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Samsung starts rollout of One UI 7 to Galaxy devices

Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd.

SAMSUNG Electronics Co., Ltd. has started rolling out One UI 7, it announced on Friday. 

“One UI 7 will begin rolling out in the Philippines within April, expanding to more Galaxy smartphones and tablets in the following weeks, including the Galaxy S24 series, Galaxy S24 FE, the Galaxy S23 series, Galaxy S23 FE, Galaxy Z Fold6 and Z Flip6, Galaxy Z Fold5 and Z Flip5, the Galaxy Tab S10 series and the Galaxy Tab S9 series,” it said in a statement. 

The new user interface is built for artificial intelligence (AI), Samsung said, and allows for better user personalization and control. 

It features a simplified home screen and redesigned One UI widgets and lock screen. 

“For added convenience, Now Bar provides real-time updates that matter most right on the lock screen. So, during a morning run, users can easily check their progress and see what song is playing in your Galaxy Buds — all with a simple swipe, without unlocking their phone,” the company said. 

One UI 7 is also meant to support AI-driven experiences, it added. 

“With Galaxy AI, users can simplify everyday tasks, minimizing the need to switch between applications. AI Select intuitively recommends by understanding context… Writing Assist allows users to easily summarize or automatically format contents in which texts can be selected,” Samsung said. 

Other features include Drawing Assist and Audio Eraser. 

The interface also supports deeper Google Gemini integration, it added. — BVR 

Meta’s Zuckerberg eyed Instagram spinoff amid antitrust scrutiny, document shows 

Meta Platforms Inc. Chief Executive Officer Mark Zuckerberg. — REUTERS

WASHINGTON — Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg considered spinning off popular photo-sharing app Instagram in 2018 over concerns about the growing risk of antitrust scrutiny, according to a document shown at a trial in Washington on Tuesday. 

The document was shown during Zuckerberg’s second day of testimony at the high-stakes trial, in which the US Federal Trade Commission (FTC) is seeking to unwind Meta’s acquisitions of prized assets Instagram and WhatsApp. 

“I wonder if we should consider the extreme step of spinning Instagram out as a separate company,” Zuckerberg said in the memo. At the time, the company was mulling plans to reorganize the social media company and link its apps together more closely. 

Zuckerberg pushed back in the memo, saying consolidation was likely to yield “strong business growth” but cautioning that it also could erode the value of flagship app Facebook’s social network, with scant promise that the company would get to keep its full “family of apps” in the end. 

Meta ultimately did not spin off Instagram, instead proceeding with the plan to integrate its apps the following year. But the fact that Zuckerberg even considered the idea is a stunning sign of how seriously he took the threat of precisely the type of antitrust trial proceeding now. 

“As calls to break up the big tech companies grow, there is a non-trivial chance that we will be forced to spin out Instagram and perhaps WhatsApp in the next 5-10 years anyway,” he wrote then, noting the possibility that the “next Democratic president” could take action to break up tech companies. 

“This is one more factor that we should consider since even if we wanted to keep those apps together, we may not be able to,” he said. 

The FTC ultimately sued Meta in 2020, during President Donald Trump’s first term. Trump’s antitrust enforcers sued Alphabet’s Google the same year, accusing it of monopolizing search. 

Zuckerberg also downplayed the impact of a spinoff on the company’s fortunes at the time in his memo, although Meta has argued publicly since then that attempts to break it up would be damaging. 

“While most companies resist break ups, the corporate history is that most companies actually perform better after they’ve been split up. The synergies are usually less than people think, and the strategy tax is usually greater than people think,” he wrote. 

‘INSTAGRAM WAS BETTER’
Zuckerberg’s testimony comes as Meta is defending itself years after the release of other damning statements plucked from Facebook’s own documents, like a 2008 email in which he said, “it is better to buy than compete.” 

The FTC accuses Meta of holding a monopoly on platforms used to share content with friends and family, where its main competitors in the United States are Snap’s Snapchat and MeWe, a tiny privacy-focused social media app launched in 2016. 

Platforms where users broadcast content to strangers based on shared interests, such as X, TikTok, YouTube and Reddit, are not interchangeable, the FTC argues. 

The case is widely seen as a test of the new Trump administration’s promises to take on Big Tech companies. 

Zuckerberg testified earlier in the day that Meta bought Instagram because it had a “better” camera than the one his company was trying to build at the time. 

The acknowledgement likewise appeared to support allegations by the FTC that Meta had used a “buy or bury” strategy to snap up potential rivals, keep smaller competitors at bay and maintain an illegal monopoly. 

Asked by an attorney for the FTC whether he thought fast-growing Instagram could be destructive to Meta, then known as Facebook, Zuckerberg said he believed Instagram had a better camera than the one his company was building. 

“We were doing a build vs. buy analysis” while in the process of building a camera app, Zuckerberg said. “I thought that Instagram was better at that, so I thought it was better to buy them.” 

The company argues that his past intentions are irrelevant because the FTC has defined the social media market inaccurately and failed to account for stiff competition Meta has faced from ByteDance’s TikTok, Alphabet’s YouTube and Apple’s messaging app. 

Zuckerberg also acknowledged that many of the company’s attempts at building its own apps had failed. 

“Building a new app is hard and many more times than not when we have tried to build a new app, it hasn’t gotten a lot of traction,” Zuckerberg told the court. 

“We probably tried building dozens of apps over the history of the company and the majority of them don’t go anywhere,” he said. — Reuters 

US oil production to peak by 2027 as shale boom fades, EIA forecasts

MODELS of oil barrels and a pump jack are displayed in this illustration photo taken on Feb. 24, 2022. — REUTERS

NEW YORK — US oil production will peak at 14 million barrels per day in 2027 and maintain that level through the end of the decade, before rapidly declining, the US Energy Information Administration said on Tuesday.

Oil output from the world’s largest producer will fall to about 11.3 million bpd in 2050, from around 13.7 million bpd this year, the statistical arm of the US Department of Energy said in its Annual Energy Outlook.

The forecasts show that the nearly two-decades old US shale boom is drawing closer to its end, challenging US President Donald Trump’s vision of unleashing higher domestic oil supply.

The DOE in a statement blamed former US President Joe Biden’s policies for charting a “disastrous path” for American energy production and said the EIA outlook is based on policies in place as of the end of last year.

US oil output set new records under Biden’s presidency in both 2023 and 2024, and new drilling permits were issued faster under Biden than Trump’s first term.

As for Trump’s policies, his sweeping tariffs against US trading partners are discouraging shale drillers, who face higher costs on steel and equipment, the Paris-based International Energy Agency said on Tuesday. The advisor to industrialized nations slashed its global oil demand and US oil output forecasts for 2025.

Even as the oil industry welcomed Trump’s early moves to ease permitting requirements and expand drilling opportunities, heightened price volatility from an uncertain market outlook has forced producers to scale back investments, Global X research analyst Kenny Zhu said.

US shale oil production will peak at 10 million bpd in 2027, up from about 9.69 million bpd this year, the EIA said. It will then decline to about 9.33 million bpd by 2050, the agency said.

POST-PANDEMIC DEMAND BOOM FADING
The post-pandemic recovery in US oil demand will end next year, forecasts showed. Total product supplied, the EIA’s measure of demand, will edge up from 20.51 million bpd this year to 20.52 million bpd next year, EIA data showed.

Before the COVID-19 pandemic, in 2019, US oil consumption averaged 20.54 million bpd. The all-time record high was in 2005 at 20.80 million bpd.

The EIA last week lowered its global oil demand growth forecasts for this year and next, citing potentially weaker economic activity due to an intensifying US trade war with China.
The agency also sharply cut its oil price forecasts and reduced its outlook for US oil production growth for 2025 and 2026 as a result of the demand uncertainty.

It now expects Brent crude, which serves as the international benchmark, to average $67.87 a barrel this year, down from its earlier forecast of $74.22.

US benchmark West Texas Intermediate crude oil will average $63.88 a barrel in 2025, EIA said last week, nearly $7 below its prior forecast.

Brent futures, were trading slightly below $65 a barrel on Tuesday, down about 13% so far this year. WTI futures USwere trading around $61.25, down about 14% so far this year. — Reuters

China Q1 GDP growth beats expectations, but US tariff shock dims outlook

A person rides a scooter past a construction site of residential buildings by Chinese developer Country Garden, in Tianjin, China Aug. 18, 2023. — REUTERS

BEIJING — China’s first-quarter economic growth beat expectations, underpinned by solid consumption and industrial output even as policymakers brace for the impact of US tariffs that analysts say pose the biggest risk to the Asian powerhouse in decades.

President Donald Trump has ratcheted up tariffs on Chinese goods to eye-watering levels, prompting Beijing to slap retaliatory duties on US imports in an intensifying trade war between the world’s two biggest economies that markets fear will lead to a global recession.

Data on Wednesday showed China’s gross domestic product (GDP) grew 5.4% in the January-March quarter from a year earlier, unchanged from the fourth quarter, but beat analysts expectations in a Reuters poll for a rise of 5.1%.

The outlook is expected to dim, however, as Washington’s tariff shock hits the crucial export engine, heaping pressure on Chinese leaders as they try to keep the world’s second-largest economy on an even keel and prevent mass job losses.

Government stimulus boosted consumption and supported investment, said Xu Tianchen, senior economist at the Economist Intelligence Unit, calling the 5.4% pace “a very good start.”

“In each of the past two years China had a high-flying first quarter and an underwhelming second quarter,” Xu said, adding that “a forceful and timely policy response” is needed given the additional pressure stemming from US tariffs.

A string of recent data has pointed to an uneven economic recovery, with bank lending beating expectations and factory activity picking up speed. But higher unemployment and persistent deflationary pressures are fuelling concerns over weak demand.

Moreover, analysts say a surge in China’s March exports – driven by factories rushing shipments to beat the latest Trump tariffs – will reverse sharply in the months ahead as the hefty US levies take effect.

“UNPRECEDENTED” CHALLENGE
For 2025, the economy is expected to grow at a subdued 4.5% pace year-on-year, the Reuters poll showed, slowing from last year’s 5.0 pace and falling short of the official target of around 5.0%. Many analysts have sharply slashed their GDP forecasts for this year.

UBS has downgraded its forecast on China’s 2025 growth to 3.4% from 4%, on the assumption that Sino-US tariff hikes will remain in place and that Beijing will roll out additional stimulus.

“We think the tariff shock poses unprecedented challenges to China’s exports and will set forth major adjustment in the domestic economy as well,” analysts at UBS said in a note.
While several other countries have been swept up in US tariffs, Trump has targeted China for the biggest levies.

Last week, Trump lifted duties on China to 145%, prompting Beijing to jack up levies on US goods to 125% and dismissing US trade actions as “a joke”.

On a quarterly basis, the economy expanded 1.2% in the first quarter, slowing from 1.6% in October-December.

Retail sales, a key gauge of consumption, rose 5.9% year-on-year in March after gaining 4.0% in January-February, while factory output growth quickened to 7.7% from 5.9% in the first two months. Both numbers topped analysts’ forecasts.

The retail sales uptick was driven by sharp double-digit gains in home electronics and furniture sales, helped by the government’s consumer goods trading scheme.

But China’s property downturn remained a drag on overall growth.

Property investment fell 9.9% year-on-year in the first three months, extending the 9.8% drop in January-February. March new home prices were unchanged on month.

AMPLE ROOM FOR STIMULUS
Policymakers have repeatedly said the country has ample room and tools to bolster the economy and premier Li Qiang this month pledged to roll out more support measures.

Beijing has put boosting consumption as the top priority this year as they try to cushion the impact of the Trump administration’s tariffs on its trade sector.

The Politburo, a top decision-making body of the ruling Communist Party, is expected to hold a meeting later this month to set its policy agenda for the coming months.

In March, China unveiled fiscal measures, including a rise in its annual budget deficit.

Officials have flagged more fiscal and monetary stimulus to cope with rising headwinds.

That followed a blitz of monetary easing steps late last year.Earlier this month, Fitch downgraded China’s sovereign credit rating, citing rapidly rising government debt and risks to public finances, suggesting a tricky balancing act for policymakers seeking to expand consumption to guard against a trade downturn. — Reuters

Love, Purpose, Impact: The leadership principles of Zephaniah ‘Khalid’ Mesa at KPC BALL 2025

Zephaniah “Khalid” Mesa

At the grand celebration of the KPC BALL 2025: Celebration of Breakthroughs and Success, one of the evening’s most moving moments came when Zephaniah “Khalid” Mesa took the stage. Held at the prestigious Okada Manila in honor of KPC’s 5th anniversary, the event paid tribute to the Top 100 Importers whose breakthroughs drive the country’s economic growth. But beyond accolades and milestones, the night became a testament to purpose-led leadership.

Mr. Mesa, the visionary behind thriving ventures such as Zion Philippines, Pablings Barbershop, and Hope Urban Villa, Inc., offered more than just a success story — he shared his vision of  truth. “Meeting God in 2021 changed everything,” he said. “From that point on, it was no longer just about business — it was about building lives, restoring hope, and honoring Him in all that I do.”

He spoke with candor and conviction, reflecting on how his faith became the foundation of his leadership. For Mr. Mesa, real breakthroughs don’t just happen in boardrooms — they begin in the heart. His approach, rooted in love, empathy, and accountability, has reshaped the way he builds companies and uplifts communities.

Beyond his business ventures, Mr. Mesa also leads with impact. He founded Veryfyd, a platform designed to create a safer, more authentic online space by fighting scams and fake accounts. Through his Change Life Cares Foundation, Inc., he supports scholars and organizes outreach efforts such as feeding programs and medical missions. As the head of Lawyers for Christ (LFC), he empowers legal professionals to provide justice for those who need it most.

Mr. Mesa’s message deeply resonated with the event’s theme — a Celebration of Breakthroughs and Success — reminding everyone in the room that true breakthroughs aren’t just measured in numbers or titles, but in how many lives are touched along the way.

In a ballroom filled with industry giants, strategic minds, and accomplished achievers, it was Mr. Mesa’s heartfelt call to lead with love that left the most lasting impression. His words reminded everyone that leadership, when grounded in faith and compassion, becomes a force for transformation — not just in business, but in life.

 


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Indonesia to propose $10 billion US energy imports increase in tariff talks

STOCK PHOTO | Image by jorono from Pixabay

 – Indonesia will propose increasing its imports of crude oil and liquefied petroleum gas from the United States by around $10 billion as part of its tariff negotiations, energy minister Bahlil Lahadalia told local media on Tuesday.

Indonesian officials are set to leave for Washington later on Tuesday for negotiations over proposed U.S. trade tariffs.

In total, Indonesia plans to buy U.S. goods worth $18 billion to $19 billion as it seeks to eliminate its trade surplus with the U.S. and avoid a threatened 32% tariff on its exports.

Bahlil said the energy ministry recommended increasing the LPG import quota for the U.S., as well as importing more U.S. crude, to help reach the target.

To make room, Indonesia would need to cut LPG imports from other origins, Putra Adhiguna, managing director at thinktank Energy Shift Institute, said, adding it could start by reducing by 20%-to-30% its LPG imports from non-U.S. sources, depending on existing contracts.

Kpler data show Indonesia imported 217,000 barrels per day of LPG last year, around 124,000 bpd of which came from the U.S. Around 23,000 bpd were imported from Qatar, while United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia each contributed around 20,000 bpd.

Indonesia also imported around 306,000 bpd crude oil last year, with Nigeria, Saudi Arabia and Angola as the top suppliers, Kpler data showed. Around 13,000 bpd were imported from the U.S.

Asked about the U.S. LPG import proposal, a spokeperson at state energy firm Pertamina, the biggest LPG retailer, said the company is conducting reviews of its imports and awaiting instructions from the government. – Reuters

Nvidia faces $5.5 billion charge as US restricts chip sales to China

The logo of technology company Nvidia is seen at its headquarters in Santa Clara, California February 11, 2015. — REUTERS/ROBERT GALBRAITH/FILE PHOTO

Nvidia on Tuesday said it would take $5.5 billion in charges after the U.S. government limited exports of its H20 artificial intelligence chip to China, a key market for one of its most popular chips.

Nvidia’s AI chips have been a key focus of U.S. export controls as U.S. officials have moved to keep the most advanced chips from being sold to China as the U.S. tries to keep ahead in the AI race. After those controls were implemented, Nvidia began designing chips that would come as close as possible to U.S. limits.

Nvidia shares were down about 6% in after-hours trading.

The H20 is currently Nvidia’s most advanced chip for sale in China and is central to its efforts to stay engaged with China’s booming AI industry. Chinese companies including Tencent, Alibaba and TikTok parent ByteDance had been ramping up orders for H20 chips due to booming demand for low-cost AI models from startup DeepSeek, Reuters reported in February.

While the H20 chip is not as fast at training AI models as Nvidia’s chips for sale outside China, it is competitive with some of those chips at a step known as inference, where AI models serve up answers to users. Inference is fast becoming the biggest part of the AI chip market. Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang last month argued that Nvidia is well positioned to dominate that shift.

But Nvidia on Tuesday said that the U.S. government is restricting H20 sales to China because of the risk that the chips could be used in a supercomputer. While the H20 has lower computing capabilities than other Nvidia chips, its ability to connect to memory chips and other computing chips at high speeds is still high.

Those memory and connectivity aspects could make the H20 useful in building supercomputers in China, and the U.S. has placed restrictions on selling chips for use in supercomputers in China since 2022. The Institute for Progress, a nonpartisan think tank in Washington, D.C., on Tuesday argued for restricting the H20 chips, writing that Chinese firms were likely already building such systems.

“At least one of the buyers, Tencent, has already installed H20s in a facility used to train a large model, very likely in breach of existing controls restricting the usage of chips in supercomputers exceeding certain thresholds. DeepSeek’s supercomputer used to train their V3 model is also likely in breach of the same restrictions,” the group wrote.

Nvidia said on Tuesday that the U.S. government informed it on April 9 that the H20 chip would require a license to be exported to China and on April 14 told Nvidia those rules would be in place indefinitely.

It is unclear how many, if any, of those licenses the U.S. government might grant.

Nvidia declined to comment beyond its filing. The U.S. Department of Commerce, which oversees U.S. export controls, did not immediately return a request for comment.

The $5.5 billion in charges are associated with H20 products for inventory, purchase commitments and related reserves, Nvidia said.

The news comes as Nvidia said on Monday it was planning to build AI servers worth as much as $500 billion in the U.S. over the next four years with help from partners such as TSMC, in step with the Trump administration’s push for local manufacturing. – Reuters

UNICEF projects 20% drop in 2026 funding after US cuts

REUTERS

 – UNICEF has projected that its 2026 budget will shrink by at least 20% compared to 2024, a spokesperson for the U.N. children’s agency said on Tuesday, after U.S. President Donald Trump slashed global humanitarian aid.

In 2024, UNICEF had a budget of $8.9 billion and this year it has an estimated budget of $8.5 billion. The funding for 2025 is “evolving,” the UNICEF spokesperson said.

“The last few weeks have made clear that humanitarian and development organizations around the world, including many U.N. organizations, are in the midst of a global funding crisis. UNICEF has not been spared,” said the spokesperson.

UNICEF did not specifically name the U.S., but Washington has long been the agency’s largest donor, contributing more than $800 million in 2024. Since UNICEF was established in 1946, all its executive directors have been American.

“At the moment, we are working off preliminary projections that our financial resources will be, at a minimum, 20% less, organization wide, in 2026 compared to 2024,” said the UNICEF spokesperson.

Since returning to office in January for a second term, Mr. Trump’s administration has cut billions of dollars in foreign assistance in a review that aimed to ensure programs align with his “America First” foreign policy.

The U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs said last week that it will cut 20% of its staff as it faces a shortfall of $58 million, after its largest donor, the United States, cut funding.

U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres also last month said he is seeking ways to improve efficiency and cut costs as the world body turns 80 this year amid a cash crisis.

UNICEF has implemented some efficiency measures but “more cost-cutting steps will be required,” said the spokesperson.

“We are looking at every aspect of our operation, including staffing, with the goal of focusing on what truly matters for children: that children survive and thrive,” the spokesperson said. “But no final decisions have been taken.” – Reuters

UK’s highest court to rule on definition of ‘woman’ under equality laws

JARED RICE-UNSPLASH

 – The United Kingdom’s top court will issue a ruling on Wednesday on the legal definition of a woman under equality laws, a case that could have far-reaching implications for the fractious debate over transgender rights.

The Supreme Court will give its judgment on whether a trans woman with a gender recognition certificate (GRC), a formal document which gives legal recognition of someone’s new gender, is protected from discrimination as a woman under Britain’s Equality Act.

Campaign group For Women Scotland (FWS) argues those rights should only apply based on a person’s biological sex, and is challenging guidance issued by the devolved Scottish government over a 2018 law that was designed to increase the proportion of women on public sector boards.

Scottish ministers’ guidance on that law stated that a trans woman with a full GRC is legally a woman. The Scottish government argues that the British parliament had intended that this should be the case under equality legislation.

Critics argue that, if upheld, such a definition could impact single-sex services for women such as refuges, hospital wards and sports.

Transgender campaigners say if the court rules in favor of FWS, it could lead to discrimination against those with gender recognition certificates, especially over employment issues.

The FWS case was rejected in the Scottish courts, leading to the Supreme Court appeal, with both sides anticipating that Wednesday’s ruling could be complicated.

 

CHALLENGES TO TRUMP ORDERS

The landmark British case is the latest example of the wider debate around transgender rights ending up before the courts.

In the United States, legal challenges are underway after President Donald Trump issued a series of executive orders which include barring transgender people from military service.

FWS lawyer Aidan O’Neill told the Supreme Court in November that the argument that the use of woman and man in the equality act referred to ‘certificated sex’ was “just wrong”, and should be understood in the “ordinary, everyday language” sense.

Lawyers representing the Scottish government, however, said the guidance was lawful and that a trans woman with a full gender recognition certificate is a woman under the law.

Several human rights organizations intervened in the appeal, with Amnesty International backing the Scottish government and lesbian groups such as LGB Alliance supporting FWS.

In 2022, Scotland’s parliament passed reforms to make it easier for transgender people to change their legal gender, including removing the need for a medical diagnosis of gender dysphoria and lowering the minimum age to 16 from 18.

But Britain’s Westminster government blocked the law and the Scottish government later dropped a challenge to that decision. – Reuters

Biden reemerges to defend Social Security as Trump cuts agency staff

REUTERS

 – Former Democratic U.S. President Joe Biden on Tuesday made his first major speech since leaving the White House in January, defending the Social Security Administration as the Trump administration cuts agency staff and shutters some of its offices.

The speech in Chicago to disability advocates was a major reemergence by Biden onto America’s political landscape, as President Donald Trump‘s Department of Government Efficiency, run by tech billionaire Elon Musk, makes massive cuts to the federal workforce.

“Social Security is more than a government program. It’s a sacred promise we made as a nation,” said Biden. “We know just how much Social Security matters to people’s lives.”

The SSA pays out $1.4 trillion in benefits to 73 million elderly and disabled Americans annually. Mr. Trump repeatedly pledged during his election campaign not to touch Social Security benefits.

Members of the DOGE team have been inside the agency since February where leadership has pledged to cut at least 7,000 staff and shutter offices, triggering fears of longer lines, longer wait times and benefit disruptions.

In March a federal judge said the SSA likely violated privacy laws by giving Musk’s aides “unbridled access” to the data of millions of Americans inside the agency’s networks, and ordered a temporary halt to further record sharing. The case continues.

“President Trump is absolutely certain about protecting Social Security benefits for law-abiding tax-paying American citizens and seniors who have paid into this program. He will always protect that program,” Karoline Leavitt, Mr. Trump’s White House press secretary, told reporters before Biden’s speech. – Reuters

Students more prepared for PISA according to DepEd

PHILSTAR FILE PHOTO

In the 2022 Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), fifteen-year-old students from the Philippines ranked 77th among 81 countries. The report highlighted the weaknesses of the Filipino participants in mathematics, reading, science, and creative thinking. 

The Department of Education (DepEd) said it had prepared Filipino students better for the 2025 PISA in order to avoid the same results from 2022.

“Noong 2022 walang preparasyon, nagalit mga tao… [People were angry in 2022 because of the lack of preparedness…],” Education Secretary Juan Edgardo “Sonny” M. Angara told reporters in Filipino at the signing of the memorandum of understanding (MOU) between the department and the Special Olympics Pilipinas. 

In a statement, DepEd said their preparations for this year’s PISA will serve as a ‘benchmark’ for future programs and other international large-scale assessments (ILSAs).  

“We prepared new types of exam questions, we prepared for critical thinking. It’s not just math or science, we have combined the questions,” Mr. Angara said. 

“We taught the students how to use laptops because in 2022 they did not know how to use them. They were rattled and did not finish the exam,” he added. 

To further show preparedness, the department said the schools with logistical gaps in testing centers, laptops, and Internet access were given maintenance and augmentation funds. Teachers were also assessed through its education technology (edtech) partners Khan Academy Philippines and Frontlearners. 

“Our goal here is a more robust and equitable testing environment,” Mr. Angara said in a press release. “We must learn from the gains of this exercise and scale it for future initiatives.”

The department completed the participation of around four million Filipino students for PISA 2025 on April 11 and will ‘welcome’ the results in September 2026. – Almira Louise S. Martinez

Philippines, China accuse each other of dangerous moves in disputed South China Sea shoal

PHILSTAR FILE PHOTO

BEIJING/MANILA – China and the Philippines accused each other on Tuesday of dangerous maneuvers in a hotly disputed shoal in the South China Sea, in the latest confrontation over the waterway.

A Chinese coast guard vessel sped up and maneuvered on Monday to block the navigation route of a Philippine vessel around 36 nautical miles off the Scarborough shoal, the Philippine Coast Guard said.

“This incident highlights the CCG’s non-compliance with the international regulations … and reflects a blatant disregard for safety at sea,” it said.

China’s coast guard said the Philippine vessel “dangerously approached” its ship and crossed its route, alleging it attempted to stage a false collision, Xinhua reported on Tuesday.

“They illegally approached China’s normal sailing coast guard ship in a dangerous manner, threatening the safety of China’s personnel and ships,” Xinhua reported.

Tensions between China and the Philippines over the South China Sea have escalated in the last two years, including in the Scarborough Shoal, a prime fishing patch claimed by both as their territory.

China claims nearly the entire South China Sea, a vital waterway for more than $3 trillion of annual ship-borne commerce, parts of which are also claimed by Brunei, Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, and Vietnam.

The Philippine Coast Guard deployed a plane on Tuesday to challenge a Chinese research vessel which it said was operating without authority in its northern waters near Taiwan.

Chinese research vessel Zhong Shan Da Xue was spotted around 78 nautical miles off the northern island province of Batanes, and did not respond to attempts by the Philippine Coast Guard’s Islander aircraft to establish radio communication.

“PCG aviators underscored on their radio challenge that the said Chinese vessel lacks the authority to conduct marine scientific research within the exclusive economic zone of the Philippines,” the coast guard said. — Reuters

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