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#satellitetophone — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #satellitetophone, aggregated by home.social.

  1. Weekly output: Internet Archive, Roblox parental controls, Google travel-search tools, T-Mobile yanks free WiFi from United flights, Mark Vena podcast, talking to local user groups, AST SpaceMobile

    LAS VEGAS–I’m typing this from a press room in the Las Vegas Convention Center barely three months after I spent too much time in that facility for CES. Credit or blame for this trip goes to a different Washington-area trade group, the National Association of Broadcasters. Tuesday, I will be moderating an NAB Show panel about the state of content creation that features two people who are better at Instagram than me: Juliana Broste and my fellow former USA Today columnist Jefferson Graham.

    4/13/2026: Journalists Applaud the Internet Archive’s Role In Preserving the Public Record, Fight for the Future

    A staffer with Public Knowledge e-mailed me a few weeks ago to ask if I would be willing to sign a letter supporting the Internet Archive’s efforts to preserve the history of the Web and possibly provide a quote about how I’d used the Archive. Having repeatedly relied on the Archive’s Wayback Machine to link back to my own past published work, I said I would be happy to do that–having already donated $100 to that San Francisco non-profit in January.

    4/13/2026: Roblox Adds Account Restrictions for Younger Users, Expands Age Verification, PCMag

    I attended a press roundtable Monday morning featuring some Roblox trust-and-safety executives, allowing me to enrich this writeup of the platform’s changes with quotes from that conversation.

    4/15/2026: T-Mobile Grounds Free In-Flight Wi-Fi Benefit for United Airlines Passengers, PCMag

    I had the dumb luck to see this change firsthand on a flight from Denver to San Jose Tuesday, then needed the rest of that day to get some responses from T-Mobile and United. The airline’s switch to free Starlink connectivity will fix this problem, but we are months away from that rollout reaching a significant fraction of United’s mainline fleet.

    4/17/2026: Like It or Not, Google Wants to Be Your AI Travel Buddy This Summer, PCMag

    I wrote up this post off an embargoed copy of Google’s announcement that we had to correct the next day because I had missed two of the finer points of this bundle of news. In my halfhearted defense, it is more work than you might realize keeping track of Google’s ongoing efforts to infuse AI into its existing services.

    4/17/2026: How NTT Research’s Upgrade 2026 Helps Silicon Valley Get Ready for The Future, Mark Vena

    My industry-analyst pal had do a quick video from NTT Research’s Upgrade conference in San Jose, Calif.–with that firm covering my travel costs–about some of its initiatives.

    4/18/2026: 2026 Consumer Electronics Show and Lots More!, Potomac Area Technology and Computer Society/Osher Lifelong Learning Institute Personal Computer User Group/Washington Apple Pi

    Despite that title–picked by the organizers at PATACS, pronounced “Pat-Aces”–I spent more time talking about other topics. Among them: my switch from Evernote to Obsidian just in time for CES, the sad state of tech policy in Washington, and my takes on self-driving cars and what’s befallen the Washington Post. As I have in previous appearances before these folks, I showed up with a bag of trade-show swag and gave away all of it.

    4/19/2026: Blue Origin Rocket Launches, Then Loses AST SpaceMobile BlueBird Satellite, PCMag

    I watched the third launch of Blue Origin’s New Glenn rocket on my phone as I was walking up to the security checkpoint at Dulles early Sunday morning, started writing up what I thought was a successful launch, then learned–via painfully slow inflight WiFi–that New Glenn’s second stage had failed to deliver AST’s mobile-broadband BlueBird satellite to the intended orbit. This is a real black eye for Blue that should outweigh its achievement in reflying a New Glenn booster and then landing it on a barge in the Atlantic.

    #ageCheck #ageGating #ageVerification #ASTSpaceMobile #BlueOrigin #contentCreation #GoogleAIMode #InternetArchive #JeffersonGraham #JulianaBroste #las #LasVegas #lvcc #NABShow #NewGlenn #NTT #NTTUpgrade #NTTUpgrade2026 #Roblox #RobloxKids #SanJose #satelliteToPhone #SJC #swag #TMobile #TMobileInflightWiFi #travelTools #UA #UnitedAirlines #userGroups #Vegas #WaybackMachine
  2. Weekly output: Internet Archive, Roblox parental controls, Google travel-search tools, T-Mobile yanks free WiFi from United flights, Mark Vena podcast, talking to local user groups, AST SpaceMobile

    LAS VEGAS–I’m typing this from a press room in the Las Vegas Convention Center barely three months after I spent too much time in that facility for CES. Credit or blame for this trip goes to a different Washington-area trade group, the National Association of Broadcasters. Tuesday, I will be moderating an NAB Show panel about the state of content creation that features two people who are better at Instagram than me: Juliana Broste and my fellow former USA Today columnist Jefferson Graham.

    4/13/2026: Journalists Applaud the Internet Archive’s Role In Preserving the Public Record, Fight for the Future

    A staffer with Public Knowledge e-mailed me a few weeks ago to ask if I would be willing to sign a letter supporting the Internet Archive’s efforts to preserve the history of the Web and possibly provide a quote about how I’d used the Archive. Having repeatedly relied on the Archive’s Wayback Machine to link back to my own past published work, I said I would be happy to do that–having already donated $100 to that San Francisco non-profit in January.

    4/13/2026: Roblox Adds Account Restrictions for Younger Users, Expands Age Verification, PCMag

    I attended a press roundtable Monday morning featuring some Roblox trust-and-safety executives, allowing me to enrich this writeup of the platform’s changes with quotes from that conversation.

    4/15/2026: T-Mobile Grounds Free In-Flight Wi-Fi Benefit for United Airlines Passengers, PCMag

    I had the dumb luck to see this change firsthand on a flight from Denver to San Jose Tuesday, then needed the rest of that day to get some responses from T-Mobile and United. The airline’s switch to free Starlink connectivity will fix this problem, but we are months away from that rollout reaching a significant fraction of United’s mainline fleet.

    4/17/2026: Like It or Not, Google Wants to Be Your AI Travel Buddy This Summer, PCMag

    I wrote up this post off an embargoed copy of Google’s announcement that we had to correct the next day because I had missed two of the finer points of this bundle of news. In my halfhearted defense, it is more work than you might realize keeping track of Google’s ongoing efforts to infuse AI into its existing services.

    4/17/2026: How NTT Research’s Upgrade 2026 Helps Silicon Valley Get Ready for The Future, Mark Vena

    My industry-analyst pal had do a quick video from NTT Research’s Upgrade conference in San Jose, Calif.–with that firm covering my travel costs–about some of its initiatives.

    4/18/2026: 2026 Consumer Electronics Show and Lots More!, Potomac Area Technology and Computer Society/Osher Lifelong Learning Institute Personal Computer User Group/Washington Apple Pi

    Despite that title–picked by the organizers at PATACS, pronounced “Pat-Aces”–I spent more time talking about other topics. Among them: my switch from Evernote to Obsidian just in time for CES, the sad state of tech policy in Washington, and my takes on self-driving cars and what’s befallen the Washington Post. As I have in previous appearances before these folks, I showed up with a bag of trade-show swag and gave away all of it.

    4/19/2026: Blue Origin Rocket Launches, Then Loses AST SpaceMobile BlueBird Satellite, PCMag

    I watched the third launch of Blue Origin’s New Glenn rocket on my phone as I was walking up to the security checkpoint at Dulles early Sunday morning, started writing up what I thought was a successful launch, then learned–via painfully slow inflight WiFi–that New Glenn’s second stage had failed to deliver AST’s mobile-broadband BlueBird satellite to the intended orbit. This is a real black eye for Blue that should outweigh its achievement in reflying a New Glenn booster and then landing it on a barge in the Atlantic.

    #ageCheck #ageGating #ageVerification #ASTSpaceMobile #BlueOrigin #contentCreation #GoogleAIMode #InternetArchive #JeffersonGraham #JulianaBroste #las #LasVegas #lvcc #NABShow #NewGlenn #NTT #NTTUpgrade #NTTUpgrade2026 #Roblox #RobloxKids #SanJose #satelliteToPhone #SJC #swag #TMobile #TMobileInflightWiFi #travelTools #UA #UnitedAirlines #userGroups #Vegas #WaybackMachine
  3. Weekly output: Internet Archive, Roblox parental controls, Google travel-search tools, T-Mobile yanks free WiFi from United flights, Mark Vena podcast, talking to local user groups, AST SpaceMobile

    LAS VEGAS–I’m typing this from a press room in the Las Vegas Convention Center barely three months after I spent too much time in that facility for CES. Credit or blame for this trip goes to a different Washington-area trade group, the National Association of Broadcasters. Tuesday, I will be moderating an NAB Show panel about the state of content creation that features two people who are better at Instagram than me: Juliana Broste and my fellow former USA Today columnist Jefferson Graham.

    4/13/2026: Journalists Applaud the Internet Archive’s Role In Preserving the Public Record, Fight for the Future

    A staffer with Public Knowledge e-mailed me a few weeks ago to ask if I would be willing to sign a letter supporting the Internet Archive’s efforts to preserve the history of the Web and possibly provide a quote about how I’d used the Archive. Having repeatedly relied on the Archive’s Wayback Machine to link back to my own past published work, I said I would be happy to do that–having already donated $100 to that San Francisco non-profit in January.

    4/13/2026: Roblox Adds Account Restrictions for Younger Users, Expands Age Verification, PCMag

    I attended a press roundtable Monday morning featuring some Roblox trust-and-safety executives, allowing me to enrich this writeup of the platform’s changes with quotes from that conversation.

    4/15/2026: T-Mobile Grounds Free In-Flight Wi-Fi Benefit for United Airlines Passengers, PCMag

    I had the dumb luck to see this change firsthand on a flight from Denver to San Jose Tuesday, then needed the rest of that day to get some responses from T-Mobile and United. The airline’s switch to free Starlink connectivity will fix this problem, but we are months away from that rollout reaching a significant fraction of United’s mainline fleet.

    4/17/2026: Like It or Not, Google Wants to Be Your AI Travel Buddy This Summer, PCMag

    I wrote up this post off an embargoed copy of Google’s announcement that we had to correct the next day because I had missed two of the finer points of this bundle of news. In my halfhearted defense, it is more work than you might realize keeping track of Google’s ongoing efforts to infuse AI into its existing services.

    4/17/2026: How NTT Research’s Upgrade 2026 Helps Silicon Valley Get Ready for The Future, Mark Vena

    My industry-analyst pal had do a quick video from NTT Research’s Upgrade conference in San Jose, Calif.–with that firm covering my travel costs–about some of its initiatives.

    4/18/2026: 2026 Consumer Electronics Show and Lots More!, Potomac Area Technology and Computer Society/Osher Lifelong Learning Institute Personal Computer User Group/Washington Apple Pi

    Despite that title–picked by the organizers at PATACS, pronounced “Pat-Aces”–I spent more time talking about other topics. Among them: my switch from Evernote to Obsidian just in time for CES, the sad state of tech policy in Washington, and my takes on self-driving cars and what’s befallen the Washington Post. As I have in previous appearances before these folks, I showed up with a bag of trade-show swag and gave away all of it.

    4/19/2026: Blue Origin Rocket Launches, Then Loses AST SpaceMobile BlueBird Satellite, PCMag

    I watched the third launch of Blue Origin’s New Glenn rocket on my phone as I was walking up to the security checkpoint at Dulles early Sunday morning, started writing up what I thought was a successful launch, then learned–via painfully slow inflight WiFi–that New Glenn’s second stage had failed to deliver AST’s mobile-broadband BlueBird satellite to the intended orbit. This is a real black eye for Blue that should outweigh its achievement in reflying a New Glenn booster and then landing it on a barge in the Atlantic.

    #ageCheck #ageGating #ageVerification #ASTSpaceMobile #BlueOrigin #contentCreation #GoogleAIMode #InternetArchive #JeffersonGraham #JulianaBroste #las #LasVegas #lvcc #NABShow #NewGlenn #NTT #NTTUpgrade #NTTUpgrade2026 #Roblox #RobloxKids #SanJose #satelliteToPhone #SJC #swag #TMobile #TMobileInflightWiFi #travelTools #UA #UnitedAirlines #userGroups #Vegas #WaybackMachine
  4. Weekly output: Internet Archive, Roblox parental controls, Google travel-search tools, T-Mobile yanks free WiFi from United flights, Mark Vena podcast, talking to local user groups, AST SpaceMobile

    LAS VEGAS–I’m typing this from a press room in the Las Vegas Convention Center barely three months after I spent too much time in that facility for CES. Credit or blame for this trip goes to a different Washington-area trade group, the National Association of Broadcasters. Tuesday, I will be moderating an NAB Show panel about the state of content creation that features two people who are better at Instagram than me: Juliana Broste and my fellow former USA Today columnist Jefferson Graham.

    4/13/2026: Journalists Applaud the Internet Archive’s Role In Preserving the Public Record, Fight for the Future

    A staffer with Public Knowledge e-mailed me a few weeks ago to ask if I would be willing to sign a letter supporting the Internet Archive’s efforts to preserve the history of the Web and possibly provide a quote about how I’d used the Archive. Having repeatedly relied on the Archive’s Wayback Machine to link back to my own past published work, I said I would be happy to do that–having already donated $100 to that San Francisco non-profit in January.

    4/13/2026: Roblox Adds Account Restrictions for Younger Users, Expands Age Verification, PCMag

    I attended a press roundtable Monday morning featuring some Roblox trust-and-safety executives, allowing me to enrich this writeup of the platform’s changes with quotes from that conversation.

    4/15/2026: T-Mobile Grounds Free In-Flight Wi-Fi Benefit for United Airlines Passengers, PCMag

    I had the dumb luck to see this change firsthand on a flight from Denver to San Jose Tuesday, then needed the rest of that day to get some responses from T-Mobile and United. The airline’s switch to free Starlink connectivity will fix this problem, but we are months away from that rollout reaching a significant fraction of United’s mainline fleet.

    4/17/2026: Like It or Not, Google Wants to Be Your AI Travel Buddy This Summer, PCMag

    I wrote up this post off an embargoed copy of Google’s announcement that we had to correct the next day because I had missed two of the finer points of this bundle of news. In my halfhearted defense, it is more work than you might realize keeping track of Google’s ongoing efforts to infuse AI into its existing services.

    4/17/2026: How NTT Research’s Upgrade 2026 Helps Silicon Valley Get Ready for The Future, Mark Vena

    My industry-analyst pal had do a quick video from NTT Research’s Upgrade conference in San Jose, Calif.–with that firm covering my travel costs–about some of its initiatives.

    4/18/2026: 2026 Consumer Electronics Show and Lots More!, Potomac Area Technology and Computer Society/Osher Lifelong Learning Institute Personal Computer User Group/Washington Apple Pi

    Despite that title–picked by the organizers at PATACS, pronounced “Pat-Aces”–I spent more time talking about other topics. Among them: my switch from Evernote to Obsidian just in time for CES, the sad state of tech policy in Washington, and my takes on self-driving cars and what’s befallen the Washington Post. As I have in previous appearances before these folks, I showed up with a bag of trade-show swag and gave away all of it.

    4/19/2026: Blue Origin Rocket Launches, Then Loses AST SpaceMobile BlueBird Satellite, PCMag

    I watched the third launch of Blue Origin’s New Glenn rocket on my phone as I was walking up to the security checkpoint at Dulles early Sunday morning, started writing up what I thought was a successful launch, then learned–via painfully slow inflight WiFi–that New Glenn’s second stage had failed to deliver AST’s mobile-broadband BlueBird satellite to the intended orbit. This is a real black eye for Blue that should outweigh its achievement in reflying a New Glenn booster and then landing it on a barge in the Atlantic.

    #ageCheck #ageGating #ageVerification #ASTSpaceMobile #BlueOrigin #contentCreation #GoogleAIMode #InternetArchive #JeffersonGraham #JulianaBroste #las #LasVegas #lvcc #NABShow #NewGlenn #NTT #NTTUpgrade #NTTUpgrade2026 #Roblox #RobloxKids #SanJose #satelliteToPhone #SJC #swag #TMobile #TMobileInflightWiFi #travelTools #UA #UnitedAirlines #userGroups #Vegas #WaybackMachine
  5. Weekly output: Internet Archive, Roblox parental controls, Google travel-search tools, T-Mobile yanks free WiFi from United flights, Mark Vena podcast, talking to local user groups, AST SpaceMobile

    LAS VEGAS–I’m typing this from a press room in the Las Vegas Convention Center barely three months after I spent too much time in that facility for CES. Credit or blame for this trip goes to a different Washington-area trade group, the National Association of Broadcasters. Tuesday, I will be moderating an NAB Show panel about the state of content creation that features two people who are better at Instagram than me: Juliana Broste and my fellow former USA Today columnist Jefferson Graham.

    4/13/2026: Journalists Applaud the Internet Archive’s Role In Preserving the Public Record, Fight for the Future

    A staffer with Public Knowledge e-mailed me a few weeks ago to ask if I would be willing to sign a letter supporting the Internet Archive’s efforts to preserve the history of the Web and possibly provide a quote about how I’d used the Archive. Having repeatedly relied on the Archive’s Wayback Machine to link back to my own past published work, I said I would be happy to do that–having already donated $100 to that San Francisco non-profit in January.

    4/13/2026: Roblox Adds Account Restrictions for Younger Users, Expands Age Verification, PCMag

    I attended a press roundtable Monday morning featuring some Roblox trust-and-safety executives, allowing me to enrich this writeup of the platform’s changes with quotes from that conversation.

    4/15/2026: T-Mobile Grounds Free In-Flight Wi-Fi Benefit for United Airlines Passengers, PCMag

    I had the dumb luck to see this change firsthand on a flight from Denver to San Jose Tuesday, then needed the rest of that day to get some responses from T-Mobile and United. The airline’s switch to free Starlink connectivity will fix this problem, but we are months away from that rollout reaching a significant fraction of United’s mainline fleet.

    4/17/2026: Like It or Not, Google Wants to Be Your AI Travel Buddy This Summer, PCMag

    I wrote up this post off an embargoed copy of Google’s announcement that we had to correct the next day because I had missed two of the finer points of this bundle of news. In my halfhearted defense, it is more work than you might realize keeping track of Google’s ongoing efforts to infuse AI into its existing services.

    4/17/2026: How NTT Research’s Upgrade 2026 Helps Silicon Valley Get Ready for The Future, Mark Vena

    My industry-analyst pal had do a quick video from NTT Research’s Upgrade conference in San Jose, Calif.–with that firm covering my travel costs–about some of its initiatives.

    4/18/2026: 2026 Consumer Electronics Show and Lots More!, Potomac Area Technology and Computer Society/Osher Lifelong Learning Institute Personal Computer User Group/Washington Apple Pi

    Despite that title–picked by the organizers at PATACS, pronounced “Pat-Aces”–I spent more time talking about other topics. Among them: my switch from Evernote to Obsidian just in time for CES, the sad state of tech policy in Washington, and my takes on self-driving cars and what’s befallen the Washington Post. As I have in previous appearances before these folks, I showed up with a bag of trade-show swag and gave away all of it.

    4/19/2026: Blue Origin Rocket Launches, Then Loses AST SpaceMobile BlueBird Satellite, PCMag

    I watched the third launch of Blue Origin’s New Glenn rocket on my phone as I was walking up to the security checkpoint at Dulles early Sunday morning, started writing up what I thought was a successful launch, then learned–via painfully slow inflight WiFi–that New Glenn’s second stage had failed to deliver AST’s mobile-broadband BlueBird satellite to the intended orbit. This is a real black eye for Blue that should outweigh its achievement in reflying a New Glenn booster and then landing it on a barge in the Atlantic.

    #ageCheck #ageGating #ageVerification #ASTSpaceMobile #BlueOrigin #contentCreation #GoogleAIMode #InternetArchive #JeffersonGraham #JulianaBroste #las #LasVegas #lvcc #NABShow #NewGlenn #NTT #NTTUpgrade #NTTUpgrade2026 #Roblox #RobloxKids #SanJose #satelliteToPhone #SJC #swag #TMobile #TMobileInflightWiFi #travelTools #UA #UnitedAirlines #userGroups #Vegas #WaybackMachine
  6. #Verizon has signed a commercial agreement with #ASTSpaceMobile to provide #satellitetophone connectivity starting next year. This solidifies their partnership, with Verizon committing $100 million and providing #AST with access to its radio spectrum. Verizon is betting on AST, which is still working to launch enough satellites. uk.pcmag.com/wireless-carriers #tech #media #news

  7. #Verizon has signed a commercial agreement with #ASTSpaceMobile to provide #satellitetophone connectivity starting next year. This solidifies their partnership, with Verizon committing $100 million and providing #AST with access to its radio spectrum. Verizon is betting on AST, which is still working to launch enough satellites. uk.pcmag.com/wireless-carriers #tech #media #news

  8. #Verizon has signed a commercial agreement with #ASTSpaceMobile to provide #satellitetophone connectivity starting next year. This solidifies their partnership, with Verizon committing $100 million and providing #AST with access to its radio spectrum. Verizon is betting on AST, which is still working to launch enough satellites. uk.pcmag.com/wireless-carriers #tech #media #news

  9. #Verizon has signed a commercial agreement with #ASTSpaceMobile to provide #satellitetophone connectivity starting next year. This solidifies their partnership, with Verizon committing $100 million and providing #AST with access to its radio spectrum. Verizon is betting on AST, which is still working to launch enough satellites. uk.pcmag.com/wireless-carriers #tech #media #news

  10. #Verizon has signed a commercial agreement with #ASTSpaceMobile to provide #satellitetophone connectivity starting next year. This solidifies their partnership, with Verizon committing $100 million and providing #AST with access to its radio spectrum. Verizon is betting on AST, which is still working to launch enough satellites. uk.pcmag.com/wireless-carriers #tech #media #news

  11. This week treated me to the very Washington experience of going to two different tech-policy events in the same room in the same large facility–the Ronald Reagan Building and International Trade Center, one of my more frequent conference settings in the District.

    Patreon subscribers got an extra post on Friday: more than a thousand words’ worth of outtakes from my early-August conversation with Boom Supersonic CEO Blake Scholl at Mojave Air & Space Port.

    9/24/2024: Internet Providers, Wi-Fi Router Vendors Can Now Ship Cloudflare’s DNS for Free, PCMag

    I have been writing about broadband outages caused by failures at an Internet provider’s domain-name-system servers for a very long time, so the relevance of Cloudflare’s pitch was immediately relevant to me.

    9/25/2024: White House 6G priorities: Openness and security, and the 6G part isn’t a prerequisite, Light Reading

    The first of two stories that I wrote for my telecom trade-pub client from the 6G Symposium in Washington covered a panel in which experts spoke at length about the risks of China steering the development of 6G while saying the word “China” much less often than I would have expected.

    9/26/2024: Could open RAN in orbit jumpstart the market for D2D services?, Light Reading

    I needed a little more time to write up this longer and more in-the-weeds panel about the state of satellite-hosted connectivity for phones and other devices.

    9/26/2024: NYC Mayor Adams’ Indictment Offers a Few Lessons in Smartphone Security, PCMag

    Before I could finish laughing at the fanboy-esque devotion to Turkish Airlines recounted in the indictment of Eric Adams, I also had to laugh at its depiction of the mayor’s fortuitous forgetfulness of of the smartphone passcode he had just changed from four to six digits.

    9/27/2024: X Blocks Links to Story on Leaked JD Vance Dossier, Suspends Author, PCMag

    One angle to this story that I should have noted: This purported research report on the Republican Party’s vice-presidential candidate that journalist Ken Klippenstein shared on his newsletter in unredacted form Thursday (before posting a redacted version on Friday in what he later described as a test of X’s rules) does not even mention Vance’s house in Alexandria, much less include its street address. That does not speak well of the effort put into this document, if it really was a product of the Trump campaign and not something forged by Iranian hackers.

    https://robpegoraro.com/2024/09/29/weekly-output-cloudflare-dns-white-house-6g-policy-satellite-to-phone-service-eric-adams-opsec-x-vs-jd-vance-dossier/

    #5G #6G #8888 #Cloudflare #DNS #ElonMuskTwitter #EricAdams #JDVanceDossier #KenKlippenstein #satelliteToPhone #TurkishAirlines

  12. This week treated me to the very Washington experience of going to two different tech-policy events in the same room in the same large facility–the Ronald Reagan Building and International Trade Center, one of my more frequent conference settings in the District.

    Patreon subscribers got an extra post on Friday: more than a thousand words’ worth of outtakes from my early-August conversation with Boom Supersonic CEO Blake Scholl at Mojave Air & Space Port.

    9/24/2024: Internet Providers, Wi-Fi Router Vendors Can Now Ship Cloudflare’s DNS for Free, PCMag

    I have been writing about broadband outages caused by failures at an Internet provider’s domain-name-system servers for a very long time, so the relevance of Cloudflare’s pitch was immediately relevant to me.

    9/25/2024: White House 6G priorities: Openness and security, and the 6G part isn’t a prerequisite, Light Reading

    The first of two stories that I wrote for my telecom trade-pub client from the 6G Symposium in Washington covered a panel in which experts spoke at length about the risks of China steering the development of 6G while saying the word “China” much less often than I would have expected.

    9/26/2024: Could open RAN in orbit jumpstart the market for D2D services?, Light Reading

    I needed a little more time to write up this longer and more in-the-weeds panel about the state of satellite-hosted connectivity for phones and other devices.

    9/26/2024: NYC Mayor Adams’ Indictment Offers a Few Lessons in Smartphone Security, PCMag

    Before I could finish laughing at the fanboy-esque devotion to Turkish Airlines recounted in the indictment of Eric Adams, I also had to laugh at its depiction of the mayor’s fortuitous forgetfulness of of the smartphone passcode he had just changed from four to six digits.

    9/27/2024: X Blocks Links to Story on Leaked JD Vance Dossier, Suspends Author, PCMag

    One angle to this story that I should have noted: This purported research report on the Republican Party’s vice-presidential candidate that journalist Ken Klippenstein shared on his newsletter in unredacted form Thursday (before posting a redacted version on Friday in what he later described as a test of X’s rules) does not even mention Vance’s house in Alexandria, much less include its street address. That does not speak well of the effort put into this document, if it really was a product of the Trump campaign and not something forged by Iranian hackers.

    https://robpegoraro.com/2024/09/29/weekly-output-cloudflare-dns-white-house-6g-policy-satellite-to-phone-service-eric-adams-opsec-x-vs-jd-vance-dossier/

    #5G #6G #8888 #Cloudflare #DNS #ElonMuskTwitter #EricAdams #JDVanceDossier #KenKlippenstein #satelliteToPhone #TurkishAirlines

  13. This week treated me to the very Washington experience of going to two different tech-policy events in the same room in the same large facility–the Ronald Reagan Building and International Trade Center, one of my more frequent conference settings in the District.

    Patreon subscribers got an extra post on Friday: more than a thousand words’ worth of outtakes from my early-August conversation with Boom Supersonic CEO Blake Scholl at Mojave Air & Space Port.

    9/24/2024: Internet Providers, Wi-Fi Router Vendors Can Now Ship Cloudflare’s DNS for Free, PCMag

    I have been writing about broadband outages caused by failures at an Internet provider’s domain-name-system servers for a very long time, so the relevance of Cloudflare’s pitch was immediately relevant to me.

    9/25/2024: White House 6G priorities: Openness and security, and the 6G part isn’t a prerequisite, Light Reading

    The first of two stories that I wrote for my telecom trade-pub client from the 6G Symposium in Washington covered a panel in which experts spoke at length about the risks of China steering the development of 6G while saying the word “China” much less often than I would have expected.

    9/26/2024: Could open RAN in orbit jumpstart the market for D2D services?, Light Reading

    I needed a little more time to write up this longer and more in-the-weeds panel about the state of satellite-hosted connectivity for phones and other devices.

    9/26/2024: NYC Mayor Adams’ Indictment Offers a Few Lessons in Smartphone Security, PCMag

    Before I could finish laughing at the fanboy-esque devotion to Turkish Airlines recounted in the indictment of Eric Adams, I also had to laugh at its depiction of the mayor’s fortuitous forgetfulness of of the smartphone passcode he had just changed from four to six digits.

    9/27/2024: X Blocks Links to Story on Leaked JD Vance Dossier, Suspends Author, PCMag

    One angle to this story that I should have noted: This purported research report on the Republican Party’s vice-presidential candidate that journalist Ken Klippenstein shared on his newsletter in unredacted form Thursday (before posting a redacted version on Friday in what he later described as a test of X’s rules) does not even mention Vance’s house in Alexandria, much less include its street address. That does not speak well of the effort put into this document, if it really was a product of the Trump campaign and not something forged by Iranian hackers.

    https://robpegoraro.com/2024/09/29/weekly-output-cloudflare-dns-white-house-6g-policy-satellite-to-phone-service-eric-adams-opsec-x-vs-jd-vance-dossier/

    #5G #6G #8888 #Cloudflare #DNS #ElonMuskTwitter #EricAdams #JDVanceDossier #KenKlippenstein #satelliteToPhone #TurkishAirlines

  14. Weekly output: Symbotic, Most Innovative Companies in robotics, Redwood Materials, Most Innovative Companies in manufacturing, Matter security label, SpaceX and Starship, AT&T and AST SpaceMobile, Android 15, Waymo, This Week in Tech

    If you’ve been wondering why it’s been so long since I last had a byline with Fast Company, here’s your answer: I’ve spent a non-trivial part of the last three months helping to put together the robotics and manufacturing parts of the publication’s Most Innovative Companies list.

    (In my nonexistent spare time, I also wrote a post for Patreon readers about my roadmap to getting our house off the methane gas grid–starting with the appliance that represents the smallest part of that fossil-fuel problem.)

    3/19/2024: How Symbotic is speeding up warehouse robots, even in the dark, Fast Company

    This piece profiles one of the finalists in the MIC robotics category–a warehouse-robot developer whose customers include Target and Walmart, and which the editors ranked number 34 among the 50 most innovative firms in the world.

    3/19/2024: The most innovative companies in robotics for 2024, Fast Company

    In addition to Symbotic, Doodle Labs, Agility Robotics, Locus RoboticsDusty Robotics, Gecko Robotics, Nearthlab, Opentrons, Stratom, and Teleo earned MIC nods and brief writeups from me.

    3/19/2024: Here’s how Redwood Materials is creating a circular economy for lithium-ion batteries, Fast Company

    Here, I took a closer look at the company that ranked 19th among the top 50, a startup moving to scale up EV battery recycling with some help from the government.

    3/19/2024: The most innovative companies in manufacturing for 2024, Fast Company

    Our other MIC nominees in this category: Group14 Technologies, Holcim (written by another Fast Co. contributor, Ted C. Fishman), Mighty Buildings, FormlabsNucor, Cellares, Doosan Bobcat, Pyrowave, and Timken.

    3/19/2024: Watch Out for This Blue Badge on the Next Smart Home Device You Buy, PCMag

    The organization behind the Matter connected-gadget standard are now moving to sync up their security efforts with government labeling programs.

    3/19/2024: SpaceX Expects Next Starship Launch in About 6 Weeks, PCMag

    SpaceX president and chief operating officer Gwynne Shotwell shared some news about the progress of the company’s Starship project and Starlink efforts during a panel at the Satellite 2024 show in D.C.

    3/22/2024: AT&T, AST SpaceMobile Promise ‘True Broadband’ From Satellite Phone Service, PCMag

    I filed a second piece from Satellite about AT&T’s plans to fill in dead zones using an upcoming constellation of low-Earth-orbit satellites operated by its partner AST SpaceMobile.

    3/22/2024: Android 15’s Second Developer Preview Augments Satellite Roaming, PCMag

    Space-based broadband showed up in my coverage a third time when Google announced a new set of features coming to the next version of Android that include software to report when your phone has switched to a satellite connection.

    3/22/2024: Waymo Wants You to Stop Worrying and Learn to Love the Robotaxi, PCMag

    Thursday, I had to rush from Satellite to a Waymo event–a good use case not for a driverless car but for a bikeshare ride–to catch a panel about road safety that I found unintentionally revealing.

    3/24/2024: This Week in Tech 972: Judicial Whimsy, TWiT.tv

    I showed up at this podcast for the first time since August and joined host Leo Laporte and two people whose expertise I’ve leaned on before in my stories–game developer and activist Brianna Wu and lawyer Cathy Gellis–to talk about the Department of Justice’s antitrust lawsuit against Apple, whether the government should ban business transactions with TikTok, Supreme Court cases involving social-media content moderation, and other recent tech-policy topics.

    #Android15 #ASTSpaceMobile #Matter #MIC #MostInnovativeCompanies #RedwoodMaterials #satelliteToPhone #smartHomeSecurity #SpaceXStarship #Starlink #Symbotic #ThisWeekInTech #TWiT #Waymo

  15. Weekly output: Symbotic, Most Innovative Companies in robotics, Redwood Materials, Most Innovative Companies in manufacturing, Matter security label, SpaceX and Starship, AT&T and AST SpaceMobile, Android 15, Waymo, This Week in Tech

    If you’ve been wondering why it’s been so long since I last had a byline with Fast Company, here’s your answer: I’ve spent a non-trivial part of the last three months helping to put together the robotics and manufacturing parts of the publication’s Most Innovative Companies list.

    (In my nonexistent spare time, I also wrote a post for Patreon readers about my roadmap to getting our house off the methane gas grid–starting with the appliance that represents the smallest part of that fossil-fuel problem.)

    3/19/2024: How Symbotic is speeding up warehouse robots, even in the dark, Fast Company

    This piece profiles one of the finalists in the MIC robotics category–a warehouse-robot developer whose customers include Target and Walmart, and which the editors ranked number 34 among the 50 most innovative firms in the world.

    3/19/2024: The most innovative companies in robotics for 2024, Fast Company

    In addition to Symbotic, Doodle Labs, Agility Robotics, Locus RoboticsDusty Robotics, Gecko Robotics, Nearthlab, Opentrons, Stratom, and Teleo earned MIC nods and brief writeups from me.

    3/19/2024: Here’s how Redwood Materials is creating a circular economy for lithium-ion batteries, Fast Company

    Here, I took a closer look at the company that ranked 19th among the top 50, a startup moving to scale up EV battery recycling with some help from the government.

    3/19/2024: The most innovative companies in manufacturing for 2024, Fast Company

    Our other MIC nominees in this category: Group14 Technologies, Holcim (written by another Fast Co. contributor, Ted C. Fishman), Mighty Buildings, FormlabsNucor, Cellares, Doosan Bobcat, Pyrowave, and Timken.

    3/19/2024: Watch Out for This Blue Badge on the Next Smart Home Device You Buy, PCMag

    The organization behind the Matter connected-gadget standard are now moving to sync up their security efforts with government labeling programs.

    3/19/2024: SpaceX Expects Next Starship Launch in About 6 Weeks, PCMag

    SpaceX president and chief operating officer Gwynne Shotwell shared some news about the progress of the company’s Starship project and Starlink efforts during a panel at the Satellite 2024 show in D.C.

    3/22/2024: AT&T, AST SpaceMobile Promise ‘True Broadband’ From Satellite Phone Service, PCMag

    I filed a second piece from Satellite about AT&T’s plans to fill in dead zones using an upcoming constellation of low-Earth-orbit satellites operated by its partner AST SpaceMobile.

    3/22/2024: Android 15’s Second Developer Preview Augments Satellite Roaming, PCMag

    Space-based broadband showed up in my coverage a third time when Google announced a new set of features coming to the next version of Android that include software to report when your phone has switched to a satellite connection.

    3/22/2024: Waymo Wants You to Stop Worrying and Learn to Love the Robotaxi, PCMag

    Thursday, I had to rush from Satellite to a Waymo event–a good use case not for a driverless car but for a bikeshare ride–to catch a panel about road safety that I found unintentionally revealing.

    3/24/2024: This Week in Tech 972: Judicial Whimsy, TWiT.tv

    I showed up at this podcast for the first time since August and joined host Leo Laporte and two people whose expertise I’ve leaned on before in my stories–game developer and activist Brianna Wu and lawyer Cathy Gellis–to talk about the Department of Justice’s antitrust lawsuit against Apple, whether the government should ban business transactions with TikTok, Supreme Court cases involving social-media content moderation, and other recent tech-policy topics.

    #Android15 #ASTSpaceMobile #Matter #MIC #MostInnovativeCompanies #RedwoodMaterials #satelliteToPhone #smartHomeSecurity #SpaceXStarship #Starlink #Symbotic #ThisWeekInTech #TWiT #Waymo

  16. Weekly output: Symbotic, Most Innovative Companies in robotics, Redwood Materials, Most Innovative Companies in manufacturing, Matter security label, SpaceX and Starship, AT&T and AST SpaceMobile, Android 15, Waymo, This Week in Tech

    If you’ve been wondering why it’s been so long since I last had a byline with Fast Company, here’s your answer: I’ve spent a non-trivial part of the last three months helping to put together the robotics and manufacturing parts of the publication’s Most Innovative Companies list.

    (In my nonexistent spare time, I also wrote a post for Patreon readers about my roadmap to getting our house off the methane gas grid–starting with the appliance that represents the smallest part of that fossil-fuel problem.)

    3/19/2024: How Symbotic is speeding up warehouse robots, even in the dark, Fast Company

    This piece profiles one of the finalists in the MIC robotics category–a warehouse-robot developer whose customers include Target and Walmart, and which the editors ranked number 34 among the 50 most innovative firms in the world.

    3/19/2024: The most innovative companies in robotics for 2024, Fast Company

    In addition to Symbotic, Doodle Labs, Agility Robotics, Locus RoboticsDusty Robotics, Gecko Robotics, Nearthlab, Opentrons, Stratom, and Teleo earned MIC nods and brief writeups from me.

    3/19/2024: Here’s how Redwood Materials is creating a circular economy for lithium-ion batteries, Fast Company

    Here, I took a closer look at the company that ranked 19th among the top 50, a startup moving to scale up EV battery recycling with some help from the government.

    3/19/2024: The most innovative companies in manufacturing for 2024, Fast Company

    Our other MIC nominees in this category: Group14 Technologies, Holcim (written by another Fast Co. contributor, Ted C. Fishman), Mighty Buildings, FormlabsNucor, Cellares, Doosan Bobcat, Pyrowave, and Timken.

    3/19/2024: Watch Out for This Blue Badge on the Next Smart Home Device You Buy, PCMag

    The organization behind the Matter connected-gadget standard are now moving to sync up their security efforts with government labeling programs.

    3/19/2024: SpaceX Expects Next Starship Launch in About 6 Weeks, PCMag

    SpaceX president and chief operating officer Gwynne Shotwell shared some news about the progress of the company’s Starship project and Starlink efforts during a panel at the Satellite 2024 show in D.C.

    3/22/2024: AT&T, AST SpaceMobile Promise ‘True Broadband’ From Satellite Phone Service, PCMag

    I filed a second piece from Satellite about AT&T’s plans to fill in dead zones using an upcoming constellation of low-Earth-orbit satellites operated by its partner AST SpaceMobile.

    3/22/2024: Android 15’s Second Developer Preview Augments Satellite Roaming, PCMag

    Space-based broadband showed up in my coverage a third time when Google announced a new set of features coming to the next version of Android that include software to report when your phone has switched to a satellite connection.

    3/22/2024: Waymo Wants You to Stop Worrying and Learn to Love the Robotaxi, PCMag

    Thursday, I had to rush from Satellite to a Waymo event–a good use case not for a driverless car but for a bikeshare ride–to catch a panel about road safety that I found unintentionally revealing.

    3/24/2024: This Week in Tech 972: Judicial Whimsy, TWiT.tv

    I showed up at this podcast for the first time since August and joined host Leo Laporte and two people whose expertise I’ve leaned on before in my stories–game developer and activist Brianna Wu and lawyer Cathy Gellis–to talk about the Department of Justice’s antitrust lawsuit against Apple, whether the government should ban business transactions with TikTok, Supreme Court cases involving social-media content moderation, and other recent tech-policy topics.

    #Android15 #ASTSpaceMobile #Matter #MIC #MostInnovativeCompanies #RedwoodMaterials #satelliteToPhone #smartHomeSecurity #SpaceXStarship #Starlink #Symbotic #ThisWeekInTech #TWiT #Waymo

  17. I have only two days this upcoming workweek that aren’t blocked off completely, Monday and Thursday. Tuesday I’ll be working the Virginia primary election (hard to believe it’s been almost four years since my first long day as a poll worker), Wednesday I’m covering the  ACA Connects telecom-industry conference, and Friday I fly to Austin for SXSW.

    In addition to the stories below, I wrote a bonus post for Patreon readers recapping some of the more interesting things I saw at MWC.

    2/26/2024: Google Brings Gemini to Messages App in AI-Flavored Android Feature Drop, PCMag

    The first story I filed from Barcelona is one that I could have written from home–Google PR gave me an embargoed copy of the announcement of these new features. But I did appreciate being able to try them out in person at Google’s MWC exhibit during a press breakfast Monday morning.

    2/25/2024: 2 Wheels, 3 Cameras, One 5G Radio: Orbic Debuts Connected E-Bike at MWC, PCMag

    Writing about a 5G-connected e-bike was not in any of my MWC plans, but the nice thing about large tech events like this is that they can serve up surprises that justify making your way to an exhibitor’s corner of the show floor.

    2/28/2024: Cyber diplomacy for the next era of connectivity, Compiler Pop-Up Series: The Barcelona Edition

    I moderated this panel discussion between a trio of diplomats–Steve Lang, the State Department’s deputy assistant secretary for international and communications policy, Vassiliki Gogou, a cybersecurity expert with the European Union Agency for Cybersecurity, and Maite Arcos, director general of the ESYS Foundation–at an event hosted by Compiler. That’s a new non-profit tech-policy publication supported by the Hewlett Foundation and founded by Mike Farrell, a longtime information-security journalist.

    2/28/2024: NTT Docomo ‘Feel Tech Animal’ Exhibit Had Me Walking a Virtual Dog, PCMag

    This virtual-reality demo was another thing not in my MWC plans until another attendee suggested I check it out.

    2/29/2024: Bluesky Adds Hashtag Support, Better Account Portability Than Mastodon, PCMag

    I saw the news about this on my way to the airport in Barcelona early Thursday morning, pitched a post about it in PCMag’s Slack workspace, and got a go-ahead from my editor before I’d cleared security in BCN. Then I wrote the post during my layover in Zurich.

    2/29/2024: At MWC, AT&T and AST execs talk up space-based possibilities, Light Reading

    The interviews for this piece happened Monday, but I didn’t finish writing it until Tuesday and then my overworked editor, also at MWC, needed a little more time to get this published. And then we had to correct it because I didn’t look close enough at the transcription of the interview provided by Google’s Live Transcribe app to notice that I’d jotted down a different number for the capacity of AST’s NextGen satellites in the notes I took on my laptop.

    3/1/2024: Facebook Finds New Way to Unfriend Publishers by Nixing News Tab, PCMag

    Writing this post became a little more fun when I realized that Facebook had not only gotten rid of the option to put the News tab among the basic shortcuts in its iPhone and iPad app, it had also left up old documentation that directs users to a nonexistent part of the settings interfaces on those apps.

    3/1/2024: Ep 96 SmartTechCheck Podcast MWC, Qualcomm FastConnect 7900, Apple kills car project, SCOTUS, Mark Vena

    I shared my impressions of MWC at my industry-analyst friend’s podcast in which we also discussed such recent tech plot twists as Apple closing down its car project and the Supreme Court taking up what strike me as flagrantly unconstitutional Florida and Texas laws that would compel social platforms to publish speech that they might find repulsive.

    https://robpegoraro.com/2024/03/03/weekly-output-android-feature-drop-5g-connected-e-bike-infosec-diplomacy-feel-tech-animal-demo-bluesky-supports-hashtags-att-and-ast-spacemobile-facebook-to-nix-news-tab-mark-vena-pod/

    #AndroidFeatureDrop #ASTSpaceMobile #ATT #Barcelona #BCN #Bluesky #cybersecurity #eBikes #FacebookNews #hashtags #infosec #MarkVena #MobileWorldCongress #MWC #NTN #satelliteToPhone #virtualReality #wireless

  18. I have only two days this upcoming workweek that aren’t blocked off completely, Monday and Thursday. Tuesday I’ll be working the Virginia primary election (hard to believe it’s been almost four years since my first long day as a poll worker), Wednesday I’m covering the  ACA Connects telecom-industry conference, and Friday I fly to Austin for SXSW.

    In addition to the stories below, I wrote a bonus post for Patreon readers recapping some of the more interesting things I saw at MWC.

    2/26/2024: Google Brings Gemini to Messages App in AI-Flavored Android Feature Drop, PCMag

    The first story I filed from Barcelona is one that I could have written from home–Google PR gave me an embargoed copy of the announcement of these new features. But I did appreciate being able to try them out in person at Google’s MWC exhibit during a press breakfast Monday morning.

    2/25/2024: 2 Wheels, 3 Cameras, One 5G Radio: Orbic Debuts Connected E-Bike at MWC, PCMag

    Writing about a 5G-connected e-bike was not in any of my MWC plans, but the nice thing about large tech events like this is that they can serve up surprises that justify making your way to an exhibitor’s corner of the show floor.

    2/28/2024: Cyber diplomacy for the next era of connectivity, Compiler Pop-Up Series: The Barcelona Edition

    I moderated this panel discussion between a trio of diplomats–Steve Lang, the State Department’s deputy assistant secretary for international and communications policy, Vassiliki Gogou, a cybersecurity expert with the European Union Agency for Cybersecurity, and Maite Arcos, director general of the ESYS Foundation–at an event hosted by Compiler. That’s a new non-profit tech-policy publication supported by the Hewlett Foundation and founded by Mike Farrell, a longtime information-security journalist.

    2/28/2024: NTT Docomo ‘Feel Tech Animal’ Exhibit Had Me Walking a Virtual Dog, PCMag

    This virtual-reality demo was another thing not in my MWC plans until another attendee suggested I check it out.

    2/29/2024: Bluesky Adds Hashtag Support, Better Account Portability Than Mastodon, PCMag

    I saw the news about this on my way to the airport in Barcelona early Thursday morning, pitched a post about it in PCMag’s Slack workspace, and got a go-ahead from my editor before I’d cleared security in BCN. Then I wrote the post during my layover in Zurich.

    2/29/2024: At MWC, AT&T and AST execs talk up space-based possibilities, Light Reading

    The interviews for this piece happened Monday, but I didn’t finish writing it until Tuesday and then my overworked editor, also at MWC, needed a little more time to get this published. And then we had to correct it because I didn’t look close enough at the transcription of the interview provided by Google’s Live Transcribe app to notice that I’d jotted down a different number for the capacity of AST’s NextGen satellites in the notes I took on my laptop.

    3/1/2024: Facebook Finds New Way to Unfriend Publishers by Nixing News Tab, PCMag

    Writing this post became a little more fun when I realized that Facebook had not only gotten rid of the option to put the News tab among the basic shortcuts in its iPhone and iPad app, it had also left up old documentation that directs users to a nonexistent part of the settings interfaces on those apps.

    3/1/2024: Ep 96 SmartTechCheck Podcast MWC, Qualcomm FastConnect 7900, Apple kills car project, SCOTUS, Mark Vena

    I shared my impressions of MWC at my industry-analyst friend’s podcast in which we also discussed such recent tech plot twists as Apple closing down its car project and the Supreme Court taking up what strike me as flagrantly unconstitutional Florida and Texas laws that would compel social platforms to publish speech that they might find repulsive.

    https://robpegoraro.com/2024/03/03/weekly-output-android-feature-drop-5g-connected-e-bike-infosec-diplomacy-feel-tech-animal-demo-bluesky-supports-hashtags-att-and-ast-spacemobile-facebook-to-nix-news-tab-mark-vena-pod/

    #AndroidFeatureDrop #ASTSpaceMobile #ATT #Barcelona #BCN #Bluesky #cybersecurity #eBikes #FacebookNews #hashtags #infosec #MarkVena #MobileWorldCongress #MWC #NTN #satelliteToPhone #virtualReality #wireless

  19. I have only two days this upcoming workweek that aren’t blocked off completely, Monday and Thursday. Tuesday I’ll be working the Virginia primary election (hard to believe it’s been almost four years since my first long day as a poll worker), Wednesday I’m covering the  ACA Connects telecom-industry conference, and Friday I fly to Austin for SXSW.

    In addition to the stories below, I wrote a bonus post for Patreon readers recapping some of the more interesting things I saw at MWC.

    2/26/2024: Google Brings Gemini to Messages App in AI-Flavored Android Feature Drop, PCMag

    The first story I filed from Barcelona is one that I could have written from home–Google PR gave me an embargoed copy of the announcement of these new features. But I did appreciate being able to try them out in person at Google’s MWC exhibit during a press breakfast Monday morning.

    2/25/2024: 2 Wheels, 3 Cameras, One 5G Radio: Orbic Debuts Connected E-Bike at MWC, PCMag

    Writing about a 5G-connected e-bike was not in any of my MWC plans, but the nice thing about large tech events like this is that they can serve up surprises that justify making your way to an exhibitor’s corner of the show floor.

    2/28/2024: Cyber diplomacy for the next era of connectivity, Compiler Pop-Up Series: The Barcelona Edition

    I moderated this panel discussion between a trio of diplomats–Steve Lang, the State Department’s deputy assistant secretary for international and communications policy, Vassiliki Gogou, a cybersecurity expert with the European Union Agency for Cybersecurity, and Maite Arcos, director general of the ESYS Foundation–at an event hosted by Compiler. That’s a new non-profit tech-policy publication supported by the Hewlett Foundation and founded by Mike Farrell, a longtime information-security journalist.

    2/28/2024: NTT Docomo ‘Feel Tech Animal’ Exhibit Had Me Walking a Virtual Dog, PCMag

    This virtual-reality demo was another thing not in my MWC plans until another attendee suggested I check it out.

    2/29/2024: Bluesky Adds Hashtag Support, Better Account Portability Than Mastodon, PCMag

    I saw the news about this on my way to the airport in Barcelona early Thursday morning, pitched a post about it in PCMag’s Slack workspace, and got a go-ahead from my editor before I’d cleared security in BCN. Then I wrote the post during my layover in Zurich.

    2/29/2024: At MWC, AT&T and AST execs talk up space-based possibilities, Light Reading

    The interviews for this piece happened Monday, but I didn’t finish writing it until Tuesday and then my overworked editor, also at MWC, needed a little more time to get this published. And then we had to correct it because I didn’t look close enough at the transcription of the interview provided by Google’s Live Transcribe app to notice that I’d jotted down a different number for the capacity of AST’s NextGen satellites in the notes I took on my laptop.

    3/1/2024: Facebook Finds New Way to Unfriend Publishers by Nixing News Tab, PCMag

    Writing this post became a little more fun when I realized that Facebook had not only gotten rid of the option to put the News tab among the basic shortcuts in its iPhone and iPad app, it had also left up old documentation that directs users to a nonexistent part of the settings interfaces on those apps.

    3/1/2024: Ep 96 SmartTechCheck Podcast MWC, Qualcomm FastConnect 7900, Apple kills car project, SCOTUS, Mark Vena

    I shared my impressions of MWC at my industry-analyst friend’s podcast in which we also discussed such recent tech plot twists as Apple closing down its car project and the Supreme Court taking up what strike me as flagrantly unconstitutional Florida and Texas laws that would compel social platforms to publish speech that they might find repulsive.

    https://robpegoraro.com/2024/03/03/weekly-output-android-feature-drop-5g-connected-e-bike-infosec-diplomacy-feel-tech-animal-demo-bluesky-supports-hashtags-att-and-ast-spacemobile-facebook-to-nix-news-tab-mark-vena-pod/

    #AndroidFeatureDrop #ASTSpaceMobile #ATT #Barcelona #BCN #Bluesky #cybersecurity #eBikes #FacebookNews #hashtags #infosec #MarkVena #MobileWorldCongress #MWC #NTN #satelliteToPhone #virtualReality #wireless

  20. I have only two days this upcoming workweek that aren’t blocked off completely, Monday and Thursday. Tuesday I’ll be working the Virginia primary election (hard to believe it’s been almost four years since my first long day as a poll worker), Wednesday I’m covering the  ACA Connects telecom-industry conference, and Friday I fly to Austin for SXSW.

    In addition to the stories below, I wrote a bonus post for Patreon readers recapping some of the more interesting things I saw at MWC.

    2/26/2024: Google Brings Gemini to Messages App in AI-Flavored Android Feature Drop, PCMag

    The first story I filed from Barcelona is one that I could have written from home–Google PR gave me an embargoed copy of the announcement of these new features. But I did appreciate being able to try them out in person at Google’s MWC exhibit during a press breakfast Monday morning.

    2/25/2024: 2 Wheels, 3 Cameras, One 5G Radio: Orbic Debuts Connected E-Bike at MWC, PCMag

    Writing about a 5G-connected e-bike was not in any of my MWC plans, but the nice thing about large tech events like this is that they can serve up surprises that justify making your way to an exhibitor’s corner of the show floor.

    2/28/2024: Cyber diplomacy for the next era of connectivity, Compiler Pop-Up Series: The Barcelona Edition

    I moderated this panel discussion between a trio of diplomats–Steve Lang, the State Department’s deputy assistant secretary for international and communications policy, Vassiliki Gogou, a cybersecurity expert with the European Union Agency for Cybersecurity, and Maite Arcos, director general of the ESYS Foundation–at an event hosted by Compiler. That’s a new non-profit tech-policy publication supported by the Hewlett Foundation and founded by Mike Farrell, a longtime information-security journalist.

    2/28/2024: NTT Docomo ‘Feel Tech Animal’ Exhibit Had Me Walking a Virtual Dog, PCMag

    This virtual-reality demo was another thing not in my MWC plans until another attendee suggested I check it out.

    2/29/2024: Bluesky Adds Hashtag Support, Better Account Portability Than Mastodon, PCMag

    I saw the news about this on my way to the airport in Barcelona early Thursday morning, pitched a post about it in PCMag’s Slack workspace, and got a go-ahead from my editor before I’d cleared security in BCN. Then I wrote the post during my layover in Zurich.

    2/29/2024: At MWC, AT&T and AST execs talk up space-based possibilities, Light Reading

    The interviews for this piece happened Monday, but I didn’t finish writing it until Tuesday and then my overworked editor, also at MWC, needed a little more time to get this published. And then we had to correct it because I didn’t look close enough at the transcription of the interview provided by Google’s Live Transcribe app to notice that I’d jotted down a different number for the capacity of AST’s NextGen satellites in the notes I took on my laptop.

    3/1/2024: Facebook Finds New Way to Unfriend Publishers by Nixing News Tab, PCMag

    Writing this post became a little more fun when I realized that Facebook had not only gotten rid of the option to put the News tab among the basic shortcuts in its iPhone and iPad app, it had also left up old documentation that directs users to a nonexistent part of the settings interfaces on those apps.

    3/1/2024: Ep 96 SmartTechCheck Podcast MWC, Qualcomm FastConnect 7900, Apple kills car project, SCOTUS, Mark Vena

    I shared my impressions of MWC at my industry-analyst friend’s podcast in which we also discussed such recent tech plot twists as Apple closing down its car project and the Supreme Court taking up what strike me as flagrantly unconstitutional Florida and Texas laws that would compel social platforms to publish speech that they might find repulsive.

    https://robpegoraro.com/2024/03/03/weekly-output-android-feature-drop-5g-connected-e-bike-infosec-diplomacy-feel-tech-animal-demo-bluesky-supports-hashtags-att-and-ast-spacemobile-facebook-to-nix-news-tab-mark-vena-pod/

    #AndroidFeatureDrop #ASTSpaceMobile #ATT #Barcelona #BCN #Bluesky #cybersecurity #eBikes #FacebookNews #hashtags #infosec #MarkVena #MobileWorldCongress #MWC #NTN #satelliteToPhone #virtualReality #wireless