![]() Wi-Fi 802.11 a/b/g/n/ac, dual-band, Wi-Fi Direct MicroSDXC (uses shared SIM slot) - dual SIM model onlyġ2 MP, f/1.7, 26mm (wide), 1/2.55", 1.4µm, dual pixel PDAF, OIS Octa-core (4x2.35 GHz Kryo & 4x1.9 GHz Kryo) - USA & China Octa-core (4x2.3 GHz Mongoose M2 & 4x1.7 GHz Cortex-A53) - EMEA Qualcomm MSM8998 Snapdragon 835 (10 nm) - USA & China IP68 dust/water resistant (up to 1.5m for 30 min)ĥ.8 inches, 84.8 cm 2 (~83.6% screen-to-body ratio)ġ440 x 2960 pixels, 18.5:9 ratio (~570 ppi density)Īndroid 7.0 (Nougat), upgradable to Android 9.0 (Pie), One UI Single SIM (Nano-SIM) or Hybrid Dual SIM (Nano-SIM, dual stand-by) Glass front (Gorilla Glass 5), glass back (Gorilla Glass 5), aluminum frame Versions: G950F (Europe, Global Single-SIM) G950FD (Global Dual-SIM) G950U (USA Unlocked) G950A (AT&T) G950P (Sprint) G950T (T-Mobile) G950V (Verizon) G950R4 (US Cellular) G950W (Canada) G950S/G950K/G950L (South Korea) G9500 (China) Network Please notify us by email that the article will be republished at.Outlets must also tag the Observer in all social media posts. Promotional materials distributed by your outlet, including all social media work, must include cites for the Observer and our reporter.Photos, illustrations and other art may be available for syndication but must be confirmed.Partners must notify to make style changes. Articles cannot be rewritten, edited or changed beyond alignments with house style books.Articles must include Texas Observer alongside author byline (first name / last name / Texas Observer).Sign up for their weekly newsletter, or follow them on Facebook and Twitter.” This article was originally published by the Texas Observer, a nonprofit investigative news outlet.Articles must link back to the original article and contain the following attribution at the top of the story:.(□ Venessa Henderson)Share your photos and video: #texas #severeweather /XfBfbLwjNO- News 4 San Antonio June 16, 2023Īll of the Texas Observer’s articles are available for free syndication for news sources under the following conditions: MASSIVE hail in Sanger, Texas (about 50 miles northwest of Dallas) last night. One Texas TV station received photos from viewers who collected ice balls bigger than golf balls, tennis balls, and even that summer treat: a ripe tomato. And voilà: In Sanger, chunks of ice as large as 6 inches in diameter fell from the sky. Suddenly, the National Weather Service predicted hail as big as DVDs would hit Texas. Weather has been really weird with heat waves, hail, Saharan dust, and Canadian smoke swirling everywhere. A local game warden responded, jumped on the beast’s back, and hauled it away. We had to turn away a visitor from registration this morning,” one posted on social media. School leaders responded rapidly to this threat. It looked like yet another attack on Texas public education when a 5-foot-long alligator wandered to the sidewalk of a Richmond elementary school. “Just like humans,” a Zoo spokesperson told the Guardian, “we’ve all kind of adjusted.” ![]() But what do animals do? At the Fort Worth Zoo, tigers, lions, and primates play with huge ice cubes, and elephants and gorillas cavort in sprinklers. ![]() Texans head for spring-fed rivers or hide out in air-conditioned homes and cooling centers during heat waves. ![]()
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