FCC considers crackdown on bad wireless receivers after 5G/altimeter debacle

FCC considers crackdown on bad wireless receivers after 5G/altimeter debacle

Enlarge (credit: BackyardProduction/Getty)

The Federal Communications Commission will consider issuing new rules for wireless receivers that could prevent future conflicts like the ongoing battle between the aviation and cellular industries.

There are strict rules requiring wireless devices to transmit only in their licensed frequencies. That means, for example, that AT&T and Verizon’s 5G transmissions in C-band spectrum (3.7 to 3.98 GHz) have to stay within the C-band.

But there isn’t much to prevent devices from receiving transmissions from outside their allotted frequencies. The altimeters used in airplanes to measure altitude officially rely on spectrum from 4.2 GHz to 4.4 GHz, but the Federal Aviation Administration has said that 5G transmissions in the C-band could interfere with the operation of some of those altimeters.

Read 21 remaining paragraphs | Comments

IonQ’s new ions have lower error, great performance on a new benchmark

Image of a gold rectangle on a black background.

Enlarge / A cartoon diagram of the trapped ion system. (credit: IonQ)

Back in 2020, we talked to the CEO of a quantum computing startup called IonQ that uses trapped ions for its qubits. At the time, the company had just introduced a quantum processor that could host 32 qubits that had impressive fidelity, meaning they were much less likely to produce an error when being manipulated or read out. Best yet, the CEO suggested there was an obvious path to doubling the qubit count every eight months for the next few years.

By that metric, we should be seeing a high-fidelity, 128-qubit machine from the company about now. Instead, it chose to make a significant change to the underlying technology and rethought how it viewed scaling its processors. To find out what motivated the changes, we talked with the company’s CTO, Duke University’s Jungsang Kim, about the decision and where IonQ’s hardware stands in the larger landscape.

If you’re interested in IonQ’s hardware in particular, the next two sections are for you; if you care about the state of the quantum computing landscape more generally, you can skip ahead past those sections.

Read 20 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Honey, I shrunk the Mac: Enthusiast makes the Mac mini more mini

mac mini mod on top of the original mac miin

Enlarge / Mac Mini mod on top of the original Mac Mini. (credit: Snazzy Labs/YouTube)

At 7.7×7.7×1.4 inches, the Mac mini is a tiny desktop. When the form factor debuted in 2010, it was pretty impressive. But 12 years later, with mini PCs like the Intel NUC measuring 4.6×4.4×1.5 inches, the Mac mini doesn’t feel all that mini anymore.

As it turns out, the PC is packing some extra baggage, and by getting rid of some of those parts—like an overly powerful internal power supply unit (PSU)—an enthusiast has been able to rebuild the system with a 28 percent reduction in volume while allegedly keeping the same performance as the original machine.

YouTube channel Snazzy Labs shared its miniature Mac mini mod in a video called “We made the Mac mini ACTUALLY mini!” on Tuesday. The idea stemmed from the M1-based Mac mini‘s reliance on a dated design built around more power-hungry Intel chips. Part of that design included a large fan. Snazzy Labs removed the blower fan, certain that a fanless Mac mini would work because of the M1’s performance in the fanless Macbook Air laptop.

Read 6 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Here’s how kids’ COVID vaccines are holding up in the real world amid omicron

A nurse gives a 16-year-old a COVID-19 vaccine.

Enlarge / A nurse gives a 16-year-old a COVID-19 vaccine. (credit: Getty | Sopa images)

New data on the real-world effectiveness of COVID-19 vaccines in children and teens largely mirrors what we’ve seen in adults so far: vaccine effectiveness is strong against the delta coronavirus variant but takes a significant hit when up against omicron. Time also erodes protection. But overall, the shots—particularly boosters—offer valuable protection against severe outcomes.

The data, published by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention this week, drew on medical records from 10 states and only focused on vaccinations with the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine. Researchers examined records of nearly 40,000 visits of non-immunocompromised children and teens to emergency departments and urgent care centers (ED and UC), as well as about 1,700 hospitalizations, all of which occurred between April 9, 2021, and January 29, 2022.

Expected waning

Across the delta and omicron eras, vaccine effectiveness of two doses against ED/UC visits was 83 percent in children 12 to 15, and 76 percent in teens 16 to 17. But those estimates only go up to five months after the two doses, and we know vaccine effectiveness wanes over time. After the five-month mark, those effectiveness estimates fell to 38 percent and 46 percent for ages 12 to 15 and 16 to 17, respectively.

Read 8 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Biden FCC pick advances in Senate by 14-14 vote amid Republican opposition

Gigi Sohn sits in front of a microphone and holds a pen in her hand at a Senate nomination hearing.

Enlarge / Gigi Sohn testifies during a Senate Commerce Committee hearing examining her nomination to the Federal Communications Commission on Wednesday, Feb. 9, 2022. (credit: Getty Images | Pool)

The Senate Commerce Committee today sent President Biden’s nomination of consumer advocate Gigi Sohn for a spot on the Federal Communications Commission to the full Senate. Sohn’s nomination was advanced with a 14-14 tie vote due to Republican opposition and still needs approval on the Senate floor.

The FCC has been stuck with a 2-2 partisan deadlock for Biden’s entire term, but Sohn’s confirmation would allow Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel to proceed with items opposed by Republicans. That includes the restoration of net neutrality rules and Title II common-carrier regulation of broadband providers.

The tie vote in committee makes the process of setting up a final Senate vote more complicated, but it can be accomplished if all Democrats back Sohn, a Broadcasting + Cable report explained. There were also tie votes in two other nominations advanced today by the Senate Commerce Committee. Those were for Federal Trade Commission nominee Alvaro Bedoya and Consumer Product Safety Commission nominee Mary Boyle.

Read 7 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Redux Tutorial for Beginners

Redux is a popular open-source JavaScript library for managing and centralizing application state. It is commonly used with React. We just published a complete course on the freeCodeCamp.org YouTube channel that will teach you how to use Redux. Nikhil Thadani developed this course. Nikhil has created many technical courses on

Microsoft is trying to lower carbon emissions via Windows Update, of all things

Windows Update will try to do its thing when your local power grid is being powered with green energy sources.

Enlarge / Windows Update will try to do its thing when your local power grid is being powered with green energy sources. (credit: Microsoft)

A future Windows 11 update might make your PC more environmentally conscious. In the latest Windows Insider preview build released to the Dev channel, Microsoft is testing out a new feature that it says might help reduce carbon emissions. Using “regional carbon intensity data” from electricityMap and Watttime, Windows will keep tabs on what kinds of power your electrical grid is currently using and will attempt to install updates “when greater amounts of clean energy sources (like wind, solar, and hydro) are available.

Prior to this, Windows Update’s dynamic scheduling would mainly try to install updates at times when you weren’t likely to be using your computer. The feature won’t work if those carbon-intensive data sources aren’t available in your area, and they also only apply to PCs that are plugged in, not those running on battery power. Users can still opt to install updates manually whenever they please.

Elsewhere, the new developer build continues the rapid rate of changes we’ve seen since Microsoft got its big Windows 11 update out the door to the public last month. The “open with” dialogue box that pops up sometimes after you install new apps has been changed from a square-cornered Windows 8- and 10-era design to a new Mica-infused Windows 11 look. More Microsoft account settings are manageable from within the Settings app. The animations that accompany some touch gestures have been refined. Searching for things in the Settings app should be more accurate, and the Settings app has been tweaked “for a consistent look and feel across the app.”

Read 2 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Find the soul