of hardware button controls on the top edge of the projector; volume controls, a source selector, Bluetooth pairing and a four-way directional remote with a selection button. There’s also four small white LEDs that show how much of the built-in 12,500mAh rechargeable battery is left.

Around the back you’ll find some ventilation openings (just like all projectors, the Nebula Mars II can get hot after prolonged use), as well as the DC-in for power, a HDMI-in port, a USB 3 port and an audio out jack. There’s also an IR sensor for using the included remote control with, along with a pin-sized reset button. The DC-in is one of the few gripes we have with the Nebula Mars II – it’s a proprietary power supply, where a USB charging option would have been much more convenient.

Either side of the box has speaker grille openings to help the Nebula Mars II deliver its impressive audio, while underneath you’ll find a rubber ring so that the projector doesn’t slip around on surfaces, as well as a point for screwing in a camera tripod.

All in black (apart from a small red Nebula logo on the front), including its leather handle, the Nebula Mars II projector is an unassuming and tidily designed box.

Features

For its size, the Nebula Mars II projector packs in an impressive spec sheet. While its 720p output won’t win any awards among cinephiles, it’s an acceptable resolution for projectors of this ilk, and the 300 ANSI Lumens lamp is excellent for night time viewing (and just about reasonable for low-lit surroundings). 

You’ll get roughly ten-inches of screen size for every foot-or-so the projector is away from the surface its projecting on, up to an ultimate limit of 150-inches. You’ll find the sweetspot between size and projection clarity somewhere between 80 and 100-inches however we found, with performance best as you’d expect when in as close to pitch-black darkness as you can manage. You’ll get between 3 and 4 hours of video playback from the projector, though you can power from the mains if needed, too.

The speakers built in are enjoyable too. Using two 10W drivers and bass radiators of Anker’s own design, they go impressively loud and sound reasonably clear too. That’s particularly handy given the projector can be used as a standalone Bluetooth speaker too, where it’ll blast 30-odd hours of tunes on a single charge.

One of the most interesting features of the Nebula Mars II however is the fact that it runs a bespoke version of Android 7.1. Laying apps out in a tile format that apes (but shouldn’t be mistaken for) Android TV, that means you’ve got ready-to-go video sources, straight out of the box. With Wi-Fi connectivity built in, you can be streaming from Netflix, Amazon Prime or your Plex library within minutes of turning it on.

Anker’s forked build of Android is limited in the apps that it lets you use with projector, but at least all that we tried seemed to work well with the hardware. Remember – if you don’t want to stream, you can always hook up a player or video file from the HDMI and USB 3 ports respectively. 

The projector comes with a physical remote, but you may find yourself more drawn to the free iOS and Android Nebula Connect app. This quickly pairs with your projector and as well as mimicking the hardware remote control, it also offer a mouse-cursor mode, which can be handy for controlling some apps.

Performance

Measure your expectations, and you’ll have a great time with the Nebula Mars II. It’s not bright enough for daytime use in any meaningful way, but when night falls, it’s a lovely bit of kit. 

For starters, its portability makes for a transformative projection experience in terms of accessibility. I had it projecting everywhere from outside on my balcony to the foot of my bed and onto the white wall beyond with ease. The struggles to find a suitable spot are whisked away thanks to the built in battery, with a speedy and accurate auto focus and keystone adjustments letting you get creative as to where you’d like to settle down and watch a movie.

Picture quality is sharp enough to be enjoyable too. It’s not going to win awards against 1080p or 4K projectors, but offset against the portability factor, that’s a fair trade to make. We had a lot of fun hooking up a SNES Classic Mini, for instance, where pixelation was never a concern.

Audio quality is punchy too, and more than loud enough to serve the sort of spaces where a 100-inch screen is a sensible size. The quoted 4-hour battery life seems pretty accurate, too.

Where you may be a little disappointed is in the quality of the apps on offer through the Android fork. Netflix, Amazon and the like seem to have taken their eyes off whichever version of their apps that the Nebula Mars II is sporting, making them feel a little clunky compared to their smart TV or console variants. However, you’ve still got full access to their respective catalogues, making it a minor quibble.

Verdict

The Anker Nebula Mars II projector is a great addition to your on-the-go entertainment arsenal. Provided you’re not expecting to use it in daylight or bright meeting rooms, it delivers large, vibrant images and an excellent array of apps thanks to the Android platform it’s built upon. With a capacious battery and loud speakers, it’ll quickly become a party centerpiece, or flexible, movable DIY home cinema.

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Governments make slow progress with digital transformation initiatives

Despite the fact that digital business initiatives are high on government agendas, a new survey from Gartner has revealed that governments’ ability to scale these initiatives is increasingly slowly and their progress lags behind that of other industries.

The research firm surveyed 372 digital decision makers from the US, Canada, UK, Australia, India and Singapore across six industries (financial services, government, manufacturing, retail, healthcare and education) to compile its digital business survey.

According to Gartner, half of the government respondents to the survey are looking to digital government to support a combination of transformation and optimisation goals. However, the other half is focusing on a single goal with 33 per cent prioritising optimisation while 17 per cent are making transformation their primary focus.

Stages of digital transformation

The firm believes the road to digital transformation is made up of five stages: desire, designing, delivering, scaling and harvesting.

Research director at Gartner, Dean Lacheca provided further insight on which stage governments believe to be on, saying:

“Ninety-one per cent of government respondents consider themselves at one of the first three stages, which focus on the development and introduction of new services. Only 9 per cent identify their digital initiatives as being in the later stages, where the focus is on scaling the service and exceeding the value of comparable nondigital initiatives.” 

Ecosystems are also playing a large part in helping government organisations scale their digital business. Collaboration with partners such as employees, citizens, consumers, startups, digital giants and service providers was also found to play a major role in scaling the benefits of digital government.

Gartner’s survey shows that government respondents already use a range of business ecosystems with over half saying they use third-part developers to deliver value to citizens.

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