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  • Why an anti-reflection PaperMatte display is probably not the best for most people

    Why an anti-reflection PaperMatte display is probably not the best for most people

    Our reviews of the MatePad 11.5 (2025) and its predecssor show that the etched surface structure of the PaperMatte panel visibly reduces the brilliance of color reproduction. Colors appear less vibrant, and image sharpness is not as clear as on a glossy display.

    The high black level also negatively impacts contrast. Compared to high-quality, non-matter IPS displays, the ratio of brightness and black tone reproduction is significantly lower on PaperMatte screens. In our review of the Huawei MatePad 11.5 (2025), we only reached a contrast ratio of 629:1. In our display measurement, the grayscale on PaperMatte panels is also slightly color cast, which impairs color accuracy.

    For outdoor enthusiasts, however, the “PaperMatte” surface will be a highlight, as reflections are greatly reduced. In everyday use, this matte finish proves to be very effective outdoors.
     

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  • Holgado flawless for majestic maiden Moto2™ victory in Barcelona

    Holgado flawless for majestic maiden Moto2™ victory in Barcelona

    Leading every lap, commanding the Grand Prix and taking his first victory, there’s only one word that can describe Daniel Holgado’s (CFMOTO Impulse Aspar Team) Catalan GP: perfect. Blasting off from pole and making it look easy, the #27 became the ninth different winner of the season ahead of Jake Dixon (ELF Marc VDS Racing Team) and super-sub Daniel Muñoz (Red Bull KTM Ajo) in a tense 21-lapper. Elsewhere, Manuel Gonzalez (LIQUI MOLY Dynavolt Intact GP) extends his advantage to 38 after a disastrous Sunday for his rivals.

    A lightning getaway from polesitter Holgado saw him snatch the holeshot and lead the opening laps ahead of Dixon. At Turn 4 on the opening lap, the #96’s teammate Filip Salac (ELF Marc VDS Racing Team) was forced out wide and into the gravel whilst further around the corner, a fast-starting Ayumu Sasaki’s (RW-Idrofoglia Racing GP) Grand Prix was over, crashing out. Settling down on Lap 3, Holgado headed Dixon whilst Muñoz gave chase in third, continuing his impressive showing ahead of Izan Guevara (BLU CRU Pramac Yamaha Moto2) and Championship leader Gonzalez in P5.

    At the start of Lap 6, Muñoz’s charge continued as he bounced through into second ahead of Dixon under braking for Turn 1. At half distance, Salac was taken out further behind by Jorge Navarro (KLINT Forward Factory Team) at Turn 1 whilst at Turn 7, it was a fast crash for Aron Canet (Fantic Racing Lino Sonego), dinting his title hopes with Gonzalez up in P5.  On Lap 16, Gonzalez attempted to pass Guevara at Turn 1 but went wide and thus lost the place but a lap later, made it work and secured fourth.

    Back at the front, Holgado’s impressive ride continued, pulling out a 2.5s gap to Muñoz. The replacement rider was starting to come under pressure from a resurgent Dixon, just half a second between them before on the penultimate lap, the Brit took P2 at Turn 1. Further back in P12, Diogo Moreira’s (Italtrans Racing Team) weekend got worse as he was issued a Long Lap Penalty for exceeding track limits.

    One Aspar rider may have taken their first win back at Balaton Park and it was the same again but for the other side of the box. A flawless ride from Holgado saw him take a lights-to-flag victory, a first in Moto2 and becoming the ninth different winner of 2025. Dixon held off Muñoz for a first podium since Germany whilst Muñoz’s is his first ever. Gonzalez extends his Championship lead with P4 ahead of Guevara who matched his season’s-best in fifth.

    Celestino Vietti (Beta Tools SpeedRS Team) was next up ahead of teammate Alonso Lopez whilst David Alonso (CFMOTO Impulse Aspar Team) surged through from 25th to eighth. Collin Veijer (Red Bull KTM Ajo) and Barry Baltus (Fantic Racing Lino Sonego) rounded out the top ten. Moreira’s penalty left him 14th, a blow to his title aspirations.

    Nine winners in 2025, will we welcome a tenth at Misano next week? Don’t bet against it!

    Moto2 Catalan GP results!

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  • Top 5 DJ sets to catch on Ibiza in September picked by Stefano

    Top 5 DJ sets to catch on Ibiza in September picked by Stefano

    Finally, September is here. Considered by many the best month of the season, what’s not up for debate is that it’s generally a great time to visit the island. Better than the overcrowded and unbearably hot months of July and August.

    This is the time of year the real clubbers show up, the atmosphere on the dancefloor is at its best, and the DJs close their residencies on an upper swing.

    This is the moment when the island succumbs to that mystical concept of party absolutism. That epic sensation of something important happening, that will go on to define everyone’s perception of the season. The club bookers must surely be feeling the pressure to deliver!


    DJ Tennis | Bedouin present Saga | Chinois Ibiza

    Sunday 7 September

    Life & Death label boss DJ Tennis parachutes into the club located in Ibiza Marina, playing at the Bedouin residency, Saga. Good choice guys! Objectively, one of the worst stage names in the business, he has very good taste when it comes to electronic music.

    The Italian DJ/producer is one of the most respected figures in the scene. Based in Miami, he is one of those DJs for clubbers in the know.

    His groovy tracks are filled with refined sounds that make his sets both entertaining and broad. His music invites you down a mysterious road to a junction. Like the rabbit from Alice In Wonderland, the choice is yours… We recommend you follow it.

    MORE INFO | BUY TICKETS


    Top 5 DJ sets to catch on Ibiza in September picked by Stefano

    Gerd Janson | Glitterbox | Hï Ibiza

    Sunday 7 September

    Alternatively, on the same date, Glitterbox at Hï Ibiza also shaping up to be a hell of a night. Glitterbox might be famous for its Disco and House-oriented sound, whilst also priding itself on being gay-friendly. But this is really a night that anyone who appreciates good music can enjoy.

    The whole line-up looks tasty, but if I have to choose, I’m picking Gerd Janson. He’s the one you should not miss. All night with this guy in the Club Room, which, in my opinion, is the venue’s best room. It stacks subwoofer and speakers at head height, while you dance the night away.

    MORE INFO | BUY TICKETS

    PHOTOGRAPHY | by Jimmy Mould


    Top 5 DJ sets to catch on Ibiza in September picked by Stefano

    Caribou (DJ set) | Solomun +1 | Pacha

    Sunday 14 September

    The creative mind behind countless great productions, including Odessa and Can’t Live Without You is the unflappable Caribou. Dan Snaith’s most famous alias will be the “+1” at the Tsar of Ibiza, Mladen Solomun, at his iconic party Solomun +1 held at the island’s oldest club, Pacha.

    One of Ibiza’s longest running residencies, it strives to book quality artists in an over-saturated and often too predictable marketplace. This booking is typical of that mindset.

    Caribou will be there to unleash all his musical magic and (we’re sure) later go on to perform a back-to-back with the hero from Hamburg. Save the date and check this out, because it’s going to be massive. Caribou’s appearances here are scarce, so don’t miss this opportunity.

    MORE INFO | BUY TICKETS


    Top 5 DJ sets to catch on Ibiza in September picked by Stefano

    Sven Väth | Cocoon | 528 Ibiza

    Wednesday 24 September

    Just as her did last year, legendary German DJ Sven Väth has chosen to throw another outdoor Cocoon party at the wonderful open-air location nestled on the hill of Benimussa, 528 Ibiza.

    2024’s edition celebrated the 25th anniversary of Cocoon – the party that help to shape Ibiza’s musical landscape in the Noughties and 2010s. Many people still remember those incredibly hedonistic nights at Amnesia. It was the living definition of epic.

    The full line-up is amazing. Richie Hawtin is part of it, along with Marcel Dettmann, but the true set which cannot be missed will be Sven’s. He never disappoints and, at 60 years young, he still rocks the dancefloor like few others. The stage is set for an unforgettable night. Vamos!

    MORE INFO | BUY TICKETS

    PHOTOGRAPHY | by Daniel Woeller


    Top 5 DJ sets to catch on Ibiza in September picked by Stefano

    Green Velvet | Pyramid | Amnesia

    Sunday 28 September

    Pyramid is an underground party where you can feel the locals’ atmosphere whilst experiencing some exemplary music.

    Green Velvet is one of the great DJs to emerge from the city of Chicago. A real larger than life character, his presence behind the decks makes all the difference. While his sound is evidently influenced by his hometown’s Jackin’ House leanings, in reality, he transcends any definition.

    Green Velvet’s sound is Green Velvet’s sound. When you spot the green mohican and the steam punk sunglasses, you know you are in for something special. Just let yourself dance until the moment he uses his headphone as a microphone and start to sing any of his famous hooks.

    At that point just scream in the air with your fellow clubbers, ’cause you’ll be in La La Land!

    MORE INFO | BUY TICKETS


    In lots of way, September feels like summer is coming to an end, that a chapter is closing and maybe even that a phase of your life is drawing to a close. With all this going on around you on this magic island, what could be better than listen some excellent electronic music?

    I hope you enjoyed my picks. You can find Lissy‘s and Steve‘s selections now online too.

    All of these listings are on sale via the party calendar.

    WORDS | by Stefano Lariccia

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  • Recording Your Workflow? High-Res Screen Recording Coming to iPhone, iPad – PCMag

    1. Recording Your Workflow? High-Res Screen Recording Coming to iPhone, iPad  PCMag
    2. iOS 26 finally fixes low-res screen recordings for iPhone users  Moneycontrol
    3. Apple now lets you record your iPhone screen in high-res  NewsBytes
    4. iOS 26 introduces higher quality screen recordings for iPhone and iPad  9to5Mac

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  • Skipping breakfast and eating late dinners might be silently damaging your bones. New study reveals shocking risk

    Skipping breakfast and eating late dinners might be silently damaging your bones. New study reveals shocking risk

    We’ve all heard that breakfast is the most important meal of the day. But a new study suggests it’s more than just energy and mood—it could be about your bones. Researchers from Nara Medical University in Japan found that skipping breakfast and eating dinner late are independently linked to osteoporosis, a disease that quietly weakens bones until fractures strike. This revelation is adding urgency to the call for healthier meal routines.

    How Late Eating Habits Put Bones at Risk

    The research, recently published in the Journal of the Endocrine Society and reported by Fox News Digital, tracked the lifestyle habits of over 927,000 adults. Participants, aged 20 and older, were followed for nearly three years to monitor who developed fractures in the hip, spine, wrist, or upper arm—common indicators of osteoporosis.
    The findings were clear. People who skipped breakfast more than three times a week or ate dinner within two hours of going to bed on a regular basis were at a significantly higher risk of bone fractures. These behaviors were also associated with other unhealthy habits like smoking, drinking alcohol daily, and inadequate sleep and exercise.
    Lead author Dr. Hiroki Nakajima told Fox News Digital, “We demonstrated that these eating patterns frequently co-occurred with other unhealthy behaviors—suggesting that comprehensive lifestyle counseling may be important for fracture prevention.”

    Even after adjusting for other risk factors, such as age and body mass index, the link between irregular eating patterns and bone health remained. “Not having a routine eating schedule was independently associated with a higher risk of osteoporotic fractures,” the study noted.

    iStock

    Osteoporosis is a progressive bone disease where bones become weak, brittle, and fragile, increasing the risk of fractures. It often develops silently. (Image: iStock)

    The Science Behind the Clock and Bones

    The Japanese findings echo conclusions from a broader body of research, including insights from a 2019 review published in Nutrients, which highlights the critical role of meal timing in regulating our internal clocks. The body’s circadian rhythms, controlled by light exposure and biological clocks in the gut, liver, and muscles, help regulate everything from glucose absorption to hormone secretion. The review explained that eating late at night disrupts these rhythms, impairing metabolic processes and reducing the body’s ability to absorb nutrients crucial for bone strength. “Food consumption that is asynchronous with natural circadian rhythms may exert adverse health effects and increase disease risk,” the authors wrote. Moreover, skipping breakfast may lead to increased post-meal insulin spikes and fat oxidation imbalance, contributing not just to poor glucose control but also to inflammation—a silent trigger in bone degradation.

    Building Healthy Routines

    Experts say meal timing isn’t about strict diets or impossible schedules—it’s about consistency. Registered dietitian Su-Nui Escobar, not involved in the study but quoted in Fox News Digital, emphasized the importance of simple, sustainable routines. “Establishing routines—like having meals at specific times—supports our well-being without requiring constant thought or reliance on willpower,” she said.
    She recommends easy-to-prepare breakfasts such as Greek yogurt with fruit, overnight oats, or egg muffins, and dinners like pan-fried salmon with vegetables—all options that keep meal timing intact without stressing busy schedules.

    What This Means for You

    Osteoporosis is often called a “silent disease” because many people don’t know they have it until a fracture occurs. According to the National Institutes of Health, it’s a leading cause of fractures in post-menopausal women and older men, with bone loss progressing quietly over time.

    The takeaway? Eating habits aren’t just about calorie counts—they can influence long-term bone health. Prioritizing regular meal times, eating breakfast, and avoiding late dinners may seem small, but they could be key steps toward reducing your risk of fractures and metabolic diseases.

    As the Nutrients review concluded, “A regular meal pattern including breakfast consumption, consuming a higher proportion of energy early in the day, reduced meal frequency, and regular fasting periods may provide physiological benefits such as reduced inflammation, improved circadian rhythmicity, and stress resistance.”

    Add ET Logo as a Reliable and Trusted News Source

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  • Experimental brain stimulation may help turn off the ‘fire alarm’ of chronic pain – KION546

    Experimental brain stimulation may help turn off the ‘fire alarm’ of chronic pain – KION546

    By Jen Christensen, CNN

    (CNN) — Edward Mowery lived with excruciating pain for years: Picture being put into a hot frying pan, he said, and then someone holding you down on that pan forever. The fiery, shooting pain got so bad that he quit his job, stopped playing sports and had to abandon his beloved death metal band just as the group was taking off.

    “At one point, I didn’t have any feeling in my arms or hands or anything,” said Mowery, 55, who lives in New Mexico. “I couldn’t put one note on a guitar, much less play like I do.”

    But everything changed when doctors tried a cutting-edge approach to pain management. If they can refine the technique to make it less intrusive and demonstrate that it works on others, doctors think this technique could radically transform the way people manage debilitating and otherwise untreatable chronic pain — no opioids or pain blockers required.

    “The state of the art right now for picking a medication for an individual patient is trial and error” when it comes to pain, said Dr. Prasad Shirvalkar, a neurologist at the University of California San Francisco. “Trying to be your own guinea pig, that’s essentially what we’re doing right now in pain medicine.” Finding something more precise that could stop a pain signal in the brain before it could be felt in the body would be a huge shift.

    An estimated 50 million adults in the United States experience chronic pain, defined as lasting for more than three months. Of them, about 8.5% are like Mowery, living with chronic pain that interferes with day-to-day life, according to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

    Years of agony

    Mowery says he was a rambunctious kid and got injured a lot while skiing and playing soccer.

    Altogether he says he’s had 34 surgeries, including 11 painful knee surgeries, as well as foot, back and neck surgeries. The bigger problem, though, started with a part of his body that hadn’t even been injured.

    About a week after a routine knee replacement in 2009, his right foot started to feel like it was on fire.

    He spoke with “all kind of doctors, trying to figure out what was going on,” but nobody could explain the pain. Some didn’t even believe that he was in pain, assuming he was an opioid addict looking for pills. “That’s the one thing, when they put me on all these meds, I wasn’t addicted to all the meds, I was addicted to getting rid of the pain,” he said.

    For eight long years, he said, doctors couldn’t figure out what was causing the pain. But in 2017, when his foot turned purple and black, he went to a pain specialist in Albuquerque who took one look and told him he had complex regional pain syndrome, or CRPS.

    CRPS is a kind of neurological pain, often in the extremities, that can develop after a surgery, stroke, injury or heart attack that is out of proportion to the severity of an initial injury. It can make blood vessels dilate or constrict, leading to skin discoloration, swelling and temperature changes.

    Mowery says doctors explained that when the acute pain from his knee went away, his brain essentially missed that feeling.

    “Because I’d been in pain for so long, my brain was so used to being in pain that it said, ‘Oh, you need to have this back,’ ” he said. “Manufactured pain from the brain with no stimulus. It’s unreal.”

    Doctors put him on a variety of pain medications, including morphine and oxycodone, that he didn’t like because he felt so out of it. At one point, he took 17 pills a day, but nothing worked for long. Always athletic, Mowery ended up relying on a walker or a wheelchair to get around.

    “It’s really depressing. You would think they’d call CRPS the suicide disease,” Mowery said. “A lot of times, I was sitting there just going, ‘what am I going to do? There’s nothing out there for me.’ “

    He spent years searching the internet for clinical trials and finally found one at the University of California San Francisco. The description of the research seemed vague but he filled out the questionnaire anyway and, within 40 minutes, he said, he got a message urgently asking him to come to San Francisco.

    Relief from his years of agony would soon come after doctors persuaded him to let them drill several holes in his head.

    ‘These are people that have been failed’

    Shirvalkar says he has long wanted to solve the puzzle that is pain. He had success treating neurological conditions but less success treating their chronic pain.

    “There are people that have been failed by all available therapies. They’ve tried over 25 different medications. They have had multiple injections and nerve blocks.
    They’ve even had spinal cord stimulators or peripheral stimulators, and nothing can alleviate their suffering,” Shirvalkar said. “We started appreciating that the brain must be generating or perpetuating these pain signals in a person. So the question becomes, how can we identify what these signals are and really try to suppress or short-circuit them?”

    Acute pain, like when someone stubs a toe, affects the brain differently from chronic pain, he said.

    “I think of chronic pain as a fire alarm. The alarm is helpful for acute pain. We want to be able to know when there’s an emergency,” he said. “In chronic pain, it’s as if the fire alarm is going off, but we can’t identify the fire.”

    When pain becomes chronic, it rewires the brain.

    “It starts to take on these other dimensions that include mood and motivation and involve attention and memory, and so we really have to address the cognitive aspect of it,” Shirvalkar said. “It tells me that when someone has developed chronic pain, treating it with a single drug or injection or some monotherapy probably isn’t going to work.”

    With the help of a $7.56 million grant from the National Institutes of Health, Shirvalkar and a team at UCSF have been exploring deep brain stimulation, a technology sometimes used with people who have Parkinson’s disease, to treat pain conditions like Mowery’s.

    With Parkinson’s, doctors implant electrodes in the brain that produce electrical impulses to disrupt the abnormal signals that cause tremors, stiffness and slow movement. Shirvalkar wondered if they could also use the a version of the device to redirect or suppress the brain’s pain signals to the body.

    There were a few challenges with this approach. The device sends signals around the clock in someone who has Parkinson’s, but Shirvalkar thought a constant signal wouldn’t work for chronic pain because the brain can become acclimated to the impulses and essentially override them.

    Another challenge was figuring out what part of the brain was sending pain signals.
    There’s no one central location that does this, and it could be different in different people.

    Yet another challenge would be to quickly sense when the brain was about to send out a pain signal – or even anticipate it – and shut it down quickly.

    The team used computational models and AI to essentially detect a biomarker that could track how severe a person’s chronic pain would be, similar to how an A1C level can tell whether someone has diabetes and how severe it is.

    But to learn whether deep brain stimulation could work for pain, the team first had to persuade Mowery that he should have another surgery. He was reluctant to have another procedure. This trial would require three.

    ‘I feel like I owe him my life’

    It took Mowery about 18 months to decide the trial was right for him – time in which the worsening pain essentially wore him down.

    In the first surgery, doctors would map Mowery’s brain to determine where the pain came from. Another surgery would remove the temporary probes from the first procedure. A final procedure placed permanent probes in the correct areas.

    For the first part of the trial, Mowery spent 10 days in the hospital while doctors created a grid of more than 100 points on his head to try to find different circuits or certain activation for pain by watching and stimulating his brain. Even with eight- to 10-hour days probing his brain, it wasn’t until day five or six that the researchers had their “eureka moment.”

    “All of a sudden, Ed says, ‘Wow, my pain just washed off of me,’ ” Shirvalkar said. “I was blown away. I didn’t know what to say.”

    Concerned that it could be the placebo effect, the doctors kept testing to make sure they had the right targets. Shirvalkar quickly became confident that they had picked the right areas when Mowery immediately felt the pain in his feet, legs and lower back dissipate.

    “When it comes to actually understanding what’s driving someone’s chronic pain, we say there’s no pain center, right? But it tells us if chronic pain is this complex lock, it tells us that yes, that there is a key to be found. So it gives us hope.”

    Much more research will be done to see if this technology can work for everyone or whether there would be even better technology that would be less invasive.

    In August, Shirvalkar and his team published the results of their tests of this technique on six people. The team followed the patients for 22 months and were even able to randomize the trial so some got the stimulation and some did not. Those who got stimulation reported a reduction in pain of about 60%, while the placebo group got no such relief.

    Mowery has resumed his normal daily activities, including playing his guitar. He can monitor what’s going on in his brain with an iPad app and just has to periodically charge the device that sends the signals to his brain.

    He’s not totally pain-free, he says: He’ll have a bad day sometimes, but it’s infrequent.

    He says Shirvalkar’s work changed his life.

    “The way it detected pain, the way it turns off pain, the way I’m getting off all these medications, I feel like I owe him my life,” Mowery said.

    Mowery felt so much better that, in June, he accompanied Shirvalkar to Washington to testify before Congress’ Neuroscience Caucus about the impact of the NIH BRAIN Initiative on addiction research and on this pain treatment alternative.

    Shirvalkar is concerned about future funding amid the current political environment and other funding cuts at the NIH.

    “NIH funding is always a concern. Fortunately, we’re doing OK for the time being,” Shirvalkar said. “We’ll have to wait and see.”

    Mowery hopes that his experience will provide enough of an example so people can see the possibilities of such medical research.

    “I have been called a medical astronaut before, and my sister is an actual astronaut, and she finds that funny,” Mowery said. “It’s a miracle.”

    The-CNN-Wire
    ™ & © 2025 Cable News Network, Inc., a Warner Bros. Discovery Company. All rights reserved.

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  • Lewis Capaldi review – an emotional return to the spotlight for pop’s most heart-on-sleeve star | Lewis Capaldi

    Lewis Capaldi review – an emotional return to the spotlight for pop’s most heart-on-sleeve star | Lewis Capaldi

    Lewis Capaldi is a pop star known for his patter. But tonight, he warns the crowd he is feeling too overwhelmed to perform his usual funnyman routine. “I probably won’t say lots this evening because I don’t know what to say,” he says. “I’m just genuinely thrilled that this is still a possibility for me.”

    The 28-year-old being lost for words tonight is understandable. In 2023, Capaldi announced he was taking a hiatus from touring, after sharing his struggles with his mental health and his diagnosis in 2022 of Tourette syndrome. Having disappeared from the spotlight for the better part of two years, he made a triumphant return at Glastonbury earlier this summer for an unannounced and emotional set on the Pyramid stage. Tonight’s Sheffield show, however, marks the Scottish singer’s first headline performance since his extended break. “We’re back baby,” he tells the crowd at one point.

    The show begins with Survive, with Capaldi singing “I still got something to give / Though it hurts sometimes / I’m gonna get up and live” over thunderous drums and lashings of guitar. As he hurtles through Grace and Heavenly Kind of State of Mind, he seems incredulous, nervously giggling as he gazes out at the audience. But by the time he performs Forever – complete with mass audience singalong – he has relaxed into it and shaken off any disbelief at being back.

    Lewis Capaldi Performs At Utilita Arena Photograph: Shirlaine Forrest/Getty Images

    Capaldi’s music has never been especially adventurous: it’s his voice – raspy and emotive – that’s the appeal. But absent his usual onstage banter, the back-to-back balladry and heartbreak anthems do begin to merge. The homogeny is thankfully broken up by the schmaltzy 80s stylings of Leave Me Slowly, with its pillowy electric pianos and guitar solo, and the poppier melodies of Forget Me also offer a little variation.

    The most striking moment comes during The Day That I Die, a new song Capaldi says was written “at a time I didn’t know I would be around”. Sat at the piano following a raging final chorus, his voice stormy with emotion, Capaldi lowers his head and cries. It’s a performance that clearly takes a toll. However, judging by his face during the encore of Someone You Loved, the price was worth paying. “It means everything that we’re back doing this,” he says with a grin. “Excuse the pun, but I’ll be doing it till the day I die.”

    At Utilita Arena, Sheffield, 7 September, and touring the UK until 27 September

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  • Figure skating – ISU CS Kinoshita Group Cup 2025: Hiccups and all, Cha Junhwan still cruises to men’s title

    Figure skating – ISU CS Kinoshita Group Cup 2025: Hiccups and all, Cha Junhwan still cruises to men’s title

    Cha Junhwan became the inaugural men’s Kinoshita Group Cup 2025 champion on Sunday (7 September) in Osaka although he was left shaking his head after what turned out to be a comfortable win over his peers.

    As the Republic of Korea’s two-time Olympian did in the short program, Cha topped the free skating by more than 10 points over runner-up Tomono Kazuki for a score of 165.55 and a total of 253.31.

    Tomono was a distant second with 236.78 as Cha lifted his first trophy of the Milano Cortina 2026 season.

    But the 23-year-old Cha was not particularly pleased with his performance on the night when he popped his opening jump – a quad Salchow-triple toeloop combo – and faltered on a couple of other combinations.

    “I was a bit disappointed about that,” said Cha, who has chosen “Moulin Rouge” for his free skate music.

    “I popped the first jump and at practice it was very consistent but I made a mistake. I had to really focus so I was a little bit disappointed with myself. It could happen in the future too so I will work on that.”

    Still Cha, who has been assigned to the Cup of China and will be back in Japan in November for the NHK Trophy, thinks there were plenty of takeaways from Sunday’s outing that he can build on for the rest of the campaign.

    He said: “It’s really early in the season. So from today I can get a lot of feedbacks and I can work on so many things.

    “I made mistakes and can make the quality of the jumps better, and the footwork. I think two days ago in an interview I said I was like 60, 70 per cent ready but today I was like 40, 50 per cent.

    “So I will keep pushing through and then it will get better and better and it will be improved more by the end of the season.”

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  • See How Much Prices Surged

    See How Much Prices Surged

    President Donald Trump’s tariffs are now hitting gamers hard, with console prices jumping across the board. Sony is the latest brand to announce price increases to its PlayStation consoles, following in the footsteps of Microsoft’s Xbox and Nintendo’s Switch.

    Learn More: I Asked ChatGPT What the Point of Trump’s Tariffs Are: Here’s What It Said

    Read Next: 7 Tax Loopholes the Rich Use To Pay Less and Build More Wealth

    Here’s how much tariffs have added to the price of PlayStations and other popular consoles.

    Sony announced that it would be raising the prices on its PlayStation devices effective Aug. 21.

    “Similar to many global businesses, we continue to navigate a challenging economic environment,” the company stated in a blog post. “As a result, we’ve made the difficult decision to increase the recommended retail price for PlayStation 5 consoles in the U.S.”

    According to Forbes reporting, the new prices reflect a $50 increase:

    • PlayStation 5: Formerly $499.99, now costs $549.99

    • PlayStation 5 Digital Edition: Formerly $449.99, now costs $499.99

    • PlayStation 5 Pro: Formerly $699.99, now costs $749.99

    Find Out: Mark Cuban: Trump’s Tariffs Will Affect This Class of People the Most

    Prior to Sony’s announcement, Microsoft announced that it would be increasing the costs of its Xbox games and devices in May.

    “We understand that these changes are challenging, and they were made with careful consideration given market conditions and the rising cost of development,” the company stated on its site.

    In addition to bumping the price of some Xbox games to $79.99 — up from the standard of $70 — Microsoft also increased the costs of some of its consoles by more than 20%:

    • Xbox Series S with 512 GB of storage: Formerly $299.99, now costs $379.99 (26% increase)

    • Xbox Series S with 1 TB of storage: Formerly $349.99, now costs $429.99 (22% increase)

    • Xbox Series X 2TB Galaxy Special Edition: Formerly $599.99, now costs $729.99 (21% increase)

    • Xbox Series X Digital: Formerly $449.99, now costs $549.99 ($100 increase)

    • Xbox Series X: Formerly $499.99, now costs $599.99 ($100 increase)

    In April, Nintendo announced that it would be releasing the Nintendo Switch 2 with a suggested retail price of $449.99. That marks a 50% increase from the price of the original Switch, which was released in 2017. The company also hiked the prices of Switch 2 accessories by $5 to $10 each that month, Forbes reported.

    More From GOBankingRates

    This article originally appeared on GOBankingRates.com: Trump’s Tariffs Hit PlayStation, Xbox and Switch: See How Much Prices Surged

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  • Armstrong edges closer to maiden win at ERC Ceredigion

    Armstrong edges closer to maiden win at ERC Ceredigion

    The M-Sport Ford World Rally Team driver extended his lead to 13.8sec over team-mate Romet Jürgenson, while ERC championship pacesetter Miko Marczyk held onto third, 31.2sec down on the flying Armstrong. M-Sport and Ford remain on course for their first ERC wins since Adrien Fourmaux’s triumph on Rally Islas Canarias in November 2020.

    Marczyk’s nearest title rival Andrea Mabellini continues his fightback from a two-minute penalty issued before the event to sit in sixth overall, albeit 2min 44.7sec adrift of first place.

    Overcast skies and the threat of rain threw an extra curveball for crews when it came to selecting tyres. Rally leader Armstrong trusted his weather crew and opted against taking any wet tyres as part of his package.

    The Motorsport Ireland Rally Academy driver’s call was reflected in the times to win SS9, Nant y Moch, that was held in dry conditions. It was Armstrong’s third stage win of the event, which he captured ahead of fellow Pirelli-shod team-mate Jürgenson by 3.3sec to grow his lead over the Estonian to 10.6sec.

    The heavy rain stayed away for SS10, Mynnydd Bach, where Armstrong notched up his fourth stage best, posting a time 2.7sec faster than Marczyk, that was crucially 3.2sec quicker than Jürgenson.

    “I would say we were quite lucky [to avoid the heavy rain] as it was starting to rain a bit towards the end, but nothing heavy. But it makes you think there could be a slippy corner coming up. It was quite a safe run, so to be faster is great,” said Armstrong.

    Jürgenson remains on course for an ERC podium

    © ERC

    Jürgenson made a small error at the hairpin in the stage as he dropped further behind Armstrong.

    “To be honest it didn’t feel so good. Getting into the stage I didn’t have the feeling to push and a real reason to do it. I know today, Jon is probably a bit faster than me so I don’t want to risk everything and with the soft tyres the understeer was quite crazy, I messed up the handbrake place too so not the best stage,” said the FIA Rally Star driver.

    Probite British Rally Championship leader William Creighton, who was among the majority of crews to carry two spare wet tyres for the loop, managed to take 3.2sec out of Miko Marczyk on SS9 to close the gap in the fight for third to 6.9sec.

    The Michelin-shod Marczyk responded to Creighton’s effort by taking 1.5sec out of the Irishman on SS10. Creighton did however carry a transmission issue that prevented him from putting his Toyota GR Yaris Rally2 car in neutral.

    Marczyk still holds the ERC title initiative

    Marczyk still holds the ERC title initiative

    © ERC

    Callum Devine and Max McRae, both running on MRF Tyres, rejoined the rally following their retirements from yesterday’s action. Devine’s return only lasted one stage as a second engine fire brought the Irishman to a halt in SS10. Meanwhile, McRae was also lucky to survive a wild slide during the stage.

    Two-time Rali Ceredigion winner Osian Pryce’s decision to go for a wet set-up backfired, but the Welshman was able to maintain fifth overall, 57.2sec ahead of ERC title contender Mabellini, with Callum Black in seventh, 3m22.7sec down on top spot.

    ERC3 leader Eamonn Kelly held eighth in front of local hero and ERC4 pacesetter Ioan Lloyd, while Meirion Evans rounded out the top 10.

    Crews will complete a second pass of the stages this afternoon to conclude the 2025 JDS Machinery Rali Ceredigion with the event-deciding Power Stage due to begin at 15h05 local time.

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