Starlink benefits as Trump admin rewrites rules for $42B grant program

Trump admin decides fiber Internet won’t be prioritized in BEAD grant program.

The Trump administration is eliminating a preference for fiber Internet in a $42.45 billion broadband deployment program, a change that is expected to reduce spending on the most advanced wired networks while directing more money to Elon Musk's Starlink and other non-fiber Internet service providers. One report suggests Starlink could obtain $10 billion to $20 billion under the new rules.

Secretary of Commerce Howard Lutnick criticized the Biden administration's handling of the Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment (BEAD) program in a statement yesterday. Lutnick said that "because of the prior Administration's woke mandates, favoritism towards certain technologies, and burdensome regulations, the program has not connected a single person to the Internet and is in dire need of a readjustment."

The BEAD program was authorized by Congress in November 2021, and the US was finalizing plans to distribute funding before Trump's inauguration. The National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA), part of the Commerce Department, developed rules for the program in the Biden era and approved initial funding plans submitted by every state and territory.

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Saliva that fights norovirus? Experimental oral vaccine is nothing to spit at.

Phase I study showed vaccine was safe and spurred immune responses in older people.

In an early clinical trial, an experimental norovirus vaccine given as a pill produced defensive responses exactly where it counts—in the saliva of older people most vulnerable to the explosive stomach bug.

The results, published this week in Science Translational Medicine, is another step in the long effort to thwart the gruesome germ, which finds a way to violently hollow out innards wherever people go—from restaurants to natural wonders and even the high seas. It's a robust, extremely infectious virus that spreads via the nauseating fecal-oral route. Infected people spew billions of virus particles in their vomit and diarrhea, and shedding can last weeks. The particles aren't easily killed by hand sanitizers and can linger on surfaces for up to two weeks. Exposure to as few as 10 virus particles can spark an infection. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, norovirus causes an average of between 19 and 21 million cases of acute gastroenteritis in the US every year, leading to 109,000 hospitalizations and 900 deaths. This racks up an economic burden estimated to be $2 billion to $10.6 billion.

Vaccine design

For most, the gut-busting bug is miserable but usually over in a few days. But older people—especially those with underlying medical conditions—are vulnerable to severe outcomes. About 90 percent of people who die from a norovirus infection are people age 65 or older who live in long-term care facilities.

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The most intriguing tech gadget prototypes demoed this week

Some of these ideas have genuine shots at making it into real products.

Creating new and exciting tech products requires thinking outside of the box. At this week's Mobile World Congress (MWC) conference in Barcelona, we got a peek at some of the research and development happening in the hopes of forging a functional gadget that people might actually want to buy one day.

While MWC is best known for its smartphone developments, we thought we'd break down the most intriguing, non-phone prototypes brought to the show for you. Since these are just concept devices, it's possible that you'll never see any of the following designs in real products. However, every technology described below is being demonstrated via a tangible proof of concept. And the companies involved—Samsung and Lenovo—both have histories of getting prototyped technologies into real gadgets.

Samsung’s briefcase-tablet

How many times must something repeat before it's considered a trend? We ask because Samsung Display this week demoed the third recent take we've seen on integrating computing devices into suitcases.

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MINISFORUM A1 X1 Pro Strix Point mini PC now available for pre-order

The MINISFORUM A1 X1 Pro is a small desktop computer that combines an AMD Ryzen AI 9 HX 370 “Strix Point” processor with up to 96GB of RAM and PCIe 4.0 storage. First announced in January, the A1 X1 Pro is now available for pre-order with p…

The MINISFORUM A1 X1 Pro is a small desktop computer that combines an AMD Ryzen AI 9 HX 370 “Strix Point” processor with up to 96GB of RAM and PCIe 4.0 storage. First announced in January, the A1 X1 Pro is now available for pre-order with prices starting at $899 for a model with 32GB of […]

The post MINISFORUM A1 X1 Pro Strix Point mini PC now available for pre-order appeared first on Liliputing.

1Password offers geo-locating help for bad apps that constantly log you out

Get at that hard-to-remember app or garage pin with a new “Nearby” feature.

1Password has announced a new feature that lets you assign a geolocation to items stored in your vault. At first glance, that might not seem like much: a new little box inside a mobile utility you use on occasion. But allow me to remind you of something many of us cannot get away from: Terrible yet semi-mandatory apps with awful names that sign you out just when you need them.

The Ticketmaster app, for example, will always be signed out right when you're coming up to the front of the line at the venue and the line suddenly starts moving faster. Or you will remember you have a discount or coupon inside a store or takeout joint's app, but you will remember this only after every item has been scanned, just as the eyes of those in line behind you start burning holes into your neck. The airline on which you are flying ensures you are not logged in right before you arrive at the airport, so you can spend a little more time at their self-service kiosk, holding your bags so they don't tip over while you log back in.

Can you get by without using these apps? Technically, yes. But they're quite handy in a pinch, and 1Password's newest feature actually does something to make them even more accessible.

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Prehistoric bone tool cache suggests advanced reasoning in early hominins

Tools “show evidence that their creators carefully worked the bones, chipping off flakes to create useful shapes.”

Olduvai Gorge in northern Tanzania boasts sediment layers dating back to about 1.8 million years ago. Those layers contain simple stone tools that marked one of the earliest recorded technological transitions. Now, researchers have uncovered a substantial cache of prehistoric bone tools in the same region dating back 1.5 million years. It's the oldest collection of mass-produced bone tools yet known, according to a new paper published in the journal Nature. And while it's still unclear which hominin species crafted the tools, the discovery suggests that our early human ancestors had some advanced reasoning skills a good million years earlier than previously thought.

“The tools show evidence that their creators carefully worked the bones, chipping off flakes to create useful shapes," said co-author Renata F. Peters, an archaeologist at University College London. "We were excited to find these bone tools from such an early timeframe. It means that human ancestors were capable of transferring skills from stone to bone, a level of complex cognition that we haven’t seen elsewhere for another million years.”

As previously reported, species on the hominin family tree have made and used stone tools for about 2.6 million years. For instance, Homo habilis was an early member of our genus who walked upright and had a mixture of human and ape-like features. Starting around 1.2 million years ago, a later hominin species called Homo erectus made more complex stone tools, like hand-axes.

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Trump claims CFPB “destroys” people. Senators say killing it is a gift to Musk.

Trump’s efforts to shutter the CFPB sparks demand for Elon Musk ethics probe.

On Wednesday, the Senate voted to block the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) from monitoring digital payments companies for fraud and privacy concerns—which Democratic lawmakers Elizabeth Warren and Adam Schiff said gave Elon Musk a "get out of jail free card."

The vote advanced a proposed joint resolution to the House of Representatives that "disapproves" of a final rule Republicans introduced last year that was supposed to bring consumer protection regulation of digital payments companies in line with traditional financial institutions.

At that time, lawmakers were concerned about tech companies spying on consumers' transactions, preventing valid transaction disputes over incorrect or fraudulent money transfers, and other potential harms to consumers "when they lose access to their app without notice or when their ability to make or receive payments is disrupted."

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Anzeige: Produktivität steigern mit Kotlin für Java-Entwickler

Kotlin kombiniert moderne Sprachfeatures mit nahtloser Java-Interoperabilität. Ein praxisorientierter Workshop zeigt, wie bestehende und neue Projekte effizienter gestaltet werden können. (Golem Karrierewelt, Java)

Kotlin kombiniert moderne Sprachfeatures mit nahtloser Java-Interoperabilität. Ein praxisorientierter Workshop zeigt, wie bestehende und neue Projekte effizienter gestaltet werden können. (Golem Karrierewelt, Java)

AOOSTAR WTR Max coming soon for $699 and up: NAS with AMD Hawk Point supports 11 drives and

The AOOSTAR WTR MAX is a network attached storage (NAS) device that packs a lot of features into a relatively small computer. It has an AMD Ryzen PRO 8845HS processor. It supports up to 11 storage devices (6 hard drives and 5 SSDs). It has two 10 Gigab…

The AOOSTAR WTR MAX is a network attached storage (NAS) device that packs a lot of features into a relatively small computer. It has an AMD Ryzen PRO 8845HS processor. It supports up to 11 storage devices (6 hard drives and 5 SSDs). It has two 10 Gigabit LAN ports and two 2.5 Gigabit Ethernet ports. And there’s even […]

The post AOOSTAR WTR Max coming soon for $699 and up: NAS with AMD Hawk Point supports 11 drives and appeared first on Liliputing.

The Last of Us: Gebt uns Spielern ein bisschen mehr von dem, was wir wollen!

Ewiges Warten auf GTA, kein neues Uncharted und wohl auch kein The Last of Us 3: Wieso macht sich die Spielebranche das Leben so schwer? Ein IMHO von Peter Steinlechner (IMHO, Grand Theft Auto)

Ewiges Warten auf GTA, kein neues Uncharted und wohl auch kein The Last of Us 3: Wieso macht sich die Spielebranche das Leben so schwer? Ein IMHO von Peter Steinlechner (IMHO, Grand Theft Auto)