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Harvard Isn’t Ready to Stop Inflating Grades // The university finally admits that it awards too many A’s, but its proposed solutions aren’t enough.

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  • Grade Inflation Acknowledgment: Harvard's report reveals top marks awarded over 60% of the time, up from 25% in 2005, with median GPA rising to 3.83 from 3.49.
  • Academic Impact: Excessive A's undermine grading's core purposes and erode the College's academic culture.
  • Root Causes: Faculty relaxed standards due to university guidance on unprepared students, influenced by limited text exposure and media-driven short attention spans, alongside optional standardized tests.
  • Grading Shifts: Move from high-stakes exams to frequent low-stakes tasks emphasizes effort over mastery, making A's easier to obtain, including for mere completion.
  • Student and Faculty Pressures: Students fear A-minuses and negotiate grades, while faculty, including non-tenured and tenured, face evaluation backlash and enrollment declines for strict grading.
  • Proposed Fixes: Suggestions include A+ grades, internal variance systems, ending course evaluations, transcript median notations, and reverting to 2015 grade distributions.
  • Critique of Approach: Reforms seen as tentative, accepting inflation without root solutions, compared to superficial measures like debt ceiling hikes.
  • Recommended Reset: Implement temporary university-wide grading curve to enforce standards and adjust expectations, countering decades of leniency.

Harvard has finally acknowledged that it has a problem with grade inflation. Unfortunately, though the university has now admitted that its instructors award too many A’s, its proposed solutions fall short.

According to a 25-page report authored by Dean of Undergraduate Education Amanda Claybaugh and released to faculty and students last month, Harvard now gives top marks more than 60 percent of the time, up from just 25 percent in 2005. The median GPA has also increased, to 3.83 from 3.49 in 2005. According to the report, Harvard is “failing to perform the key functions of grading,” which is “damaging the academic culture of the College.”

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The report marks a sharp shift in tone for Harvard. A 2023 report cautiously cited compression—that is, a tighter clustering of grades but not necessarily a higher average—but Claybaugh’s report explicitly identifies grade inflation. It also outlines several incentives—some driven by the university, others by students and faculty—fueling the problem.

Though it doesn’t explicitly say as much, Claybaugh’s report also reveals the consequences of Harvard’s waning commitment to merit. She notes that over the past decade, faculty have relaxed grading standards partly in response to the university’s “exhorting faculty to remember that some students arrive less prepared for college than others.” Harvard attributes this unpreparedness to students’ limited exposure to complex texts and shorter attention spans caused by “media culture.” But during this same period, the university made standardized tests optional, sidelining one of the few objective measures of academic readiness in admissions. (The report neglects to note this.)

As courses became less demanding and grading more lenient, the report explains, earning an A grew progressively easier. Harvard’s shift from high-stakes exams to frequent, lower-stakes assignments rewarded effort over mastery, giving students a false sense of confidence in their understanding of a subject. Some faculty even gave students A’s just for completing assignments.

Part of the pressure to give A’s comes directly from students. When nearly everyone seems to be receiving A’s, even the possibility of an A- seems terrifying to students. Faculty worry about upsetting students and doubt that administrators will “have their back” if the student complains. Students routinely negotiate grades with professors, while professors, especially non-tenured ones, fear receiving negative student evaluations.

Even tenured faculty are not immune from student pressure. Poor course evaluations and a reputation for harsh grading can lead to smaller class enrollments, which affect department budgets. As one faculty member put it, giving honest grades now requires great “strength of character.”

Harvard’s approach to solving grade inflation appears incremental and tentative, though the problem is perennial. Most of the university’s proposals accept grade inflation as a given rather than tackling its underlying causes. For instance, Harvard suggests expanding the grading scale to include A+, which would be awarded only to a limited number of students in a class. But this merely kicks the can down the road, much like raising the debt ceiling does nothing to tackle the problem of spending growth.

Another proposal would introduce a “variance-based grading system” for internal use, allowing Harvard to distinguish high-performing students for awards and honors without publicly confronting lenient departments or underperforming students. That’s just a band aid that doesn’t correct relaxed standards.

Some of the more promising proposed reforms include eliminating student course evaluations to ease pressure on faculty, recording median grades for each course on transcripts to discourage students from selecting only easy courses, and returning grade distributions to 2015 levels—a time “when grading was not overly stringent . . . but we did assign a broader distribution of grades,” according to the report. These would all represent changes in the right direction, albeit still modest ones, suggesting something less than a commitment to academic rigor.

If Harvard really wants to address grade inflation, it needs a reset. One solution would be to institute a standardized, university-wide grading curve. In the past, when grade quotas or semi-curves were suggested, Harvard officials insisted that “nobody wants to legislate grade distributions.” But the situation is far more serious today. A temporary curve lasting two or three years would not only allow faculty to apply strict grading standards guilt-free but also help modify student expectations.

By tolerating grade inflation, Harvard and its peers are misleading students about what excellence really entails and denying young people the elite education they have promised to deliver.

Neetu Arnold is a Paulson Policy Analyst at the Manhattan Institute and a Young Voices contributor. Follow her on X @neetu_arnold.

Photo by Aaron M. Sprecher/Getty Images

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What Margaret Atwood got wrong // ‘The Handmaid’s Tale’ never happened

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  • Atwood's social obtuseness: Memoir reveals her missing obvious male interest, rivalries in publishing, and reasons for women alone in Prague bars in 1984, showing puzzles over human motivations.
  • Writer's curiosity theory: Atwood posits novelists understand human nature less than others, using fiction to explore it, influenced by her entomologist father's cataloging approach.
  • Practical talents: Excels in codes, ciphers, identifying rare species, palm reading, and creative pursuits like sewing, baking, and puppetry, preferring hands-on learning over theory.
  • Adventurous upbringing: Describes risky childhood in remote Canadian wilderness with intrepid parents, surviving dangers like drownings and wildlife, contrasting modern indoor child-rearing.
  • Stoic heritage: Inherits from Nova Scotian roots a disdain for self-pity and emotional excess, later applying fix-it attitude to husband's depression, contributing to marriage's end.
  • Feminist ambivalence: Enjoys male company, lacks deep female friendships early on, dismisses victimhood after assault, and aware of women's toxicity, as depicted in novels like Cat's Eye.
  • Liberal defenses: Champions free speech by supporting Rushdie and signing Harper's letter, critiques #MeToo excesses and campus witch-hunts, but silent on Canadian gender authoritarianism.
  • Handmaid's Tale critique: Memoir undercuts its prescient image; modern coercions like genderism rely on cultural persuasion rather than force, with women enforcing norms against dissenters.

Margaret Atwood has a reputation for spookily accurate predictions about the future of humanity in her novels. This is quite strange, because — as her new memoir Book of Lives demonstrates — she is in fact quite obtuse when it comes to interpreting humans. She doesn’t clock male romantic interest, even when obvious; is blindsided by rivalrous feuding in an independent publishing house of all places; can’t work out why so many “good-looking, well-dressed single women” would be sitting alone at Prague bars in 1984, and has to be told. When her father is gravely ill, she doesn’t “quite understand” why her mother goes to the hospital daily to play him his favourite Beethoven recordings: “Surely a couple of times a week would do.” Later, as her own partner lies dying, she finally gets the point.

She peppers her memoir with “why” questions, as if anxiously monitoring for things she might have missed. She also poses puzzled questions of her past self, though seems refreshingly untroubled by the answers. Of her temperament, she explains, “I was more interested in the paper people I could create than in doing deep dives into my own psyche, should such a thing exist”.

Being good at myth-making, the still fizzy 85-year-old seamlessly weaves her interpretative deficits into a vivid origin story: “One of my theories about novel writers is that they don’t know more about human nature than other people: they know less, and their novels are attempts to figure it out.” Her father was an entomologist; like him, she can’t stop mentally cataloguing bits of the world, then cross-referencing. “If I watched carefully, I’d be able to find out how stuff worked, whatever that stuff might be. Sometimes it was mechanical devices, such as sewing machines. But usually it was people.”

But though minds were slippery things to master, in other informational domains Atwood was in her element. She relished learning about arcane codes and ciphers, then applying them. She became able to identify rare fauna and flora, read palms, do star charts, detect ghosts. For a time she did graduate work in English literature at Harvard, but the role of critically minded theoretician didn’t seem to fit; her interest in the world is much more practical. She loves building novels out of images and ideas, just as she also likes making dresses, cakes, puppet shows, comic strips, operettas, poems and jokes.

Though it isn’t clear where all that creativity came from, the practical bent appears to have been non-negotiable during an extremely adventurous childhood. Book of Lives cheerfully describes a dangerous existence in the company of intrepid parents and an older brother: living in remote parts of Quebec and Ontario, sleeping in tents, surviving near-drownings, casually seeing off snakes and bears, and always feeling cold. Any reader using a screen to bring up their child will presumably hang their head in shame.

From her stoic Nova Scotian forebears, “Peggy” (her name at home) also inherited a now-unfashionable dislike of navel-gazing and self-pity. Her relatives would “think it bad manners to show off, to snivel and complain, or to express emotions to excess, or even at all”. Later on in life, she shows impatience with the depression of her husband, self-satirising as “Ms. Fixit”. “Are you feeling better now? How about now? Look, we have a fondue pot! Doesn’t that make you happy?”. The marriage doesn’t last.

It is fun to cross-reference these personal insights with her novels. Like their author, the stories are madly creative; unsentimental and often macabre; crammed with fascinating empirical detail; fond of cross-referencing between domains. They are also short on psychological analysis, numinously infusing the natural world and manmade objects with unconscious feeling instead. Her most famous natural object is the female body: imagined as food (The Edible Woman); as decaying medical material (Bodily Harm), as breeding stock (The Handmaid’s Tale). The theme has made her enormously popular with feminists, a fact which she plainly experiences as a mixed blessing.

Certainly, Atwood is not an obvious candidate for leading the women’s movement. She loves chumming around with the male sex, and it takes until the account of her university days in her memoir to get a proper description of a female friendship. She has no truck with victimhood — the perpetrator of a grim sexual assault at graduate school gets a quick, heartfelt curse before the narrative moves on. And when, in the Seventies, a film director demands a “naked woman wrapped in cellophane” in a screenplay she is writing, she happily complies.

She is also markedly ambivalent about other women. Though she may not understand much about female psychology in detail, she is at least well aware of its toxic side. In Cat’s Eye, Atwood forensically detailed the brutality of nine-year-old girls to each other. In the memoir, we get the real-life version, with young Peggy as the hapless victim. She also knows from experience how envious and vindictive grown women can be. At one point, the protagonist of the dystopian The Handmaid’s Tale grimly accuses her absent mother, a second-wave feminist: “You wanted a women’s culture. Well, now there is one.”

“Atwood is not an obvious candidate for leading the women’s movement.”

Her political outlook is mostly liberal, which puts her at odds with the prevailing mood in modern progressivism — often to her credit. A big fan of freedom of expression, she introduced Salman Rushdie on stage shortly after the fatwa. She also signed the Harper’s letter against an “intolerant climate” in 2020. And she is very keen on due process, having no truck with the score-settling excesses of the #MeToo movement.

During this time, Atwood defended a University of British Columbia professor from what seems to have been a vicious witch-hunt. Afterwards, the witch-hunters tried to come for her as well, though she batted them off with her enormous fame, plus an acerbic essay entitled “Am I a bad feminist?”. In her memoir, she reflects that “when cults are at their height, fairness and human rights go out the window”, and is similarly critical of Trump’s lack of regard for legal process now.

Equally, though, she has been mostly silent on the authoritarian gender cult still operating in her Canadian backyard, except to disseminate some dodgy information about chromosomes and get annoyed when Hadley Freeman asked her about it. She has apparently reflected little about why chromosomally average teenage girls might be queuing up to get their sex organs surgically expunged. This has resulted in a lot of disappointed women shouting at Atwood on the internet. But there are suggestive clues to the blindspot in Book of Lives.

I would guess that Atwood can easily understand what’s wrong with the authoritarian coercion of people by outside forces — simply applying the mechanical model of “object x exerts force on object y”. But when it comes to minds that enthusiastically embrace damaging social norms inherited from the wider culture, it is quite possible she doesn’t really grasp the problem. Maybe this is because she is a classic liberal, uninterested in unverifiable claims about false consciousness; or maybe it’s because she struggles to place herself imaginatively within the mind of anyone sheep-like enough to succumb to social pressure — as she herself is manifestly not. And there is also the fact that in her work she often seems to exhibit profound unease about the female body. It’s part of what makes her artistic vision so compelling, even if it arguably compromises her politics.

I don’t really care about any of that; I like her books too much. But her memoir does rather undercut any flattering vision of The Handmaid’s Tale as a prescient forecast, peculiarly attuned to the authoritarian Right-wing future allegedly lying in wait for women, now that Trump is here. Atwood enjoys this image of herself as a far-sighted sage very much, referring to it several times. Perhaps it’s a small compensation for all those times her male pals laughed at her for not understanding something. But honestly, the idea that, in the near future, Western governments will need to use direct force to make women do market-friendly things against their own interests is now surely, definitively preposterous. The case of genderism — and surrogacy, and “sex work”, for that matter — shows that authorities only need to persuade enough women that certain activities are kind, or glamorous, or nobly self-improving; at which point, tender-hearted armies will rise up to ruthlessly punish dissenters themselves.


Kathleen Stock is contributing editor at UnHerd.
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How Iron Man’s Jarvis Became the Symbol of Corporate America’s AI Ambitions - WSJ

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  • Jarvis in Business: Fictional AI Jarvis from Marvel appears frequently in corporate contexts like boardrooms and executive talks to describe generative AI's potential.
  • Nonthreatening Reference: Companies use Jarvis as an accessible, positive way to explain AI to public, press, and employees without technical jargon.
  • Executive Endorsement: Akamai CTO Robert Blumofe frequently references Jarvis as the ideal for artificial general intelligence in presentations.
  • Character Evolution: Introduced in 2008 Iron Man film, Jarvis evolves from household manager to suit designer and Stark Industries operator, inspired by comic butler Edwin Jarvis.
  • Current AI Limitations: Today's AI agents perform narrow tasks with less reliability than Jarvis, focusing on specific industries or actions like buying groceries.
  • Cultural Touchpoint: Jarvis provides a positive cultural reference for AI, contrasting negative depictions like Hal from 2001 or Terminator, and addresses anxieties about job replacement.
  • Corporate Naming: Companies like Henry Schein One, Google (Project Jarvis, renamed Mariner), and former Jasper AI adopt Jarvis-inspired names for tools.
  • Sci-Fi Influence: Tech draws from sci-fi like Star Trek for iPad, Jetsons for robots, and Star Wars for flying cars, with mutual influence between fiction and reality.

This is a scene that’s playing out all the time in businesses across America. 

Jarvis, the fictional AI from Marvel, was once known for helping billionaire playboy turned superhero Tony Stark save the world. But now he’s more ubiquitous in boardrooms, pitchdecks, corporate blogs and executive talking points.


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Why? Because the character, whose full name is “J.A.R.V.I.S.,” (standing for “Just Another Very Intelligent System,”) has become a nonthreatening, non-overly technical way for companies to describe the promise of generative AI in business to the public, the press and employees. 

Tech executives (who, frequently, are also nerds) love how accessible the reference is, but also how well it encapsulates the best of what AI could offer. 

“I use it a lot,” said Robert Blumofe, chief technology officer at Akamai Technologies. “If you think about [artificial general intelligence] and what we’re trying to do, I do think that Jarvis is sort of the best version of that that we have.”

AI Jarvis was introduced in the 2008 “Iron Man” movie that kicked off the Marvel Cinematic Universe, although he pays tribute to comic-book character Edwin Jarvis, the loyal (human) butler that worked for the Stark family and the Avengers. 

In the films, Jarvis’s capabilities expand from managing Stark’s household to helping him design his Iron Man suit, becoming something of an operating system inside and running parts of Stark Industries.

“He runs more of the business than anyone besides Pepper,” Stark said in 2015’s “Avengers: Age of Ultron,” comparing the AI to Stark Industries CEO Pepper Potts.

Fictional character Tony Stark as Iron Man in 2019's

Fictional character Tony Stark as Iron Man in 2019's "Avengers: Endgame." Jarvis helps the billionaire playboy turned superhero manage his household, design his suit and act as an operating system inside it, and run parts of Stark Industries. Walt Disney/Everett Collection

Today’s AI agents, which can take some actions on behalf of humans, aren’t quite there yet. They are far less reliable and their abilities are typically more narrow, relating to particular tasks or particular industries, Blumofe said.  

But he loves the reference anyway, often using it in talks for both technical and nontechnical audiences. Society needs a cultural touchpoint to help explain the technical details of AI, but so much of what’s out there focuses on the worst of it, like the evil AIs from “2001: A Space Odyssey” or “Terminator.” 

“One of the things Jarvis does is he puts a really nice face on agentic systems,” said Julian Chambliss, an English professor at Michigan State University, and the Val Berryman Curator of History at the MSU Museum. 

Jarvis is moral and cognitively aware and dispels our anxieties that the technology could replace or even harm humans, said Chambliss, whose work explores the relationship between comics and culture. 

Vijoy Pandey had the same thought when his team at Outshift, Cisco’s innovation lab, would lovingly refer to some AI agents in development as “Jarvises.” There was even a running joke about making sure the appropriate guardrails were in place, “so that your Jarvis doesn’t turn into a Hal,” he said, referring to “2001’s” menacing superintelligence.

To be sure, some of today’s foremost AI experts think the Hal or “Terminator” scenario is more likely. In both instances, systems designed to serve humanity ended up turning against it. 

But the aspirational nature of Jarvis continues to inspire the growing cohort of sci-fi and fantasy fans running corporate America. Some companies are even formally naming their AI tools after him. 

SHARE YOUR THOUGHTS

Do you think Jarvis is an apt goal or comparison for today’s AI systems? What other fictional AIs should we be trying to emulate or avoid? Join the conversation below.

Dental technology company Henry Schein One has an analytics tool named after Jarvis. 

Google reportedly started building an AI agent that could navigate a web browser under the name “Project Jarvis,” although it was then reported that the company renamed it “Project Mariner.”  

And AI marketing company Jasper used to be named Jarvis. It rebranded in 2022 after trademark conflicts with Marvel, although the company said the new name better reflects the human-centered nature of its tools. 

Jarvis is far from the first time science fiction pop culture has collided with real world technology developments.

“There’s a long history in tech of leveraging movies as not only inspiration, but also to explain some of our goals,” said Sophia Velastegui, board director of BlackLine and former chief AI technology officer at Microsoft.

Velastegui, who also held product-focused roles at Apple between 2009 and 2014, said “Star Trek: The Next Generation” was part of the inspiration for the original iPad. 

New humanoid-style robots created to do household tasks have been compared with the Jetsons’ Rosey-the-robot. 

And flying-car racing company Airspeeder said it sees itself as delivering on the flying car promise of movies like “Star Wars: Episode I” and “Back to the Future.” 

At some point, Velastegui said, “It’s like, are we influencing the sci-fi movies or are the sci-fi movies influencing us?”

Chambliss agreed it is very much both. After all, he said, one of Iron Man’s computer assistants in the newer comics is called “Iron.GPT.”

Write to Isabelle Bousquette at isabelle.bousquette@wsj.com

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Why New York City Centrists Need Their Own Party

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  • Mamdani's Voting Choice: Voted for himself on Working Families Party line, emphasizing loyalty to progressive movement over Democratic establishment.
  • WFP Success: All 32 WFP-endorsed candidates won, including key positions like Public Advocate, District Attorneys, Borough Presidents, and City Council members.
  • Progressive Influence: WFP and DSA represent rising power, extending to Albany for policy support like tax hikes.
  • Establishment Shift: Progressives now form New York's political establishment, predicting decline of moderate elite.
  • Election Dynamics: Mamdani secured narrow majority against scandal-plagued opponent Andrew Cuomo, who had low favorability.
  • Campaign Tactics: Mamdani's victory driven by effective ground game and turnout of young voters, contrasting Cuomo's weak campaign.
  • Progressive Strategy: Opposition to open primaries and election cycle changes preserved influence in Democratic primaries.
  • Moderate Response: Centrists urged to build organizations or third party to challenge progressives, drawing from San Francisco model and New York's fusion voting history.

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Courtesy Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images.

When Zohran Mamdani, now mayor-elect of New York City, went to the polls last Tuesday, he didn’t vote for himself on the Democratic ballot line he had wrested from Andrew Cuomo five months earlier. Rather, Politico’s Jason Beeferman reported, Mamdani voted for himself on the line controlled by the Working Families Party, a third party that backs progressive challengers to Democrats in an effort to push them to the left. The vote was a nod to Mamdani’s outsider status—at the end of the day, his loyalty is to the union-backed movement the WFP represents, not to the Democratic establishment that preferred Cuomo.

But after Tuesday’s results, it’s not clear that Mamdani and his friends are still “outsiders.” Every single one of the 32 WFP-endorsed candidates won his or her election. These included not just Mamdani, but Public Advocate Jumaane Williams; the Manhattan and Brooklyn District Attorneys; the Manhattan, Bronx, and Brooklyn borough presidents; and 25 members of the 51-member City Council. As Joseph Burns wrote in City Journal following Mamdani’s primary win, the WFP’s influence extends to Albany, where Mamdani will need support to get his promised tax hikes approved. Mamdani’s candidacy also represents the rising power of another progressive org: the Democratic Socialists of America (DSA), the reach of which Mamdani aimed to grow when he first began running.

If anything, these two organizations, and the broader progressive movement, are New York City’s “establishment” now. Indeed, many are predicting the demise of the New York City moderate elite—some gloomily, some gleefully. Is New York fated, by the inalterable logic of history, to a future of “socialism on the Hudson”?

Not necessarily. Mamdani’s victory—and the broader progressive takeover of New York City’s government—isn’t really the result of a socialist revolution in public opinion. Rather, it represents a concerted political effort on the part of the progressives, combined with the complacency of the city’s moderates. The left, through groups like the DSA and WFP, staged an insurgency and won. If the center wants to retake the city, it needs to play the same game—and win.

One way to understand New York’s mayoral election is as a sweeping victory for the city’s progressive faction. But another is that their tribune secured barely a majority of the vote. This, in spite of the fact that his primary opponent had already lost the primary; was 20 points down in favorability in the days before the election; was implicated in multiple major scandals that had driven him from the state’s governorship; and is generally an object of hatred across the entirety of New York State politics. (Even worse: his other opponent was, horror of horrors, a Republican.)

As Jesse Arm recently wrote, the notable thing isn’t that Mamdani won, but rather how far he ran behind moderates and fellow executive candidates Abigail Spanberger and Mikie Sherrill in their respective races. With a different candidate running against Mamdani—a possibility discussed but never realized after the primary—it’s quite possible the race would have gone the other way.

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Source: New York Times

Within his narrow margin, Mamdani’s success is attributable not so much to the inexorable march of progress as it is to his campaign’s superior tactics. After all, there is little doubt that if Cuomo had won the primary, a Mamdani challenge on the WFP line in the general would have been futile. But Mamdani’s primary success was at least in part about the effectiveness of his turnout machine, which drove tens of thousands of younger New Yorkers to vote for the first time. His ground game—powered by the DSA and WFP—was so effective that it transformed the entire primary electorate, resulting in a shocking polling miss.

Cuomo, by contrast, ran an anemic campaign, defined primarily by out-of-date ads and the occasional presser. Observers were left with the impression that the former Governor, scion of a political dynasty, felt entitled to his comeback. Talk to almost anyone in New York and they’ll tell you they spoke to Mamdani canvassers; no one remembers anyone in a “Hot Girls for Cuomo” shirt knocking on their door.

This inertia, though, is not limited to the mayoral race. Alvin Bragg, the arch-progressive prosecutor in Manhattan, barely faced a primary challenge; Eric Gonzalez, Brooklyn’s DA, didn’t even have to compete in a primary and was uncontested in the general. Infamous progressives on the Council like Tiffany Cabán, Sandy Nurse, Lincoln Restler, and Shanana Hanif faced no or no real primary challenge. All of these people will greenlight Mamdani’s agenda. In the case of radical changes like abolishing the NYPD’s gang database, they will probably be the ones pushing for change.

The progressives, moreover, know how important their ground game is to their success. That’s why the WFP worked to kill an amendment to the City Charter that would have created an open primary system—ensuring that registered WFP voters would be shut out so that they would have an easier time influencing the Democratic primary. And it’s why Mamdani voted no on proposition 6, which would have moved New York City’s local elections to the same cycle as national elections, increasing the size of the electorate and making organizing less effective. In other words, if you doubt that the progressive machine made the difference, recognize that the left sure thinks it did.

On election night, myself and fellow City Journal contributors

Rafael A. Mangual

and

John Ketcham

were joined in conversation by

Pirate Wires

’s Mike Solana. For me at least, the most interesting part of the conversation was Mike’s detailing of how San Francisco elected its current, more moderate leadership. In his telling, decades of dominance by progressives was undermined by concerted action on the part of the city’s more moderate residents, mobilizing around objections to progressive excesses, and focusing on the minutiae that are needed to win elections. To translate: moderates took San Francisco back by actually trying to win.

It would be easy for New York City centrists to throw their hands in the air and insist that Mamdani is the future, which we all had better get used to. But that would avoid the hard truth that this was a winnable race, and that Mamdani’s victory is the culmination of years of progressive insurgency largely unchallenged.

The progressive have won; they are the establishment. Which is why the moderates, rather than giving up, need to start acting like they’re the outsiders. If groups like the DSA and WFP are running the show, then moderates need their own institutions—even their own third party—to hold the new progressive establishment accountable.

The use of third parties for such purposes—buoyed by New York’s unique electoral “fusion” laws—is far from unprecedented. Bill Buckley’s quixotic 1965 campaign for the mayoralty was on a third party line; so was John Lindsay’s reelection bid four years later. Mario Cuomo narrowly lost to Ed Koch on the Liberal Party line in 1977; and Giuliani won on a Republican-Liberal fusion ticket in 1993, with the Liberal-line votes putting him over the top. Mike Bloomberg used the Independence Party line throughout his campaigns, both as a Republican and as a registered Independent. The WFP has not been the only party to try to discipline Democrats by selectively running candidates; the New York Conservative party did so as well, long after Buckley’s campaign was over.

A new moderate party could do the same for the numerous progressives now in charge of New York’s government. It could build enthusiasm for moderate candidates, taking advantage of the generous election laws that the WFP has used so successfully to its advantage. There’s at least one obvious electoral vehicle—the essentially moribund Liberal Party of New York, which endorsed Cuomo in 2025. If the LPNY can’t be wrested from its current controllers, then another party could be stood up easily—imagine a 2029 nominee running on the Prosperity Party line.

Even if a third party isn’t right, moderates need some sort of public-facing organization. The results last Tuesday indicated that a sizable fraction of New Yorkers are skeptical of their new Mayor. They can’t be welcomed into smoke-filled rooms, but they can join clubs, mailing lists, or any other infrastructure that might be on offer.

How could such a group hold New York’s progressive establishment accountable? San Francisco offers a good model: publicize and criticize the sort of excesses that scare off even New York’s left-leaning electorate. As recent MI polling showed, while Mamdani is popular in the city, many of his ideas are not. When progressives—not just Mamdani, but Councillors, borough presidents, and appointed officials—oppose fare enforcement or the city’s gifted and talented program, they’re at odds with a majority of Gothamites. Thus far, they’ve mostly managed to avoid scrutiny for these views; some adept social media wrangling could easily change that.

After all, if moderates are no longer the establishment, then the city’s problems are no longer their fault. There’s nothing quite so liberating as being out of power: you get to make all the criticisms, while your opponent has to take all the blame.

Which doesn’t mean that the city’s moderates need to be knee-jerk critics of everything Mamdani does. Doubtless, some of his initiatives will be popular with the electorate. Conservative talking points—no matter how correct—probably won’t persuade. That’s why the center-left needs to lead this movement—they’re the middle of the city.

But moderates can connect and have connected with New Yorkers before. There’s a reason why, in City Journal’s pre-election focus group, participants remembered the mayoralties of Mike Bloomberg and Rudy Giuliani more favorably than that of Bill de Blasio. The former provided safe streets and rising prosperity; the latter offered conflict with the cops and cronyism in city hall.

In four years, New York’s moderates might be mounting a successful campaign to stop a second Mamdani term. (I think their champion is obvious.) But if they do, it’s because they’ll understand that they haven’t failed to control just Gracie Mansion, but the whole of the city’s government. And they’ll try to retake that government from the ground up—after all, that’s how the left did it.

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The DSA Just Won Big, But Its Members Can’t Stop Fighting About Mamdani // Radicals can’t agree if the mayor-elect is one of them—or a crypto-Zionist.

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  • DSA Victory and Divisions: Zohran Mamdani's election as New York City mayor marks a win for the Democratic Socialists of America, but internal fractures emerge even prior to the outcome over campaign endorsements.
  • Factional Struggles: The Groundwork caucus, focused on political reform and Democratic alliances, faces resistance from radical wings, including failure to endorse No Kings Day protests.
  • NYC DSA Propositions: Steering committee proposals, especially one prioritizing Mamdani's election and working-class gains, spark debates on centering the organization's mission around his candidacy.
  • Opposition from Factions: Five groups—Springs of Revolution, Emerge Caucus, Libertarian Socialists, Reform and Revolution, and Marxist Unity Group—urge rejection via flyer and petition for a special deliberative meeting.
  • Marxist Unity Group's Stance: MUG previously opposed Mamdani running to win, favoring an agitational campaign; post-victory, it demands DSA accountability over him and more democratic structures.
  • Liberation Caucus Critique: This Marxist-Leninist-Maoist faction denounces DSA as an electoral fundraising entity and labels Mamdani too conservative, even a "traitor" for perceived rightward shifts on Israel.
  • Contrasting Views on Mamdani: While radicals decry his mainstream tilt, others in outlets like Partisan see his role as a chance to deepen political contradictions and build socialist power beyond one administration.

The election of Zohran Mamdani as mayor of New York represents a seismic victory for the Democratic Socialists of America. Yet even as the DSA seems poised for a political breakthrough, it shows signs of unraveling.

Indeed, even before Mamdani’s victory last week, DSA members were intensely divided over whether his election would represent an electoral success or capitulation to the status quo. Some on the party’s radical fringes have argued against a consensus document meant to define DSA’s positions on Mamdani’s campaign. These tensions could shape Mamdani’s mayoralty and the future of socialist politics in America.

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The DSA is not a political party. Like a party, however, the DSA has several factions and caucuses that jockey for power. Many of the DSA’s most prominent members belong to the Groundwork caucus, which emphasizes political reform and the need to preserve strong relationships with mainstream progressives and Democrats. These members are typically influential in the group’s politics.

But Groundwork often struggles to corral the DSA’s more radical wings. Groundwork representatives could not, for example, convince the rest of the DSA’s National Political Committee to endorse the No Kings Day protests.

These tensions mounted a week before the October 2025 meeting of New York City DSA, when the city chapter’s steering committee introduced two propositions: “Local Dues Drives Proposal” and “NYC-DSA Goals in Electing a Democratic Socialist Mayor.” While both documents provoked debate, conflicts flared in particular over one line in the second document: “If we succeed in electing Zohran Mamdani, our priorities will be campaigning for a democratic socialist mayor, expanding working-class power, and winning material improvements in the lives of the working class.” (NYC DSA did not respond to a request for comment for this article.)

Some members of NYC DSA and other chapters across the country feared this language would make Mamdani’s candidacy too central to the organization’s mission. Within days, five DSA factions—Springs of Revolution, Emerge Caucus, Libertarian Socialists, Reform and Revolution, and Marxist Unity Group (MUG)—published a flyer encouraging members to vote “No” on both propositions. They also released a petition demanding that the city chapter hold a “special meeting” in January with “true deliberative spaces, where members can collectively decide our work.”

There’s reason to suspect that one of those factions, MUG, has long been wary of Mamdani’s run for mayor. In August 2024, two months before Mamdani launched his campaign, someone writing under the name “Sid C.”—possibly Sidney Carlson White, a MUG member who now sits on DSA’s National Political Committee—penned a piece in the Socialist Tribune (a MUG-run Substack newsletter) arguing that it was “imperative that Zohran Mamdani . . . NOT run to win.” (a comment request to the newsletter’s email went unanswered.)

Instead, Sid C. argued, Mamdani should run an “agitational campaign” that advances the DSA’s positions on issues ranging from Palestine to police abolition in hopes of “lay[ing] the groundwork for our socialist future.”

Mamdani’s victory in the Democratic primary sent MUG back to the drawing board. In September, the entire faction published a missive that outlined its strategy for the “Mamdani moment.” The document demanded more “democratic” DSA institutions, with more “transparency and accountability” from the group’s leadership. It also outlined several principles about the DSA’s relationship to Mamdani, including asserting that “Zohran should be accountable to DSA’s democracy.”

The Liberation Caucus also opposed the pro-Mamdani propositions. Calling itself “Marxist-Leninist-Maoist,” the group formed this year to advocate for more revolutionary politics within the organization. Liberation Caucus recently issued its own response to the propositions, denouncing the NYC DSA for “seek[ing] to turn an ostensibly socialist organization into an electoral cheerleading and fundraising machine.”

“What worker would donate to NYC-DSA,” the group asked, “if all we do is run electoral campaigns?”

Remarkably, some of the Liberation Caucus’s members believe that Mamdani has become too conservative and friendly to Israel. One member called Mamdani “ZIOhran” and accused him of “pivot[ing] further and further to the right.” Another deemed Mamdani a “traitor and an opportunist,” adding, “[I w]ould not vote for him if I [were] a New Yorker.”

While some in the DSA’s radical fringes think that Mamdani is too mainstream, others see the mayor-elect as a revolutionary. In Partisan, a Communist magazine, someone writing under the name “Landry L.” argued that Mamdani’s mayoral campaign gave socialists an opportunity to “unite new and existing fights under a common banner.”

Mamdani’s campaign presents “a golden chance . . . to build power both inside and outside the state,” Landry L. writes. Invoking historian Noel Ignatiev—known for his calls to abolish “whiteness” and his objections to kosher toasters—Landry L. suggests that DSA and its allies should “actually instigate [a crisis] by deepening the contradictions in the current political order.” Even if Mamdani fails to deliver on his agenda, Landry L. argues, “his position as mayor will open possibilities that are bigger than a single mayoral administration in one city.”

These disputes reveal the extent to which Mamdani’s DSA coalition is fractured. His ideological allies cannot agree on the purpose of his mayoralty, or even whether it’s worthwhile. Is the mayor-elect merely an “organizer in chief,” or does he have the “radical potential” to spark a crisis that ushers in a socialist revolution? As the DSA takes power, New Yorkers should pay close attention to the answers.

Stu Smith is an investigative analyst with City Journal. Follow him on X @TheStuStuStudio.

Photo by CHARLY TRIBALLEAU/AFP via Getty Images

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OnePlus 15 review: Back to settling

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  • Company Context: OnePlus faced challenges like canceling the Open 2, no North American OnePlus 13T launch, and ending Hasselblad partnership while adopting in-house imaging.
  • Design Shift: OnePlus 15 features a typical 2025 smartphone look with iPhone-like elements, including camera bump and shortcut button, in colors like Sand Storm that feel unfinished.
  • Display Specs: 6.78-inch flat panel at 1272p resolution and 165Hz refresh rate offers vibrant colors but no noticeable difference from predecessor's 1440p and 120Hz.
  • Software Changes: OxygenOS 16 emphasizes AI tools and iOS-inspired features like app categories and quick settings, resulting in a less original Android experience.
  • Performance Details: Powered by Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5, it handles tasks efficiently with good haptics and speakers but shows occasional warming and freezing issues.
  • Battery Capacity: 7,300mAh silicon-carbon battery provides two-day endurance for most users, enhanced by 80W charging, though lacks Qi2 magnetic support.
  • Camera Performance: Main 50MP lens offers accurate but oversaturated colors with oversharpening; ultra-wide and 3.5x telephoto show softness and inconsistencies compared to prior Hasselblad-tuned models.
  • Overall Assessment: At $899, it excels in battery life and basics but disappoints in design, software originality, and camera, positioning it as a transitional device amid delayed US launch due to FCC certification postponement.

No matter how it’s translated into raw sales or market share, OnePlus has been on a tear in the lead-up to the OnePlus 15. The OnePlus Open remains one of my favorite foldables ever, and I continue to hope for an eventual follow-up to compete against Samsung and Google’s efforts in the US. The OnePlus 12 and 13, meanwhile, offered exceptional rivals to the usual suspects lining your carrier’s shelves; this year’s OnePlus 13, in particular, felt like something special.

But this year’s been full of challenges for OnePlus. It wasn’t just the Open 2’s quiet cancellation or the lack of a North American launch for the smaller OnePlus 13T. The dissolution of the company’s partnership with Hasselblad — despite Oppo’s continuation of the same program — seemed to spell big changes on the horizon for the brand, while OxygenOS 16’s initial debut showed off just how far the Apple-flavored inspiration has come.

And now, with the arrival of the OnePlus 15, we can see what a year’s worth of transformation has brought us. In some ways, it’s business as usual for OnePlus, pushing boundaries on battery capacity and launching at an $899 price tag that’s hundreds of dollars cheaper than its main competition. But a closer look reveals the OnePlus 15 is a pretty big step back compared to its direct predecessors in practically every regard. It’s not enough to keep me from enjoying plenty of aspects of this phone, but recommending the OnePlus 15 comes with some big caveats.

Hardware

The last few outings from OnePlus have seen some surprisingly unique designs, especially in an otherwise stagnant mobile arena. After the fairly drab OnePlus 10, the OnePlus 11 in its marquee Emerald Green colorway really wowed me, thanks in large part to its redesigned camera bump. The company continued to iterate on that core design language until eventually ending up with the OnePlus 13 that hit store shelves earlier this year.

While there are certain elements of the OnePlus 13 I don’t like — its metallic, smudge-friendly frame; its flat display that nevertheless hides under curved glass — it was unapologetically original, especially in its faux-leather Midnight Blue shade.

In contrast to the unique spirit that’s shown through the last handful of OnePlus flagships, the OnePlus 15 looks about as typical 2025 smartphone as you could possibly hope to find.

In fact, it goes well beyond that. At times, it was impossible not to feel like the device in my hands was actually one of Apple’s Pro Max-sized iPhones, a comparison made far worse by some of the changes in OxygenOS 16. The camera bump shape and location, the single shortcut button in the upper left-hand section of the frame, the flat matte ceramic edges aiming to one-up Apple’s (no longer employed) use of titanium.

Other times, I felt as though I was holding a reference device, a CAD model brought to life through the magic of 3D printing. Although I’m sure this feeling would stick around in its Infinite Black or Ultra Violet, the Sand Storm shade here just amplifies it to a degree that, frankly, two weeks of serving as my daily driver hasn’t resolved. Sand Storm is, in effect, a warmish-gray tone that leaves the entire device feeling unfinished, as though it’s missing its final paint job out of the box. At least its velvety-smooth finish feels nice in the hand, though I’ve dropped this device more than I’d care to admit.

Thankfully, any qualms I have about the design here don’t carry over to actually using the phone. The 6.78-inch display is a fraction smaller than the one used by its predecessor, but it’s every bit as poppy and vibrant indoors and out. It’s technically lower resolution than last year’s panel — a reduced 1272p compared to the previous true 1440p spec — but I’d be lying if I said I noticed the difference.

Unfortunately, that blade cuts both ways, as the move to 165Hz is similarly lost on me. It’s a buttery smooth display, but I can’t tell you I’m seeing a difference compared to 120Hz. It’s a fully flat panel under a similarly flat piece of glass, though, which certainly feels more comfortable to hold compared to this phone’s not-quite-flat predecessor.

Despite the redesign, OnePlus hasn’t given up on nailing the basics. The stereo speakers, haptics, and buttons all feel top-shelf, though the volume rocker placement continues to be far too high up the right side of the device for my liking. Face unlock works surprisingly well in most cases, while the ultrasonic fingerprint sensor feels as accurate as ever to me. Enthusiast-favorite features — like an IR blaster functioning as a built-in universal remote — also remain present and accounted for.

But OnePlus deserves some shame for replacing its alert slider with a shortcut button — the ‘Plus Key’ — clearly inspired by Apple, while simultaneously failing to improve on the Action Button failings. It’s a serviceable replacement, but like on the iPhone, you can only set it to perform one task. Double or triple-click options remain a pipe dream — or, if we’re lucky, a post-launch software upgrade. And if you think that’s a copy, just wait until you see the software for it.

Software and performance

The Plus Key is the perfect transition to talk about some of the big changes made to OxygenOS this year. It’s remarkable that, in less than a span of 12 months, I can go from celebrating the software that ships on OnePlus devices to actively disliking it — and yet, that’s exactly where we land with OxygenOS 16.

This software upgrade really comes with two main focuses, neither of which I find appealing. The first is an obvious continued reliance on AI toolsets. I’m of the mindset that Google is the only company currently doing anything truly novel in this space; from Samsung to Motorola to, yes, Apple, everyone else seems to be set on replicating the same handful of features again and again. The OnePlus 15 comes preloaded with AI writing tools, AI search tools, AI translation tools, AI recording and transcription tools, and a “Mind Space” application that actually describes itself as “your AI brain.”

Most of these features aren’t new, and what little is new is certainly uninspired. I don’t get the impression OnePlus actually expects most of its fans to use these tools; largely speaking, they’re buried in settings and exist as OEM-specific alternatives to plenty of what we’ve seen Google ship to all Android devices through Gemini. And that’s the other key here — if you really want your smartphone to operate as an AI-centric device, you’re probably going to be relying on Gemini more than anything else.

The other changes on display in OxygenOS 16 are, unfortunately, harder to ignore. This software pulls so hard from iOS, it occasionally verges on embarrassment. The app drawer now has a permanent “Categories” toggle at the top of the page, with the word “Categories” constantly scrolling every other second despite fitting properly in the space provided. Tapping it gives you a direct clone of the App Library on iOS, an objectively worse take on Android’s default app drawer.

This isn’t just cloning a rival’s software experience — it’s also functionally nonsensical. Let’s say you disagree with me and prefer this flavor of Apple’s weird auto-assigned categories. There’s no way to set the Categories view as your default app drawer experience, meaning you need to tap it every single time you open your app list to view it. It’s a secondary step for an unnecessary feature, and aside from visually copying the iPhone, I have no idea why it’s here.

That’s far from the only space where OxygenOS verges heavily into knock-off territory. It’s not a new change, but the default split quick settings view looks right out of modern iOS (though that can graciously be combined back into something more traditionally Android). Global Search looks almost identical to Spotlight on the iPhone, though it appears far less useful for actually pulling up anything outside a Google Search shortcut. The lock screen now supports ultra-tall, frosted digits for its clock — wonder where I’ve seen that before?

And that brings us back to the OnePlus 15’s shortcut Plus Key, the setup process for which is a nearly 1:1 recreation of the exact experience offered up by the iPhone.

Maybe I’m a little too in-the-weeds with this phone to have a clear vision, but combined with the new design here, the entire experience of using this phone just feels cheap. It’s the equivalent of buying a “Gucci” handbag off the street for pennies on the dollar, except in the OnePlus 15’s case, you aren’t actually saving much compared to the product it’s knocking off.

Some of this is easy enough to ignore, and if you primarily use your smartphone as a launching pad for opening apps, this isn’t going to feel much different than any other Android experience you can find on store shelves today. But with Google painting such a unique vision for both itself and other OEMs to follow with Material 3 Expressive, I think it’s worth calling out the aversion to embracing anything outside of the Apple bubble. Recent iOS changes haven’t even been particularly popular among its own fan base, and yet, you won’t find much outside of Apple’s influence shaping OxygenOS 16. It’s a shame.

The company’s software support policy remains unchanged. The OnePlus 15 will see four major OS upgrades alongside six years of bimonthly security patches. It’s far from a dealbreaker, but it’s also far from the seven-year standard set by Google and Samsung, and I’d like to eventually see these ranges improve.

The OnePlus 15 is my first experience with the Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5, and so far, I’m as impressed as I tend to be with Qualcomm’s flagship chipsets. If you’re coming from the Snapdragon 8 Elite that directly preceded this chip, or even the Snapdragon 8 Gen 3 from 2023 — great job with these names, Qualcomm — I don’t think you’re going to notice much in the way of a performance boost. If you’re coming from a Pixel, well, I don’t know what to tell you. This phone stays cooler under pressure and runs circles around Tensor when it comes to gaming; it’ll feel like a big upgrade for power users.

All that said, I have spotted some odd performance hiccups throughout the couple of weeks I’ve been using this phone. On a couple of occasions, this device got surprisingly warm when on a strong 5G signal, despite operating on relatively low (auto) brightness. I’ve also had the phone outright freeze, requiring a hard reset to get back to the home screen. With any luck, these minor issues can be ironed out within the first couple of patches.

Battery life and charging

You would never know it just by picking it up, but through the use of silicon-carbon technology, OnePlus managed to pack a 7,300mAh battery in this thing. That’s not a typo — 7,300mAh, or, for comparison’s sake, a battery nearly 300mAh larger than the one packed in the Pixel Tablet. If you thought the 6,000mAh cell in the OnePlus 13 outperformed the competition, well, you ain’t seen nothing yet.

Put simply, this is a two-day smartphone for practically everyone. While I’m sure someone out there reading this could figure out the right series of tasks to kill this device before the sun goes down — my money’s on the MiHoYo game of your choice paired with PiP video streaming over 5G, with the display set to full brightness — it’s going to take some pretty abusive treatment to get there.

Those screen-on/off times are just for a single day, not that entire span since its last charge.

For everyone else, how you use your phone is going to be the determining factor in how long it lasts. I’ve tried to replicate a handful of experiences to determine just how long the OnePlus 15 can go between charges. A true mixed bag — think a combination of Wi-Fi and cellular, audio playback over Bluetooth and the on-board speakers, indoor and outdoor usage for various brightness levels, and so on — should deliver a full two days without breaking a sweat. Lighter users, like those of us who practically never leave their home Wi-Fi network, could last well into day three or, in some cases, even day four. Heavier users might need a mid-afternoon top-off on day two.

Either way, I think this is an unabashed win. My Pixel Tablet comparison wasn’t an accident; with this device, we’ve effectively hit tablet-levels of battery life from our smartphones, and that’s in line with what I’ve experienced from the OnePlus 15. This sort of battery life — crossed with the usual 80W SuperVOOC charger offered here in the US — completely revolutionizes how you use your smartphone. Why plug it in at night when any random 20-minute charging session will get you through at least an additional day?

But even this category isn’t a slam dunk for OnePlus. While I’ll give the company some respect for having admitted directly to reviewers that this device doesn’t support Qi2 — no “Qi2 Ready” nonsense here — this is yet another generation that completely ignores the demand for magnetic accessories. 7,300mAh is nice, but I think I would’ve rather taken something in the 6,000mAh-range in exchange for built-in magnets. At the very least, OnePlus does offer magnet-equipped cases as an optional purchase.

Camera

For as many qualms as I may have about photos from Samsung, Motorola, or even Google, I’m not sure I’ve ever been so frustrated by a relatively good camera lineup than the performance seen out of the OnePlus 15. For every good thing I have to say about these lenses and the underlying processing power, an equally-notable shortcoming rears its ugly head — and it all starts with a company that isn’t even part of the equation this year.

Yes, as we’ve known for a few months now, OnePlus opted to dissolve its partnership with Hasselblad after several generations of fairly wide-ranging success. Although the two companies started off relatively quiet in the smartphone game, by the time the OnePlus 13 arrived in North America at the start of 2025, I was absolutely smitten with the images produced by these devices. Unfortunately, despite some lofty promises from OnePlus on the capabilities of its in-house imaging engine, I just can’t say I’m all that impressed with what’s on display here.

That’s not to say the OnePlus 15 is an outright camera disaster — rather, it’s just a pretty big stepback compared to its predecessor. As usual, you’ll get your best shots with the main f/1.8 lens 50MP. Color reproduction is actually fairly accurate, if on the oversaturated side. It’s a compromise I’ll take compared to the washed-out, HDR-addled look delivered by Pixel and its main competitors, but it comes at a cost: oversharpening.

For whatever reason, the new imaging engine OnePlus developed for this device loves to oversharpen. You can watch it happen in real-time after tapping the shutter button; a perfectly respectable image will suddenly indent itself with deeper, heavier outlines surrounding practically every object in a frame. Sometimes, like when taking photos of my cats, this effect can be ignored entirely, written off as an artifact of your pet’s fur. Other times, like when capturing trees and grass, it leaves an otherwise fine photo looking like a bad Photoshop experiment.

1 / 8

It’s a problem that only gets worse when you swap to other lenses. My experience with the ultra-wide sensor here primarily comes from macro images — again, snapping images of my cats or of my dinner out. In less-than-perfect light, shooting in macro caused some particularly blurry images, and I can’t tell how much of that was a fault in my hand movements versus some particularly slow processing. I nearly always got a better shot by disabling macro and backing up from my subject.

The 3.5x telephoto lens didn’t fare much better; it’s surprisingly soft in practice, while simultaneously oversharpening whatever it determines to be the main focus point of an image.

You can get good shots from this camera, but it’s far more hit or miss than last year’s outing, and the misses here in particular occur much more often than before. Hasselblad’s partnership with OnePlus started off similarly rocky in its earliest of days, so it’s possible a future device — or, if we’re especially lucky, a future software update — can replicate its success while this company ventures out on a solo quest. That doesn’t change the fact that, at launch, the OnePlus 15’s camera just doesn’t hold up to its predecessor.

Final thoughts

The OnePlus 15 isn’t a bad phone, but it is an inherently frustrating one. There’s still plenty of OnePlus magic under the hood here — an ultra-fast chipset, a camera unafraid of colors and life-like saturation, and the largest battery I’ve ever used in a smartphone by a longshot. Simultaneously, though, I just can’t say this phone captured my heart the way the last couple of this company’s flagship releases did. Combining a disappointing redesign with less impressive camera performance and a UI overhaul dramatically hoping you’ll recognize iOS in every nook and cranny just doesn’t feel like a path to success.

And yet, there’s plenty to like about the OnePlus 15. It’s comfortable to hold, it nails all the basics — particularly its display and its overall performance — and, to really drive the point home, the battery life here really does change how you use your phone. And for less than $1,000, it remains a bargain compared to big-screen competitors from Google, Samsung, and Apple, even if you can feel out those cut corners a little more than usual.

OnePlus is no stranger to setbacks in its overall vision — the OnePlus 8 and 9, in particular, stood out as disappointing releases from the company. In that sense, the OnePlus 15 feels like another step towards something greater, potentially something that once again takes the Pixel out of its usual spot in my pocket. For now, though, I’m not sure this device is much more than a transitional device, albeit one with class-leading battery life.

The OnePlus 15 was meant to go on sale in the US today, November 13th. However, due to the government shutdown, this device was unable to finish formal certification by the FCC. Below is an official statement from OnePlus:

As is the case with every smartphone manufacturer, the United States’ Federal Communications Commission certifies OnePlus devices before they are sold in the U.S. As a result of the government shutdown, device certifications have been delayed. Subsequently, U.S. sales for the OnePlus 15 will be postponed until they have been secured. The OnePlus 15 has already finished all the required tests from the FCC’s recognized labs and the certification application has been formally submitted. We are hopeful that approvals can be generated quickly and as a result, we can bring the OnePlus 15 to our customers in the U.S. expeditiously.

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