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Message-ID: <D0A44F50-DA93-446F-81D1-F1F3A20FA675@roscom.com>
Date: Wed, 21 Sep 2016 09:21:36 -0400
From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
Subject: Allo's Tryout: 5 Days With Google's Annoying Office Intern
Google's new chat app promises to stand out from a crowded field by
bringing artificial intelligence into conversations. But it turns out
to be frustrating and unhelpful.
By Brian X Chen
You may now have more messaging apps than you have close friends.
As of this week, there are six prominent chat apps in the United
States - or as I see it, one too many. The latest to join the horde is
Allo, Google's highly anticipated messaging app that lets people take
advantage of artificial intelligence to chat and make plans. Google
began offering the smarter app on Wednesday.
Allo is appearing at a time when smartphones are already crowded with
chat apps. IMessage from Apple is prominent among iPhone owners.
Facebook Messenger is widely used on that social network. Also popular
is WhatsApp, the chat service from Facebook that has largely replaced
text messaging internationally. Add to the list Slack, a group chat
tool that is popular among businesses, and Google Hangouts, which was
released in 2013, and you have six.
http://www.nytimes.com/2016/09/22/technology/personaltech/allos-tryout-5-days-with-googles-annoying-office-intern.html
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Message-ID: <caa5890b1ab7fbd0ae0547defa6bac2f.squirrel@email.fatcow.com>
Date: Tue, 20 Sep 2016 22:26:03 -0500
From: "Neal McLain" <nmclain.remove-this@and-this-too.annsgarden.com>
Subject: AT&T Lab's Project AirGig Nears First Fiedld Trials
AT&T Labs' Project AirGig Nears First Field Trials for Ultra-Fast
Wireless Broadband Over Power Lines
Urban, Rural and Underserved Parts of the World Could Benefit from
AT&T's Innovative Wireless, Multi-Gigabit-Speed Internet Connectivity
Where There Are Power Lines, There Can Be Broadband
AT&T unveiled today Project AirGig, a transformative technology from
AT&T Labs that could one day deliver low-cost, multi-gigabit wireless
internet speeds using power lines. We're deep in the experimentation
phase. This technology will be easier to deploy than fiber, can run
over license-free spectrum and can deliver ultra-fast wireless
connectivity to any home or handheld wireless device. We designed
Project AirGig literally from the ground up to be both practical and
transformational. Our initial and ongoing testing at AT&T outdoor
facilities has been positive. We expect to kick off our first field
trials in 2017.
http://about.att.com/newsroom/att_to_test_delivering_multi_gigabit_wireless_internet_speeds_using_power_lines.html
-or-
http://tinyurl.com/hoequ7l
Neal McLain
***** Moderator's Note *****
This sort of breathless, amateur-hour self-promotion by AT&T would
normally merit no more than a trip to the bit-bucket. However, I'm
publishing it because I want to make people think about some advice my
dad gave me over fifty years ago: he said "They'll spend a million
dollars to eliminate your job."
He was right. BPL is yet-another-effort to eliminate the jobs of the
technicians who are paid to wire the last 100 feet of any current
Internet connection method. It is designed to allow the wet dream of
every monopolist in telecommunications: the provisioning of Internet
(and therefore telephone) service through the post office, with
customer-installable devices arriving in the mail, which require only
that they be plugged into an electrical outlet.
It doesn't matter that BPL has gone through several deaths and
rebirths, or that it is widely thought of to be impractical. So long
as the labor costs are at stake, BPL will keep crawling out of the
grave.
Bill Horne
Moderator
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Message-ID: <0b68805848500ff93c2ea8e038c98851.squirrel@email.fatcow.com>
Date: Fri, 16 Sep 2016 22:42:36 -0500
From: "Neal McLain" <nmclain.remove-this@and-this-too.annsgarden.com>
Subject: RE: AT&T and FCC chairman square off in set-top box fight
On Wednesday, February 10, 2016 at 4:25:44 PM UTC-6, Bill Horne wrote:
> FCC set to vote on a card-less replacement for CableCard.
>
> by Jon Brodkin
>
> The Federal Communications Commission chairman dismissed
> concerns from AT&T and other pay-TV providers about new
> set-top box rules, saying that the companies shouldn't
> fear a little competition.
>
> FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler's proposal would force pay-TV
> providers to make video programming available to the
> makers of third-party devices and software, saying he
> wants customers to have more alternatives to set-top
> boxes rented from cable companies. A vote is scheduled
> for next week, and TV providers are furious.
>
>
http://arstechnica.com/business/2016/02/att-and-fcc-chairman-square-off-in-set-top-box-fight/
>
> Bill Horne
The vote is now scheduled for September 29, on track to a 3-2 vote
with Commissioner Jessica Rosenworcel casting swing vote.
>From FierceCable, by Daniel Frankel, Sept 15, 2016:
Rosenworcel wary of angering content community with set-top vote,
analyst says.
While assumption exists among some pundits that Commissioner Jessica
Rosenworcel's swing vote was secured by FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler when
he put forth his revised plan on set-top regulation last week, not
everyone believes the Democratic agency Commissioner's vote is locked
up.
"We retain our current view that Rosenworcel is unlikely to vote in a
way that would anger the content community and thus, we see the
current proposal as having to be modified to move forward," said New
Street Research analyst Jonathan Chaplin, in a note to investors
Wednesday.
http://www.fiercecable.com/cable/rosenworcel-won-t-anger-content-community-new-set-top-vote-analyst-says?mkt_tok=
eyJpIjoiWkRNMU5XUmtNelJqWVdWbCIsInQiOiIwQXFad2Y4d3pDSFh6dldEcktTdkc5MXFoR
1wvSllyNnpQaEp6V1wvN0RFZzBmTlBOUk84UEVmcXM4SFMwZ3FtVGpwaFdaUGkrd1lndUloMF
NWWm1YQTQ5RThGTUlOenhZaXZ6czdhV3hIXC85az0ifQ%3D%3D&utm_medium=nl&utm_source=internal
-or-
http://tinyurl.com/z2llxnm
Neal McLain
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End of telecom Digest Thu, 22 Sep 2016