Grand Lotto 6/55 Results for June 28, 2025
Here are the Grand Lotto 6/55 results for today, June 28, 2025 (Saturday), 9 PM with jackpot prize is Php 67.5 million!
The post Grand Lotto 6/55 Results for June 28, 2025 appeared first on PCSOLOTTO.PH.
Lotto 6/42 Results for June 28, 2025
Here are the Lotto 6/42 results for today, June 28, 2025 (Saturday), 9 PM draw, with jackpot prize of Php 12 million!
The post Lotto 6/42 Results for June 28, 2025 appeared first on PCSOLOTTO.PH.
Major mobile network with 18million customers unleashes huge free data boost for their cheapest plans
A MAJOR mobile network operator is unleashing a huge boost in data allowance to 18 million of its customers for free.
It comes on their basics plan, which is the cheapest entry-level package offered by the network.

New Vodafone customers will be able to access this extra data through their 4G SIM Only Basics plan.
Details of the plan
It will provide 21GB of data for just £7 a month, as well as unlimited minutes on UK calls and texts on a 12-month term.
Customers can otherwise choose to get 80GB for £8, which is up from 50GB, 90GB for £10.
They can also get 100GB for £12 a month, which is up from 70GB.
The price will increase monthly by £1 from April next year.
Claim the Vodafone deal
Vodafone does make it difficult to find the Basics plan on their website.
They also do not display it on their SIM Only deals page.
The plan is designed to be very simplistic and don’t include any support for 5G services, only 4G.
As stated on their website: “Vodafone Basics are our simple, everyday plans.
“Vodafone Basics plans are capped so you never need to worry about going over your allowances.
“This means, picture messages, International calls and Premium calls starting 09 are not available.”
Other features like international calls and texts, upgrades, OneNumber connectivity are not included in the plan, which has a maximum download speed 100 Mbps.
Vodafone also occasionally introduces changes to their mobile plans, and yet to state how long the new offers will run.
How to save on your mobile phone bill
BY Jamie Harris, Senior Technology and Science Reporter
NOT happy with your current mobile phone deal?
If you’re outside the minimum term of your contract then you won’t need to pay a cancellation fee – and you might be able to find a cheaper deal elsewhere.
But don’t just switch contracts because the price is cheaper than what you’re currently paying.
Take a look at how many minutes and texts, as well as how much data you’re using, to find out which deal is best for you.
For example, if you’re a heavy internet user it’s worth finding a deal that accommodates this so you don’t end up spending extra on bundles or add-ons each month.
Also note that if you’re still in your contract period, you might be charged an exit fee.
Ready to look elsewhere? Pay-as-you-go deals are better for people who don’t regularly use their phone, while monthly contracts usually work out cheaper for those who do.
It’s worth using comparison websites, such as MoneySupermarket and uSwitch.com, to compare tariffs and phone prices.
Billmonitor also matches buyers to the best pay-monthly deal based on their previous three months of bills.
It only works if you’re a customer of EE, O2, Three, Vodafone or Tesco Mobile and you’ll need to log in with your online account details.
There’s also MobilePhoneChecker, which has a bill monitoring feature that recommends a tariff based on your monthly usage.
If you’re happy with your provider then it might be worth using your research to haggle a better deal.
Mum reveals desperate sunlounger hogging attempt after getting up in the dark hours before pool opens
A MUM has shared how she got up at 6am to beat ‘sunbed warriors’ at a popular Spanish holiday hotspot.
Venice Wallace, 29, has shared she got up in the early morning and in the dark, to try and reserve the best spot for family when on holiday.


She commented how she would be ready “go to war” for the sunbeds in her Tenerife hotel, when recently on holiday with her son, aged four, and her partner, Luke, 34.
Unable to find a good bed for the first seven-days of her holiday, Venice then decided to set an alarm to be able to put her towels down and secure a bed at 6am.
The property manager from Essex said: “We were there for 11 days and there were no rules around the sunbeds.
“It was just a free for all and I’ve never experienced that.
“Every morning, we’d get up quite early and I’d look over the balcony to see all the sunbeds covered in towels.
“So, when we would go down at like eight or nine in the morning, we’d never get a front row seat to the kids’ pool with the slides.”
Venice explained how when she then decided to get up early to secure some of the loungers, “there was no arguing or anything”.
She added: “I never would have done it, but now that I’m a mum I understand it.
“You need to be able to see your children.”
The mum shared a video on TikTok – which was captioned “Venice 1, everybody else 0” – of the ordeal.
Since positing, it has gained over 1.6million views.
Some viewers praised Venice for her boldness.
However, others were quick to judge and blamed her for being “part of the problem”.
One said: “I swear on my life that if I’m coming down to find ‘reserved’ sunbeds like this with no one in sight, I’m removing those towels.
“Mad? Go see what the staff have to say about it.”
The 29-year-old added that she gained a lot of hate in the comments from Spanish locals, but as she speaks Spanish – she has since argued back in more recent videos.

She said: “A lot of Brits give us a bad name, so they were saying ‘we hate the tourists’, ‘don’t bother coming here!’
“The population of Spain are attacking you in the comments but they don’t know that you grew up in Spain and probably speak better than their ancestors.”
Another popular spot in Spain recently announced that it would be removing sunbeds and parasols from its top beaches.
In and around Palma, more than 1,700 loungers are being removed by the government as locals have complained they cannot find sunbathing spots.
The news follows a time where people are becoming increasingly frustrated over the amount of sun lounger space and availability.
Often, videos are uploaded to social media showing holidaymakers battling for spots – or in Venice’s case – rush to secure a spot at ridiculous hours.
Plus, another holidaymaker was recently slammed after she said that it’s ‘normal’ to bagsy sunbeds before breakfast and to hog the best spots.

Bucoy says Duterte’s `bloodbath’ remark may well just be `bubble bath’
Moment red-faced ‘flytipper’ gets instant karma when farmer turns detective to ‘return mound of rubbish’
WATCH the satisfying moment a farmer seemingly gets revenge on alleged flytippers as he returns their rubbish.
The farmer is said to have tracked down the alleged fly-tipper after she left boxes on his land.




In a rookie error, the ‘flytipper’ failed to notice that her address was still left on the boxes.
Taking the opportunity to exact revenge, land manager Graeme Upton went to her postcode, where he then recognised the car.
He filmed himself dumping the rubbish back on her front garden.
According to Graeme, the woman had apparently gone to the effort of driving 25 miles to dump her boxes on Graeme’s land – leaving her none-too-pleased to have it returned to her.
Graeme said in a Facebook post, that he had first noticed the woman idling in a car on his property in Redhill, Surrey when he was moving bales of wheat.
When asked what she was doing, he claims she said she was only stopping “for a wee”.
It was only after she’d driven off that Graeme noticed the pile of cupboard dumped on the ground at the edge of his field.
Graeme explained the backstory as part of a video showing him returning the boxes to the woman.
In the video, Graeme can be seen knocking on the woman’s door and pointing out the familiar car.
A man answers and says he hadn’t been driving the car when the rubbish was allegedly dumped.
Graeme then begins to sarcastically explain the situation to the man, beginning “It’s a bit bizarre“.
He says: “While she was having a wee, all of this stuff clearly fell out of the car and it’s got your address on it.”
The man then goes back into the house before telling them to “drop it all there”, pointing at his driveway.
Graeme and another man then begin dumping loads of boxes from their van onto the drive.
As a woman leaves the house, Graeme says: “I bet you didn’t think you’d see me again quite so quick.
“I’m just returning what was dropped off in my gateway.”
As Graeme and his friend leave, he adds: “That’s all yours.
“A word of advice, make sure you take off your postcode.”
He wrote: “The silly cow had left loads of delivery boxes with a post code on and hadn’t made a good job of cutting out the address on some boxes or her name !!!
“So I punched the post code into sat nav and lo and behold it took me to her house.
“So myself and two neighbours then collected their rubbish and returned it. They weren’t so happy.”
In the video, the woman who left her cardboard boxes on Graeme’s property stood by her husband, both with their arms crossed and shaking their heads as they watched the rubbish be returned to them.
Our village is at war over 60ft oak tree – I live in darkness & fear it’ll crush my home… but I can’t chop it down
VILLAGERS at war with a nightmare 60ft tree have lost their latest battle to get it chopped down.
Plans to fell the protected oak, which sits just metres from thatched cottages in Kings Newton, South Derbyshire, have been axed.

Residents living next to the “frightening” behemoth in Sleepy Lane have fumed that it could crush their homes.
They claim it also causes major sewage issues, problems with the road surface and blocks huge amounts of natural light.
It was planted 34 years ago after a 109-year-old tree in the same spot was deemed to be in a dangerous condition and felled.
DerbyshireLive reported that the sleepy village is divided by the new oak, which sits next to a public footpath leading into the picturesque countryside.
Paul Hackney, whose house is dwarfed by the 30-foot-wide tree, saw his proposal to have it cut down rejected earlier this week.
Almost 80 rejection letters were submitted at a South Derbyshire District Council meeting.
Opposition was led by Melbourne Parish Council and the Kings Newton Residents Association.
The “nuisance” tree is expected to reach 300 years old, much to the horror of some locals.
Mr Hackney told how the shrub had proved to be a hazard to vehicles after it was recently hit by an Ocado delivery van.
He said: “Ultimately it is a tree that has outgrown its position.
“It would be better for the residents to resolve the issue and be involved in the future planning of a new tree (if required) without the understandable stress and worry of the current situation.”
But John Jackson, chair of the residents association, argued that the oak was healthy and did not pose a risk.
Councillors understood the frustrations of locals living in its shadow, but defended keeping the “healthy” tree.
Cllr Andrew Kirke said: “I do have some sympathy for the neighbours.
“We have many very large trees but we can’t just chop them down in case there is a strong wind.
“We have lots of periods of strong wind while it has been there and trees have fallen down but it has stayed up through all of that.
“There is no reason to chop down such a healthy specimen.”
Cllr Jayne Davies added: “It is such a glorious tree.
“It has a tree preservation order for a reason and the applicant can come back for a crown or lift or another suitable solution.”
It comes as a similar ‘Jack and the beanstalk’ tree continues to frustrate homeowners in Winchester, Hampshire.

Locals in Canon Street slammed the “grotesquely irresponsible” and “ludicrous” 45 foot high oak.
But now it has branched into an “out of proportion” eyesore which overshadows the gardens of nearby properties – where the average house price is more than £600,000.
However, the council have refused to cut it down and placed it under a protection order.
The authorities said residents from a neighbouring street “appreciated” the tree.
The decision has sparked outrage among locals who are actually dealing with the daily repercussions of such an overwhelming tree.
South Derbyshire District Council has been approached for comment.
