High and healthy: an eco-minded break in Italy’s South Tirol

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Powered by Guardian.co.ukThis article titled “High and healthy: an eco-minded break in Italy’s South Tirol” was written by Mark Pickering, for The Guardian on Tuesday 25th June 2019 05.30 UTC


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Of all the things I’ve ever wanted to do in life, being naked and trapped inside a haystack has never been one of them. But four hours into my stay in Italy, that’s exactly where I find myself.


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I’m in South Tirol – a place renowned for its affinity with nature. Bordering Austria and Switzerland, it is a gorgeous sliver of rocky landscape, peppered with lagoons, spiky peaks and orchard-lined hills. It is also one of the most environmentally sound places on the map, priding itself on its sustainable, eco-friendly practices.


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Our first stop – and host of my straw-chaffing induction – is Gargazzone, a sleepy village north-west of the provincial capital, Bolzano. On arrival at Theiner’s Garten – which describes itself as a bio-hotel, with a wellness garden, sustainable power and organic produce – I foolishly ask what the most nature-loving Tirolean thing I could do is. The result is to be led immediately downstairs to a room, told to get undressed and lie on a table strewn with itchy hay.


Theiner’s Garten hotel, South Tirol
Theiner’s Garten. Photograph: Hannes Niederkofler

After getting into place, the masseur unceremoniously dumps a further bale’s worth on top of me, wraps me in white gauze then leaves my mummified, Worzel Gummidge-esque corpse to stew for 45 minutes. Every 10 minutes, a sinister bubbling erupts from beneath me, and a burst of steam rises to invigorate the aroma of the hay.


“The hay bath is designed to relieve pain in the kidneys and joints,” says Stefan Hütter, the hotel owner. “The locals find it relaxing.” That’s not exactly how I would describe it but after learning not to wriggle painfully around in the prickles, the experience is oddly enjoyable.


When my wife picks me up, we head for a swim at nearby Naturbad (€7 for a day ticket, evening €3.20), a manmade, mountain-enveloped lido, bestrewn with phytoplankton and zooplankton that clean the water organically instead of chemicals. The natural, chlorine-free pool is lush and the surroundings –hill-lined orchards with distant shards of white Dolomite rock – is postcard-perfect.


Female swimmer in pool at Naturbad, Gargazzone, South Tirol, Italy.

 


Naturbad Photograph: Petra Pickering

A 10-minute stroll takes us to Kathi’s Jausenstation, a family-run restaurant framed by a sprawling rose garden, and popular with radler (shandy)-drinking cyclists. Enjoying some spinach gnocchi (mains from €7) and a glass of Hugo – the elderflower aperitif named after the Bolzano barman who invented it in 2005, we can immediately see how South Tirol’s cultural cohabitation works, with staff switching effortlessly between German and Italian and a menu that boasts both schnitzel and spaghetti.


“It wasn’t always like that,” Hütter tells us later. “Twenty years ago, if you were an Austrian girl and you brought an Italian boy home, there could be trouble.”


Until the end of the first world war, South Tirol was part of the Austro-Hungarian empire but was annexed to the Kingdom of Italy in 1919, as a reward for joining the allies in 1915. After an initial wave of Austro-German persecution, and a brief period of German occupation in the latter stages of the second world war, South Tirol has steadily recovered and now exists as a harmonious, extensively self-governed province.


“The rest of Italy is 10 years behind what we are doing here in South Tirol,” Hütter claims, referring to the region’s upsurge in ecological thinking. “The other week I bought an organic ice-cream and some Italians said ‘Why would you buy an organic ice-cream? Italian ice-cream is the best in the world as it is!’”


Kathi’s Jausenstation, Gargazonne, South Tirol, Italy.

 


Kathi’s Jausenstation, Gargazonne Photograph: Petra Pickering

The province is indeed about as sustainable place as you will find. Thanks to large sums of public investment, a third of the region is now powered by various sustainable sources – hydropower, biomass, biogas, as well as wind and geothermal energy – and the new, back-to-basics approach to farming has transformed the region into a vibrant organic food community. What is particularly noticeable though, is the amount of green travel – bikes and ebikes are everywhere, and there are more than 80 public charging points for electric cars.


Our next stop is south at Caldaro, a grape-growing municipality in the heart of South Tirol’s wine region. After a quick stop at Lago di Caldaro – a swimmer-filled lake by morning, windsurf-flipping spectacle by afternoon – we arrive at one of the three vineyards of Alois Lageder – the legendary wine producer, who takes us on a personal tour. As well as being regarded as one of South Tirol’s greatest exporters, his winery’s set of strict biodynamic principles is what beds him nicely into the landscape of this eco-conscious region.


Alois Lageder at one of his vineyards, South Tirol, Italy.

 


Alois Lageder at one of his vineyards Photograph: Petra Pickering

We sample a quintet of refreshing whites, then two of the region’s indigenous red grapes – very light and drinkable varieties known as schiava and lagrein. It is when we reach Lageder’s favoured pinot noir, however, that his tour reaches its crescendo, his right hand shooting out theatrically with each describing word as he lauds “the complexity … the power … the finesse!”


We finish the day with a short hike to the Maurerberg alpine refuge (€48 a night) in San Martino in Badia, in the heart of the Dolomites. After driving up the mountainside’s hairpin bends, we park at Passo delle Erbe, then climb steeply for 60-minutes. It’s arduous, but when we reach the top, the views are spectacular. Whitewashed pillars of greatness stand before us, with unspoiled, sun-kissed nature all around.


Our tour ends in San Candido, an old market town in the Puster valley. It’s also known as a green valley; each village has its own eco energy plant and our hotel, the Leitlhof, is powered by the hotel’s wood chip cogeneration plant. The town itself is a charming clutter of churches and Austrian bistros, flanked by the imposing 3,000-metre Haunold mountain, replete with exciting mini-bobsleighs we giddily spend the afternoon whizzing down (€20.90 for three rides).


Mini bobsleighs at San Candido in front of Haunold mountain, South Tirol, Italy.

 


Mini bobsleighs at San Candido, in front of Haunold mountain Photograph: Petra Pickering

Before hitting the town, we make a brief stop at nearby Lago di Dobbiaco – a lake enveloped by rocky peaks and bordered by a huge nature reserve. Around it, couples picnic, but no one’s swimming. We dip a toe into the inviting-looking emerald water – it’s freezing. We quickly rejoin the throng and settle for a sandwich on the bank instead.


In the evening, we burrow our way inside bustling vinotheque Uhrmacher’s Weinstube. It’s the undisputed local hub and has customers, and their dogs, spilling merrily out onto the streets. Pouncing on two free stools at the bar, I enquire why one of the white wines is so affordable (€1.40 a glass). “Michaelstrunk is from Bolzano,” the barmaid tells us. “It’s got a very neutral taste – but it’s what the locals drink.”


She pours us a couple of glasses – it’s much nicer than “neutral” – and as one man outside strikes up an accordion, almost simultaneously another starts playing guitar ballads in the saloon bar. With traditional Austrian folk hitting one ear, and Italian love songs the other, it seems a rather poignant summary of the trip as a whole: drinking delicious local wine in a rustic pub, surrounded by a friendly coupling of cultures.


THREE MORE SOUTH TIROL HIGHLIGHTS


Taser Alm


Alpaca on grassy verge at Taser Alm, South Tirol, Italy.

At 1,450m above sea level and accessed by cable car (€10.70 return), this European Eco-label-awarded farmstead near Merano is an idyllic retreat, with high ropes and a great kids’ adventure playground. The view is a heavenly canvass of mountains and hills, punctuated by cute alpacas and llamas roaming the upper pastures.
Must do: Order the restaurant dumplings with locally forested chanterelle mushrooms. That said, make sure you don’t slice them. “There’s a South Tirol saying that when you use a knife, you’re also breaking the chef’s heart,” the waiter will tell you. “It means the dumplings are too hard.” They’re really not though; they’re gooey and delicious.
taseralm.com


Campo Tures


Campo Tures, River Ahr and Tures castle, South Tirol, Italy.

This sleepy Tirolean town is abundant with castles and churches but is also great for incredible hikes, such as the walk to the Riva waterfalls. However, its main allure is the tranquil atmosphere.
Must do: A night in the Feldmilla Design Hotel (doubles from €134pp B&B). Beneath the gorgeous 13th-century Tures Castle, this climate-neutral accommodation nuzzles the River Ahr, a relaxing stream that powers the hotel and most of the town, too.


Casere


Chisetta di Santo Spirito, South Tirol, Italy.

 


Chisetta di Santo Spirito. Photograph: Petra Pickering

This village close to the Austrian border is lined with brightly clothed grandmothers sat in front of their houses industriously embroidering kloppeln (tablecloths). It is also the home of the famous, though miniscule, Chisetta di Santo Spirito (Chapel of the Holy Ghost).
Must do: Go round the back of the chapel. Wedged into it is a giant rock, the two separated only by a crack. It’s said that if a person successfully passes through, their sins are forgiven. It takes a bit of unholy body manipulation to manage it – but if you do, you’ll feel a small, slightly cramped sense of accomplishment.


The trip was provided by the South Tyrol tourist board, suedtirol.info


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iOS 13: how to install Apple’s latest iPhone software today

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Powered by Guardian.co.ukThis article titled “iOS 13: how to install Apple’s latest iPhone software today” was written by Samuel Gibbs, for theguardian.com on Tuesday 25th June 2019 09.17 UTC


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Apple has released the public beta version of its much-anticipated free iOS 13 software update for iPhones and the first edition of its new iPadOS for tablets.


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Those eager to try the latest features, including the new dark mode, faster Face ID, Memoji stickers and smarter photo organisation, can now install iOS 13 on a compatible iPhone or iPadOS on their Apple tablet.


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Announced at the beginning of June, iOS 13 and iPadOS were initially released as a developer test versions but are now available for the general public to try before their full release in September.


To try out iOS 13 you will need an iPhone 6S, iPhone SE, iPod touch (seventh generation) or newer device. For iPadOS you will need an iPad Air 2, iPad mini 4, iPad Pro or newer device.


iOS 13 Public beta download now available for various newer iPhones.
The iOS 13 Public beta download is now available for various newer iPhones. Photograph: Samuel Gibbs/The Guardian

Installing the beta is fairly straightforward:


1. Make a full backup of your phone or tablet as, if you dislike the update, reverting back to iOS 12 will require a full wipe and restore of the device.


2. Visit Apple’s beta site on your iPhone or iPad and sign in with your Apple ID (the one you use for iTunes and the App Store).


3. Download the beta settings profile.


4. Open the Settings app, tap on the new Profile menu option near the top and install the Profile using your pin code.


5. Reboot your iPhone or iPad.


6. Connect to wifi.


7. Check for updates in the settings app under General > Software Update.


8. Download and install the iOS 13 or iPadOS Public beta (this may take some time).


Once installed on your phone or tablet iOS 13 and iPadOS will automatically update as new beta versions are released (there were 10 for the public beta of iOS 12). As ever, it is important to make sure you install updates promptly, as bugs are fixed on a regular basis and older versions will no longer be supported.


It is also worth noting that this is very much still an early test version of Apple’s software and bugs will be present that can cause crashes and other issues. Battery life and device performance may not be the same either.


Some experienced developers have been warning about the testing nature of iOS 13 and iPadOS.




The advice is to install it on an older phone or tablet, if you have one, or wait until the next beta update, which is likely to be more stable and complete. But for those eager to try the very latest iPhone or iPad software, this is your chance.


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Mars rover's large methane discovery excites scientists

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Powered by Guardian.co.ukThis article titled “Mars rover’s large methane discovery excites scientists” was written by Ian Sample Science editor, for The Guardian on Monday 24th June 2019 16.16 UTC


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Nasa’s Curiosity rover has detected its largest belch of methane on Mars so far, fuelling speculation that the robot may have trundled through a cloud of waste gas released by microbial Martians buried deep under the surface.


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Mission scientists announced on Monday that Curiosity had measured a record-breaking 21 parts per billion (ppb) of methane in the air in Gale crater, the rover’s landing site and area of exploration. The level is substantially more than the 5.8ppb it sensed on 16 June 2013.


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Curiosity touched down on the red planet in August 2012 and has recorded a number of sharp spikes in methane and a fluctuating background level of the gas that appears to rise and fall with the seasons.


The latest measurement has excited some Mars enthusiasts because on Earth, much of the methane in the air comes from living things that release it one way or another as waste gas. But methane can have far more mundane origins than microscopic Martians, such as reactions between water and certain types of rock, and Nasa’s rover cannot distinguish between these.


While Mars was once warm and home to coursing rivers and giant lakes, it is now exceptionally dry and battered with intense radiation. If any life exists on the planet, it would probably have to be sheltering deep underground.


“With our current measurements, we have no way of telling if the methane source is biology or geology, or even ancient or modern,” said Paul Mahaffy from Nasa’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt in Maryland, US.


The methane spike was recorded by the rover’s sample analysis at Mars (SAM) tunable laser spectrometer. After noticing the methane surge in data beamed back to Earth last week, mission scientists commanded the rover to perform follow-up experiments over the weekend.


The measurement deepens the mystery of why a European Space Agency probe sent to Mars to nail down the origins of the planet’s methane has so far found no traces of the gas. One possible explanation is that any methane released on the planet is broken down before it reaches the altitude of the ExoMars Trace Gas Orbiter (TGO).


In April, a team of Italian scientists traced a plume of methane on Mars back to a particular spot on the surface where the movement of a geological fault may have released bubbles of the gas trapped in Martian permafrost.


Manish Patel, an Open University researcher who works on the TGO mission, said the latest detection by Curiosity was what the European team had been waiting for. Until now, the TGO has not looked for methane on Mars at the same time as Curiosity. “The previous ‘discrepancy’ in findings was always complicated by the fact that we never made measurements at the same time,” Patel said. “There was always a possibility that something was occurring in the atmosphere to trap or remove the methane before we arrived to measure it.”


He added: “Now that both Curiosity and TGO are active on Mars, we have the chance to compare measurements made at the same time, which will allow direct comparison. Curiosity will likely continue to make measurements, and it will be interesting to see whether they still see the methane, or whether it disappears immediately.”


In the meantime, scientists on TGO will examine their own data to see if any trace of the methane was picked up by their own instruments high above the Martian surface.


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10 of Europe’s best hostels near city railway stations

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Powered by Guardian.co.ukThis article titled “10 of Europe’s best hostels near city railway stations” was written by Rachel Dixon, for The Guardian on Monday 24th June 2019 05.30 UTC


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Amsterdam


All five Clink hostels can be found near train stations: two in King’s Cross in London, and two more opening soon in Dublin and Lisbon, each a few minutes’ walk from the main stations. The fifth hostel is ClinkNoord is opposite Centraal Station on the other side of the Amstel river. A free, 24-hour ferry runs every seven minutes during the day and every 15 minutes at night. It takes five minutes to cross, then it is a 300-metre walk to the hostel, which is a converted 1920s laboratory. There are private en suite rooms (single, twin, doubles and quads), plus mixed and women-only dorms (sleeping four or 10). The cafe serves homemade banana bread and all-night panini; the bar has a happy hour from 5pm-7pm, food until 11pm and regular live music. Daily events include city walking and cycling tours, yoga and meditation sessions, and tasting sessions of Dutch beers.
Dorm beds from £13, doubles from £65, clinkhostels.com


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Rome


generator hostel, rome

Generator was launched in London in 1995, and now has 13 hotels in central locations across Europe, from Hamburg to Madrid (as well as Miami, and Washington DC opening this year). All of the hostels have a wide range of great-value shared rooms and dorms (including female-only dorms) and cool communal spaces, from rooftop bars to chill-out lounges. Just a short walk from the Colosseum and Termini station, Generator Rome is set over seven floors, and has a bar inspired by old Havana’s decadent charms. Its deli-style menu is sourced from Mercato Esquilino across the street. The hotel’s accommodation ranges from private rooms sleeping up to four, to shared dorms for up to six.
Dorms from £13, twins from £52, staygenerator.com


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Copenhagen


Danhostel Copenhagen Brand new bar with large selection 6

Danhostels is the Danish equivalent of the UK’s YHA. There are about 70 across Denmark, including the superbly situated Danhostel Copenhagen City. This huge hostel, comprising 1,020 beds over 192 rooms and 16 floors, is in the heart of the city, by the Copenhagen Harbour Baths, a few minutes’ walk from City Hall Square, the Tivoli Gardens and the central station. Large, modern dorms sleep six to 10; private rooms sleep up to eight. The bar and restaurant were recently revamped. The buffet breakfast (£9) includes crackers made from insect flour, Bar 50 has a daily happy hour and there are free daily walking tours of the city.
Dorms from £20, doubles from £77, danhostelcopenhagencity.dk


Berlin


Room at Zimmerbeispiel a&o hostel

A&O has a chain of hostels across Germany and Austria, plus a handful in other cities, including Prague, Venice and Vienna. The Berlin Hauptbahnhof branch, which was renovated in March, is a 10-minute walk from the central station. The lobby has a bar with table football and pool, and there is a roof terrace. (Top tip: travellers who look after the housekeeping of their room and bed get a free drink.) There is a mixture of en suite doubles and dorms, and a €7 buffet breakfast. The government area, with the Reichstag, Brandenburg Gate and, beyond, the Tiergarten is only a 20-minute walk away.
Dorm beds from £9, twins from £49, aohostels.com


Barcelona


Meeting Point Hostel, Barcelona

A three-minute walk from Barcelona-Sants train station, Meeting Point is a bright, modern hostel in a quiet neighbourhood. Rooms range from an accessible twin to dorms with en suites, with up to six beds (mixed and women-only), all with air conditioning and free lockers. The hostel doesn’t serve breakfast but there is a kitchen, plus a common room, terrace, self-service laundry and a games room. The Camp Nou stadium is a 20-minute walk and Plaça de Catalunya and the old town are 10 minutes away by train. Sights such as the Sagrada Família and Port Vell are within 20 minutes on the metro.
Dorm beds from £20, meetingpointhostels.com


Budapest


Hostel One Budapest

With hostels in eight cities across Europe, from Seville and Porto to Prague and Kraków, Hostel One prides itself on friendly staff with plenty of local knowledge, and good, central locations. There are two properties in Budapest (so good we’ll go all the way up to 11 with this top-10 list), each within half an hour’s walk of Keleti station. Hostel One Budapest, which is slightly closer, has six-, eight- and 10-bed mixed dorms. Hostel One Basilica has private rooms as well as four- to 14-bed dorms, including one women’s dorm. Both are sociable places, with three common rooms (for working, relaxing and partying), a bar and kitchen, free daily city tours and nightly pub crawls. The price includes dinner, making these hostels particularly excellent value.
Dorms from about £12, doubles from £47, hostelone.com


Paris


St Christopher’s Inn, Paris Gare du Nord. (hostel)

“Party hostels”, with 12 outposts in the UK – eight in London, plus one in Cardiff, Edinburgh, Bath and ,Newquay – St Christopher’s Inns can also be found in many of the major cities on the Interrail trail: Paris, Berlin, Barcelona, Bruges, Amsterdam and Prague. They are not for those who want a quiet night – all have a bar attached and a lively atmosphere. One of the Paris hostels is just across the road from the Gare du Nord Eurostar station. Rooms range from singles and doubles to 10-bed dorms, some women-only. There are free city walking tours and daily pub crawls, and guests get 25% off food at Belushi’s bar downstairs, which has a daily happy hour from 4pm-9pm.
Dorms from £18 including breakfast, doubles from £34, st-christophers.co.uk


Kraków


Mosquit-Hostel-Krakow-Triple-Shared-Bathroom

Don’t be put off by the name – Mosquito is a buzzing (but bug-free) hostel for travellers who want a mix of socialising and relaxing. There is a chill-out room with bean bags, books, games and a guitar, and an activities room where you can meet fellow travellers. Different events take place every night from 9.15pm, including a traditional Polish dinner (Thursday), vodka shots (Saturday) and Polish wedding games (Sunday). At 11pm, staff take guests out to the best local bars and places to sample pierogi and zapiekanka. Rooms range from double en suites to 12-bed dorms. The hostel is a few minutes’ walk from Kraków Główny, the main station.
Dorms from about £12 including breakfast, doubles from £40, mosquitohostel.com


Prague


Miss Sophie’s Hotel, twin room, no. 1

Sophie’s is a stylish hostel in a 19th-century art nouveau building in Prague’s so-called new town (founded in 1348!), a five-minute walk from Wenceslas Square. Accommodation includes apartments, double rooms and dorms – the latter have artwork by a Czech designer and bathrooms with rain showers. The women-only dorm has proper beds (no bunks) and a private kitchen. For more luxury, guests can book a wellness session in the sauna and jacuzzi at Miss Sophie’s hotel next door. An all-you-can-eat cold buffet breakfast costs a fiver, or fill up for the day on bacon, eggs and pancakes with the £7 hot brunch. Sophie’s is a 20-minute walk from the main station, or two stops on the metro.
Dorms from £13, doubles from £70, sophieshostel.com


Vienna


MEININGER Hotel Wien Downtown Franz Lobby

Meininger has 28 budget hotel-cum-hostels in 16 European cities, including new ones in Brussels and Munich. Of the three branches in the Austrian capital, Vienna Central Station in the Favoriten district is less than 10 minutes’ walk from the international terminus. There are single and double rooms, and dorms sleeping up to six (up to eight in the women-only dorm). As well as backpackers, the hotel attracts families and business travellers, so the atmosphere is less raucous than some hostels, but there is still a bar, lounge and games room for socialising. The Keplerplatz metro station is on the doorstep for travel into the city centre.
Dorms from £13, doubles from £43, meininger-hotels.com


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Nick Clegg denies misuse of Facebook influenced Brexit vote

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Powered by Guardian.co.ukThis article titled “Nick Clegg denies misuse of Facebook influenced Brexit vote” was written by Alex Hern, for The Guardian on Monday 24th June 2019 09.50 UTC


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Nick Clegg, Facebook’s head of communications, has dismissed allegations that misuse of the social network influenced the Brexit referendum result.


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Speaking on the BBC’s Today programme on Monday, the former deputy UK prime minister said the company’s investigations had found no evidence of Russian involvement in the campaign, unlike when it ran a similar inquiry into the 2016 US election.


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As for Cambridge Analytica, the election consultancy that shut down after it emerged it had used improperly acquired Facebook data to target voters with political advertising, Clegg cited an investigation by the UK’s information commissioner to argue that “no UK voter’s Facebook data was involved”.


He added: “We ran two full analyses of all the data we have in the run-up to the Brexit referendum, following exactly the same methodology as we did after the FBI notified Facebook of outside interference in the 2016 US presidential election. We’ve shared all this information with the select committee and Westminster and elsewhere. We have found no evidence of a significant attempt by outside forces.


“I’ve also heard it claimed that that [Cambridge Analytica] data was used in the Brexit referendum here. In fact, the watchdog, the UK watchdog that has that data … firstly they said this last week, that there was no raw data from Facebook on the servers of Cambridge Analytica, but more than that, they have confirmed that no UK voter’s Facebook data was involved.”


Clegg did not address allegations that Facebook’s viral mechanics aid populist politics at the expense of more moderate campaigns, a theory cited by academics and researchers to explain the rise of populism. But earlier this month, he dismissed those concerns as well, telling the Times’s Red Box podcast that populism was “not new”.


He added: “Social media has something which is qualitatively new, which is scale and speed. What is not new is people coming up with bonkers ideas, or fake ideas, or indulging in extremist or populist points of view. That was not invented 15 years ago. Populism, extremism, conflict and division in society, particularly when you have, as we have had since 2008, profound economic and social shocks to society, I think people some times confuse symptom with cause.


“You see a lot of the divisions in society played out on social media … When you look at the claims and counterclaims about the effect of social media on the US presidential elections in 2016, [you] discover that the thing that created the bubble effect was the feedback loop between the tweets of the then candidate Donald Trump and the media, cable TV.”


Clegg also argued the recent backlash against technology companies created “the risk that we throw the baby out with the bathwater and make it almost impossible for tech to innovate properly … Technology is not good or bad. Technology down the ages is used by good and bad people for good and bad ends.”


Before he took the job at Facebook, but after the Brexit and US presidential votes, Clegg wrote in the Evening Standard that he found “the messianic Californian new-worldy-touchy-feely culture of Facebook a little grating”. However, even then, he argued “populists know how to appeal to emotions in a way reasonable, measured liberals almost never do. So the politics of moderation needs to pack a bigger emotional punch. That’s our problem – not Mark Zuckerberg’s.”


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Bitcoin passes $11,000 on news of Facebook's cryptocurrency plan

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Powered by Guardian.co.ukThis article titled “Bitcoin passes $11,000 on news of Facebook’s cryptocurrency plan” was written by Richard Partington Economics correspondent, for The Guardian on Monday 24th June 2019 16.11 UTC


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The price of bitcoin has surged above $11,000 (£8,600), its highest level in 15 months, amid renewed hype over cryptocurrencies after Facebook said it was planning to launch a digital currency next year.


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Bitcoin has risen in value by almost $2,000 in the week since the US technology firm revealed plans to create a cryptocurrency called Libra, in a move that could radically reshape the financial landscape with far-reaching implications for governments and central banks around the world.


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The original cryptocurrency had languished below $6,000 for much of this year and was falling out of the headlines as investors around the world gradually lost interest in the fad for digital assets.


Some investors had been severely burned by bitcoin when its meteoric rise to almost $20,000 in late 2017 – which drew comparisons to the tulip mania of the 17th century – was followed by a spectacular collapse last year.


Stoking fresh fears of the reinflation of the bubble, bitcoin hit $11,116.65 over the weekend, up from $8,539.81 at the start of June, before dropping back slightly to trade at about $10,800 on Monday afternoon.


Analysts said the news of Facebook’s work on Libra was the prime driver behind the surge, as traders bet the adoption of cryptocurrency technology by a major global corporation would help legitimise the industry.


Craig Erlam, a senior market analyst at the financial trading firm Oanda, said: “Bitcoin has slowly – by its own standards – been rising in recent months but the launch of Facebook’s Libra has clearly been a catalyst for the recent surge.


 




What is Libra?


 


Facebook says Libra is a ‘global currency and financial infrastructure’ – a digital asset built by Facebook and powered by a new Facebook-created version of blockchain, the encrypted technology used by bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies. The name Libra comes from the basic Roman measurement of weight. The abbreviation lb for pound is derived from Libra, and the £ symbol originally comes from an ornate L in Libra.


 


Why is Facebook launching a cryptocurrency?


 


Facebook claims it wants to reach the 1.7 billion people around the world who do not have access to a bank account.


 


Who is in charge of Libra?


 


Facebook is likely to run into regulatory hurdles and antitrust concerns. The currency will be serviced by a collective of companies called the ‘Libra Association’. It functions as what is known as a ‘stablecoin’, pegged to existing assets like the dollar or euro, in the aim of making it less subject to the volatility that many cryptocurrencies experience.


The Libra Association is described by Facebook as an independent, not-for-profit organisation based in Switzerland. Within the Libra Association will be a governing body called the Libra Association Council, comprised of a representative of each member of the association, which will vote on policy and operating decisions.


Facebook claims that although it created the Libra Association and the Libra Blockchain, once the currency is launched in 2020 the company will withdraw from a leadership role and all members of the association will have equal votes in governance of Libra. The companies who contributed a minimum of $10m(£8m) to be listed as founding members of the Libra Association include tech companies such as PayPal, Ebay, Spotify, Uber and Lyft, as well as financial and venture capital firms such as Andreessen Horowitz, Thrive Capital, Visa and Mastercard.  


 


How and when can I use it?


 


When the cryptocurrency launches, users can download Calibra, a digital wallet, that will allow them to send it to anyone with a smartphone. It will be available in Messenger, WhatsApp, and as a standalone app.


It is not clear which countries the coin will launch in first, though Facebook said ‘almost anybody’ in the world with a smartphone will be able to download the app.


Kari Paul in San Francisco


 



 



 


“The publicity that the launch has once again brought to the space, combined with the legitimacy it offers, has understandably excited the community.”


Rising tensions in the Middle East and mounting fears about the world economy have also stoked renewed interest among investors in bitcoin, which is sometimes viewed as a safe-haven asset similar to gold. The digital currency does not typically mirror the movements in wider financial markets during periods of turmoil.


Gold prices have risen in recent weeks to the highest levels since 2013, as the US Federal Reserve could be forced into interest rate cuts to stave off a slowdown in the US economy. The European Central Bank has also said it could cut interest rates as growth falters in the eurozone.


bitcoin price since 2015

Unlike its run in 2017, which came largely from media hype stoking retail investors’ interest in cryptocurrencies, bitcoin’s tripling in value this year could have been the result of increased demand from professional investors such as fund managers and hedge funds.


The Chicago Mercantile Exchange last week recorded an all-time high volume of trading in bitcoin derivatives contracts – sophisticated investments tracking the price of the digital currency only available to City banks and fund managers – with more than 5,000 contracts worth $250m.


However regulators around the world have warned that Facebook’s entry into the world of cryptocurrencies could lead to greater controls and tougher regulations to protect consumers.


Mark Carney, the governor of the Bank of England, gave a cautious welcome to Libra last week. He said the central bank would support new entrants into the UK financial system, but warned that Facebook would need to meet the highest regulatory standards.



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“The Bank of England approaches Libra with an open mind but not an open door,” he said.


At the weekend the Bank for International Settlements warned that big tech firms using digital currencies could undermine the stability of a banking system that had only just recovered from the crash of 2008.


Analysts at the Swiss bank UBS said: “We continue to view speculation in specific cryptocurrencies as a gamble and not an investment. Investors interested in next-generation payment systems should consider [other] emerging opportunities.”


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The reason Australia doesn't have nuclear power: the workers fought back

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Powered by Guardian.co.ukThis article titled “The reason Australia doesn’t have nuclear power: the workers fought back” was written by Jeff Sparrow, for theguardian.com on Monday 24th June 2019 01.24 UTC


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What do Clive Palmer, Tony Abbott, Cory Bernardi, Barnaby Joyce, Mark Latham, Jim Molan, Craig Kelly, Eric Abetz and David Leyonhjelm have in common?


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No doubt many answers will come to to mind. But whatever else unites them, they all support nuclear power.


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Jim Green from Friends of the Earth Australia, which compiled the above list, says that nuclear energy now functions more as a culture war troll than a serious policy, not least because the people who want atomic solution to climate change are usually the same people (as the group above illustrates) who don’t believe climate change requires a solution at all.


Despite the best efforts of Queensland conservatives, Australia will not go nuclear. The former chair of Uranium King, Warwick Grigor, says flatly: “No one is going down that path in the foreseeable future.” Even industry boosters see nuclear power stations as feasible only if the government introduces, um, a carbon tax, a proposal to which the culture warriors would react like vampires to garlic.


Nevertheless, progressives should discuss nuclear energy and climate change, if only because the campaign we need against coal can learn from the historic struggle against a different mineral.


Upon the opening of the Rum Jungle uranium mine in 1953, Robert Menzies gushed: “We, in Australia, are lucky indeed, that we should have found, within our own boundaries, deposits of this ore which can and will undoubtedly within a measurable distance bring power and light and the amenities of life to the producers and consumers and the housewives of this continent.”


You feel that if he could have brought a lump of the stuff into parliament he probably would have done so.


Yet by the second half of the 70s, activists concerned about the environmental consequences of mining, the effects on Indigenous communities, and Australia’s role in the nuclear arms race, had made uranium mining into a national controversy.


In 1977, the Movement Against Uranium Mining collected 250,000 signatures within a few months for a moratorium on mining. Later that year 20,000 people joined rallies in both Sydney and Melbourne.


The activists then confronted the same arguments about mining and jobs we hear today about Adani’s Carmichael coalmine. Yet as historian Verity Burgmann says, organised labour was “involved in the [anti-uranium] movement from its very earliest stages”.


The key struggles were led by rank-and-file unionists, often in defiance of prominent officials.


In 1976 Jim Assenbruck, a railway worker in Townsville, refused, in accordance with the recently adopted policy of the Australian Railways Union, to load materials intended for the Mary Kathleen uranium mine.


His subsequent suspension sparked a national rail strike.


In response, Jack Egerton, the ACTU’s senior vice president and an important Labor politician, came out in support of uranium using very familiar rhetoric.


“Railwaymen,” he said, “who are among the low-income earners in the community, should not be the pawn in the game of environmental politics.”


Egerton explicitly cast the rail workers as dupes when, in fact, those “low-income earners” were perfectly capable of making their own decisions – and had chosen of their own accord not to support environmental destruction.


Like many politicians who proclaim the importance of coal jobs, Egerton was not exactly an impartial commentator, given he moonlighted as a director of the Mary Kathleen mine.


In 1977 Melbourne wharfies called a 24-hour strike of the entire port after the arrival of the yellowcake laden ship Columbus Australia. The Melbourne branch of the Waterside Workers’ Federation eventually imposed a ban on that ship and all future vessels carrying uranium – and they so in defiance of their own, more conservative, federal leadership.


Obviously that was a different time.


Today unionism is far weaker, with the rank and file less active.


But that bureaucratisation makes the examples from the anti-uranium struggle particularly compelling.


Why did the Melbourne wharfies walk off the job?


In part they were inspired by the courage of anti-nuclear protesters, over 40 of whom were violently arrested in what the Australian dubbed “the wildest demo since Vietnam”.


The environmental activists’ determination in the face of “brute force” from mounted police encouraged the unionists to take action themselves – and that action then spread.


Such was the pattern of the campaign.


The momentum eventually persuaded the Australian Labor party to abandon its previous support for uranium. At the national conference of 1977, the party passed a historic resolution for an indefinite moratorium.


Unfortunately, that motion encouraged the movement to, as Burgmann writes, throw itself “wholeheartedly into supporting the Labor party to regain government” – rather in the way that Bill Shorten’s climate rhetoric led activists to back the ALP during the 2019 election campaign.


Then, as now, the reliance on Labor proved disastrous.


In 1982 the ALP overturned the 1977 position. When Bob Hawke came to power the next year, mining continued under the very government for which many anti-uranium activists had campaigned.


The movement’s real strength always depended on its grassroots – on the willingness of activists to defy the rightwingers in Labor and the unions, even to the extent of facing arrest.


In Queensland for instance, the corrupt and authoritarian regime of Joh Bjelke-Petersen tried to physically prevent the anti-uranium marches of 1977, with 418 people facing 566 charges after a single march in October, mostly for “taking part in an unlawful procession”.


Thereafter Bjelke-Petersen banned marches altogether.


“Protest groups need not bother applying for permits to stage marches because they won‘t be granted …” he said. “That’s government policy now.”


The anti-nuclear cause thus became, for Queenslanders, a proxy for other issues, not least basic civil liberties.


The Brisbane rally last week of more than 700 people against the Adani coalmine recalled that history, with Greens councillor Jonathan Sri telling attendees that “mass civil disobedience” would be necessary to stop the mine.


“Right now,” he said, “what we need is as many people as possible who are willing to get arrested, who are willing to put their bodies on the line. … You need to mobilise on the streets in large numbers.”


He’s right.


If Jim Assenbruck could risk his job in Townsville to oppose uranium in 1976, working-class people in rural Queensland can be convinced to oppose Adani today.


But to win them over, we need an independent grassroots movement that shows, through practice, its seriousness.


In a time of profound despair, mass civil disobedience over climate – a cause with tremendous moral weight – would provide a beacon of hope. It would be a rallying cry for everyone aghast not just at environmental devastation but at the broken political system incapable of preventing it.



  • Jeff Sparrow is a Guardian Australia columnist



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5G finally launches in the UK – but is it really worth it?

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Powered by Guardian.co.ukThis article titled “5G finally launches in the UK – but is it really worth it?” was written by Samuel Gibbs, for The Guardian on Friday 21st June 2019 06.00 UTC


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The future of mobile phones is finally here. You can go out and buy a 5G phone, and if you happen to be in one of the six cities across the UK in which EE’s 5G network is up and running, you can get the blistering mobile broadband speeds we’ve been promised will revolutionise our mobile lives, again. But should you?


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I’ve spent the past two weeks equipped with the OnePlus 7 Pro 5G on first-out-of-the-gate EE’s 5G network. I streamed 2K HDR movies, downloaded whole albums in seconds and generally used it like I would on my extremely fast 350Mbps home wifi – data caps be damned.


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So what is 5G like, and is it worth buying into? The answer to both those questions is … complicated.


Bursts of speed


Speeds in St. Pauls were some of the highest in London.
Speeds in St. Pauls were some of the highest in London.
Photograph: EE

Is 5G faster than 4G? Absolutely. Day to day in the most congested parts of London, it was at least double the speed of EE’s 4G, sometimes up to 10 times faster.


That meant speeds varied wildly as I trundled through patches of 5G on the train. At Elephant and Castle in the morning rush hour I got full 5G signal, but only speeds of about 3Mbps – still double the 1.5Mbps 4G could produce at the same time.


A few hundred metres down the tracks stuck outside Blackfriars, speeds in excess of 120Mbps were routine, with 4G capping out at less than 30Mbps. A similar experience was had outside Victoria and several other central London stations.


On foot in 5G areas such as St Paul’s or Covent Garden, it was clear that speeds were much more transformative. On-the-street speeds of 200-300Mbps were the norm in the lunchtime rush, with peaks of 500Mbps or more at less congested times, which is genuinely faster than my home broadband.


 




5G is the next generation mobile phone network and it promises much higher connection speeds, lower latency (response times) and to be more reliable than the creaking 4G networks we have now.


It will be much faster, with download speeds 5-10 times quicker than 4G to start with, meaning a movie will download in seconds rather than minutes. Over the next few years it should become even faster, as the technology matures. It will also have lower latency, the time it takes for something to happen: tap a link and the download will start faster.


But perhaps the most important thing 5G will immediately do for users is increase the carrying capacity of the masts, meaning more people can connect at the same time.


Samuel Gibbs, consumer technology editor 


 



 



 


The speed can be blistering, with full movies downloading from Netflix in seconds. But what is noticeable is how that speed is delivered. It’s rapid: click the button and something happens instantaneously.


It’s a bit like driving a high performance car. More or less any car can hit 60mph, but a Tesla Model S can do so in 2.4 seconds. You’re not driving any faster, but it is so much more instantaneous it feels faster. 5G inherently feels faster because everything happens so much quicker, even if the data actually downloads at the same speed.


The other advantage of 5G right now is that you remove the effects of congestion. We’ve all been there: sitting on that packed commuter train or bus with full 4G signal but nothing happening when you tap that link apart from your phone getting hot.


Even at this early stage 5G cures that problem, meaning you can do what you want, when you want, even if that means streaming the TV show What We Do In the Shadows on the morning commute.


Wider coverage than expected


EE’s 5G coverage map

 


EE’s 5G coverage map
Photograph: EE

It is very early days for 5G in the UK, but it still feels like we’re more prepared for 5G than we were for the similar transition to 4G and 3G before that.


For one, we have compelling handsets that behave exactly the same as their 4G counterparts. Not some bulky, crippled phone that suffers because of the addition of 5G.


The OnePlus 7 Pro 5G, for instance, has the same thickness, weight and even battery life as the excellent 4G version. The only difference, as far as the consumer is concerned, is that it can connect to a 5G network when there’s one active and it only supports a single sim.


EE too appears more prepared with wider 5G coverage than you might expect. I was surprised to find it in Denmark Hill in London’s zone two, for instance, and every day there appeared to be additional patches where the little 5G symbol began to appear in the suburbs of London. It’s not exactly blanket coverage in the six cities in which it is active and it’s mostly available outdoors, but it’s a good start.


Of course, you still have internet when you’re not on 5G, as you simply swap between 4G and 5G. And sometimes that means it can be hard to tell if you’re on the faster network as the 5G symbol disappears when you start to download a track or watch a video.


These are the pains of an early adopter. Which is exactly what you are if you buy into 5G right now. But apart from the added expense – which is about £5 a month on EE – you’re not getting a worse phone experience. The traditional first-generation pains of poor battery life and excessive heat have been at least partially mitigated.


Buy now or wait?


The OnePlus 7 Pro 5G is one of the best phones on the market right now and also happens to have 5G connectivity.

 


The OnePlus 7 Pro 5G is one of the best phones on the market right now and also happens to have 5G connectivity.
Photograph: Samuel Gibbs/The Guardian

In the near future buying a 5G-capable phone will be recommended, simply because we’re keeping our handsets for longer. You may not see the immediate benefits of 5G today, but you will in your second, third or fourth year with your phone. Future-proofing is always a guessing game, but a 4G phone in 2022 might look like a new Nokia 3310 now. Delightfully retro. Decidedly quaint.


So should you get 5G now? If you’re in the process of upgrading, have the money to burn, live in an area with at least limited 5G coverage and were already looking at high-end phones such as the OnePlus 7 Pro, there’s no real downside.


There are a few things of which to be aware. First, if you want a small phone you’re out of luck, as all 5G phones have massive screens right now. Secondly, you will likely need more data allowance than you think you do. When it flows this quickly you end up using more of it. Thirdly, uploads of things such as photos and videos still use the 4G network, as do calls and other non-download related activities.


And lastly, by next year the second generation of 5G phones will launch, potentially offering better performance, longer battery life and smaller sizes.


EE is the only game in town right now, but Vodafone will launch its 5G offerings on 3 July with Three launching 5G mobile broadband in London in August and O2 by the end of 2019.


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Five of the best VR headsets

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Powered by Guardian.co.ukThis article titled “Five of the best VR headsets” was written by Samuel Gibbs and Keza MacDonald, for The Observer on Saturday 22nd June 2019 15.00 UTC


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Six years after the first iteration of the Oculus Rift kickstarted the modern era of virtual reality, the now Facebook-owned company is back with not one but two new entries, joining a raft of big names from Valve’s Vive to Sony’s PlayStation VR and even Nintendo.


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With more options than ever to suit budgets, play styles – and games and experiences actually worth paying for – there’s never been a better time to don a headset and step into a new reality. Here’s a quick guide to five of the best on the market.


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1. Oculus Quest


Price: £399/£499 (64/128 GB)


The Quest is Oculus’s first fully featured standalone headset and offers a transformational experience. For the first time you get all that’s good about high-end VR, including precise tracking, excellent hand controls and room-scale play that lets you actually walk around in a virtual world, and without the restrictive cables tethering you to a monster PC.


You lose visual fidelity (the Quest is powered by Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 835 chip from 2017), the battery only lasts about three hours, and it’s not as comfortable on the face as the Rift S. It’s also more difficult for other people in the room to see what you’re doing, as not every game supports Chromecasting your view to a TV.


However the freedom to pick up and play, or to take your headset to another room or a friend’s house with no fuss, is worth it – particularly in households where space is limited. It has pretty good built-in speakers located by your ears, or you can plug your own headphones in.


Not every great VR game is available for the Quest, but fan favourites such as Job Simulator, Robo Recall and Superhot VR have made the jump, while titles such as Star Wars Vader Immortal are compelling (if short and pricey) experiences. It just needs more games, but many are on the cards.
Verdict A mobile, self-contained VR headset that’s finally worth buying.
Best game Beat SaberGuitar Hero with lightsabers is simply brilliant without wires.


2. Oculus Rift S


Price: £399 – plus high-end gaming PC


the oculus rift s headset
The Oculus Rift S: ‘a big step up in comfort and convenience’. Photograph: Antonio Olmos/The Observer

The latest PC-powered VR headset from Oculus is a big step up in comfort and convenience compared to the previous Rift, but still requires a hefty gaming PC to power it.


The Rift S ditches the annoying sensors that had to be positioned around your room to track your head and hands, and needed recalibration almost every time you used them. Instead cameras on the Rift S track your room and hands, with just one USB cable and one display cable connecting your headset and PC. Just put the headset on and it takes care of the rest, making setup much easier. Another significant change is the switch to a halo design for the attachment to your head, which combined with reduced weight makes it a lot more comfortable to wear even for extended VR sessions. Built-in speakers by each ear remove the need for headphones, but you can plug your own in if you want.


The headset’s display is crisper too (though you can still see the pixels) and it has the same great touch controllers as the Quest. The Oculus game library is quite big and you can play VR games from Steam too.
Verdict PC-powered high-end VR with less of the faff.
Best game Robo RecallI, Robot turned into an arcade shooter at its best.


3. HTC Vive Pro


Price: £799-£1,299 – plus high-end gaming PC


the htc vive pro headset

 


The Vive Pro: ‘the best-looking, highest-resolution VR experience currently possible’. Photograph: Antonio Olmos/The Observer

If you are a VR devotee with all the money to spend on the best possible kit, the Vive Pro is what you want. You’ll also need a lot of space. Vive will let you use a whole five-metre-square room as a VR environment, with the help of the headset sensors and a base station plugged into your (high-end) PC. For your money, you get the best-looking, highest-resolution VR experience currently possible, a step above the slightly pixelly experience on both Oculus headsets and the older Vive. Games look significantly better, and virtual objects less blurry round the edges.


Built-in headphones and an improved harness that holds the thing on your head when you’re moving around make playing more comfortable. A cable still connects it to your PC, though for even more money you can tack on a wireless adaptor. Setup is lengthy and quite complex, as every single component requires its own up-to-date firmware and drivers, and sometimes it can take half an hour or longer to actually get a game going. If you’re into high-end VR you probably don’t mind the tinkering so much, but for a lot of people it’s enough to put them off.
Verdict Technically the best VR experience – but for a price (in time and money).
Best game Doom VFR – only high-end VR can do justice to this frenetic shooter.


4. PlayStation VR


Price: £180 plus PS4


the playstation vr headset

 


PlayStation VR: ‘If your priority is games that are super fun to play, rather than how good they look, this is the standout.’ Photograph: Antonio Olmos/The Observer

Compared with high-end PC VR, the much cheaper PlayStation VR headset is pretty plasticky, and lower-resolution. It can’t track your hands or even its own motion controllers with total accuracy, though most games work perfectly well with a standard PlayStation 4 pad. The thing about PS VR, though, is that it’s got by far the greatest number of VR games that you’d actually want to play.


Where lots of PC VR games are adaptations of older titles like Skyrim or experimental concepts that can leave you with a headache, Sony has tasked its development talent with making things specifically for VR with the kind of polish you’d expect from a PlayStation game. Tetris Effect is a trippy take on the classic, and transcendental in VR; Blood & Truth is a hugely enjoyable London gangster drama; Moss is a gentle adventure involving a little white mouse. Early PC VR hits like Job Simulator and Beat Saber are available too. If your priority is games that are super fun to play, rather than how good they look, PS VR is the standout.
Verdict The least impressive VR tech, but the best games.
Best game Astro Bot: Rescue Mission – brilliantly inventive puzzle adventure featuring cute robots.


5. Nintendo Labo


Price: from £38 – plus Nintendo Switch (£280)


the cardboard swan from nintendo labo

 


Nintendo Labo: ‘fun, creative, cheap and family-friendly’. Photograph: Antonio Olmos/The Observer

Nintendo’s VR option is so simple and intuitive you can build it yourself. Indeed, you have to build it yourself: Nintendo Labo comes as a kit full of flat-packed cardboard. Pop the game into your Switch and it’ll give you lively instructions to assemble your own cleverly designed VR headset, along with some endearingly crackpot accessories like a cardboard swan for flight games, a little windmill that lets you play games by blowing on it and a blaster for shooting with. Insert the Switch controllers and screen, and away you go.


Labo VR comes with 64 creative, experimental games – one involves feeding hippos fruit with the blaster, another piloting a UFO – and, interestingly, it also lets players remix and create their own VR games. Few of them last more than 10 minutes or so but they’re creative and entertaining nonetheless. Nintendo’s is the only family-friendly VR option, with a 7+ PEGI rating, and it also gives curious kids an insight into how VR actually works with friendly tutorials and explanations. Technologically it’s basic, but the games are spirited and fun, and assembling the headset yourself is an entertaining way to spend an afternoon.
Verdict VR as a toy: fun, creative, cheap and family-friendly.
Best game Only the packaged games run with it: one favourite has you taking pictures of fish underwater with a cardboard camera.


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