COVID-19 forced cancellation of the Sept. 11-14 IBC2020 in Amsterdam, said event CEO Michael Crimp Monday. “A return to (a new) normal is unlikely to be achieved by September.” The “still many unknowns” make it impossible to “guarantee that we will be able to deliver a safe and valuable event,” he said. “Important aspects of a large-scale event such as IBC will be greatly altered by social distancing, travel restrictions, masks etc. so much so that the spirit of IBC will be compromised.”
A coming wearable monitors social distancing. It senses when other devices come within 6 feet and alerts wearers with a visual, vibrating or audio alarm, said IK Multimedia Thursday.
North Carolina state legislators proposed more broadband spending and other connectivity measures, in bills introduced amid COVID-19. The bipartisan HB-1105 would appropriate $30 million for an Information Technology Department special supplementary grant process. Nineteen Democrats and one Republican introduced HB-1122 to allocate $35 million to such a program in FY 2020-21 and $50 million for the two following fiscal years, plus $5 million for a homework gap program. HB-1130 by 18 Democrats would appropriate $5 million for a competitive grant program to provide broadband outside the classroom for public school students. Six Democratic senators introduced a municipal broadband bill (SB-769) in the state that bans muni broadband expansion. Also Thursday in Michigan, Gov. Gretchen Whitmer (D) signed an executive order authorizing and encouraging use of telehealth services during the emergency. Louisiana senators voted 34-0 that day to send to the House the bipartisan SB-406 allowing rural electric cooperatives to provide broadband.
If COVID-19-induced telework persists after the pandemic, it could speed virtual reality adoption, said eMagin CEO Andrew Sculley on a Thursday investor call. “If I'm sitting at the office and I'm a stock trader or something like that, I may have six screens.” There’s “talk” of replacing them with one VR headset, he said. “If we continue to work at home, that would make it very convenient instead of requiring me to have six screens on my dining room table.” The "consumer world thinks that our technology is the way to go,” the executive said as his company reported Q1 results.
The Home Entertainment Show 2020 became the latest casualty from the COVID-19 pandemic, saying Wednesday the December expo, tentatively rescheduled from June, was canceled. Organizers emailed exhibitors, showgoers and the media with “what we believe to be a final update.” They were in the final stages of announcing an intention to “simply move the dates” of the event to be at the Hilton Long Beach in southern California from June 12-14 to December but didn't receive “solid answers” from the hotel after asking for clarification on health and safety policies: “We wanted to ensure everyone was going to be safe.” Questions to the hotel were referred to Hilton’s corporate office Thursday. A spokesperson said Hilton was looking into the questions but the Long Beach hotel is independently owned and operated. After hearing Gov. Gavin Newsom (D)’s four-stage Resilience Roadmap for reopening the state, T.H.E. organizers contacted the hotel again, “this time to request information on a full cancellation,” saying the hotel wouldn’t be able to guarantee the event even if it were to be in December.
Seven hundred seventy-four broadband and phone providers extended their Keep Americans Connected pledge through June 30, the FCC said Thursday. The agency said Chairman Ajit Pai's requested extension (see 2004300044) resulted in more companies signing up for KAC than declining to extend previous commitments. The extensions "will help ensure that Americans can continue to communicate with loved ones, access education, and get healthcare remotely as they practice social distancing," Pai said. Under KAC, providers agree not to end service due to bill nonpayment caused by the pandemic, waive any pandemic-caused late fees and open their Wi-Fi hot spots to the public. ACA Connects President Matt Polka said its members "have been looking out for their customers and communities long before COVID-19, and all of them will continue to do so long afterward," and the association reaffirmed its endorsement of the pledge through the extension. Bad debt costs associated with KAC are growing, with telecoms setting up reserves of hundreds of millions of dollars in anticipation (see 2005120017).
U.S. District Judge Arthur Schwab in Pittsburgh Thursday ordered consolidated (in Pacer) nearly two dozen complaints from advocates for the blind against Onkyo, Sound United, Vizio and other consumer product companies. The complaints, filed by nine plaintiffs individually or in tandem with others, allege the companies fail to make their e-commerce sites accessible to the visually impaired, in violation of the Americans with Disabilities Act. Their alleged negligence is especially worrisome during the COVID-19 pandemic, say the complaints, because shelter-in-place orders make it more important for the blind to have access to online retailers. Sound United "takes all complaints very seriously," emailed a spokesperson Thursday. "We cannot comment further on pending litigation.” Onkyo and Vizio didn’t respond to queries.
Keep providing free internet to low-income families who need it amid COVID-19, said San Jose, Los Angeles, San Francisco and eight other California mayors in a Thursday letter to AT&T, Comcast, T-Mobile, Frontier Communications, Charter Communications and Cox Communications. San Jose's Sam Liccardo (D) and other mayors from both parties urged the companies to extend interim free service at least through July 31. Expand program eligibility including by permitting multiple households with the same address to enroll and qualifying as eligible all families with children at schools with a high percentage of students eligible for the National School Lunch Program, they said. Frontier "shares the concerns of California leaders and is responding to the meet immediate needs during the pandemic through an array of options that provide relief, expand internet access, and promote connectivity to the communities we serve," a spokesperson emailed. Other ISPs didn’t comment.
Cisco’s Webex videoconferencing platform is operating “at three times the capacity we were running at in February to manage the dramatic increase in usage growth” during the COVID-19 pandemic, said CEO Chuck Robbins on a quarterly call Wednesday. “We had well over 500 million meeting participants, generating 25 billion meeting minutes in April,” he said. Cisco added “many new prospects” through free Webex trials “that we anticipate converting to revenue in the future,” he said. Many enterprise customers already had Webex licenses but “exceeded their usage” and needed to add more users, said Robbins. “We'll work with them to clean that up in the future.” The priority during the crisis was “getting them up and running and just allowing them to be productive,” he said. Cisco spent the past two years “rebuilding and modernizing the Webex architecture,” he said. “We've now gone through two months of building out capacity on a global basis. Webex was the largest platform in the world in February, and now it's three times what it was then.” The stock closed up 4.5% Thursday at $43.85.
Amazon removed quantity limits suppliers can send to its fulfillment centers, put in place to focus on essential goods in response to the coronavirus pandemic, a spokesperson emailed Wednesday. The company is adhering to “extensive health and safety measures” to protect fulfillment center workers and is “improving delivery speeds across our store,” he said. Prime one-day and two-day shipping remains elusive, we found. Responding to our question on when those services would resume, the spokesperson said many items are available for one- and two-day Prime shipping. Only one Echo speaker at Amazon Wednesday showed one-day free Prime delivery; others were Sunday and Monday. When we put the Echo in our shopping cart, the delivery date defaulted to one-week out; we had an option to change it to one day.