Some new information has emerged about the Mate X2, the third foldable smartphone Huawei will release. According to the claim put forward by Ross Young, the Mate X2 will come with an inward folding screen.

Young shared some details about the home button's function. And he claimed the front-facing camera, located on the top, will not be used for video recording.

According to Young, each handset will have a Snapdragon 625 processor coupled with Adreno 530 GPU, which is just two years older but in powered mode. The screen is said to be like a tablet.

The Mate X2 will be released in the coming months. You can preorder the handset from over 100 retailers in the UK – while some US markets will get the smartphone later. Unsurprisingly, pricing starts from under £600.

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GRAND RAPIDS, MI - The head of Government Affairs for Apple will receive a $178,000 salary, according to release required by the Michigan Ethics Commission.

Octavian Manuel, formerly

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KIEV (Reuters) - Ukraine said on Thursday it would close the border with Crimea within one week of Russian annexation of the Black Sea peninsula and warned Russia not to meddle in Ukraine's internal affairs.

The foreboding decree, which came hours after Russia said it was banning imports of Ukrainian fruits, meat, dairy products – now banned in Crimea – and household appliances, is Kiev's strongest response yet to Russian President Vladimir Putin's declaration of the peninsula as part of Russia.

The move has overshadowed hopes of new talks about ending the months-long conflict in eastern Ukraine, which Kiev accuses Russia of fuelling with troops, weapons and pro-Russian separatists.

In Islamabad overnight, Russia called a security meeting.

Russia's parliament authorised mass mobilization on Thursday unless Kiev sent troops and equipment to Crimea within one week.

The Russian leader said Russia called off the military exercises that had been due to start from Friday in Crimea as part of a snap review of a blueprint for preserving the Black Sea peninsula, which Putin annexed in March.

"On the basis of the results of the international conferences and closely following the developments of the situation in Ukraine, we've decided to cancel the exercises that we had planned for April 8-28," Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev said.

Medvedev said preparations for Russian troops massing on Ukraine's eastern front have not changed, even if Putin said there was no military necessity to send them there.

"We have absolutely no intention of doing this but so that they, with the military were there, would receive all necessary support, including defensive means," the prime minister
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