The first great smartphone of 2015. Beautiful and bold..with complications. The new no-compromise MacBook. A stellar on-ear headphone. Crave-worthy curves for a premium price. Cheaper than a GoPro and more durable than a regular phone, Kyocera's rugged DuraForce Pro features a 135-degree camera lens. Editors' Note: This piece has been updated on August 31, 2016 with carrier and pricing information. The newly announced DuraForce Pro is unique to Kyocera in one big way: It has three cameras. In addition to the front-facing shooter, the back has a 13- and 5-megapixel camera. And while the former features a standard lens, the 5-megapixel rear camera is an "action camera," which has a wider 135-degree lens and can record 1,920x1,080-pixel video.
About 6,000 refugees live in the Jungle, a camp on the east lines / navy iphone case side of Calais in northern France, It's their base for trying to smuggle themselves on a truck bound for the UK, where they often have family or friends, The UK also has a reputation for handling asylum claims faster than France, Many Jungle refugees live in tents, but they can only keep the rain off for so long, Some refugees use plastic sheeting to keep their tents waterproof, Workers carry new razor wire to be installed on security fences to keep refugees off the highway, Refugees want to jump onto trucks that will be transported from Calais through the Eurotunnel to the UK..
This satellite view shows the Jungle refugee camp on May 17, 2016. The grid of white structures in the center of the frame are a fenced, government-run site with metal shipping containers for housing. Surrounding it is a jumble of tents and plywood structures. Until March, the Jungle spread south across the barren area on the bottom half of the photo, but the government swept the site clear to try to coax refugees into the metal containers. The English Channel is just out of the frame on the top edge of the photo.
Six-year-old Muhammad Rashed traveled with his sister and parents through Turkey, Greece, Macedonia, Serbia and Hungary on their way to a refugee camp in Grande-Synthe near Dunkirk, France, Sudanese refugee Adam Sharawi, who spent nine months traveling by car, boat and train across Africa to France, walks back to the Jungle camp after another night failing to get onto a truck bound for the UK, He doesn't want his face photographed in case lines / navy iphone case that might jeopardize his chances of getting asylum in the UK..
Signs reading "danger de mort" -- danger of death -- are mounted near the electric train lines that connect France and the UK. Kamil Shamal, a 16-year-old refugee from Afghanistan, holds his basic Samsung phone. He doesn't want his face photographed. Trash bins stand outside white shipping containers that house about 1,500 refugees in the Jungle. They're on a bed of gravel, another contrast to the chaotic parts of the Jungle nearby on sand dunes. The Grande-Synthe homes are sturdy plywood constructions with watertight roofs. They're elevated to avoid problems with rodents and drainage.