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UK drops 'backdoor' mandate for Apple: spy chief

UK drops 'backdoor' mandate for Apple: spy chief

Britain has dropped its demand for iPhone maker Apple to provide a "backdoor" that would have enabled access to protected encrypted data of American citizens, US Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard says.
Gabbard issued the statement on X on Monday in the United States, saying she had worked for months with Britain, along with President Donald Trump and Vice President JD Vance, to arrive at a deal.
British Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer was in Washington on Monday along with other European leaders to meet Trump and discuss Russia's war in Ukraine.
A spokesperson for the British government said on Tuesday that, while they would not comment on any agreement, Britain had long worked with the US to tackle security threats while seeking to protect the privacy of citizens in both countries.
"We will always take all actions necessary at the domestic level to keep UK citizens safe," the spokesperson added.
Apple did not immediately respond to requests for comment on Gabbard's statement.
US lawmakers said in May this year that the United Kingdom's order to Apple to create a backdoor to its encrypted user data could be exploited by cybercriminals and authoritarian governments.
Apple, which has said it would never build such access into its encrypted services or devices, had challenged the order at the UK's Investigatory Powers Tribunal (IPT).
The iPhone maker withdrew its Advanced Data Protection feature for British users in February following the UK order.
Users of Apple's iPhones, Macs and other devices can enable the feature to ensure that only they - and not even Apple - can unlock data stored on its cloud.
US officials said earlier this year they were examining whether Britain broke a bilateral agreement by demanding that Apple build a backdoor allowing the British government to access backups of data in the company's encrypted cloud storage systems.
In a letter dated February 25 to US lawmakers, Gabbard said the US was examining whether the UK government had violated the CLOUD Act, which bars it from issuing demands for the data of US citizens and vice versa.
Cybersecurity experts told Reuters that if Apple chose to build a backdoor for a government, that backdoor would eventually be found and exploited by hackers.
Apple has sparred with regulators over encryption as far back as 2016 when the US government tried to compel it to build a tool to unlock the iPhone of a suspected extremist.
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Russia insists on role in Ukraine security talks, downplays Zelenskyy summit
Russia insists on role in Ukraine security talks, downplays Zelenskyy summit

NZ Herald

time7 hours ago

  • NZ Herald

Russia insists on role in Ukraine security talks, downplays Zelenskyy summit

But Russia violated that first by taking Crimea in 2014, and then by starting a full-scale offensive in 2022, which has killed tens of thousands of people and forced millions to flee their homes. US President Donald Trump hosts a meeting with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and European leaders at the White House. Photo / Getty Images Top US officer Dan Caine, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, held talks with European military chiefs on the 'best options for a potential Ukraine peace deal', a US defence official told AFP. In eastern Ukraine, far from the diplomatic deliberations, Russian forces claimed fresh advances on the ground and Ukrainian officials reported more deaths from Russian attacks. Diplomatic flurry US President Donald Trump brought Zelenskyy and European leaders to the White House earlier this week, three days after his landmark encounter with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Alaska. Russia's long-serving foreign minister downplayed the meeting in Washington, describing it as a 'clumsy' attempt to change the US president's position on Ukraine. Trump, long a fierce critic of the billions of dollars in US support to Ukraine, earlier said European nations were 'willing to put people on the ground' to secure any settlement. US President Donald Trump meets with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy at the White House. Photo / Getty Images He ruled out sending US troops but suggested the country might provide air support. Russia has long said it will never tolerate the presence of any Western troops in Ukraine. While Trump said Putin had agreed to meet Zelenskyy and accept some Western security guarantees for Ukraine, Russia has not confirmed this. Lavrov also cast doubt on an imminent meeting between the sworn enemies, saying that any summit between Putin and Zelenskyy 'must be prepared in the most meticulous way' so it does not lead to a 'deterioration' of the situation surrounding the conflict. Fresh Russian strikes Russia's defence ministry said on social media this week that its troops had captured the villages of Sukhetske and Pankivka in the embattled Donetsk region. They are near a section of the front where the Russian army broke through Ukrainian defences last week, between the logistics hub of Pokrovsk and Kostiantynivka. 'Our units are engaged in heavy defensive battles against superior Russian forces,' said Ukraine's commander-in-chief Oleksandr Syrsky. Six civilians were killed by Russian attacks across eastern and southern Ukraine on Wednesday, local authorities said. One person died in Russia's western Bryansk region as a result of a Ukrainian drone strike, the local governor said. Russia's aerial attacks on the northeastern town of Okhtyrka in the Sumy region wounded at least 14 people, including three children, according to regional governor Oleg Grygorov. Zelenskyy said these latest strikes showed 'the need to put pressure on Moscow', including through sanctions. - Agence France-Presse

Society Insider: East Imperial founder Tony Burt's new business with chef Peter Gordon; Sir Colin Giltrap's family motorsport legacy; Kylie Bax's model agent Kim Larking's new venture
Society Insider: East Imperial founder Tony Burt's new business with chef Peter Gordon; Sir Colin Giltrap's family motorsport legacy; Kylie Bax's model agent Kim Larking's new venture

NZ Herald

time11 hours ago

  • NZ Herald

Society Insider: East Imperial founder Tony Burt's new business with chef Peter Gordon; Sir Colin Giltrap's family motorsport legacy; Kylie Bax's model agent Kim Larking's new venture

The New Zealand-based business went on to sell some 33 million bottles of its products in more than 20 countries. Tony Burt pictured at a Viva event in 2019. Photo / Babiche Martens Then the Covid pandemic hit, dealing a heavy blow to trading, while mounting pressure on supply chains drove up its costs. And, in July 2024, the business went into liquidation after its parent company, Singapore's East Imperial Pte, defaulted on a loan to INL Investments Ltd. INL took over the international parent firm and decided to wind up the New Zealand subsidiary. A final report by liquidator Deloitte, released last month, showed the New Zealand branch of East Imperial was deregistered from the Companies Office, still owing $7.8 million. Tony Burt, pictured in 2014, with products from his East Imperial range. Photo / Babiche Martens Burt tells Society Insider he has learned a lot from losing East Imperial, and says the reality of the liquidation was more complex than it might have appeared. 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Ngai says INL is committed to ensuring the long-term financial stability and success of East Imperial and strengthening its market position. Despite losing the brand he started, Burt said he is immensely proud of what the company achieved before the liquidation. 'We built an innovative, global-leading brand that connected New Zealand to the world,' he said of East Imperial. And now Burt is back with a new venture, this time in the food industry. He has teamed up with business partner Dana Johnston, well known for creating some of Auckland's most iconic hospitality spots, including 1885, 46 & York, and Pineapple on Parnell. Dana Johnston, Sir John Key and JP Schmidt at 46 & York in Parnell. Together, they are developing Maris Vitae, a Southland-based start-up focusing on exporting premium NZ seafood as high-end gourmet canned fish. They have also brought in NZ celebrity chef Peter Gordon as culinary director, the man behind restaurants including SkyCity's The Sugar Club, and Homeland, which closed last year. Burt and Johnston tell Society Insider that their Maris Vitae project is still in its early stages, but their ambition is significant. 'It will include a boutique, semi-automated canning facility in Southland producing a range of premium New Zealand seafood,' says Johnston. 'All sourced sustainably and transformed into gourmet products under the culinary direction of internationally renowned chef Peter Gordon,' he says. Chef Peter Gordon is among those working on Maris Vitae, a Southland-based start-up focusing on exporting premium NZ seafood as high-end gourmet canned fish. Photo / Jason Oxenham Gordon told Society Insider that working with Maris Vitae is 'an exciting opportunity' to showcase NZ seafood to the world, where 'canned seafood is held in high esteem'. 'I have always strongly advocated for New Zealand kaimoana,' he says. 'It's an incredible venture and I'm genuinely excited to be a part of it'. Burt and Johnston see an incredible opportunity to showcase New Zealand seafood in a completely new way. 'The response so far has been overwhelming. Iwi, quota holders, government agencies, chefs and distributors all see the potential to take this to the world,' says Johnston. Blair Wolfgram from Ocean Beach, Bluff, Tony Burt and Dana Johnston. The pair say Maris Vitae is supported by a heavyweight advisory board spanning seafood, Māori enterprise, governance and investment. Through the research Maris Vitae has conducted with Introspective Market Research, the team believes the venture could unlock new value chains, create year-round jobs in Southland, and position New Zealand as a serious player in the growing global gourmet seafood market, currently worth more than $50 billion. Dana Johnston, MP Jenny Marcroft and Tony Burt. In June, the pair had a meeting at parliament, introducing Maris Vitae to NZ First MP Jenny Marcroft, in her capacity as Under Secretary to the Oceans and Fisheries Ministry, along with Ministry of Primary Industries officials. 'This is about moving forward positively,' Johnston says. 'We want to prove, once again, that New Zealand can lead with premium, sustainable products that celebrate our provenance and create value for our people.' Burt and Johnston have formed a parent company, Rolf Ventures, which is both the holding company for Maris Vitae and a partner to several other FMCG brands. The pair aim to help with strategy, creativity and execution for brands looking to export to global markets. Sir Colin Giltrap's motorsport family legacy Marco Giltrap, the grandson of Sir Colin Giltrap. NZ Fashion Week: Kahuria begins on Monday, and this year's re-energised event will include a raft of off-runway activations. One of those gives attendees the chance to meet Kiwi motorsport racer Marco Giltrap, the grandson of the late, great Sir Colin Giltrap. Marco is the son of Richard Giltrap, who, along with his brother Michael, is the co-executive director of the family's Giltrap Group, with a family net worth of more than $400m. Sir Colin, known as much for his philanthropy as for the powerhouse motoring group he started in the 1960s, died in April last year aged 84. Giltrap Group announced in June that it had signed a three-year partnership deal with NZ Fashion Week, as the official naming rights sponsor of the event. Richard tells Society Insider his father had an incredible passion for helping Kiwis fly on the world stage, and it is something he and Michael have been proud to continue. Marco and his grandfather, Sir Colin Giltrap, at his investiture in 2012. Photo / Greg Bowker Marco Giltrap, 21, will be part of a meet-and-greet next Thursday morning at one of the Beyond the Runway speaking series, called Menswear Unfiltered, at the Giltrap Cupra showroom on Great North Rd. Richard tells Society Insider that his son Marco is part of a talented team of Kiwi drivers who have won international titles with Giltrap Group. Marco will be a special guest on the panel, alongside fellow Giltrap Group racers Clay Osborne and Liam Sceats. Marco started go-karting at the age of 10, with his family and beloved grandfather cheering him on. He quickly progressed through the ranks, winning championships. He then moved from karts to cars, where he competed in the NZ Toyota 86 Championship. After two years, he moved on to Porsche Cup cars. Giltrap won the Porsche Sprint Challenge Australia title at Supercheap Auto Bathurst International in 2023, and Marco secured a podium finish, claiming the Jim Richards Enduro Cup. The same year, he clinched the 2023 Lamborghini Super Trofeo Asia PRO Championship. Marco has had Kiwi motor sport champion Simon Evans as a mentor, and looks to be following in Evans' steps as one of the hardest-working drivers from go-karts to cars. Marco Giltrap and Kiwi motor sport champion Simon Evans. As well as Giltrap Group, Marco has had sponsor and partner deals with streetwear label Huffer, UDC Finance, car and rental company SIXT, and Italian appliance giant Smeg. And as well as the racing stars, the speaking panel for Unfiltered features highly influential leaders in menswear: Rodd and Gunn CEO Mike Beagley, Longform Limited's Des Rusk, and Porter James Sports designer Joshua Heares. The following afternoon, Porsche is highlighting NZ's most compelling contemporary designers, with The New Guard: Rewriting the Rules of NZ Fashion taking place onsite at Shed 10. On the panel are Wynn Hamlyn founder Wynn Crawshaw; Harris Tapper co-founder Lauren Tapper; Rebe founder Rebe Burgess; and Georgia Alice and Flowers founder Georgia Currie. The other must-see panel is From Idea to Empire: Turning Creativity into Global Success, which features visiting Australian Ksubi Creative Director Pip Edwards with Karen Walker, who is showing at the week for the first time in 15 years, and Stolen Girlfriends' Marc Moore, who will feature onsite at Shed 10 on Wednesday. Designer Karen Walker is showing at Fashion Week for the first time in 15 years. Ksubi's Pip Edwards will be part of New Zealand Fashion Week 2025. NZ Fashion Week owner Feroz Ali tells Society Insider that after being away for two years, he and his team are looking forward to giving the fashion industry the jumpstart it needs. 'We've been overwhelmed with the way the industry has embraced the new direction for the event, and I look forward to seeing people experience it in real life,' says Feroz. NZ model and agency founder Kim Larking goes from fashion to philanthropy Former model and founder of Clyne Model Management, Kim Larking. For more than 25 years, Kim Larking was a giant in the fashion and modelling industry. His next chapter has focused on giving back to create a better world. Larking, 61, walked the top runways around the world in the mid-1980s and the early 1990s, going on to create one of New Zealand's top modelling agencies, Clyne Model Management, where Kylie Bax was one of his signings. He now runs a charitable organisation, Vision for Humanity, and has become an author. 'I've gradually redirected my life from the heights of the fashion world, while wishing to stay authentic to who I am,' Larking tells Society Insider. 'I try to use my fashion experience to create relatable, inspirational role model messages to make healthy, constructive habits fashionable.' Larking says that through social media, everyone now has a platform to magnify their beliefs, values, and interests, subtly influencing the direction of society. 'That should be used for constructive purposes,' he says. Kim Larking, 61, walked the top runways around the world in the mid-1980s and the early 1990s. Larking modelled around the world for six years in Milan, Paris, London, Tokyo, Canada, and Spain, and worked for designers Armani, Missoni, and Valentino in Milan. As an 18-year-old, Larking says, his education was travelling the developing world on a shoestring budget of 50 cents a day, which he says was an extreme contrast to being backstage at the haute couture runway shows of Jean Paul Gaultier with all the supermodels of the era. It was these extreme life perspectives that he says helped shape his unique view of the world. With a book filled with solid global industry contacts, Larking started Clyne Management in 1991. He credits the success of Kylie Bax as a key milestone in turning his agency into a powerhouse. 'Having discovered and managed Kylie, placing her globally, every door in the fashion world opened wider,' he says. Kylie Bax's success was key to turning Kim Larking's agency into a powerhouse. One of Larking's most significant moments for Bax was signing her with Woman Agency in New York, where she worked with photographer Steven Meisel – famous for his work in Vogue as well as for photographing Madonna for her controversial book Sex. 'Her stardom flowed from there,' Larking says. Other famous names on Clyne's books included Michelle Blanchard, who went on to feature on Real Housewives of Auckland, and Nicola Robinson, later known as Nicky Watson while married to Eric Watson, as well as Nick Bryant, Andrew Healy, Andrew Von Lochner, Jannette Williams, Racheal Millar, Peter Nolet, Chloe Hardy, Tia Woods, Jessica Clarke, and Emily Baker. The last thing Larking did at Clyne was to place Georgia Fowler with IMG New York, sparking her international career. Georgia Fowler's move to IMG New York, aided by Kim Larking, sparked her international career. He finished with the modelling industry in 2011, but retained the agency's offices in Auckland's Martin's Lane, turning them into his base to focus on his new business, Vision Products. Kim Larking at his St Martin's Lane home office. Photo / David Rowland The skin and body care range is made from natural, organic, wild-harvested ingredients, and presented in advanced eco-packaging. Vision Products also has a range of bamboo eco-apparel. Larking says he reinvests in "Biospherically Correct" systems. 'A Biospherically Correct system takes into account all eco-social aspects of how products and services can be ethically produced – as per the principles of how our biosphere works,' says Larking. Larking's goals are lofty. Vision Products generates funds and awareness to support its sister charity Vision for Humanity, which he says aims to 'elevate global consciousness and empower people to co-create a successful planet, with more peace, prosperity and joy in the world'. Larking says VFH is developing a wide range of resources to help people 'holistically advance their lives', and there are large-scale templates the charity is working on as initiatives to positively shape the world. When VFH officially launches, Larking says he will bring all of the services into a planned 'urban sanctuary' he hopes to open next year. Larking is also a self-published author, with his first book, Health Psychology: A Paradigm Shift to Greater Health Span, released last year. It includes techniques to assist people with life balance, authentic happiness, self-empowerment, and functional ageing. Kim Larking released his first book last year. 'The greatest satisfaction has come from the regular stream of people who have informed me how the book has helped them,' Larking says. He lives what he teaches, looking years younger than his 61 years, but he believes age is irrelevant anyway – it's your functional or biological age that counts. He says he has refined all his lifestyle habits for optimal well-being and health span, but likes to blend in at a party. 'I drink kombucha from a champagne glass and cranberry juice from a red wine glass to keep everyone feeling comfortable,' he says. Party people of the week Forever Auckland FC Sky TV teamed up with Auckland FC at Event Cinemas Newmarket on Friday night to celebrate the launch of its upcoming docuseries, Forever Auckland FC. AFC founders Anna Mowbray and Ali Williams were joined by a host of Black Knights players, including captain Hiroki Sakai, defenders Francis De Vries and Dan Hall, AFC's CEO Nick Becker and head coach Steve Corica (recently named Isuzu UTE A-League Coach of the Year). Dan Carter and Anna Mowbray at the premiere of Forever Auckland FC at Event Cinemas Newmarket. Photos / Michelle Hyslop and Kellie Blizzard Other guests included former All Black legend Dan Carter, former Olympian Steve Ferguson and his wife, TV personality Shelley Ferguson, Sky's chief corporate affairs officer Chris Major, Sky NZ Original's Nick Ward (senior commissioner and executive producer of the series), and head of sport content, Gary Burchett. Guests were treated to a preview of the first two episodes of the eight-part series, executive produced by a Kiwi television icon, NHNZ Worldwide's Dame Julie Christie. Newstalk ZB's Jason Pine MC-ed the event, leading a pre-screening Q&A with Christie, Mowbray, Becker, Corica, and De Vries. The AFC panel shared their experiences of inviting cameras into the club – an idea of Christie's, greenlit by AFC to honour their rapidly amassed and loyal fanbase. The series premieres on Sky Open and Neon on August 27. Nick Ward and Dame Julie Christie. Photos / Michelle Hyslop and Kellie Blizzard Ali Williams and Anna Mowbray with members of their families at the premiere of Forever Auckland FC. Photos / Michelle Hyslop and Kellie Blizzard Marlee François. Photos / Michelle Hyslop and Kellie Blizzard Anna Mowbray, Dame Julie Christie and Jason Pine. Photos / Michelle Hyslop and Kellie Blizzard Shelley and Steve Ferguson. Photos / Michelle Hyslop and Kellie Blizzard Logan Rogerson, Jordie Gibbens, Dan Hall and Lachlan Brook. Photos / Michelle Hyslop and Kellie Blizzard Megg Alexander. Photos / Michelle Hyslop and Kellie Blizzard Francis De Vries and Steve Corica. Photos / Michelle Hyslop and Kellie Blizzard Real Housewives of London preview The exclusive New Zealand preview of The Real Housewives of London took place in Auckland last Thursday. The show is reality streaming platform Hayu's first commission of an original series, expanding the global franchise that includes versions filmed in Beverly Hills, New York, Dubai and many other cities around the world. Guests watched the first episode, which introduced its six stars – Juliet Angus, Karen Loderick-Peace, Juliet Mayhew, Panthea Parker, Amanda Cronin and Nessie Welschinger – while enjoying prosecco and a British-inspired high tea at the Library boutique cinema at Westfield Newmarket. Guests included RuPaul's Drag Race Down Under Season 1 winner, Kita Mean, former reality stars Colin Mathura-Jeffree and entrepreneur lyia Liu, ZM host Georgia Burt and influencer Win Wolf. The Real Housewives of London is available to stream on Hayu, with episodes dropping weekly for a 10-episode run. The series will culminate with a reunion special hosted by London-based Canadian comedian Katherine Ryan. Tony Collins, Colin Mathura-Jeffree and Lucy Sharp at the Real Housewives of London premiere in the Library boutique cinema at Westfield Newmarket. Photo / 818 Carmen Tsoi and Bethany Pettengell. Photo / 818 Arii Jade. Photo / 818 Kita Mean. Photo / 818 Win Wolf. Photo / 818 Yasmina Coe. Photo / 818 Dominic Corry and Anna-Lisa Tombolato. Photo / 818 Flynn Adamson. Photo / 818 Ricardo Simich has been with the Herald since 2008 where he contributed to The Business Insider. In 2012 he took over Spy at the Herald on Sunday, which has since evolved into Society Insider. The weekly column gives a glimpse into the worlds of the rich and famous.

Honda's new electric is the one
Honda's new electric is the one

Otago Daily Times

timea day ago

  • Otago Daily Times

Honda's new electric is the one

Photo: David Thomson ROAD TEST What's new? It may have come late to the party, but Honda now has its first fully electric new car on sale in New Zealand, the strangely familiar but distinctively named e:N1. Strangely familiar because, at a glance, one might easily be forgiven for labelling the new e:N1 as the all-electric variant of the latest HR-V. But the e:N1 sits on a new pure-electric platform, and that's what the "e:N" part of its name signals. The number "1", meanwhile, indicates that it's the first model on this platform. What comes as standard? Standard features on the e:N1 include all-round LED lights, keyless entry, dual zone climate, an eight-way driver's power seat, artificial leather upholstery, a six-speaker audio, wireless charge pad, front and rear parking cameras, a reversing camera and heated mirrors. There's a fully digital main instrument cluster and the literal centre piece of the dashboard, a 38.3cm portrait-format touchscreen. Smartphone mirroring to the centre screen is provided, wireless for Apple devices and by cable for Android phones. Ancap safety testing has not yet been carried out on the e:N1, but it is fairly well provisioned with passive and active safety equipment. Key items include adaptive radar cruise control, lane departure and collision warning and assist systems, auto-dipping headlights, rear cross traffic alert, blind spot monitoring and road departure warning. What's it like inside? Up front, there are some visual similarities to the HR-V, but overall, the e:N1 goes its own way and departs from some Honda staples, including the traditional hooded instrument panel. Though presenting as an impressively large single display, the centre touchscreen is in fact divided into three separate sub-screens, with the climate controls at the bottom, main menu and information displays (including battery use information) in the middle, and smartphone mirroring at the top (or an oversized clock when a device is not connected). What's it like to drive? In how it drives the e:N1 feels purposefully designed to ease the transition to electric-vehicle motoring for those not yet experienced with such machines. As a prime example, floor the accelerator from rest, and it gathers pace modestly, rather than with the shove-in-the-back force that is a common EV characteristic. Honda has intentionally engineered the e:N1 to behave in this way to mimic the accelerative feel of a petrol car, in part it says for reasons of passenger comfort. That said, the car is no slouch, with a quoted 0-100kmh time of 7.6 seconds and, once off the mark, it picks up the pace in a typically responsive and linear EV way. Whether round town or out on the highway, the e:N1 is an easy car to drive smoothly, and it is comfortable, quiet (aside from the whine of its electric motor) and generally quite refined. Ride quality tends to the firmer side for a vehicle of this type, meaning the e:N1 doesn't sponge surface imperfections away as deftly as some of its rivals, but maintains balance better through medium-to-slow bends. It's great that a paddle-shift activated multi-mode regenerative braking system is fitted to the e:N1. It's entertaining to use and can contribute usefully to economy, especially when activated in sport mode, which is the only way to make it hold the braking intensity you have chosen for more than a few seconds before reverting to the mildest setting. I'd love to see more difference in braking force between the modes, and a more aggressive "maximum regen" mode, which is something the likes of Kia does very well. The matter of real world economy and ease of recharging is one that needs to be carefully traversed. The headline figure of "range up to 500km" that Honda quotes for the e:N1 is generous even beyond the optimism of the vehicle's standard WLTP range figure of 412km; even that latter figure is only likely to be achievable in relatively mild weather urban driving, in a city that is reasonably flat. When I picked up the test car with the battery fully charged, the range estimator was showing just over 300km available. At the same time, the trip computer revealed that this car's first 739km of driving had been achieved with an efficiency of 3.7km/kWh. I'll do the math for you and reveal that equates to range of around 230km from fully charged. As Drivesouth has noted before, hilly terrain and cold weather dramatically increase energy use on any vehicle, and it's patently obvious with EVs as their range is a point of focus. Some careful assessment on test suggests a realistic real-world range on an extended highway haul will be in the order of 250-320km; that's not stellar for an EV in 2025, but nor is it unusual for a vehicle of this approximate size with a standard rather than extended range battery pack. A further point is that by the latest standards, the e:N1 is not a fast charger, being restricted to a maximum 78kW charge rate on a modern DC rapid charger. Some obvious rivals are similarly restricted, but the emerging standard — accessible with the rollout of superchargers across the country — is well over 100kW, and premium models can charge at double that. What this means is that when you use one of those faster chargers your e:N1 won't be able to make use of its full potential; at best, it will take around 45 minutes to charge the battery from 10-80% of capacity. Home charging, though, is industry-standard, at rates of around 7kW with a single phase wall box (which Honda is offering with the e:N1 at present). With this facility, overnight charging is all you'll need unless venturing out of town. It's both cheaper and easier on an EV's battery than a commercial rapid charger, and most likely you'll only need to hook the car up every few days. Verdict The new e:N1 is a solid first effort for Honda in this country, especially suited to those customers seeking a capable day-to-day urban EV with decent capacity to venture away from home when required. [abridged] By David Thomson

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