Huawei Mate 80 Pro Launched Globally With 50-Megapixel Main Camera, 100W Fast Charging

Huawei has launched the Huawei Mate 80 Pro globally at its Madrid event. The phone runs EMUI 15.0 internationally and features a 6.75-inch LTPO OLED display with 120Hz refresh rate and 3000 nits peak brightness. It is available in a singular 16GB + 512GB configuration. The handset includes a 50-megapixel triple rear camera system and a 13-megapixel selfie shooter. It ...

ICON e: bất ngờ được Honda Việt Nam tung ưu đãi đến 5 triệu đồng

Lì xì đầu xuân, Honda Việt Nam ưu đãi đặc biệt 5 triệu đồng cho    xe gắn máy điện Honda ICON e: Phú Thọ, ngày 17 tháng 1 năm 2026 – Honda Việt Nam (HVN) triển khai Chương trình khuyến mại (CTKM) Lì xì 5 triệu cho khách hàng mua xe Honda ICON e: […]

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Vivo T4 Series, iQOO Z10 Lineup to Get Price Hike Starting March 1, Tipster Claims

Several smartphones from Vivo and iQOO could see a price hike in India starting beginning next month. According to a tipster, the revision is expected to impact multiple storage variants across the Vivo T4 series and the corresponding iQOO Z10 lineup. The increase is tipped to range from Rs. 1,500 to Rs. 2,500, depending on the RAM and storage configuration. While bot...

Ancient by Luke Barley review – the secret history of Britain’s woodlands

A former ranger tells the story of how the UK’s forests intimately shaped – and were shaped by – its people

It may not sit well with the politicians who now seek to govern it, but Britain has always been a land of immigrants – our “native” fauna and flora among them. More than 10,000 years ago, in the wake of retreating ice sheets, trees from the warmer south began to re-colonise this chilly north-western fringe of Europe: first birch, then hazel, elm, oak and alder. By the time rising sea levels submerged the marshy lowlands connecting it to the rest of the continent, the new British mainland was covered in a luxuriant tangle of forest. In this primeval wildwood, a squirrel could leap tree-to-tree from north coast to south, east coast to west.

Or so one story goes. In Ancient, woodland expert Luke Barley sets out to tell a more complex and fascinating tale of our forests and the people that have lived with and made use of them. His title points back to the post-ice age woodland and its forerunners in sweltering or wintry deep prehistory, but it also holds a more specific meaning. Under classifications drawn up in the 1970s, a UK wood is considered “ancient” if it was already in existence by 1600 (in Scotland, by 1750), as shown on the earliest accurate maps. These are our last links to the wildwood, places where the undisturbed soil still supports a rich and intricate ecosystem that no human ingenuity can recreate.

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