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Light Reading met up with Verizon's Vivencio Luna, Associate Director of Network Performance, on site at Allegiant Stadium for a behind-the-scenes tour of the network infrastructure Verizon has deployed ahead of Super Bowl LVIII. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Three podcast hosts join forces in a single show to discuss the latest in experience design. It's a fast-paced three-way session covering half a dozen broad themes, and countless smaller ones. What are we hearing out there? How can we apply it to the work of cultural institutions? Is the biggest creative trend of them all the resurgence of … empathy? Jonathan Alger (Managing Partner, C&G Partners) is joined by the co-hosts of “Matters of Experience,” Brenda Cowan (Professor at SUNY FIT) and Abigail Honor (Founding Partner of Lorem Ipsum Corp) — who share what they've learned so far from their own podcast about experience design. Along the way: a mystery visit, disagreeing with yourself, and cocktails in the arms and armor gallery. In case anyone's keeping track, this is a podcast about a podcast. (And it would probably be easier to summarize what we didn't discuss than what we did.)Talking Points:1. Breaking Down The Silos (The purpose of “Matters of Experience”)2. Cross Pollination (The people we interview)3. Immersion, AI, and Empathy (The trends we are finding)4. Experience Designers at the Table (It's not all about architecture)5. Collections, Repatriation and Provocation (What is happening with objects)6. Being Playful, Seeing the Larger Context, and Owning It (Takeaways for listeners)Guest Bios:Abigail Honor, co-host of the podcast “Matters of Experience”, is a founding partner of Lorem Ipsum Corp. She is a curator and experience designer of award-winning exhibits such as The Warmth of Yamal, Zoya Museum and Zaradye Park and has worked with world-renowned international museums and foundations, including, the Smithsonian Museum and the V-A-C Foundation. Abigail has partnered with corporations including Verizon 5G, Google, and Snapchat and has spoken at global conferences like the Society for Experiential Graphic Design, MuseumNext, and the National Taiwan Museum of Fine Arts about museum design, visitor experience, and multimedia. Abigail graduated from Boston University with an MFA in film production.Brenda Cowan, co-host of the podcast “Matters of Experience”, is a Professor and former Chairperson of Graduate Exhibition & Experience Design at the SUNY/Fashion Institute of Technology in New York where she teaches exhibition development and evaluation; object and museum studies; research methodologies and audience studies. Her background includes work for museums and design firms in education, exhibition development, and research. Brenda is a Fulbright Specialist in the disciplines of museums, objects and mental health. Her research work with museum objects, mental health and healing has been presented for the American Alliance of Museums; Museums of Hope; MidAtlantic Association of Museums; Sweden's National Museums of World Culture; CoMuseum Athens; the American Association of State and Local History Leadership Institute; and published with Routledge, Taylor & Francis, the National Association for Museum Exhibition, and the Society for Experiential Graphic Design. About:Making the Museum is hosted (podcast) and written (newsletter) by Jonathan Alger. This podcast is a project of C&G Partners | Design for Culture. Learn about the firm's creative work at: https://www.cgpartnersllc.comShow Links:Podcast: Matters of Experience https://loremipsumcorp.com/matters-of-experience/Abby via LinkedIn:https://www.linkedin.com/in/abigailhonor/Abby at Lorem Ipsum:https://www.loremipsumcorp.comBrenda via LinkedIn:https://www.linkedin.com/in/brenda-cowan-01bb94140/Brenda / Museums, Health, and Wellbeing: Museum Projectshttps://www.psychotherapeuticobjectdynamics.com/for-the-museum-communityBrenda / New Book: Museum Objects, Health and Healinghttps://www.routledge.com/Museum-Objects-Health-and-Healing-The-Relationship-between-Exhibitions/Cowan-Laird-McKeown/p/book/9781138606203Brenda / Research: Psychotherapeutic Object Dynamicswww.psychotherapeuticobjectdynamics.comShow Contact:https://www.makingthemuseum.com/contacthttps://www.linkedin.com/in/jonathanalgeralger@cgpartnersllc.comhttps://www.cgpartnersllc.comNewsletter:Like the episode? Subscribe to the newsletter! (It's the best way to know when a new podcast episode goes live.) Making the Museum is also a very short daily newsletter on exhibition planning for museum leaders, exhibition teams and visitor experience professionals. Subscribe here:https://www.makingthemuseum.com
It's time for episode 317 of the Mobile Tech Podcast with guest Rita El Khoury of Android Authority -- brought to you by Mint Mobile. In this episode, we share our thoughts on generative AI and the Xiaomi 13 Ultra teaser, then review the ShiftCam SnapGrip and OnePlus Nord Buds 2. We also discuss new phones from ZTE and Moto, and cover news, leaks, and rumors from Samsung, Vivo, Apple, and Verizon... Phew!Episode Links- Support the podcast on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/tnkgrl- Donate: https://tnkgrl.com/tnkgrl/- Support the podcast with Mint Mobile: https://mintmobile.com/mobiletech- Rita El Khoury: https://twitter.com/khouryrt- Rita's generative AI article: https://www.androidauthority.com/not-ready-for-ai-3303341/- Rita's ShiftCam SnapGrip review: https://www.androidauthority.com/shiftcam-snap grip-magsafe-grip-review-3285696/- Xiaomi 13 Ultra teaser: https://www.androidauthority.com/xiaomi-13-ultra-launch-date-3309503/- ZTE Axon 50 Ultra: https://www.gsmarena.com/zte_axon_50_ultra_price_availability-news-58226.php- Moto G Power 5G: https://www.gsmarena.com/motorola_moto_g_power_5g_debuts_with_120hz_lcd_and_dimensity_930_chipset-news-58156.php- Samsung Galaxy Z Flip5 large cover screen rumor: https://www.sammobile.com/news/galaxy-z-flip-5-bigger-cover-screen-confirmed-mockup/- Vivo X Fold 2 and X Flip leak: https://9to5google.com/2023/04/10/vivo-x-fold-2-flip-leaks/- Apple AirPods case with touchscreen patent: https://www.macrumors.com/2023/04/03/apple-airpods-case-with-touchscreen/- OnePlus Nord Buds 2 review: https://www.xda-developers.com/oneplus-nord-buds-2-review/- Verizon 5G private networks: https://www.fiercewireless.com/5g/verizon-launches-private-5g-for-enterprise-public-sector
If artificial intelligence disrupts search, will it disrupt the search business model as well?This episode is sponsored by Nexo.io, Circle, Kraken and the Galaxy Brains Podcast.On this week's “Long Reads Sunday,” NLW reads:“Starlink, Verizon 5G and Crypto: What the New ‘War of the Currents' Means for Decentralization” by Tim Kravchunovsky“ChatGPT Will Kill Search and Open a Path to Web3” by Michael J. Casey -Nexo is a security-first platform where you can buy, exchange and borrow against your crypto. The company ensures the safety of your funds and keeps innovating with products like the Nexo Wallet - a non-custodial smart wallet that allows you to create your Web3 identity. Get early access at nexo.io/wallet.-Circle, the sole issuer of the trusted and reliable stablecoin USDC, is our sponsor for today's show. USDC is a fast, cost-effective solution for global payments at internet speeds. Learn how businesses are taking advantage of these opportunities at Circle's USDC Hub for Businesses.-Kraken, the secure, trusted digital asset exchange, is our sponsor for today's show. Kraken makes it easy to instantly buy 185+ cryptocurrencies with fast, flexible funding options. Your account is covered by regular Proof of Reserves audits, industry-leading security and award-winning Client Engagement, available 24/7. Sign up and trade today at kraken.com/breakdown.-Galaxy Brains: Whether it's breaking down market volatility or analyzing the latest development, come for the latest market insights from our in-house trading professionals and renowned experts from across the industry. Stay for the occasional rap from host Alex Thorn. Check out the latest episodes here: https://www.galaxy.com/research/podcasts/galaxy-brains/?utm_source=BD&utm_medium=podcast&utm_id=CoinDesk-“The Breakdown” is written, produced by and features Nathaniel Whittemore aka NLW, with editing by Rob Mitchell and research by Scott Hill. Jared Schwartz is our executive producer and our theme music is “Countdown” by Neon Beach. Music behind our sponsors today is “Back To The End” by Strength To Last. Image credit: Malte Mueller/Getty Images, modified by CoinDesk. Join the discussion at discord.gg/VrKRrfKCz8.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
This episode is sponsored by Nexo.io, Circle, Kraken and the Galaxy Brains Podcast. On this week's “Long Reads Sunday,” NLW reads:“Starlink, Verizon 5G and Crypto: What the New ‘War of the Currents' Means for Decentralization” by Tim Kravchunovsky “ChatGPT Will Kill Search and Open a Path to Web3” by Michael J. Casey - Nexo is a security-first platform where you can buy, exchange and borrow against your crypto. The company ensures the safety of your funds and keeps innovating with products like the Nexo Wallet - a non-custodial smart wallet that allows you to create your Web3 identity. Get early access at nexo.io/wallet. - Circle, the sole issuer of the trusted and reliable stablecoin USDC, is our sponsor for today's show. USDC is a fast, cost-effective solution for global payments at internet speeds. Learn how businesses are taking advantage of these opportunities at Circle's USDC Hub for Businesses. - Kraken, the secure, trusted digital asset exchange, is our sponsor for today's show. Kraken makes it easy to instantly buy 185+ cryptocurrencies with fast, flexible funding options. Your account is covered by regular Proof of Reserves audits, industry-leading security and award-winning Client Engagement, available 24/7. Sign up and trade today at kraken.com/breakdown. - Galaxy Brains: Whether it's breaking down market volatility or analyzing the latest development, come for the latest market insights from our in-house trading professionals and renowned experts from across the industry. Stay for the occasional rap from host Alex Thorn. Check out the latest episodes here: https://www.galaxy.com/research/podcasts/galaxy-brains/?utm_source=BD&utm_medium=podcast&utm_id=CoinDesk - “The Breakdown” is written, produced by and features Nathaniel Whittemore aka NLW, with editing by Rob Mitchell and research by Scott Hill. Jared Schwartz is our executive producer and our theme music is “Countdown” by Neon Beach. Music behind our sponsors today is “Back To The End” by Strength To Last. Image credit: Malte Mueller/Getty Images, modified by CoinDesk. Join the discussion at discord.gg/VrKRrfKCz8.
Andrea Caldini, VP of network engineering at Verizon, has seen a lot of wireless technology evolution during her 20 years at the telecom giant. This includes that carrier's initial 3G launch based on CDMA technology, its radical move to 4G LTE more than a decade ago, and its more recent push into 5G. “I remember at some point thinking 64 kb/s was really fast,” Caldini joked during an interview with SDxCentral. Caldini cited Verizon's early 5G work, including its early work toward 5G standards that were initially outside of the normal standards bodies. Verizon has also been able to inject a lot more spectrum into its 5G services based on that technology standards ability to support larger “chunks” of spectrum. Caldini cited the carrier's extensive millimeter wave (mmWave) spectrum holdings that support significant capacity and its ongoing deployment of its C-Band spectrum that is providing a broader reach. As part of that push, Verizon itself has been able to expand those network updates broadly across the organization, including into its Verizon Business Group. That group has been a driver of Verizon's recent business operations. Verizon 5G and the Private, MEC Space That work has also begun to spread more into the private 5G space, which Caldini said is a “huge opportunity here,” and the is “a gateway into mobile edge compute.” Verizon's MEC efforts include agreements with all three major hyperscalers – Amazon Web Services (AWS), Microsoft Azure, and Google Cloud Platform (GCP) – to provide optionality to enterprises. This allows the carrier to support two deployment models: private MEC and public MEC. The private MEC path involves an on-premises device deployment that allows an enterprise to maintain total control over its data. The carrier runs this on top of its agreement with AWS, Microsoft, and GCP. The public MEC work taps into nearly 20 locations where Verizon is collocated with the hyperscalers. This model is one Verizon executives have previously stated provide a connection point to within 150 miles of most enterprises. “As you're creating these solutions, you're looking to have your workloads closer, so you might have a low-latency need and need to have that workload closer,” Caldini said, adding that this private and public MEC integration then allows an enterprise to adjust where they want to run applications and still have it all under strict control. “They all come together as you create these new services to support a business need.” Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
On this very disconnected episode of One and Done TV, Ian and John join the waiting room for the 2020 NBC/Peacock Zoom comedy Connecting… starring Keith Powell and Otmara Marrero! A group of friends stay in touch via video chat through the depths of the COVID-19 pandemic, airing their grievances and keeping up to date on what's happening in society and in their lives during lockdown. Ian remembers working with Shakina Nayfack on Difficult People. John once again urges Ian (and the listeners) to watch Inside by Bo Burnham! The hosts discuss Peacock's cut-for-tv Harry Potter films, the difficulties of shooting a show over Zoom, and disagree on the worst one and done show they've reviewed thus far! Plus - Ian and John agree that no one needs another reminder of the trials and tribulations that 2020 unthoughtfully bestowed upon us all. Don't forget to eat Cool Ranch Doritos while you switch over to Verizon 5G!Logo by Hannah Bess RossMusic by Adam BarnettAudio Editing by John PoelkingCreated/Produced by Ian Hamilton & John PoelkingFollow Us on Twitter and Instagram @oneanddonetvEmail us oneanddonepod@gmail.comWebsite us @ oneanddonetv.comBrought to you by Lack of Hustle Media
In this video, we will discuss the top Metaverse crypto coins. We'll take a look at NFTs & Digital Real Estate floor prices, play to earn games and the latest Web3 news. **Metaverse Headlines** **1** METAVERSE IS BECOMING A ‘MULTIPERSONALITY' HUB! GOOD IS BAD HERE **2** Metaverse: Virtual reality tech 'still clunky,' **3** Verizon, Meta strike deal to explore 5G metaverse
About ChrisChris Short has been a proponent of open source solutions throughout his over two decades in various IT disciplines, including systems, security, networks, DevOps management, and cloud native advocacy across the public and private sectors. He currently works on the Kubernetes team at Amazon Web Services and is an active Kubernetes contributor and Co-chair of OpenGitOps. Chris is a disabled US Air Force veteran living with his wife and son in Greater Metro Detroit. Chris writes about Cloud Native, DevOps, and other topics at ChrisShort.net. He also runs the Cloud Native, DevOps, GitOps, Open Source, industry news, and culture focused newsletter DevOps'ish.Links Referenced: DevOps'ish: https://devopsish.com/ EKS News: https://eks.news/ Containers from the Couch: https://containersfromthecouch.com opengitops.dev: https://opengitops.dev ChrisShort.net: https://chrisshort.net Twitter: https://twitter.com/ChrisShort TranscriptAnnouncer: Hello, and welcome to Screaming in the Cloud with your host, Chief Cloud Economist at The Duckbill Group, Corey Quinn. This weekly show features conversations with people doing interesting work in the world of cloud, thoughtful commentary on the state of the technical world, and ridiculous titles for which Corey refuses to apologize. This is Screaming in the Cloud.Corey: Welcome to Screaming in the Cloud. I'm Corey Quinn. Coming back to us since episode two—it's always nice to go back and see the where are they now type of approach—I am joined by Senior Developer Advocate at AWS Chris Short. Chris, been a few years. How has it been?Chris: Ha. Corey, we have talked outside of the podcast. But it's been good. For those that have been listening, I think when we recorded I wasn't even—like, when was season two, what year was that? [laugh].Corey: Episode two was first pre-pandemic and the rest. I believe—Chris: Oh. So, yeah. I was at Red Hat, maybe, when I—yeah.Corey: Yeah. You were doing Red Hat stuff, back when you got to work on open-source stuff, as opposed to now, where you're not within 1000 miles of that stuff, right?Chris: Actually well, no. So, to be clear, I'm on the EKS team, the Kubernetes team here at AWS. So, when I joined AWS in October, they were like, “Hey, you do open-source stuff. We like that. Do more.” And I was like, “Oh, wait, do more?” And they were like, “Yes, do more.” “Okay.”So, since joining AWS, I've probably done more open-source work than the three years at Red Hat that I did. So, that's kind of—you know, like, it's an interesting point when I talk to people about it because the first couple months are, like—you know, my friends are like, “So, are you liking it? Are you enjoying it? What's going on?” And—Corey: Do they beat you with reeds? Like, all the questions people have about companies? Because—Chris: Right. Like, I get a lot of random questions about Amazon and AWS that I don't know the answer to.Corey: Oh, when I started telling people, I fixed Amazon bills, I had to quickly pivot that to AWS bills because people started asking me, “Well, can you save me money on underpants?” It's I—Chris: Yeah.Corey: How do you—fine. Get the prime credit card. It docks 5% off the bill, so there you go. But other than that, no, I can't.Chris: No.Corey: It's—Chris: Like, I had to call my bank this morning about a transaction that I didn't recognize, and it was from Amazon. And I was like, that's weird. Why would that—Corey: Money just flows one direction, and that's the wrong direction from my employer.Chris: Yeah. Like, what is going on here? It shouldn't have been on that card kind of thing. And I had to explain to the person on the phone that I do work at Amazon but under the Web Services team. And he was like, “Oh, so you're in IT?”And I'm like, “No.” [laugh]. “It's actually this big company. That—it's a cloud company.” And they're like, “Oh, okay, okay. Yeah. The cloud. Got it.” [laugh]. So, it's interesting talking to people about, “I work at Amazon.” “Oh, my son works at Amazon distribution center,” blah, blah, blah. It's like, cool. “I know about that, but very little. I do this.”Corey: Your son works in Amazon distribution center. Is he a robot? Is normally my next question on that? Yeah. That's neither here nor there.So, you and I started talking a while back. We both write newsletters that go to a somewhat similar audience. You write DevOps'ish. I write Last Week in AWS. And recently, you also have started EKS News because, yeah, the one thing I look at when I'm doing these newsletters every week is, you know what I want to do? That's right. Write more newsletters.Chris: [laugh].Corey: So, you are just a glutton for punishment? And, yeah, welcome to the addiction, I suppose. How's it been going for you?Chris: It's actually been pretty interesting, right? Like, we haven't pushed it very hard. We're now starting to include it in things. Like we did Container Day; we made sure that EKS news was on the landing page for Container Day at KubeCon EU. And you know, it's kind of just grown organically since then.But it was one of those things where it's like, internally—this happened at Red Hat, right—when I started live streaming at Red Hat, the ultimate goal was to do our product management—like, here's what's new in the next version thing—do those live so anybody can see that at any point in time anywhere on Earth, the second it's available. Similar situation to here. This newsletter actually is generated as part of a report my boss puts together to brief our other DAs—or developer advocates—you know, our solutions architects, the whole nine yards about new EKS features. So, I was like, why can't we just flip that into a weekly newsletter, you know? Like, I can pull from the same sources you can.And what's interesting is, he only does the meeting bi-weekly. So, there's some weeks where it's just all me doing it and he ends up just kind of copying and pasting the newsletter into his document, [laugh] and then adds on for the week. But that report meeting for that team is now getting disseminated to essentially anyone that subscribes to eks.news. Just go to the site, there's a subscribe thing right there. And we've gotten 20 issues in and it's gotten rave reviews, right?Corey: I have been a subscriber for a while. I will say that it has less Chris Short personality—Chris: Mm-hm.Corey: —to it than DevOps'ish does, which I have to assume is by design. A lot of The Duckbill Group's marketing these days is no longer in my voice, rather intentionally, because it turns out that being a sarcastic jackass and doing half-billion dollar AWS contracts can not to be the most congruent thing in the world. So okay, we're slowly ameliorating that. It's professional voice versus snarky voice.Chris: Well, and here's the thing, right? Like, I realized this year with DevOps'ish that, like, if I want to take a week off, I have to do, like, what you did when your child was born. You hired folks to like, do the newsletter for you, or I actually don't do the newsletter, right? It's binary: hire someone else to do it, or don't do it. So, the way I structured this newsletter was that any developer advocate on my team could jump in and take over the newsletter so that, you know, if I'm off that week, or whatever may be happening, I, Chris Short, am not the voice. It is now the entire developer advocate team.Corey: I will challenge you on that a bit. Because it's not Chris Short voice, that's for sure, but it's also not official AWS brand voice either.Chris: No.Corey: It is clearly written by a human being who is used to communicating with the audience for whom it is written. And that is no small thing. Normally, when oh, there's a corporate newsletter; that's just a lot of words to say it's bad. This one is good. I want to be very clear on that.Chris: Yeah, I mean, we have just, like, DevOps'ish, we have sections, just like your newsletter, there's certain sections, so any new, what's new announcements, those go in automatically. So, like, that can get delivered to your inbox every Friday. Same thing with new blog posts about anything containers related to EKS, those will be in there, then Containers from the Couch, our streaming platform, essentially, for all things Kubernetes. Those videos go in.And then there's some ecosystem news as well that I collect and put in the newsletter to give people a broader sense of what's going on out there in Kubernetes-land because let's face it, there's upstream and then there's downstream, and sometimes those aren't in sync, and that's normal. That's how Kubernetes kind of works sometimes. If you're running upstream Kubernetes, you are awesome. I appreciate you, but I feel like that would cause more problems and it's worse sometimes.Corey: Thank you for being the trailblazers. The rest of us can learn from your misfortune.Chris: [laugh]. Yeah, exactly. Right? Like, please file your bugs accordingly. [laugh].Corey: EKS is interesting to me because I don't see a lot of it, which is, probably, going to get a whole lot of, “Wait, what?” Moments because wait, don't you deal with very large AWS bills? And I do. But what I mean by that is that EKS, until you're using its Fargate expression, charges for the control plane, which rounds to no money, and the rest is running on EC2 instances running in a company's account. From the billing perspective, there is no difference between, “We're running massive fleets of EKS nodes.” And, “We're managing a whole bunch of EC2 instances by hand.”And that feels like an interesting allegory for how Kubernetes winds up expressing itself to cloud providers. Because from a billing perspective, it just looks like one big single-tenant application that has some really strange behaviors internally. It gets very chatty across AZs when there's no reason to, and whatnot. And it becomes a very interesting study in how to expose aspects of what's going on inside of those containers and inside of the Kubernetes environment to the cloud provider in a way that becomes actionable. There are no good answers for this yet, but it's something I've been seeing a lot of. Like, “Oh, I thought you'd be running Kubernetes. Oh, wait, you are and I just keep forgetting what I'm looking at sometimes.”Chris: So, that's an interesting point. The billing is kind of like, yeah, it's just compute, right? So—Corey: And my insight into AWS and the way I start thinking about it is always from a billing perspective. That's great. It's because that means the more expensive the services, the more I know about it. It's like, “IAM. What is that?” Like, “Oh, I have no idea. It's free. How important could it be?” Professional advice: do not take that philosophy, ever.Chris: [laugh]. No. Ever. No.Corey: Security: it matters. Oh, my God. It's like you're all stars. Your IAM policy should not be. I digress.Chris: Right. Yeah. Anyways, so two points I want to make real quick on that is, one, we've recently released an open-source project called Carpenter, which is really cool in my purview because it looks at your Kubernetes file and says, “Oh, you want this to run on ARM instance.” And you can even go so far as to say, right, here's my limits, and it'll find an instance that fits those limits and add that to your cluster automatically. Run your pod on that compute as long as it needs to run and then if it's done, it'll downsize—eventually, kind of thing—your cluster.So, you can basically just throw a bunch of workloads at it, and it'll auto-detect what kind of compute you will need and then provision it for you, run it, and then be done. So, that is one-way folks are probably starting to save money running EKS is to adopt Carpenter as your autoscaler as opposed to the inbuilt Kubernetes autoscaler. Because this is instance-aware, essentially, so it can say, like, “Oh, your massive ARM application can run here,” because you know, thank you, Graviton. We have those processors in-house. And you know, you can run your ARM64 instances, you can run all the Intel workloads you want, and it'll right size the compute for your workloads.And I'll look at one container or all your containers, however you want to configure it. Secondly, the good folks over at Kubecost have opencost, which is the open-source version of Kubecost, basically. So, they have a service that you can run in your clusters that will help you say, “Hey, maybe this one notes too heavy; maybe this one notes too light,” and you know, give you some insights into Kubernetes spend that are a little bit more granular as far as usage and things like that go. So, those two projects right there, I feel like, will give folks an optimal savings experience when it comes to Kubernetes. But to your point, it's just compute, right? And that's really how we treat it, kind of, here internally is that it's a way to run… compute, Kubernetes, or ECS, or any of those tools.Corey: A fairly expensive one because ignoring entirely for a second the actual raw cost of compute, you also have the other side of it, which is in every environment, unless you are doing something very strange or pre-funding as a one-person startup in your spare time, your payroll costs will it—should—exceed your AWS bill by a fairly healthy amount. And engineering time is always more expensive than services time. So, for example, looking at EKS, I would absolutely recommend people use that rather than rolling their own because—Chris: Rolling their own? Yeah.Corey: —get out of that engineering space where your time is free. I assure you from a business context, it is not. So, there's always that question of what you can do to make things easier for people and do more of the heavy lifting.Chris: Yeah, and to your rather cheeky point that there's 17 ways to run a container on AWS, it is answering that question, right? Like those 17 ways, like, how much of this do you want to run yourself, you could run EKS distro on EC2 instances if you want full control over your environment.Corey: And then run IoT Greengrass core on top within that cluster—Chris: Right.Corey: So, I can run my own Lambda function runtime, so I'm not locked in. Also, DynamoDB local so I'm not locked into AWS. At which point I have gone so far around the bend, no one can help me.Chris: Well—Corey: Pro tip, don't do that. Just don't do that.Chris: But to your point, we have all these options for compute, and specifically containers because there's a lot of people that want to granularly say, “This is where my engineering team gets involved. Everything else you handle.” If I want EKS on Spot Instances only, you can do that. If you want EKS to use Carpenter and say only run ARM workloads, you can do that. If you want to say Fargate and not have anything to manage other than the container file, you can do that.It's how much does your team want to manage? That's the customer obsession part of AWS coming through when it comes to containers is because there's so many different ways to run those workloads, but there's so many different ways to make sure that your team is right-sized, based off the services you're using.Corey: I do want to change gears a bit here because you are mostly known for a couple of things: the DevOps'ish newsletter because that is the oldest and longest thing you've been doing the time that I've known you; EKS, obviously. But when prepping for this show, I discovered you are now co-chair of the OpenGitOps project.Chris: Yes.Corey: So, I have heard of GitOps in the context of, “Oh, it's just basically your CI/CD stuff is triggered by Git events and whatnot.” And I'm sitting here going, “Okay, so from where you're sitting, the two best user interfaces in the world that you have discovered are YAML and Git.” And I just have to start with the question, “Who hurt you?”Chris: [laugh]. Yeah, I share your sentiment when it comes to Git. Not so much with YAML, but I think it's because I'm so used to it. Maybe it's Stockholm Syndrome, maybe the whole YAML thing. I don't know.Corey: Well, it's no XML. We'll put it that way.Chris: Thankfully, yes because if it was, I would have way more, like, just template files laying around to build things. But the—Corey: And rage. Don't forget rage.Chris: And rage, yeah. So, GitOps is a little bit more than just Git in IaC—infrastructure as Code. It's more like Justin Garrison, who's also on my team, he calls it infrastructure software because there's four main principles to GitOps, and if you go to opengitops.dev, you can see them. It's version one.So, we put them on the website, right there on the page. You have to have a declared state and that state has to live somewhere. Now, it's called GitOps because Git is probably the most full-featured thing to put your state in, but you could use an S3 bucket and just version it, for example. And make it private so no one else can get to it.Corey: Or you could use local files: copy-of-copy-of-this-thing-restored-parentheses-use-this-one-dot-final-dot-doc-dot-zip. You know, my preferred naming convention.Chris: Ah, yeah. Wow. Okay. [laugh]. Yeah.Corey: Everything I touch is terrifying.Chris: Yes. Geez, I'm sorry. So first, it's declarative. You declare your state. You store it somewhere. It's versioned and immutable, like I said. And then pulled automatically—don't focus so much on pull—but basically, software agents are applying the desired state from source. So, what does that mean? When it's—you know, the fourth principle is implemented, continuously reconciled. That means those software agents that are checking your desired state are actually putting it back into the desired state if it's out of whack, right? So—Corey: You're talking about agents running it persistently on instances, validating—Chris: Yes.Corey: —a checkpoint on a cron. How is this meaningfully different than a Puppet agent running in years past? Having spent I learned to speak publicly by being a traveling trainer for Puppet; same type of model, and in fact, when I was at Pinterest, we wound up having a fair bit—like, that was their entire model, where they would have—the Puppet's code would live in an S3 bucket that was then copied down, I believe, via Git, and then applied to the instance on a schedule. Like, that sounds like this was sort of a early days GitOps.Chris: Yeah, exactly. Right? Like so it's, I like to think of that as a component of GitOps, right? DevOps, when you talk about DevOps in general, there's a lot of stuff out there. There's a lot of things labeled DevOps that maybe are, or maybe aren't sticking to some of those DevOps core things that make you great.Like the stuff that Nicole Forsgren writes about in books, you know? Accelerate is on my desk for a reason because there's things that good, well-managed DevOps practices do. I see GitOps as an actual implementation of DevOps in an open-source manner because all the tooling for GitOps these days is open-source and it all started as open-source. Now, you can get, like, Flux or Argo—Argo, specifically—there's managed services out there for it, you can have Flux and not maintain it, through an add-on, on EKS for example, and it will reconcile that state for you automatically. And the other thing I like to say about GitOps, specifically, is that it moves at the speed of the Kubernetes Audit Log.If you've ever looked at a Kubernetes audit log, you know it's rather noisy with all these groups and versions and kinds getting thrown out there. So, GitOps will say, “Oh, there's an event for said thing that I'm supposed to be watching. Do I need to change anything? Yes or no? Yes? Okay, go.”And the change gets applied, or, “Hey, there's a new Git thing. Pull it in. A change has happened inGit I need to update it.” You can set it to reconcile on events on time. It's like a cron or it's like an event-driven architecture, but it's combined.Corey: How does it survive the stake through the heart of configuration management? Because before I was doing all this, I wasn't even a T-shaped engineer: you're broad across a bunch of things, but deep in one or two areas, and one of mine was configuration management. I wrote part of SaltStack, once upon a time—Chris: Oh.Corey: —due to a bunch of very strange coincidences all hitting it once, like, I taught people how to use Puppet. But containers ultimately arose and the idea of immutable infrastructure became a thing. And these days when we were doing full-on serverless, well, great, I just wind up deploying a new code bundle to the Lambdas function that I wind up caring about, and that is a immutable version replacement. There is no drift because there is no way to log in and change those things other than through a clear deployment of this as the new version that goes out there. Where does GitOps fit into that imagined pattern?Chris: So, configuration management becomes part of your approval process, right? So, you now are generating an audit log, essentially, of all changes to your system through the approval process that you set up as part of your, how you get things into source and then promote that out to production. That's kind of the beauty of it, right? Like, that's why we suggest using Git because it has functions, like, requests and issues and things like that you can say, “Hey, yes, I approve this,” or, “Hey, no, I don't approve that. We need changes.” So, that's kind of natively happening with Git and, you know, GitLab, GitHub, whatever implementation of Git. There's always, kind of—Corey: Uh, JIF-ub is, I believe, the pronunciation.Chris: JIF-ub? Oh.Corey: Yeah. That's what I'm—Chris: Today, I learned. Okay.Corey: Exactly. And that's one of the things that I do for my lasttweetinaws.com Twitter client that I build—because I needed it, and if other people want to use it, that's great—that is now deployed to 20 different AWS commercial regions, simultaneously. And that is done via—because it turns out that that's a very long to execute for loop if you start down that path—Chris: Well, yeah.Corey: I wound up building out a GitHub Actions matrix—sorry a JIF-ub—actions matrix job that winds up instantiating 20 parallel builds of the CDK deploy that goes out to each region as expected. And because that gets really expensive with native GitHub Actions runners for, like, 36 cents per deploy, and I don't know how to test my own code, so every time I have a typo, that's another quarter in the jar. Cool, but that was annoying for me so I built my own custom runner system that uses Lambda functions as runners running containers pulled from ECR that, oh, it just runs in parallel, less than three minutes. Every time I commit something between I press the push button and it is out and running in the wild across all regions. Which is awesome and also terrifying because, as previously mentioned, I don't know how to test my code.Chris: Yeah. So, you don't know what you're deploying to 20 regions sometime, right?Corey: But it also means I have a pristine, re-composable build environment because I can—Chris: Right.Corey: Just automatically have that go out and the fact that I am making a—either merging a pull request or doing a direct push because I consider main to be my feature branch as whenever something hits that, all the automation kicks off. That was something that I found to be transformative as far as a way of thinking about this because I was very tired of having to tweak my local laptop environment to, “Oh, you didn't assume the proper role and everything failed again and you broke it. Good job.” It wound up being something where I could start developing on more and more disparate platforms. And it finally is what got me away from my old development model of everything I build is on an EC2 instance, and that means that my editor of choice was Vim. I use the VS Code now for these things, and I'm pretty happy with it.Chris: Yeah. So, you know, I'm glad you brought up CDK. CDK gives you a lot of the capabilities to implement GitOps in a way that you could say, like, “Hey, use CDK to declare I need four Amazon EKS clusters with this size, shape, and configuration. Go.” Or even further, connect to these EKS clusters to RDS instances and load balancers and everything else.But you put that state into Git and then you have something that deploys that automatically upon changes. That is infrastructure as code. Now, when you say, “Okay, main is your feature branch,” you know, things happen on main, if this were running in Kubernetes across a fleet of clusters or the globe-wide in 20 regions, something like Flux or Argo would kick in and say, “There's been a change to source, main, and we need to roll this out.” And it'll start applying those changes. Now, what do you get with GitOps that you don't get with your configuration?I mean, can you rollback if you ever have, like, a bad commit that's just awful? I mean, that's really part of the process with GitOps is to make sure that you can, A, roll back to the previous good state, B, roll forward to a known good state, or C, promote that state up through various environments. And then having that all done declaratively, automatically, and immutably, and versioned with an audit log, that I think is the real power of GitOps in the sense that, like, oh, so-and-so approve this change to security policy XYZ on this date at this time. And that to an auditor, you just hand them a log file on, like, “Here's everything we've ever done to our system. Done.” Right?Like, you could get to that state, if you want to, which I think is kind of the idea of DevOps, which says, “Take all these disparate tools and processes and procedures and culture changes”—culture being the hardest part to adopt in DevOps; GitOps kind of forces a culture change where, like, you can't do a CAB with GitOps. Like, those two things don't fly. You don't have a configuration management database unless you absolutely—Corey: Oh, you CAB now but they're all the comments of the pull request.Chris: Right. Exactly. Like, don't push this change out until Thursday after this other thing has happened, kind of thing. Yeah, like, that all happens in GitHub. But it's very democratizing in the sense that people don't have to waste time in an hour-long meeting to get their five minutes in, right?Corey: DoorDash had a problem. As their cloud-native environment scaled and developers delivered new features, their monitoring system kept breaking down. In an organization where data is used to make better decisions about technology and about the business, losing observability means the entire company loses their competitive edge. With Chronosphere, DoorDash is no longer losing visibility into their applications suite. The key? Chronosphere is an open-source compatible, scalable, and reliable observability solution that gives the observability lead at DoorDash business, confidence, and peace of mind. Read the full success story at snark.cloud/chronosphere. That's snark.cloud slash C-H-R-O-N-O-S-P-H-E-R-E.Corey: So, would it be overwhelmingly cynical to suggest that GitOps is the means to implement what we've all been pretending to have implemented for the last decade when giving talks at conferences?Chris: Ehh, I wouldn't go that far. I would say that GitOps is an excellent way to implement the things you've been talking about at all these conferences for all these years. But keep in mind, the technology has changed a lot in the, what 11, 12 years of the existence of DevOps, now. I mean, we've gone from, let's try to manage whole servers immutably to, “Oh, now we just need to maintain an orchestration platform and run containers.” That whole compute interface, you go from SSH to a Docker file, that's a big leap, right?Like, you don't have bespoke sysadmins; you have, like, a platform team. You don't have DevOps engineers; they're part of that platform team, or DevOps teams, right? Like, which was kind of antithetical to the whole idea of DevOps to have a DevOps team. You know, everybody's kind of in the same boat now, where we see skill sets kind of changing. And GitOps and Kubernetes-land is, like, a platform team that manages the cluster, and its state, and health and, you know, production essentially.And then you have your developers deploying what they want to deploy in when whatever namespace they've been given access to and whatever rights they have. So, now you have the potential for one set of people—the platform team—to use one set of GitOps tooling, and your applications teams might not like that, and that's fine. They can have their own namespaces with their own tooling in it. Like, Argo, for example, is preferred by a lot of developers because it has a nice UI with green and red dots and they can show people and it looks nice, Flux, it's command line based. And there are some projects out there that kind of take the UI of Argo and try to run Flux underneath that, and those are cool kind of projects, I think, in my mind, but in general, right, I think GitOps gives you the choice that we missed somewhat in DevOps implementations of the past because it was, “Oh, we need to go get cloud.” “Well, you can only use this cloud.” “Oh, we need to go get this thing.” “Well, you can only use this thing in-house.”And you know, there's a lot of restrictions sometimes placed on what you can use in your environment. Well, if your environment is Kubernetes, how do you restrict what you can run, right? Like you can't have an easily configured say, no open-source policy if you're running Kubernetes. [laugh] so it becomes, you know—Corey: Well, that doesn't stop some companies from trying.Chris: Yeah, that's true. But the idea of, like, enabling your developers to deploy at will and then promote their changes as they see fit is really the dream of DevOps, right? Like, same with production and platform teams, right? I want to push my changes out to a larger system that is across the globe. How do I do that? How do I manage that? How do I make sure everything's consistent?GitOps gives you those ways, with Kubernetes native things like customizations, to make consistent environments that are robust and actually going to be reconciled automatically if someone breaks the glass and says, “Oh, I need to run this container immediately.” Well, that's going to create problems because it's deviated from state and it's just that one region, so we'll put it back into state.Corey: It'll be dueling banjos, at some point. You'll try and doing something manually, it gets reverted automatically. I love that pattern. You'll get bored before the computer does, always.Chris: Yeah. And GitOps is very new, right? When you think about the lifetime of GitOps, I think it was coined in, like, 2018. So, it's only four years old, right? When—Corey: I prefer it to ChatOps, at least, as far as—Chris: Well, I mean—Corey: —implementation and expression of the thing.Chris: —ChatOps was a way to do DevOps. I think GitOps—Corey: Well, ChatOps is also a way to wind up giving whoever gets access to your Slack workspace root in production.Chris: Mmm.Corey: But that's neither here nor there.Chris: Mm-hm.Corey: It's yeah, we all like to pretend that's not a giant security issue in our industry, but that's a topic for another time.Chris: Yeah. And that's why, like, GitOps also depends upon you having good security, you know, and good authorization and approval processes. It enforces that upon—Corey: Yeah, who doesn't have one of those?Chris: Yeah. If it's a sole operation kind of deal, like in your setup, your case, I think you kind of got it doing right, right? Like, as far as GitOps goes—Corey: Oh, to be clear, we are 11 people and we do have dueling pull requests and all the rest.Chris: Right, right, right.Corey: But most of the stuff I talk about publicly is not our production stuff, so it really is just me. Just as a point of clarity there. I've n—the 11 people here do not all—the rest of you don't just sit there and clap as I do all the work.Chris: Right.Corey: Most days.Chris: No, I'm sure they don't. I'm almost certain they don't clap… for you. I mean, they would—Corey: No. No, they try and talk me out of it in almost every case.Chris: Yeah, exactly. So, the setup that you, Corey Quinn, have implemented to deploy these 20 regions is kind of very GitOps-y, in the sense that when main changes, it gets updated. Where it's not GitOps-y is what if the endpoint changes? Does it get reconciled? That's the piece you're probably missing is that continuous reconciliation component, where it's constantly checking and saying, “This thing out there is deployed in the way I want it. You know, the way I declared it to be in my source of truth.”Corey: Yeah, when you start having other people getting involved, there can—yeah, that's where regressions enter. And it's like, “Well, I know where things are so why would I change the endpoint?” Yeah, it turns out, not everyone has the state of the entire application in their head. Ideally it should live in—Chris: Yeah. Right. And, you know—Corey: —you know, Git or S3.Chris: —when I—yeah, exactly. When I think about interactions of the past coming out as a new DevOps engineer to work with developers, it's always been, will developers have access to prod or they don't? And if you're in that environment with—you're trying to run a multi-billion dollar operation, and your devs have direct—or one Dev has direct access to prod because prod is in his brain, that's where it's like, well, now wait a minute. Prod doesn't have to be only in your brain. You can put that in the codebase and now we know what is in your brain, right?Like, you can almost do—if you document your code, well, you can have your full lifecycle right there in one place, including documentation, which I think is the best part, too. So, you know, it encourages approval processes and automation over this one person has an entire state of the system in their head; they have to go in and fix it. And what if they're not on call, or in Jamaica, or on a cruise ship somewhere kind of thing? Things get difficult. Like, for example, I just got back from vacation. We were so far off the grid, we had satellite internet. And let me tell you, it was hard to write an email newsletter where I usually open 50 to 100 tabs.Corey: There's a little bit of internet out Californ-ie way.Chris: [laugh].Corey: Yeah it's… it's always weird going from, like, especially after pandemic; I have gigabit symmetric here and going even to re:Invent where I'm trying to upload a bunch of video and whatnot.Chris: Yeah. Oh wow.Corey: And the conference WiFi was doing its thing, and well, Verizon 5G was there but spotty. And well, yeah. Usual stuff.Chris: Yeah. It's amazing to me how connectivity has become so ubiquitous.Corey: To the point where when it's not there anymore, it's what do I do with myself? Same story about people pushing back against remote development of, “Oh, I'm just going to do it all on my laptop because what happens if I'm on a plane?” It's, yeah, the year before the pandemic, I flew 140,000 miles domestically and I was almost never hamstrung by my ability to do work. And my only local computer is an iPad for those things. So, it turns out that is less of a real world concern for most folks.Chris: Yeah I actually ordered the components to upgrade an old Nook that I have here and turn it into my, like, this is my remote code server, that's going to be all attached to GitHub and everything else. That's where I want to be: have Tailscale and just VPN into this box.Corey: Tailscale is transformative.Chris: Yes. Tailscale will change your life. That's just my personal opinion.Corey: Yep.Chris: That's not an AWS opinion or anything. But yeah, when you start thinking about your network as it could be anywhere, that's where Tailscale, like, really shines. So—Corey: Tailscale makes the internet work like we all wanted to believe that it worked.Chris: Yeah. And Wireguard is an excellent open-source project. And Tailscale consumes that and puts an amazingly easy-to-use UI, and troubleshooting tools, and routing, and all kinds of forwarding capabilities, and makes it kind of easy, which is really, really, really kind of awesome. And Tailscale and Kubernetes—Corey: Yeah, ‘network' and ‘easy' don't belong in the same sentence, but in this case, they do.Chris: Yeah. And trust me, the Kubernetes story in Tailscale, there is a lot of there. I understand you might want to not open ports in your VPC, maybe, but if you use Tailscale, that node is just another thing on your network. You can connect to that and see what's going on. Your management cluster is just another thing on the network where you can watch the state.But it's all—you're connected to it continuously through Tailscale. Or, you know, it's a much lighter weight, kind of meshy VPN, I would say, if I had to sum it up in one sentence. That was not on our agenda to talk about at all. Anyways. [laugh]Corey: No, no. I love how many different topics we talk about on these things. We'll have to have you back soon to talk again. I really want to thank you for being so generous with your time. If people want to learn more about what you're up to and how you view these things, where can they find you?Chris: Go to ChrisShort.net. So, Chris Short—I'm six-four so remember, it's Short—dot net, and you will find all the places that I write, you can go to devopsish.com to subscribe to my newsletter, which goes out every week. This year. Next year, there'll be breaks. And then finally, if you want to follow me on Twitter, Chris Short: at @ChrisShort on Twitter. All one word so you see two s's. Like, it's okay, there's two s's there.Corey: Links to all of that will of course be in the show notes. It's easier for people to do the clicky-clicky thing as a general rule.Chris: Clicky things are easier than the wordy things, yes.Corey: Says the Kubernetes guy.Chris: Yeah. Says the Kubernetes guy. Yeah, you like that, huh? Like I said, Argo gives you a UI. [laugh].Corey: Thank you [laugh] so much for your time. I really do appreciate it.Chris: Thank you. This has been fun. If folks have questions, feel free to reach out. Like, I am not one of those people that hides behind a screen all day and doesn't respond. I will respond to you eventually.Corey: I'm right here, Chris. Come on, come on. You're calling me out in front of myself. My God.Chris: Egh. It might take a day or two, but I will respond. I promise.Corey: Thanks again for your time. This has been Chris Short, senior developer advocate at AWS. I'm Cloud Economist Corey Quinn and this is Screaming in the Cloud. If you've enjoyed this podcast, please leave a five-star review on your podcast platform of choice and if it's YouTube, click the thumbs-up button. Whereas if you've hated this podcast, same thing, smash the buttons five-star review and leave an insulting comment that is written in syntactically correct YAML because it's just so easy to do.Corey: If your AWS bill keeps rising and your blood pressure is doing the same, then you need The Duckbill Group. We help companies fix their AWS bill by making it smaller and less horrifying. The Duckbill Group works for you, not AWS. We tailor recommendations to your business and we get to the point. Visit duckbillgroup.com to get started.Announcer: This has been a HumblePod production. Stay humble.
Amazon sets a date for the first 2022 Prime Day event; the travel tips and gadgets I used on my recent trip to Rome; T-Mobile wants to sell your data unless you opt out; how not to fall for a tech support scam; Google upgrades its password manager to work natively on iOS.Viewers ask about the best free antivirus protection, buying a cable modem, ditching wired home Internet for Verizon 5G home internet, if Amazon will contact you about a problem with your account, an alternative to iTunes, what to do if a cell phone number is exposed in a data breach and an alternative to Apple's AirTag for luggage.Follow Rich!richontech.tvMy Rome Instagram highlights!Prime Day 2022Travel tips and tricksT-Mobile opt outTech support scamsGoogle Password managerBest free antivirusVerizon 5G Home InternetiTunes AlternativeAirTag AlternativeSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
The G2 on 5G Podcast – Episode 106 – July 1, 2022In this episode of The G2 on 5G, Anshel and Will Cover:1. Cisco partners with General Dynamics to deliver private 5G services to US federal governmental entities - what are the expected outcomes?2. Could Apple's 5G modem delay rumors push it back into Qualcomm's arms for longer?3. What's the deal with Dish's 5G network performance inconsistencies?4. SES Launch should help to clear a considerable amount of C-band for 5G, stands to make an additional $3 billion by clearing remaining C-Band by Dec 20235. Verizon reveals a 5G connected police cruiser prototype and why it's an analogy to the movie Blade Runner 20496. TSMC and Samsung both talk 3nm, what could it mean for 5G?
The G2 on 5G Podcast – Episode 104 – June 17, 2022In this episode of The G2 on 5G, Anshel and Will Cover:1. Qualcomm acquires Cellwize - is it a smart move?2. Dish Launches 5G service in 120 Cities3. Google Cloud finally announces its private 5G offering - is it competitive with AWS and Azure?4. T-Mobile Uncarrier: Coverage Beyond, Hits 3 Gbps with 3x CA on Galaxy S22 Snapdragon 8 Gen1, and partnership with Oceus to launch 5G services for the Department of Defense (DoD)5. Verizon tests CBRS use for 5G - can it help accelerate its much-needed mid-band deployment?6. 5G C-Band: FAA Chief Warns Airlines of Summer Deadline
Ever-improving and increasing 5G services certainly can make our lives as livestreamers and consumers easier. So I was excited to see the 5GUW mark on my phone on a visit to Des Moines. The UW stands for ultrawideband. But how fast is this new ultra network and how does it compare to others? Find out on this episode and read the related article here: http://christophtrappe.com/verizon-5g-uw --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/ctrappe/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/ctrappe/support
Twitter tests an inner circle; Sonos launching voice assistant; tech giants work on password-less future; Facebook says no more Podcasts; Apple Music arrives on Roku; Google has helpful new travel tools; Amazon introduces virtual product placement; How to check the battery level of AirTags.Listeners ask about using an iPad to "listen" to printed documents, finding sports cards values, recovering photos from a locked iPhone, unlocking an iPhone while wearing a mask, if Verizon 5G home internet works with Vonage and mesh networks and getting rid of duplicate photos on the iPhone.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Ever-improving and increasing 5G services certainly can make our lives as livestreamers and consumers easier. So I was excited to see the 5GUW mark on my phone on a visit to Des Moines. The UW stands for ultrawideband. But how fast is this new ultra network and how does it compare to others? Find out on this episode and read the related article here: http://christophtrappe.com/verizon-5g-uw --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/going-live/message
Mayor Dyer joins the show to discuss Beautify Fresno's Great American Cleanup on April 30th, Granite Park insurance and remedies for the city's "low self-esteem." A northwest Fresno man claims that he can hear the hum from Verizon 5G towers in his neighborhood have caused his severe insomnia. The "Drug and Alcohol Review" published a survey that suggests binaural beats may have effects similar to psychedelic drugs. Listeners comment. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
5G is poised to revolutionize what's possible for businesses—and real, tangible, and transformative impact is right around the corner. Shelby Skrhak speaks with Matt Montgomery, managing director for the Verizon Business Group - Channel, and Frank Garcia, client partner connected solutions, both with Verizon, about: - What's going on with 5G now - How the Verizon 5G Ultra Wideband network is different - What it means for speed, reliability, and capacity - How 5G can improve the employee experience Email Frank Garcia or visit Verizon 5G Solutions for more information. To join the discussion, follow us on Twitter @IngramTechSol #B2BTechTalk Listen to this episode and more like it by subscribing to B2B Tech Talk on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or Stitcher. Or, tune in on our website.
The January 2022 update is available now for Pixel 6 phones. It brings some quality of life improvements for their users. But the the news isn't so good for NVIDIA Shield TV after an Android 11 update. However, NVIDIA says fixes for Plex, Kodi, and more are on the way. The crew also dig into a lot of other news, such as why Airlines have such a bee in their bonnet about 5G, YouTube Premium discounts, scaling back on original content, and lousy trade-in values from Apple for Android phones. Links: How does 5G pose a threat to the airline industry? | Android Central AT&T and Verizon 5G upgrades delayed as airlines warn of 'major disruption' | Android Central AT&T and Dish outspend T-Mobile in mid-band 5G spectrum auction, Verizon sits this one out | Android Central January 2022 update for Pixel 6 and Pixel 6 Pro is finally available | Android Central NVIDIA promises fixes for broken Plex, Kodi, and more on NVIDIA Shield TV after Android 11 update | Android Central Google Pay may add crypto cards to attract its 'Next Billion Users' | Android Central YouTube Premium gets a nice discount with new annual subscription plan | Android Central YouTube scales back original content following executive departure | Android Central Google Project Iris is a new AR/VR headset powered by the cloud | Android Central Google, Apple warn of 'harmful consequences' from proposed Senate bills | Android Central Apple lowers the trade-in value for some of the best Android phones | Android Central Logitech Pen review: The best Chromebook stylus ever | Android Central 3 reasons you should buy a Chromebook tablet instead of Android | Android Central Sponsors: Indeed: Choose Indeed and join 3 million companies worldwide who use Indeed to hire great people and help grow their teams faster. Get started right now with a free $75 sponsored job credit at indeed.com/acp. Offer valid through March 31. Terms and conditions apply. Surfshark: All you need in a VPN — and more. Go to Surfshark.deals/ACP and use code ACP to get 83% off plus 3 extra months for free when you sign up! Manscaped: Get 20% Off and Free Shipping with the code ACP at Manscaped.com.
Microsoft's Activision Blizzard deal, 5G improvements, Intel's Ohio factory Microsoft set to purchase Activision Blizzard in a $68.7 billion deal. Over 100 Activision Blizzard employees stage walkout, demand CEO step down. Bobby Kotick Reportedly Turned Up Late and Left Early from a Meeting Meant to Reassure Employees. Bobby Kotick interview: Why Activision Blizzard did the deal with Microsoft. The movie segment! Airline CEOs make a U-turn, now say 5G isn't a big problem for altimeters. AT&T, Verizon 5G is about to get much faster in more places - if you have the right phone. AT&T begins a 5G C-band rollout in a limited number of metro areas. Intel Reveals Plans for Massive Factory in Ohio. The Intel Split. Google starts rolling out the Pixel 6 and 6 Pro's delayed December update. IRS Will Require Facial Recognition Scans to Access Your Taxes. Senate committee votes to advance major tech antitrust bill. Federal Trade Commission and Justice Department Seek to Strengthen Enforcement Against Illegal Mergers. MEPs adopt Digital Services Act with significant last-minute changes. Twitter Blue on Twitter: "You asked (a lot), so we made it. Now rolling out in Labs: NFT Profile Pictures on iOS" Joe Rogan Experience Podcast Ensnares Spotify in Covid Misinformation Debate. Bitcoin drops to a six-month low as investors dump speculative assets. Fed releases long-awaited study on a digital dollar but doesn't take a position yet on creating one. Faster cable internet speeds are coming, even if you don't really need them. The World's First Wi-Fi 7 Demo Reached Speeds 2.4 Times Faster Than Wi-Fi 6. Twitter shakes up its security team. TikTok's marketing chief ousted after 'going rogue' with bizarre campaigns. US athletes are told to use burner phones at Beijing Winter Olympics. Netflix Q4 2021: Gains 8.2 Million Subscribers, Stock Down on Forecast. Felony charges are 1st in a fatal crash involving Autopilot. We Met in Virtual Reality' finds love in the metaverse. Host: Leo Laporte Guests: Devindra Hardawar and Dwight Silverman Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/this-week-in-tech Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Sponsors: expressvpn.com/twit newrelic.com/twit streak.com/twit ZipRecruiter.com/Twit
Microsoft's Activision Blizzard deal, 5G improvements, Intel's Ohio factory Microsoft set to purchase Activision Blizzard in a $68.7 billion deal. Over 100 Activision Blizzard employees stage walkout, demand CEO step down. Bobby Kotick Reportedly Turned Up Late and Left Early from a Meeting Meant to Reassure Employees. Bobby Kotick interview: Why Activision Blizzard did the deal with Microsoft. The movie segment! Airline CEOs make a U-turn, now say 5G isn't a big problem for altimeters. AT&T, Verizon 5G is about to get much faster in more places - if you have the right phone. AT&T begins a 5G C-band rollout in a limited number of metro areas. Intel Reveals Plans for Massive Factory in Ohio. The Intel Split. Google starts rolling out the Pixel 6 and 6 Pro's delayed December update. IRS Will Require Facial Recognition Scans to Access Your Taxes. Senate committee votes to advance major tech antitrust bill. Federal Trade Commission and Justice Department Seek to Strengthen Enforcement Against Illegal Mergers. MEPs adopt Digital Services Act with significant last-minute changes. Twitter Blue on Twitter: "You asked (a lot), so we made it. Now rolling out in Labs: NFT Profile Pictures on iOS" Joe Rogan Experience Podcast Ensnares Spotify in Covid Misinformation Debate. Bitcoin drops to a six-month low as investors dump speculative assets. Fed releases long-awaited study on a digital dollar but doesn't take a position yet on creating one. Faster cable internet speeds are coming, even if you don't really need them. The World's First Wi-Fi 7 Demo Reached Speeds 2.4 Times Faster Than Wi-Fi 6. Twitter shakes up its security team. TikTok's marketing chief ousted after 'going rogue' with bizarre campaigns. US athletes are told to use burner phones at Beijing Winter Olympics. Netflix Q4 2021: Gains 8.2 Million Subscribers, Stock Down on Forecast. Felony charges are 1st in a fatal crash involving Autopilot. We Met in Virtual Reality' finds love in the metaverse. Host: Leo Laporte Guests: Devindra Hardawar and Dwight Silverman Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/this-week-in-tech Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Sponsors: expressvpn.com/twit newrelic.com/twit streak.com/twit ZipRecruiter.com/Twit
Microsoft's Activision Blizzard deal, 5G improvements, Intel's Ohio factory Microsoft set to purchase Activision Blizzard in a $68.7 billion deal. Over 100 Activision Blizzard employees stage walkout, demand CEO step down. Bobby Kotick Reportedly Turned Up Late and Left Early from a Meeting Meant to Reassure Employees. Bobby Kotick interview: Why Activision Blizzard did the deal with Microsoft. The movie segment! Airline CEOs make a U-turn, now say 5G isn't a big problem for altimeters. AT&T, Verizon 5G is about to get much faster in more places - if you have the right phone. AT&T begins a 5G C-band rollout in a limited number of metro areas. Intel Reveals Plans for Massive Factory in Ohio. The Intel Split. Google starts rolling out the Pixel 6 and 6 Pro's delayed December update. IRS Will Require Facial Recognition Scans to Access Your Taxes. Senate committee votes to advance major tech antitrust bill. Federal Trade Commission and Justice Department Seek to Strengthen Enforcement Against Illegal Mergers. MEPs adopt Digital Services Act with significant last-minute changes. Twitter Blue on Twitter: "You asked (a lot), so we made it. Now rolling out in Labs: NFT Profile Pictures on iOS" Joe Rogan Experience Podcast Ensnares Spotify in Covid Misinformation Debate. Bitcoin drops to a six-month low as investors dump speculative assets. Fed releases long-awaited study on a digital dollar but doesn't take a position yet on creating one. Faster cable internet speeds are coming, even if you don't really need them. The World's First Wi-Fi 7 Demo Reached Speeds 2.4 Times Faster Than Wi-Fi 6. Twitter shakes up its security team. TikTok's marketing chief ousted after 'going rogue' with bizarre campaigns. US athletes are told to use burner phones at Beijing Winter Olympics. Netflix Q4 2021: Gains 8.2 Million Subscribers, Stock Down on Forecast. Felony charges are 1st in a fatal crash involving Autopilot. We Met in Virtual Reality' finds love in the metaverse. Host: Leo Laporte Guests: Devindra Hardawar and Dwight Silverman Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/this-week-in-tech Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Sponsors: expressvpn.com/twit newrelic.com/twit streak.com/twit ZipRecruiter.com/Twit
Microsoft's Activision Blizzard deal, 5G improvements, Intel's Ohio factory Microsoft set to purchase Activision Blizzard in a $68.7 billion deal. Over 100 Activision Blizzard employees stage walkout, demand CEO step down. Bobby Kotick Reportedly Turned Up Late and Left Early from a Meeting Meant to Reassure Employees. Bobby Kotick interview: Why Activision Blizzard did the deal with Microsoft. The movie segment! Airline CEOs make a U-turn, now say 5G isn't a big problem for altimeters. AT&T, Verizon 5G is about to get much faster in more places - if you have the right phone. AT&T begins a 5G C-band rollout in a limited number of metro areas. Intel Reveals Plans for Massive Factory in Ohio. The Intel Split. Google starts rolling out the Pixel 6 and 6 Pro's delayed December update. IRS Will Require Facial Recognition Scans to Access Your Taxes. Senate committee votes to advance major tech antitrust bill. Federal Trade Commission and Justice Department Seek to Strengthen Enforcement Against Illegal Mergers. MEPs adopt Digital Services Act with significant last-minute changes. Twitter Blue on Twitter: "You asked (a lot), so we made it. Now rolling out in Labs: NFT Profile Pictures on iOS" Joe Rogan Experience Podcast Ensnares Spotify in Covid Misinformation Debate. Bitcoin drops to a six-month low as investors dump speculative assets. Fed releases long-awaited study on a digital dollar but doesn't take a position yet on creating one. Faster cable internet speeds are coming, even if you don't really need them. The World's First Wi-Fi 7 Demo Reached Speeds 2.4 Times Faster Than Wi-Fi 6. Twitter shakes up its security team. TikTok's marketing chief ousted after 'going rogue' with bizarre campaigns. US athletes are told to use burner phones at Beijing Winter Olympics. Netflix Q4 2021: Gains 8.2 Million Subscribers, Stock Down on Forecast. Felony charges are 1st in a fatal crash involving Autopilot. We Met in Virtual Reality' finds love in the metaverse. Host: Leo Laporte Guests: Devindra Hardawar and Dwight Silverman Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/this-week-in-tech Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Sponsors: expressvpn.com/twit newrelic.com/twit streak.com/twit ZipRecruiter.com/Twit
Join us on TechTime with Nathan Mumm this week on the show; AT&T and Verizon 5G power limits will resolve FAA safety concerns with interference. Next, Spotify creates 'Netflix Hub,' and a real-life Squid Game re-creates Netflix show with a $456,000 prize. Next, our guest Trina L Martin helps us enhance our virtual Zoom Meetings with suggested tweaks and addons, then we look at how to help our Small Business Saturday with a few items in technology items to grab. Finally, we have our Pick of the Day Whiskey Tastings and Mike's Mesmerizing Moment brought to us by Stori-Coffee®. All of this on hour one of our two-hour show.On the Second Hour, we continue our small business Saturday by looking at a beta software application that allows small businesses to advertise for free while allowing gamers to play games to win real prizes. Then, join us to talk about some Cyber Monday Steals and Deals and what is happening in the gaming community on Gamer Time. Next, we have a few cyber breaches to talk about, and finally, we have the "This Week in Technology" segment and a few breaking news articles we might bring up along the way."Welcome to TechTime Radio with Nathan Mumm, the show that makes you go "Hummmm" Technology news of the week for November 27th through December 3rd, 2021.Episode 76: Hour 1--- [Now on Today's Show]: Starts at 4:45--- [Top Stories in 5 Minutes]: Starts at 10:47AT&T and Verizon agree to 5G power limits to resolve FAA safety concerns - https://tinyurl.com/8zppb2za Spotify creates ‘Netflix Hub' where fans can listen to playlists and podcasts - https://tinyurl.com/yj3watsfCan South Africa embrace renewable energy from the sun?Spotify tests TikTok-like vertical video feature - https://tinyurl.com/ckdpz8 Real-life Squid Game re-creates Netflix show with $456,000 prize--- [Pick of the Day - Whiskey Tasting Review]: 20:27Glenmorangie Quinta Ruban | $49.99 | 92 Proof--- [Technology Insider] Guest Trina L Martin: Starts at 21:53Trina shares about Addins and the Marketplace for Zoom the Video Conference Service--- [TechTime Wish List]: Starts at 37:37We share tips on this holiday's top items with secrets for purchasing these items.--- [Mike's Mesmerizing Moment brought to us by StoriCoffee®]: Starts at 49:37--- [Pick of the Day]: Starts at 54:30Glenmorangie Quinta Ruban | $49.99 | 92 Proof Nathan: Thumbs Up Mike: Thumbs UpEpisode 76: Hour 2 --- [Now on Today's Show]: Starts at 1:01:24--- [Steal and Deals]: Starts at 1:06:20Mike and Nathan share this week's best prices on technology items for the week. --- [Technology Insider]: Starts at 1:18:00Corey Williams the CEO and Founder of Pryzbox joins the show to explain his application that is built to help small businesses. --- [What we found on the Web]: Starts at 1:37:14Twitter launches livestream shoppingNetflix's new gaming service added two more titlesPrivacy-focused search engine DuckDuckGo added to its Android app the ability to block hidden trackers, as part of its new “App Tracking Protection for Android” feature--- [This Week in Technology]: Starts at 1:48:20November 24, 1998- AOL announces it will buy Netscape Communications in a stock-for-stock deal worth approximately $4.2 billion
SDxCentral 2-Minute Weekly Wrap Podcast for Sept. 10, 2021 Plus, Microsoft boosts its executive ranks, carrier services in battle against Amazon Web ServicesIntel next-gen chips mimic AMD chiplet method; and Microsoft swipes an Amazon executive, launches Verizon 5G edge platform. Intel Follows AMD on Chiplet Journey Microsoft Lifts Amazon, AT&T Telco Talent Verizon Greenlights Azure-Powered Private 5G Edge Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Our 5G football playbook. All the ways Verizon 5G is making this football season even sweeter. Plus, new 5G Home and mobility cities announced.
Verizon's mantra both for its public sector business and the corporation as a whole is to be the indispensable partner alongside customers for modernizing their networks.In this episode of Project 38, Verizon's public sector leader Jennifer Chronis explains to our Senior Staff Writer Ross Wilkers how that approach as part of the overall “Verizon 2.0” vision informs the telecommunications giant's federal market strategy.Chronis also overviews how Verizon ties these common technology threads between both the commercial and public sector sides of Verizon: 5G adoption, cloud computing, software-defined networks and pretty much everything under the umbrella of modernization.For many federal agencies that means leveraging the government-wide EIS contract for next-generation telecom services. EIS and Verizon's future of work strategy were additional topics of discussion.
Earl Swift is author of the New York Times bestseller Chesapeake Requiem, which was named to ten best of the year lists. Swift brings to life another remarkable community—the engineers and astronauts who designed and operated the Lunar Roving Vehicle in his new book Across the Airless Wilds. In this fast-moving exploration, Swift puts the reader alongside the men who dreamed of the rover, designed it, troubleshot its flaws, and drove it on the lunar surface. His other books include Auto Biography and The Big Roads. A former reporter for the Virginian-Pilot and contributor to Outside and other magazines, he has been a fellow of Virginia Humanities at the University of Virginia since 2012. http://www.earlswift.comDaniel Levin, writer of Proof of Life, provides an inside look into the industry of the drug, and shows Levin negotiating with dealers and coming into contact with the drug and those who sell it frequently during the course of the book. https://www.daniellevinauthor.com/Wendy Taccetta talks Verizon 5G!
Stetson and Dennis cover Verizon's new free 5G smartphone deal and if it's actually good, Verizon's 5G network improvements and which carrier offers the best 5G network today, and provide updates to Verizon's Home Internet offering. See Verizon's plans here: https://www.bestphoneplans.net/carriers/verizon News stories: The wait is over — the biggest Verizon 5G upgrade campaign ever: https://www.verizon.com/about/news/wait-over-biggest-verizon-5g-upgrade-campaign-ever Verizon's 5G Home Internet now available in even more cities: https://www.verizon.com/about/news/5G-home-internet-offered-more-cities Verizon flips the switch on 5G at popular destinations just in time for Memorial Day: https://www.verizon.com/about/news/verizon-5g-popular-destinations-memorial-day Verizon is your home for the best entertainment; now with Apple Arcade and Google Play Pass on us: https://www.verizon.com/about/news/verizon-apple-arcade-and-google-play-pass Verizon 5G live in 60+ stadiums & arenas; named 5G partner for 15 NBA teams: https://www.verizon.com/about/news/verizon-5g-live-60-stadiums-15-nba-teams You broke your phone, so Verizon is breaking the rules: https://www.verizon.com/about/news/you-broke-your-phone-so-verizon-breaking-rules --- Check Verizon mmWave 5G coverage in your area here: https://www.verizon.com/coverage-map/ --- Support us on Patreon and get exclusive content: https://www.patreon.com/stetsondoggett Subscribe on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/stetsondoggett Compare cell phone plans: https://www.bestphoneplans.net/ Cell phone plan & smartphone deals: https://www.bestphoneplans.net/deals Contact Us: podcast@bestphoneplans.net Social Links: https://twitter.com/stetsondoggett https://twitter.com/DennisBP3 --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/bestphoneplans/support
After increasing the price, T-Mobile has cut reversed course. T-Mobile, Verizon and AT&T CEO's discuss their plans for 5G and networking into the future. Nokia now has a portfolio of small cell hardware for C Band and mmWave tech in 5G. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/smtreport/message
How does a huge telecom organization with $132 billion in revenue manage product development for the enterprise and consumer markets? Verizon's Chief Product Development Officer, Nicki Palmer, explains and also dives into what's happening with 5G. She describes Verizon’s product design process, talks about Verizon’s 5G Labs, and explains how digital transformation shapes customer experience.This conversation covers these topics:-- What is product development in telecommunications?-- Balancing product innovation with legacy product development-- Digital transformation and customer experience management-- About the Verizon 5G labs-- How to drive product innovation in a remote work environment-- 5G and modern telecom applications-- Team diversity and women in technology===Read the full transcript: https://www.cxotalk.com/episode/telecom-industry-product-development-verizonSubscribe to the CXOTalk newsletter: https://www.cxotalk.com/subscribe===As Verizon's Chief Product Development Officer, Nicki Palmer oversees the growth and expansion of the 5G ecosystem, convening partners and developing products and services to advance 5G growth and device technology. Previously she was responsible for planning, operations & engineering of the nation's largest and most reliable 4G LTE wireless network, the company’s 5G residential broadband and 5G mobile network deployments.
Jesse Trucks is the Minister of Magic at Splunk, where he consults on security and compliance program designs and develops Splunk architectures for security use cases, among other things. He brings more than 20 years of experience in tech to this role, having previously worked as director of security and compliance at Peak Hosting, a staff member at freenode, a cybersecurity engineer at Oak Ridge National Laboratory, and a systems engineer at D.E. Shaw Research, among several other positions. Of course, Jesse is also the host of Meanwhile in Security, the podcast about better cloud security you're about to listen to.TranscriptJesse: Welcome to Meanwhile in Security where I, your host Jesse Trucks, guides you to better security in the cloud.Announcer: This episode is sponsored by ExtraHop. ExtraHop provides threat detection and response for the Enterprise (not the starship). On-prem security doesn't translate well to cloud or multi-cloud environments, and that's not even counting IoT. ExtraHop automatically discovers everything inside the perimeter, including your cloud workloads and IoT devices, detects these threats up to 35 percent faster, and helps you act immediately. Ask for a free trial of detection and response for AWS today at extrahop.com/trial. That's extrahop.com/trial.Jesse: This week, Verizon announced a deepening of its partnership with AWS with the launch of a private mobile edge computing, or MEC, service, which was previously only available from Verizon using Microsoft Azure cloud services. This new service complements the public MEC offering using AWS that Verizon introduced in August of 2020, and brings MEC solutions within reach of many organizations who could not consider implementing MEC in the past. What is mobile edge computing and what do these services provide? Mobile edge computing, sometimes called multi-access edge computing, is an infrastructure approach that provides cloud compute services at the edge of the network closest to the end-users of those services. To service implementations for mobile end-users, the hardware hosting the cloud services are co-located with the 4G or 5G networks rather than relying on transport to and from regular cloud services in addition to traversing the mobile networks.This provides low-latency access for critical and real-time applications by users on those mobile networks. With the advent of 5G, latency on mobile networks has dropped down to or below levels commonly measured in landline-based networks. A common example cited is the use of MEC with self-driving cars for ultra-low latency access to traffic, weather, and other real-time conditions. However, a more practical example is using MEC to provide real-time analysis of crowd densities and line cues in public spaces such as theatres or public transit stations. The difference between public and private MEC is that, as the names imply, public implementations are accessible on the public internet, whereas private implementations are only accessible via internal private networks.The latency for private MEC implementations tend to be much lower than public MEC implementations as well because the hardware running the compute services is physically located with the end-user systems, such as in a manufacturing plant or train station, but public MEC systems are usually located with a mobile network provider away from the end-users. The Verizon private MEC uses the AWS Outpost service, which is a hardware-based extension of AWS Cloud services physically located at the customer site rather than in AWS or Verizon data centers. These systems include Verizon 5G services for use on private local networks to provide low latency, easy to manage, and secure wireless access. Because of the co-location inside the customer network, the AWS Cloud services provided by this offering are only available to the customer hosting the hardware. The Verizon public MEC uses the AWS Wavelength service, which is a collection of AWS zones co-located with Verizon's 5G network in select locations. These are generally available [over 00:03:53] AWS Cloud services, usable by nearly any AWS customer. Meanwhile, what about security and MEC?Because the Verizon MEC services use existing AWS products, there are no new security mechanisms, tools, or requirements added to either of the public or private MEC services. The customer is required to manage all the usual security for systems and applications they deploy with either of the MEC solutions using the shared responsibility model with two slight differences with AWS Outpost. Let's look a bit more closely at these two products and their security models.AWS Outpost is essentially an AWS Cloud in a box or rack of servers physically installed in the customer's location. This is remotely managed by AWS and provides a subset of the same AWS services, using the same APIs and other tools, as standard AWS offers in their normal regions. This is different than a wholly private and self-managed cloud implementation because AWS still manages the cloud infrastructure within the Outpost's equipment.Announcer: If you have several PostgreSQL databases running behind NAT, check out Teleport, an open-source identity-aware access proxy. Teleport provides secure access to anything running behind NAT, such as SSH servers or Kubernetes clusters and—new in this release—PostgreSQL instances, including AWS RDS. Teleport gives users superpowers like authenticating via SSO with multi-factor, listing and seeing all database instances, getting instant access to them using popular CLI tools or web UIs. Teleport ensures best security practices like role-based access, preventing data exfiltration, providing visibility, and ensuring compliance. Download Teleport at goteleport.com. That's goteleport.com.Jesse: With Outpost, there are two changes to the shared security model. Obviously, there's an added layer of security managed by the customer to protect the physical hardware, and the customer must also provide adequate network access and security for the network. However, in terms of the systems, services, and applications running in the environment, operations and security are the same as running those same services in any other cloud environment. The hardware within the server or rack is built on the AWS Nitro platform. Nitro is a hardware implementation of the AWS hypervisor technology, coupled with chip-based hardware security subsystems.This allows for a secure implementation of AWS Cloud services while also protecting customer environments and data. AWS Wavelength is the implementation of many of the familiar AWS Cloud services but co-located by AWS within mobile provider 5G networks, and uses the same shared responsibility model as normal AWS solutions. Essentially, Wavelength is used much like any other AWS environment. To use Wavelength, you must request access to the desired Wavelength zone or zones. Once access is granted, create or modify an existing AWS virtual private cloud, or VPC, with coverage extended to include the Wavelength's zone or zones.Then you deploy MEC-based services in the Wavelength zones as you normally would in other AWS regions and zones. Given this as an implementation of VPC, there are no additional security concerns outside the normal issues with managing a complex VPC environment. As always, you can limit access to these services and applications in all the usual ways with either the public or private MEC solutions. You can limit access to VPC connected systems, open it to public access and/or require authenticated access. However, one caveat is that to grant access from outside the organization with the private MEC solution using Outposts, your network must provide a path to the services just as you would set up any self-hosted solution today. For more details on the services, go to the AWS documentation for Outpost, Wavelength, and Nitro.Now that we've covered what this announcement means, it's useful to talk about how this might apply to your environment. Most organizations will have little or no use for MEC capabilities now or in the future. However, some organizations might find new uses for MEC now that the barrier to entry for this type of service is brought lower with the advent of these services as standard AWS and Verizon offerings. Implementing any solution that relies on low latency connections and high-speed calculations for near-instant results requires a non-trivial investment in time and resources, as we all know, but pushing such a solution to production use or as a rapid go-to-market strategy could be much faster and easier than it used to be using the services. The real security implications come if you're implementing MEC solutions that touched your IoT devices, which historically weren't involved in connected networks such as these. I'm [laugh] pretty sure that pricing is non-trivial as well, but you'd have to talk with our friends Mike and Corey at The Duckbill Group about cost analysis. I'm just the security guy.Jesse: Thanks for listening. Please subscribe and rate us on Apple and Google Podcast, Spotify, or wherever you listen to podcasts.Announcer: This has been a HumblePod production. Stay humble.
Marsha Collier & Marc Cohen Techradio by Computer and Technology Radio / wsRadio
#COVID19 News: You Should Know about Made in USA N95 masks; Netflix sets new restrictions on password sharing; A lesser known phone manufacturer OnePlus 9 collaborates with premiere camera maker Hasselblad; Verizon rolls out a tiered #5G plan; Learn what Google knows about you; Google Career Certificates; When to reset your computer;
Here's where you can get the high-speed home internet service. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Super Follows, TikTok Success Secrets, Pandemic Baby Bust, Stadia's Failure Google's Stadia Problem? A Video Game Unit That's Not Googley Enough. Twitter announces paid Super Follows to let you charge for tweets. I Will Never Charge You for My Tweets. The Rise of Clubhouse. Baby Bust: America's Pandemic Birth Declines Steeper Than Initially Believed. The Secret to TikTok Success is There is No Secret. Former SolarWinds CEO blames intern for "solarwinds123" password leak. Verizon support says you should turn off 5G to save your phone's battery. Valve Ordered to Give Apple Information on 436 Steam Games As Part of Epic Games Legal Case. Amazon's new rotating, the follow-you camera is useful — and invasive. A software update has caused some Roombas to misbehave, and iRobot is working on a fix. Facebook Is Considering Facial Recognition For Its Upcoming Smart Glasses. GameStop shares soar more than 100% amid executive shuffle. Bots hyped up GameStop on major social media platforms, analysis finds. Sources: Robinhood is planning to confidentially file for an IPO as soon as next month. Square announces it spent $170M to acquire 3,318 bitcoins at an average price of $51,236. CD Projekt Red delays the 'Cyberpunk 2077' 1.2 patch until March. PlayStation CEO says PS5 will get its own VR headset, explains console supply chain shortfall. HP is buying gaming accessory brand HyperX for $425 million. MSI GS66 Stealth review (2021): The gaming sweet spot comes to laptops. 'Deep Nostalgia' Can Turn Old Photos of Your Relatives Into Moving Videos. Shockingly Real Tom Cruise Deepfakes Are Invading TikTok. Border agents can search phones freely under the new circuit court ruling. Biden Orders Broad Supply-Chain Review Amid Chip Shortages. California can finally enforce its landmark net neutrality law, judge rules. F.C.C. Approves a $50 Monthly High-Speed Internet Subsidy. NFTs and a Thousand True Fans. It's the End of an Era: Fry's Calls It Quits. Farewell Cinefex, you unlocked the magic of VFX for everyone. Host: Leo Laporte Guests: Shira Lazar, Lance Ulanoff, and Devindra Hardawar Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/this-week-in-tech Sponsors: udacity.com/twit coupon code TWiT extrahop.com/TWIT Gabi.com/TWIT mintmobile.com/twit
Super Follows, TikTok Success Secrets, Pandemic Baby Bust, Stadia's Failure Google's Stadia Problem? A Video Game Unit That's Not Googley Enough. Twitter announces paid Super Follows to let you charge for tweets. I Will Never Charge You for My Tweets. The Rise of Clubhouse. Baby Bust: America's Pandemic Birth Declines Steeper Than Initially Believed. The Secret to TikTok Success is There is No Secret. Former SolarWinds CEO blames intern for "solarwinds123" password leak. Verizon support says you should turn off 5G to save your phone's battery. Valve Ordered to Give Apple Information on 436 Steam Games As Part of Epic Games Legal Case. Amazon's new rotating, the follow-you camera is useful — and invasive. A software update has caused some Roombas to misbehave, and iRobot is working on a fix. Facebook Is Considering Facial Recognition For Its Upcoming Smart Glasses. GameStop shares soar more than 100% amid executive shuffle. Bots hyped up GameStop on major social media platforms, analysis finds. Sources: Robinhood is planning to confidentially file for an IPO as soon as next month. Square announces it spent $170M to acquire 3,318 bitcoins at an average price of $51,236. CD Projekt Red delays the 'Cyberpunk 2077' 1.2 patch until March. PlayStation CEO says PS5 will get its own VR headset, explains console supply chain shortfall. HP is buying gaming accessory brand HyperX for $425 million. MSI GS66 Stealth review (2021): The gaming sweet spot comes to laptops. 'Deep Nostalgia' Can Turn Old Photos of Your Relatives Into Moving Videos. Shockingly Real Tom Cruise Deepfakes Are Invading TikTok. Border agents can search phones freely under the new circuit court ruling. Biden Orders Broad Supply-Chain Review Amid Chip Shortages. California can finally enforce its landmark net neutrality law, judge rules. F.C.C. Approves a $50 Monthly High-Speed Internet Subsidy. NFTs and a Thousand True Fans. It's the End of an Era: Fry's Calls It Quits. Farewell Cinefex, you unlocked the magic of VFX for everyone. Host: Leo Laporte Guests: Shira Lazar, Lance Ulanoff, and Devindra Hardawar Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/this-week-in-tech Sponsors: udacity.com/twit coupon code TWiT extrahop.com/TWIT Gabi.com/TWIT mintmobile.com/twit
Super Follows, TikTok Success Secrets, Pandemic Baby Bust, Stadia's Failure Google's Stadia Problem? A Video Game Unit That's Not Googley Enough. Twitter announces paid Super Follows to let you charge for tweets. I Will Never Charge You for My Tweets. The Rise of Clubhouse. Baby Bust: America's Pandemic Birth Declines Steeper Than Initially Believed. The Secret to TikTok Success is There is No Secret. Former SolarWinds CEO blames intern for "solarwinds123" password leak. Verizon support says you should turn off 5G to save your phone's battery. Valve Ordered to Give Apple Information on 436 Steam Games As Part of Epic Games Legal Case. Amazon's new rotating, the follow-you camera is useful — and invasive. A software update has caused some Roombas to misbehave, and iRobot is working on a fix. Facebook Is Considering Facial Recognition For Its Upcoming Smart Glasses. GameStop shares soar more than 100% amid executive shuffle. Bots hyped up GameStop on major social media platforms, analysis finds. Sources: Robinhood is planning to confidentially file for an IPO as soon as next month. Square announces it spent $170M to acquire 3,318 bitcoins at an average price of $51,236. CD Projekt Red delays the 'Cyberpunk 2077' 1.2 patch until March. PlayStation CEO says PS5 will get its own VR headset, explains console supply chain shortfall. HP is buying gaming accessory brand HyperX for $425 million. MSI GS66 Stealth review (2021): The gaming sweet spot comes to laptops. 'Deep Nostalgia' Can Turn Old Photos of Your Relatives Into Moving Videos. Shockingly Real Tom Cruise Deepfakes Are Invading TikTok. Border agents can search phones freely under the new circuit court ruling. Biden Orders Broad Supply-Chain Review Amid Chip Shortages. California can finally enforce its landmark net neutrality law, judge rules. F.C.C. Approves a $50 Monthly High-Speed Internet Subsidy. NFTs and a Thousand True Fans. It's the End of an Era: Fry's Calls It Quits. Farewell Cinefex, you unlocked the magic of VFX for everyone. Host: Leo Laporte Guests: Shira Lazar, Lance Ulanoff, and Devindra Hardawar Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/this-week-in-tech Sponsors: udacity.com/twit coupon code TWiT extrahop.com/TWIT Gabi.com/TWIT mintmobile.com/twit
Super Follows, TikTok Success Secrets, Pandemic Baby Bust, Stadia's Failure Google's Stadia Problem? A Video Game Unit That's Not Googley Enough. Twitter announces paid Super Follows to let you charge for tweets. I Will Never Charge You for My Tweets. The Rise of Clubhouse. Baby Bust: America's Pandemic Birth Declines Steeper Than Initially Believed. The Secret to TikTok Success is There is No Secret. Former SolarWinds CEO blames intern for "solarwinds123" password leak. Verizon support says you should turn off 5G to save your phone's battery. Valve Ordered to Give Apple Information on 436 Steam Games As Part of Epic Games Legal Case. Amazon's new rotating, the follow-you camera is useful — and invasive. A software update has caused some Roombas to misbehave, and iRobot is working on a fix. Facebook Is Considering Facial Recognition For Its Upcoming Smart Glasses. GameStop shares soar more than 100% amid executive shuffle. Bots hyped up GameStop on major social media platforms, analysis finds. Sources: Robinhood is planning to confidentially file for an IPO as soon as next month. Square announces it spent $170M to acquire 3,318 bitcoins at an average price of $51,236. CD Projekt Red delays the 'Cyberpunk 2077' 1.2 patch until March. PlayStation CEO says PS5 will get its own VR headset, explains console supply chain shortfall. HP is buying gaming accessory brand HyperX for $425 million. MSI GS66 Stealth review (2021): The gaming sweet spot comes to laptops. 'Deep Nostalgia' Can Turn Old Photos of Your Relatives Into Moving Videos. Shockingly Real Tom Cruise Deepfakes Are Invading TikTok. Border agents can search phones freely under the new circuit court ruling. Biden Orders Broad Supply-Chain Review Amid Chip Shortages. California can finally enforce its landmark net neutrality law, judge rules. F.C.C. Approves a $50 Monthly High-Speed Internet Subsidy. NFTs and a Thousand True Fans. It's the End of an Era: Fry's Calls It Quits. Farewell Cinefex, you unlocked the magic of VFX for everyone. Host: Leo Laporte Guests: Shira Lazar, Lance Ulanoff, and Devindra Hardawar Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/this-week-in-tech Sponsors: udacity.com/twit coupon code TWiT extrahop.com/TWIT Gabi.com/TWIT mintmobile.com/twit
Super Follows, TikTok Success Secrets, Pandemic Baby Bust, Stadia's Failure Google's Stadia Problem? A Video Game Unit That's Not Googley Enough. Twitter announces paid Super Follows to let you charge for tweets. I Will Never Charge You for My Tweets. The Rise of Clubhouse. Baby Bust: America's Pandemic Birth Declines Steeper Than Initially Believed. The Secret to TikTok Success is There is No Secret. Former SolarWinds CEO blames intern for "solarwinds123" password leak. Verizon support says you should turn off 5G to save your phone's battery. Valve Ordered to Give Apple Information on 436 Steam Games As Part of Epic Games Legal Case. Amazon's new rotating, the follow-you camera is useful — and invasive. A software update has caused some Roombas to misbehave, and iRobot is working on a fix. Facebook Is Considering Facial Recognition For Its Upcoming Smart Glasses. GameStop shares soar more than 100% amid executive shuffle. Bots hyped up GameStop on major social media platforms, analysis finds. Sources: Robinhood is planning to confidentially file for an IPO as soon as next month. Square announces it spent $170M to acquire 3,318 bitcoins at an average price of $51,236. CD Projekt Red delays the 'Cyberpunk 2077' 1.2 patch until March. PlayStation CEO says PS5 will get its own VR headset, explains console supply chain shortfall. HP is buying gaming accessory brand HyperX for $425 million. MSI GS66 Stealth review (2021): The gaming sweet spot comes to laptops. 'Deep Nostalgia' Can Turn Old Photos of Your Relatives Into Moving Videos. Shockingly Real Tom Cruise Deepfakes Are Invading TikTok. Border agents can search phones freely under the new circuit court ruling. Biden Orders Broad Supply-Chain Review Amid Chip Shortages. California can finally enforce its landmark net neutrality law, judge rules. F.C.C. Approves a $50 Monthly High-Speed Internet Subsidy. NFTs and a Thousand True Fans. It's the End of an Era: Fry's Calls It Quits. Farewell Cinefex, you unlocked the magic of VFX for everyone. Host: Leo Laporte Guests: Shira Lazar, Lance Ulanoff, and Devindra Hardawar Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/this-week-in-tech Sponsors: udacity.com/twit coupon code TWiT extrahop.com/TWIT Gabi.com/TWIT mintmobile.com/twit
Super Follows, TikTok Success Secrets, Pandemic Baby Bust, Stadia's Failure Google's Stadia Problem? A Video Game Unit That's Not Googley Enough. Twitter announces paid Super Follows to let you charge for tweets. I Will Never Charge You for My Tweets. The Rise of Clubhouse. Baby Bust: America's Pandemic Birth Declines Steeper Than Initially Believed. The Secret to TikTok Success is There is No Secret. Former SolarWinds CEO blames intern for "solarwinds123" password leak. Verizon support says you should turn off 5G to save your phone's battery. Valve Ordered to Give Apple Information on 436 Steam Games As Part of Epic Games Legal Case. Amazon's new rotating, the follow-you camera is useful — and invasive. A software update has caused some Roombas to misbehave, and iRobot is working on a fix. Facebook Is Considering Facial Recognition For Its Upcoming Smart Glasses. GameStop shares soar more than 100% amid executive shuffle. Bots hyped up GameStop on major social media platforms, analysis finds. Sources: Robinhood is planning to confidentially file for an IPO as soon as next month. Square announces it spent $170M to acquire 3,318 bitcoins at an average price of $51,236. CD Projekt Red delays the 'Cyberpunk 2077' 1.2 patch until March. PlayStation CEO says PS5 will get its own VR headset, explains console supply chain shortfall. HP is buying gaming accessory brand HyperX for $425 million. MSI GS66 Stealth review (2021): The gaming sweet spot comes to laptops. 'Deep Nostalgia' Can Turn Old Photos of Your Relatives Into Moving Videos. Shockingly Real Tom Cruise Deepfakes Are Invading TikTok. Border agents can search phones freely under the new circuit court ruling. Biden Orders Broad Supply-Chain Review Amid Chip Shortages. California can finally enforce its landmark net neutrality law, judge rules. F.C.C. Approves a $50 Monthly High-Speed Internet Subsidy. NFTs and a Thousand True Fans. It's the End of an Era: Fry's Calls It Quits. Farewell Cinefex, you unlocked the magic of VFX for everyone. Host: Leo Laporte Guests: Shira Lazar, Lance Ulanoff, and Devindra Hardawar Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/this-week-in-tech Sponsors: udacity.com/twit coupon code TWiT extrahop.com/TWIT Gabi.com/TWIT mintmobile.com/twit
Super Follows, TikTok Success Secrets, Pandemic Baby Bust, Stadia's Failure Google's Stadia Problem? A Video Game Unit That's Not Googley Enough. Twitter announces paid Super Follows to let you charge for tweets. I Will Never Charge You for My Tweets. The Rise of Clubhouse. Baby Bust: America's Pandemic Birth Declines Steeper Than Initially Believed. The Secret to TikTok Success is There is No Secret. Former SolarWinds CEO blames intern for "solarwinds123" password leak. Verizon support says you should turn off 5G to save your phone's battery. Valve Ordered to Give Apple Information on 436 Steam Games As Part of Epic Games Legal Case. Amazon's new rotating, the follow-you camera is useful — and invasive. A software update has caused some Roombas to misbehave, and iRobot is working on a fix. Facebook Is Considering Facial Recognition For Its Upcoming Smart Glasses. GameStop shares soar more than 100% amid executive shuffle. Bots hyped up GameStop on major social media platforms, analysis finds. Sources: Robinhood is planning to confidentially file for an IPO as soon as next month. Square announces it spent $170M to acquire 3,318 bitcoins at an average price of $51,236. CD Projekt Red delays the 'Cyberpunk 2077' 1.2 patch until March. PlayStation CEO says PS5 will get its own VR headset, explains console supply chain shortfall. HP is buying gaming accessory brand HyperX for $425 million. MSI GS66 Stealth review (2021): The gaming sweet spot comes to laptops. 'Deep Nostalgia' Can Turn Old Photos of Your Relatives Into Moving Videos. Shockingly Real Tom Cruise Deepfakes Are Invading TikTok. Border agents can search phones freely under the new circuit court ruling. Biden Orders Broad Supply-Chain Review Amid Chip Shortages. California can finally enforce its landmark net neutrality law, judge rules. F.C.C. Approves a $50 Monthly High-Speed Internet Subsidy. NFTs and a Thousand True Fans. It's the End of an Era: Fry's Calls It Quits. Farewell Cinefex, you unlocked the magic of VFX for everyone. Host: Leo Laporte Guests: Shira Lazar, Lance Ulanoff, and Devindra Hardawar Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/this-week-in-tech Sponsors: udacity.com/twit coupon code TWiT extrahop.com/TWIT Gabi.com/TWIT mintmobile.com/twit
Super Follows, TikTok Success Secrets, Pandemic Baby Bust, Stadia's Failure Google's Stadia Problem? A Video Game Unit That's Not Googley Enough. Twitter announces paid Super Follows to let you charge for tweets. I Will Never Charge You for My Tweets. The Rise of Clubhouse. Baby Bust: America's Pandemic Birth Declines Steeper Than Initially Believed. The Secret to TikTok Success is There is No Secret. Former SolarWinds CEO blames intern for "solarwinds123" password leak. Verizon support says you should turn off 5G to save your phone's battery. Valve Ordered to Give Apple Information on 436 Steam Games As Part of Epic Games Legal Case. Amazon's new rotating, the follow-you camera is useful — and invasive. A software update has caused some Roombas to misbehave, and iRobot is working on a fix. Facebook Is Considering Facial Recognition For Its Upcoming Smart Glasses. GameStop shares soar more than 100% amid executive shuffle. Bots hyped up GameStop on major social media platforms, analysis finds. Sources: Robinhood is planning to confidentially file for an IPO as soon as next month. Square announces it spent $170M to acquire 3,318 bitcoins at an average price of $51,236. CD Projekt Red delays the 'Cyberpunk 2077' 1.2 patch until March. PlayStation CEO says PS5 will get its own VR headset, explains console supply chain shortfall. HP is buying gaming accessory brand HyperX for $425 million. MSI GS66 Stealth review (2021): The gaming sweet spot comes to laptops. 'Deep Nostalgia' Can Turn Old Photos of Your Relatives Into Moving Videos. Shockingly Real Tom Cruise Deepfakes Are Invading TikTok. Border agents can search phones freely under the new circuit court ruling. Biden Orders Broad Supply-Chain Review Amid Chip Shortages. California can finally enforce its landmark net neutrality law, judge rules. F.C.C. Approves a $50 Monthly High-Speed Internet Subsidy. NFTs and a Thousand True Fans. It's the End of an Era: Fry's Calls It Quits. Farewell Cinefex, you unlocked the magic of VFX for everyone. Host: Leo Laporte Guests: Shira Lazar, Lance Ulanoff, and Devindra Hardawar Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/this-week-in-tech Sponsors: udacity.com/twit coupon code TWiT extrahop.com/TWIT Gabi.com/TWIT mintmobile.com/twit
Super Follows, TikTok Success Secrets, Pandemic Baby Bust, Stadia's Failure Google's Stadia Problem? A Video Game Unit That's Not Googley Enough. Twitter announces paid Super Follows to let you charge for tweets. I Will Never Charge You for My Tweets. The Rise of Clubhouse. Baby Bust: America's Pandemic Birth Declines Steeper Than Initially Believed. The Secret to TikTok Success is There is No Secret. Former SolarWinds CEO blames intern for "solarwinds123" password leak. Verizon support says you should turn off 5G to save your phone's battery. Valve Ordered to Give Apple Information on 436 Steam Games As Part of Epic Games Legal Case. Amazon's new rotating, the follow-you camera is useful — and invasive. A software update has caused some Roombas to misbehave, and iRobot is working on a fix. Facebook Is Considering Facial Recognition For Its Upcoming Smart Glasses. GameStop shares soar more than 100% amid executive shuffle. Bots hyped up GameStop on major social media platforms, analysis finds. Sources: Robinhood is planning to confidentially file for an IPO as soon as next month. Square announces it spent $170M to acquire 3,318 bitcoins at an average price of $51,236. CD Projekt Red delays the 'Cyberpunk 2077' 1.2 patch until March. PlayStation CEO says PS5 will get its own VR headset, explains console supply chain shortfall. HP is buying gaming accessory brand HyperX for $425 million. MSI GS66 Stealth review (2021): The gaming sweet spot comes to laptops. 'Deep Nostalgia' Can Turn Old Photos of Your Relatives Into Moving Videos. Shockingly Real Tom Cruise Deepfakes Are Invading TikTok. Border agents can search phones freely under the new circuit court ruling. Biden Orders Broad Supply-Chain Review Amid Chip Shortages. California can finally enforce its landmark net neutrality law, judge rules. F.C.C. Approves a $50 Monthly High-Speed Internet Subsidy. NFTs and a Thousand True Fans. It's the End of an Era: Fry's Calls It Quits. Farewell Cinefex, you unlocked the magic of VFX for everyone. Host: Leo Laporte Guests: Shira Lazar, Lance Ulanoff, and Devindra Hardawar Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/this-week-in-tech Sponsors: udacity.com/twit coupon code TWiT extrahop.com/TWIT Gabi.com/TWIT mintmobile.com/twit
Super Follows, TikTok Success Secrets, Pandemic Baby Bust, Stadia's Failure Google's Stadia Problem? A Video Game Unit That's Not Googley Enough. Twitter announces paid Super Follows to let you charge for tweets. I Will Never Charge You for My Tweets. The Rise of Clubhouse. Baby Bust: America's Pandemic Birth Declines Steeper Than Initially Believed. The Secret to TikTok Success is There is No Secret. Former SolarWinds CEO blames intern for "solarwinds123" password leak. Verizon support says you should turn off 5G to save your phone's battery. Valve Ordered to Give Apple Information on 436 Steam Games As Part of Epic Games Legal Case. Amazon's new rotating, the follow-you camera is useful — and invasive. A software update has caused some Roombas to misbehave, and iRobot is working on a fix. Facebook Is Considering Facial Recognition For Its Upcoming Smart Glasses. GameStop shares soar more than 100% amid executive shuffle. Bots hyped up GameStop on major social media platforms, analysis finds. Sources: Robinhood is planning to confidentially file for an IPO as soon as next month. Square announces it spent $170M to acquire 3,318 bitcoins at an average price of $51,236. CD Projekt Red delays the 'Cyberpunk 2077' 1.2 patch until March. PlayStation CEO says PS5 will get its own VR headset, explains console supply chain shortfall. HP is buying gaming accessory brand HyperX for $425 million. MSI GS66 Stealth review (2021): The gaming sweet spot comes to laptops. 'Deep Nostalgia' Can Turn Old Photos of Your Relatives Into Moving Videos. Shockingly Real Tom Cruise Deepfakes Are Invading TikTok. Border agents can search phones freely under the new circuit court ruling. Biden Orders Broad Supply-Chain Review Amid Chip Shortages. California can finally enforce its landmark net neutrality law, judge rules. F.C.C. Approves a $50 Monthly High-Speed Internet Subsidy. NFTs and a Thousand True Fans. It's the End of an Era: Fry's Calls It Quits. Farewell Cinefex, you unlocked the magic of VFX for everyone. Host: Leo Laporte Guests: Shira Lazar, Lance Ulanoff, and Devindra Hardawar Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/this-week-in-tech Sponsors: udacity.com/twit coupon code TWiT extrahop.com/TWIT Gabi.com/TWIT mintmobile.com/twit
Super Follows, TikTok Success Secrets, Pandemic Baby Bust, Stadia's Failure Google's Stadia Problem? A Video Game Unit That's Not Googley Enough. Twitter announces paid Super Follows to let you charge for tweets. I Will Never Charge You for My Tweets. The Rise of Clubhouse. Baby Bust: America's Pandemic Birth Declines Steeper Than Initially Believed. The Secret to TikTok Success is There is No Secret. Former SolarWinds CEO blames intern for "solarwinds123" password leak. Verizon support says you should turn off 5G to save your phone's battery. Valve Ordered to Give Apple Information on 436 Steam Games As Part of Epic Games Legal Case. Amazon's new rotating, the follow-you camera is useful — and invasive. A software update has caused some Roombas to misbehave, and iRobot is working on a fix. Facebook Is Considering Facial Recognition For Its Upcoming Smart Glasses. GameStop shares soar more than 100% amid executive shuffle. Bots hyped up GameStop on major social media platforms, analysis finds. Sources: Robinhood is planning to confidentially file for an IPO as soon as next month. Square announces it spent $170M to acquire 3,318 bitcoins at an average price of $51,236. CD Projekt Red delays the 'Cyberpunk 2077' 1.2 patch until March. PlayStation CEO says PS5 will get its own VR headset, explains console supply chain shortfall. HP is buying gaming accessory brand HyperX for $425 million. MSI GS66 Stealth review (2021): The gaming sweet spot comes to laptops. 'Deep Nostalgia' Can Turn Old Photos of Your Relatives Into Moving Videos. Shockingly Real Tom Cruise Deepfakes Are Invading TikTok. Border agents can search phones freely under the new circuit court ruling. Biden Orders Broad Supply-Chain Review Amid Chip Shortages. California can finally enforce its landmark net neutrality law, judge rules. F.C.C. Approves a $50 Monthly High-Speed Internet Subsidy. NFTs and a Thousand True Fans. It's the End of an Era: Fry's Calls It Quits. Farewell Cinefex, you unlocked the magic of VFX for everyone. Host: Leo Laporte Guests: Shira Lazar, Lance Ulanoff, and Devindra Hardawar Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/this-week-in-tech Sponsors: udacity.com/twit coupon code TWiT extrahop.com/TWIT Gabi.com/TWIT mintmobile.com/twit
Super Follows, TikTok Success Secrets, Pandemic Baby Bust, Stadia's Failure Google's Stadia Problem? A Video Game Unit That's Not Googley Enough. Twitter announces paid Super Follows to let you charge for tweets. I Will Never Charge You for My Tweets. The Rise of Clubhouse. Baby Bust: America's Pandemic Birth Declines Steeper Than Initially Believed. The Secret to TikTok Success is There is No Secret. Former SolarWinds CEO blames intern for "solarwinds123" password leak. Verizon support says you should turn off 5G to save your phone's battery. Valve Ordered to Give Apple Information on 436 Steam Games As Part of Epic Games Legal Case. Amazon's new rotating, the follow-you camera is useful — and invasive. A software update has caused some Roombas to misbehave, and iRobot is working on a fix. Facebook Is Considering Facial Recognition For Its Upcoming Smart Glasses. GameStop shares soar more than 100% amid executive shuffle. Bots hyped up GameStop on major social media platforms, analysis finds. Sources: Robinhood is planning to confidentially file for an IPO as soon as next month. Square announces it spent $170M to acquire 3,318 bitcoins at an average price of $51,236. CD Projekt Red delays the 'Cyberpunk 2077' 1.2 patch until March. PlayStation CEO says PS5 will get its own VR headset, explains console supply chain shortfall. HP is buying gaming accessory brand HyperX for $425 million. MSI GS66 Stealth review (2021): The gaming sweet spot comes to laptops. 'Deep Nostalgia' Can Turn Old Photos of Your Relatives Into Moving Videos. Shockingly Real Tom Cruise Deepfakes Are Invading TikTok. Border agents can search phones freely under the new circuit court ruling. Biden Orders Broad Supply-Chain Review Amid Chip Shortages. California can finally enforce its landmark net neutrality law, judge rules. F.C.C. Approves a $50 Monthly High-Speed Internet Subsidy. NFTs and a Thousand True Fans. It's the End of an Era: Fry's Calls It Quits. Farewell Cinefex, you unlocked the magic of VFX for everyone. Host: Leo Laporte Guests: Shira Lazar, Lance Ulanoff, and Devindra Hardawar Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/this-week-in-tech Sponsors: udacity.com/twit coupon code TWiT extrahop.com/TWIT Gabi.com/TWIT mintmobile.com/twit
An enhanced podcast about all things Macintosh. For Mac geeks, by Mac geeks. Episode 770. 2020 was not too bad for Apple. Year-end speculation turns to Apple Car. A Gaming focused Apple TV. The Verizon 5G dupe. New Macs RAM vs SSD. Fitness+ Community reviews. A community thank you. Special thanks to our sponsor: Smile - Check out TextExpander Shownotes in: HTML or OPML Subscribe to the Podcast Feed or Get the MP3 or Enhanced AAC
Can city life be improved? In this episode, host Christina Warren explores how Verizon 5G can help make sense of busy streets — and keep city residents safe. You’ll hear from Nicholas Nilan, Director of Public Sector Product Development at Verizon, about the problems facing first responders today. Then, you’ll hear from Elise Neel, VP of Location Services and New Business Innovation at Verizon, about how 5G smart cities can provide more efficient transportation for residents. Finally, you’ll hear from Herve Utheza, the Chief of Data Strategy at HERE Technologies. He’ll talk about how HERE’s location intelligence could eliminate traffic congestion and make cities safer.
Everybody is excited that the new apple products are being ushered in including the iPhone 12 family. Not everyone is excited though as Thio Joe tells why he's not. Also, Verizon makes an announcement on rolling out their 5G and why it's special.
What’s the future of online gaming? Players will no longer be confined to a console, games will come to life in the world around us and multiplayer connections will happen at lightning speed. In this episode, host Christina Warren explores the future of gaming, with guests like Veronica Saron, the Global Product Lead of Pokémon GO, Candice Mudrick, Head of Market Analysis and Newzoo and Michael Prindiville, CEO of Dignitas. Learn how Verizon 5G can unleash entirely new experiences in virtual reality, augmented reality and multiplayer games.
Marsha Collier & Marc Cohen Techradio by Computer and Technology Radio / wsRadio
Amazon Halloween boxes, New Google Maps feature; Should you upgrade to #iPhone12? Trade Ins, Pricing and advice; Verizon 5G; Google hum to search; New Chromebook lifetime;
Have you heard the good news about Verizon 5G Verizoning it's 5G way around the Verizon 5G world? Because Verizon 5G is here! In this episode, TJ and Joe talk about Verizon 5G!, the new HomePod Mini, Verizon 5G!, the new iPhones 12, and Verizon 5G! Brought to you by Verizon 5G! (disclaimer: not actually brought to you by Verizon 5G!)
Topics: Woman on the Moon Resurgence of Moon Exploration Spaghettification of stars Supermassive Black holes Verizon 5G Alphabet Mineral (Robotic Plant Buggies)
Season 2 Episode 16 --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/smtreport/message
SDxCentral Weekly Wrap for Sept. 11, 2020 Plus, T-Mobile's intricate 5G tapestry, and Nutanix CEO explains why he is leaving Samsung's gain is Nokia's loss; T-Mobile's 5G runs on Cisco, Ericsson, and Nokia; and COVID-19 impacts Nutanix's future. Samsung's Massive Verizon 5G Contract Spells Doom for Nokia How T-Mobile Weaved Cisco, Ericsson, Nokia Into Its 5G SA Core Nutanix CEO Dheeraj Pandey Talks Remote First Grade, Why He's Leaving Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
SDxCentral Weekly Wrap for Sept. 11, 2020 Plus, T-Mobile's intricate 5G tapestry, and Nutanix CEO explains why he is leaving Samsung's gain is Nokia's loss; T-Mobile's 5G runs on Cisco, Ericsson, and Nokia; and COVID-19 impacts Nutanix's future. Samsung’s Massive Verizon 5G Contract Spells Doom for Nokia How T-Mobile Weaved Cisco, Ericsson, Nokia Into Its 5G SA Core Nutanix CEO Dheeraj Pandey Talks Remote First Grade, Why He’s Leaving
In this episode, Anshel and Will Cover:1. Nokia ORAN announcement and promise of a complete solution in 20212. 3GPP Release 16 Released, Quick Recap, Will Cover Deeper in next Podcast.3. AWS Telco Symposium - impressions and insights4. GSA Reports there are now 317 5G devices, up from 112 in May (135 phones (95 unveiled) plus 85 CPE, 49 modules, 22 hotspots, 5 laptops and 21 other devices. 76% support Sub6, 26% support mmWave and 20% support both.5. Verizon 5G standalone core trial - a step closer to the promise of 5G6. Ericsson's 5G SA software, upgradeable Radio System Equipment from 2015 and newer. Privately released last month, T-Mobile and Telstra are already testing. Ericsson claims that SA 5G devices can connect to an SA 5G network six times faster than NSA mode.
Verizon is upgrading the Houston market to the industry-standard version of 5G, which will also expand the coverage area. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
This week’s Techpinions podcast features Carolina Milanesi and Bob O’Donnell discussing the new 5G offerings from AT&T and Verizon, announcements from Google's latest event covering GCP, GSuite and more, the launch of HPE's Open Container Platform, and commenting on earbud news from Microsoft and Apple, the Tim Cook Austin factory visit, and the launch of Tesla's CyberTruck.
Both Segments: Computer and Technology News.Ring: Doorbell camera footage can be kept by police forever and shared with whomever they'd like – The Washington PostNew NASA study finds long-haul danger for astronauts: Blood flow in reverseMicrosoft tests Gmail integration in web-based Outlook | EngadgetVerizon's 5G coverage maps are here, and they're sparse | EngadgetAmazon may open checkout-free supermarkets early next year | EngadgetResearchers see spike in “out of season” IRS-impersonating phishing attacks | Ars TechnicaGoogle outlines plans for mainline Linux kernel support in Android | Ars TechnicaFor full show notes, check out ComputerAmerica.com!
Marsha Collier & Marc Cohen Techradio by Computer and Technology Radio / wsRadio
California Fires & electricity; Rats drive tiny cars; #5G Updates; Verizon 5G update; Variable speed on Netflix; New ISP Wander
Marsha Collier & Marc Cohen Techradio by Computer and Technology Radio / wsRadio
Door dash breach- how to protect yourself; Amazon product launch; Vaping #ecig news; Illegal Data Center: Verizon 5G; Match.com fraud; Facebook mindreading?
Marsha Collier & Marc Cohen Techradio by Computer and Technology Radio / wsRadio
Facebook Dating; Tesla's new business; Samsung changes; Verizon 5G in NFL; How police use your Ring videos
Watch the podcast live every Thursday night on Twitch: https://www.twitch.tv/androidpolice ==== Huawei Mate X delay: https://www.androidpolice.com/2019/08/15/huawei-further-delays-folding-mate-x-still-projects-2019-release/ RIP Daydream and Gear VR: https://www.androidpolice.com/2019/08/13/the-galaxy-note10-marks-the-end-of-google-daydream-and-gear-vr/ Note 10 notification spam: https://www.androidpolice.com/2019/08/10/samsung-note-10-notification-spam/ Verizon 5G: https://www.androidpolice.com/2019/08/14/verizon-5g-spanks-sprints-in-new-speedtest-net-performance-report/ Upcoming OnePlus 5G phone: https://www.androidpolice.com/2019/08/14/oneplus-5g-global-pete-lau/ OnePlus TV: https://www.androidpolice.com/2019/08/14/oneplus-tv-name-logo/ US tariffs: https://www.androidpolice.com/2019/08/13/smartphones-us-china-tariffs/ Smartwatch sales are up: https://www.androidpolice.com/2019/08/15/us-smartwatch-shipments-up-38-this-year-and-samsungs-market-share-is-growing/ Fossil Gen 5 review: https://www.androidpolice.com/2019/08/16/fossil-q-5th-gen-review/ ==== If you enjoy the show and want to support us, we would love it if you could consider subscribing to us on Twitch. When you subscribe, you get to use a special emoji in the live chat, and you get extra entry methods in our site’s giveaways. Amazon Prime members can link their Twitch accounts to receive one free subscription. How to link Amazon Prime and Twitch accounts: https://help.twitch.tv/customer/en/portal/articles/2574978-how-to-link-your-amazon-account
- Morgan Stanley: China Led App Store Revenue Up in July - President Trump Threatens New Round of Tariffs in Trade War with China - Wedbush and BofA/Merrill Lynch See Hard Times for Apple in Trade War - BofA Stay Positive on Apple Despite Tariff Threats - Counterpoint Sees iPhone Growth in India - Positive Signs for Apple News in Europe - Apple, Eli Lilly, and Evidation Study Dimentia with Consumer Tech - Verizon Exec: A Lot of Verizon 5G will Approximate Good 4G - Two More Unreleased iPads Registered with EEC - Apple Selling Updated LG UltraFine 5K Display - Get free overnight shipping with offer code macosken at . - Get 10% off of your first purchase of a website or domain with coupon code macosken at - Power Mac OS Ken through Patreon at ! - Send me an email: or call (716)780-4080!
In this Episode: Department of Justice approves T-Mobile / Sprint Deal (0:42) DISH becomes the new 4th national wireless carrier in the US (1:43) FCC authorizes $524 million in funding for rural broadband (4:13) AT&T announces new partnership deals (6:53) 5G Updates (10:00) Q&A How will the merger between Sprint and T-Mobile affect its customers? (12:20) How would Sprint and T-Mobile merger impact you? (13:56) Why do we (consumers) need 5G (isn't the internet fast enough already)? I can understand if the businesses need it, but why 5G on a phone? (15:42) Show Notes: DISH national carrier announcement - http://about.dish.com/2019-07-26-DISH-to-Become-National-Facilities-based-Wireless-Carrier FCC rurual broadband funding - https://docs.fcc.gov/public/attachments/DOC-358490A1.pdf AT&T partnership deal - https://about.att.com/story/2019/att_ibm_alliance.html https://news.microsoft.com/2019/07/17/att-and-microsoft-announce-a-strategic-alliance-to-deliver-innovation-with-cloud-ai-and-5g/ Verizon 5G deployment in St. Paul Minnesota - https://www.verizon.com/about/news/verizon-launches-exclusive-inseego-5g-mifi-m1000 Vodafone Germany 5G update - https://www.reuters.com/article/us-germany-telecoms-vodafone-group/vodafone-launches-5g-in-germany-challenges-d-telekom-on-price-idUSKCN1UB1IY?feedType=RSS&feedName=technologyNews O2 5G launch October 2019 - https://news.o2.co.uk/press-release/o2-announces-october-5g-launch-prioritising-areas-where-customers-will-benefit-most/ Israel 5G tender - https://www.reuters.com/article/us-israel-telecoms-5g-idUSKCN1U90C4
“People get addicted to feeling offended all the time because it gives them a high; being self-righteous and morally superior feels good.” ― Mark Manson Ruthie and RA share their latest hot trending now reports and as always they wrap with Ruthie's holistic recommendation, and Botanikal's Crystal Ally recommendation. Listen here to our latest podcast. Sources: https://www.sott.net/article/417586-YouTube-terminates-account-of-Sacramento-family-fighting-Verizon-5G-cell-tower-installed-next-to-childrens-bedroom https://www.sott.net/article/417599-Illegal-gold-miners-invade-indigenous-village-in-Brazil-Senator-blames-Bolsanaro https://humanevents.com/2019/07/28/jessica-yanivs-troubling-history-goes-beyond-forced-genital-waxing/?utm_referrer=https%3A%2F%2Fduckduckgo.com%2F
The Show Radio: A Tech, Video Games and Entertainment Podcast
Verizon #5G Labs Senior Manager Joshua Ness talks 5G, games on 5G and NFL Challenge. Andrew: http://streamerlinks.com/uriyya Daniella: http://streamerlinks.com/missdjm Blog: http://theshowradio.info Donate: http://theshowradio.info/donate
This week's Tech.pinions podcast features Ben Bajarin, Carolina Milanesi and Bob O'Donnell discussing the release of Lenovo's ThinkPad X1 Foldable PC, analyzing the impact of the US debut of 5G mobile service on Verizon with the Samsung S105G smartphone, and chatting about Microsoft's upcoming mobile version of Minecraft in augmented reality.
In this Episode: T-Mobile calls out Verizon & AT&T on their 5G deployments AT&T, Verizon, T-Mobile Quarterly Updates More Changes to the OTT Landscape Verizon 5G launches in 20 cities plus Samsung S10 5G pre-orders Q&A Is there such a thing as too much contact with customers? What is 5g spectrum? What do you love the most about working in customer service? Notes: T-Mobile 5G Blog https://www.t-mobile.com/news/the-5g-status-quo-is-clearly-not-good-enough Verizon, YouTube TV Partnership https://www.verizon.com/about/news/verizon-partners-google-make-youtube-tv-available-customers-where-and-when-they-want-it Verizon 20 cities launch https://www.verizon.com/about/news/verizon-names-20-more-us-cities-where-customers-will-get-5g-ultra-wideband-network-year
In this Special Anniversary Episode we welcome 3 familiar faces - Mike "The Car Guy" Correra, Mike Phillips, and Terry Lancaster for a candid conversation about Uber's IP filing, Disney's new streaming TV service DisneyPlus, Verizon 5G, and the ramifications of government regulation in big tech and social media. View the original live stream on YouTube.
In this Special Anniversary Episode we welcome 3 familiar faces - Mike "The Car Guy" Correra, Mike Phillips, and Terry Lancaster for a candid conversation about Uber's IP filing, Disney's new streaming TV service DisneyPlus, Verizon 5G, and the ramifications of government regulation in big tech and social media. View the original live stream on YouTube. Get full access to AutoConverse at autoconverse.substack.com/subscribe
Tune into episode 105 of the Mobile Tech Podcast with guest Vlad Savov of The Verge -- brought to you by Audible. In today's action packed show we review LG's G8 ThinQ, Huawei's P30 Pro (and P30), plus Hidizs' Sonata HD USB Type-C headphone adapter. We also chat about the latest phones (Nokia X71, Oppo Reno, Samsung Galaxy A80), Qualcomm's new Snapdragon chips (665, 730, and 730G), some leaks (Google Pixel 3a, OnePlus 7), and Verizon's 5G launch! Good times... Show Links: Support the podcast with Audible: http://AudibleTrial.com/MobileTech Vlad Savov: https://twitter.com/vladsavov My LG G8 review: https://geekspin.co/lg-g8-thinq-review/ My LG G8 unboxing: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xsonGYlSQuA Hidizs Sonata HD: https://www.theverge.com/circuitbreaker/2019/4/6/18297992/hidizs-sonata-hd-best-usb-c-audio-dongle-review Vlad's Huawei P30 Pro review: https://www.theverge.com/2019/4/10/18285123/huawei-p30-pro-review-periscope-camera-zoom-android-phone Vlad's Huawei P30 Pro camera article: https://www.theverge.com/2019/4/1/18290215/huawei-p30-pro-camera-night-low-light-mode-photos Vlad's iPhone camera article: https://www.theverge.com/2019/4/3/18291921/iphone-camera-huawei-p30-pro-google-pixel-competition Nokia X71: https://www.theverge.com/circuitbreaker/2019/4/2/18291837/nokia-x71-48-megapixel-camera-hole-punch-display-specs-release-date-price Oppo Reno: https://www.engadget.com/2019/04/10/oppo-reno-5g-10x-zoom-pop-up-camera-wedge/ Samsung Galaxy A80: https://www.engadget.com/2019/04/10/samsung-galaxy-a80-rotating-camera/ Qualcomm Snapdragon 665, 730, and 730G: https://www.engadget.com/2019/04/09/qualcomm-snapdragon-730-730g-665/ Moto quad-camera phone leak: https://www.engadget.com/2019/04/03/motorola-four-camera-phone-leak/ Google Pixel 3a leak: https://www.slashgear.com/pixel-3a-could-come-with-iris-purple-color-64gb-storage-27571297/ OnePlus 7 leak: https://pocketnow.com/oneplus-7-leaked-case-renders Verizon 5G: https://www.pcmag.com/news/367659/heres-the-real-truth-about-verizons-5g-network
Watch the podcast live every Thursday night on Twitch: https://www.twitch.tv/androidpolice ==== Pixel 3a on Play Developer Console: https://www.androidpolice.com/2019/04/05/google-pixel-3a-and-3a-xl-play-console-evidence-points-to-mid-2019-launch-verizon-availability/ Pixel 3a on Google Store: https://www.androidpolice.com/2019/04/06/pixel-3a-links-appear-on-google-store-site/ Phone as security key: https://www.androidpolice.com/2019/04/10/google-beta-testing-android-phones-as-a-new-bluetooth-based-two-step-verification-key/ T-Mobile TVision: https://www.androidpolice.com/2019/04/10/t-mobile-launches-tvision-to-take-on-big-cable-keeps-the-crappy-big-cable-prices/ Samsung Galaxy A80: https://www.androidpolice.com/2019/04/10/samsung-reveals-the-galaxy-a80-with-a-sliding-rotating-48mp-camera/ Snapdragon 730G: https://www.androidpolice.com/2019/04/09/the-snapdragon-730g-is-qualcomms-first-gaming-chip-packs-an-overclocked-gpu/ Verizon 5G demo: https://www.androidpolice.com/2019/04/10/using-verizons-5g-wasnt-the-disaster-i-expected-but-its-a-long-way-from-practical/ Note10 rumors: https://www.androidpolice.com/2019/04/08/report-samsung-will-release-four-galaxy-note-10-models-both-4g-and-5g-options/ Galaxy S10 5G on Verizon: https://www.androidpolice.com/2019/04/08/verizon-to-purportedly-start-galaxy-s10-5g-sales-on-may-16/ Alexa earbuds: https://www.androidpolice.com/2019/04/05/amazon-is-reportedly-developing-wireless-earbuds-with-alexa-built-in/ ==== If you enjoy the show and want to support us, we would love it if you could consider subscribing to us on Twitch. When you subscribe, you get to use a special emoji in the live chat, and you get extra entry methods in our site’s giveaways. Amazon Prime members can link their Twitch accounts to receive one free subscription. How to link Amazon Prime and Twitch accounts: https://help.twitch.tv/customer/en/portal/articles/2574978-how-to-link-your-amazon-account
First, we dissect the issues Verizon is having with their 5G rollout in Chicago and share what the impact could be if they do not figure the technology out sooner than later. Second, the National Association of Broadcasters (NAB) Show is back in Las Vegas. The event is packed with plenty to discuss as we have witnessed major shifts over the last decade in the broadcasting scene. Lastly, Apple’s long awaiting spin into the entertainment side of the business has occurred with the announcement of Apple TV+. Time will tell as to whether their new original programming is embraced by the loyal users and if new users are willing to pay.
Apple sets March date for next unveiling; Spotify says Apple doesn't play fair; Google releases Android Q beta; DNA test for Type 2 Diabetes; Kayak lets you filter out Boeing 737 Max flights; Verizon 5G launches in Chicago and Minneapolis April 11; Firefox Send lets you transfer large files for free; Using Google Hotels to find hotel deals; Keeper tax app uses artificial intelligence to identify write offs; HP expands laptop battery recall.Buy my book!101 Handy Tech Tips for the iPhoneFollow Rich on Social Media:Facebook: http://facebook.com/RichOnTechTwitter: http://twitter.com/richdemuroInstagram: http://instagram.com/richontechEasy ways to listen on your phone or smart speaker:"Hey Google, Play the Rich on Tech Podcast""Hey Siri, Play the Rich on Tech Podcast""Alexa, Enable the Rich on Tech Flash Briefing"
In episode 119, we have another electric show on Technocrats! We breakdown Verizon will launch 5G in 30 cities this year. We also dive into our review of Audi’s ETron SUV. Plus, we discuss why Elon Musk’s AI bots are considered dangerous. This and a whole lot more on #Technocrats!
In episode 119, we have another electric show on Technocrats! We breakdown Verizon will launch 5G in 30 cities this year. We also dive into our review of Audi’s ETron SUV. Plus, we discuss why Elon Musk’s AI bots are considered dangerous. This and a whole lot more on #Technocrats!
Verizon promised and has began delivering in-home 5G internet service to 4 select cities as the next development in home and mobile delivery is set to take center stage. Microsoft is looking to revolutionize the gaming industry with Project xCloud, a new concept that will be bringing the XBox gaming ecosystem to the mobile and tablet industries in 2019. The federal government is suing the State of California over their recent open internet protection bill (net neutrality) in what will become an epic court battle. And finally, we discuss the roles we have to play in today’s world in order to protect our data and information.
In today's edition of In Brief, Verizon launches its 5G Home service, Google releases the October security update, and more renders show up for upcoming devices.
The Saga of Elon Continues, Spiderman PS4 Review, 2080 and 2080ti reviews, Google's Project Stream, HP Leather Spectre, Verizon 5G for homes, IMDB has a streaming service, Wyze Camera Review, Japan and Robots, Japan and Moon Bases, Magic: The Gathering Open Beta, Facebook and 2FA
Verizon 5G is here! It's available in Los Angeles for home internet!Facebook "help wanted" ads are leaving women out.And, a Newport Beach surgeon is in trouble for sex assaults.
KTLA's Rich DeMuro joins Wake Up Call to discuss the new iOS 12, Verizon 5G, and Gilette's newest "heated" innovation!
Amazon theaters, Verizon 5G rollout, and a new Star Wars trailer. All this and more on Cordkillers! Subscribe to and support Cordkillers at http://www.cordkillers.com. If we get to 1850 patrons or $1850/episode, we can begin the Spoilerin’ Project and give you show-based Spoilerin’ Time feeds. Find out more and pledge here. Become our bosses! Pledge … Continue reading Cordkillers 233 – Giving Up on Being a Completionist →
Amazon theaters, Verizon 5G rollout, and a new Star Wars trailer. All this and more on Cordkillers! Subscribe to and support Cordkillers at http://www.cordkillers.com. If we get to 1850 patrons or $1850/episode, we can begin the Spoilerin’ Project and give you show-based Spoilerin’ Time feeds. Find out more and pledge here. Become our bosses! Pledge … Continue reading Cordkillers 233 – Giving Up on Being a Completionist →
This week on the Friday News Update: - Motorola announces the Moto Z3 mid-range phone, with a 6" bezelless AMOLED screen, a Snapdragon 835 and 5G on Verizon with Motorola's upcoming 5G Moto Mod - Samsung makes a surprise announcement of the Galaxy Tab S4, with an iris scanner, Samsung DeX on the tablet and a 7300mAh battery plus a bigger, more bezelless AMOLED screen, and the Galaxy Tab A 10.5, a cheaper version of the Tab S4 with a Snapdragon 450 and an LCD screen - Tiger Mobiles shows off dummy models of two of Apple's 2018 iPhones - XDA Developers publishes photos of the Google Pixel 3 XL in Clearly White Get every episode of the Friday News Update with the Friday News Update Alexa Flash Briefing
While Facebook, Amazon and Netflix have slumped, Google parent Alphabet has soared. Today's Stocks & Topics: 3M Co.-MMM, Apple-AAPL, Cummins Inc.-CMI, Aurora Cannabis Inc.-ACB, Nike Inc.-NKE, GEO Group Inc.-GEO; Verizon-VZ, Recession coming?, Bonds vs. funds?, PMI index UP but ISM number down?, Coming changes to credit cards-- such as more rewards programs. Plus: Key Benchmark Numbers and Market Comments for: Gold, Oil, Gasoline, Treasury Yields; TRIVIA QUESTION: How many 4G cell phone towers are there now, and how many 5G towers will be needed? (Cost projections for Verizon 5G capital expenditures).Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/investtalk-investment-in-stock-market-financial-planning/donations