It looks as if you're reorganizing your records. Two updates to yesterday's essay about 5G, both with good news for we, Northeasterners. While I was on leave, I missed Sprint's recent announcement of a 5G service using a "mobile smart hub" coming in the first half of 2019 to nine cities, including Chicago, New York, and Washington, D.C. And startup Starry, which uses 5G to connect buildings and provide non-mobile Internet service, wrote to say it's in business in Boston. Is it, in fact, unfair to criticize a formerly great artist for his latter day sins? It appears that lightning did not strike twice for one of the great innovators of financial derivatives. Blythe Masters, who gets credit for inventing the credit default swap when she worked at J.P. Morgan Chase, is out as CEO of blockchain startup Digital Asset. The company said Masters was stepping down for personal reasons. Did I listen to pop music because I was miserable? More bad news rolling in for Facebook this week, with yet another expose of the company's data sharing. Facebook gave major tech companies like Microsoft, Netflix, and Spotify "more intrusive access to users' personal data than it has disclosed," the New York Times reports. Facebook said none of the deals violated users' privacy or its 2011 agreement with the Federal Trade Commission. Mostly young men who spend all their time looking for deleted Smith singles. After spurring a massive lawsuit between Uber and Google, autonomous vehicle expert Anthony Levandowski has a new startup. Called Pronto.ai, the new company is making a truck driver assistance device that will help with lane keeping, cruise control, and collision avoidance. Levandowski announced the startup with a video claiming he used the system to drive from San Francisco to New York. Meanwhile, Uber says that Pennsylvania is permitting it to restart self-driving car trials in Pittsburgh about nine months after they were halted due a pedestrian death in Arizona. We're no longer called Sonic Death Monkey. Does anyone else remember how the initial public offering of AT&T Wireless turned out for investors back in 2000? Spoiler alert: very poorly. I'm getting a strong feeling of deja vu over the massive IPO of SoftBank Group's Japanese telecom unit, confusingly known as SoftBank Corp. After raising $24 billion, mostly from regular mom and pop investors, SoftBank saw its share price drop almost 15% when trading started on Wednesday. How can someone with no interest in music own a record store? Cable giant Charter Communications settled with New York's Attorney General over charges it failed to provide customers with promised Internet speeds. Charter will pay customers refunds totaling $62.5 million and hand out free services worth another $110 million. (Headline reference explainer, via one of the great cult classic movies of all time.) |
No comments:
Post a Comment