FCC provides Hurricane Sandy cellphone disruption data

Yesterday it was reported that 25% of cell phone towers in 10 states had been knocked out by Hurricane Sandy, as well as 25% of cable services, and a small number of emergency call centers. Now, according to the FCC, that number has dropped a few percentage points. Homes without cable TV and wired broadband is now “well under 20-percent.”

Verizon has reported that 6-percent of its cell towers are down in the storm’s path, but that its data and switching centers are fine. Sprint and AT&T didn’t offer a statement on how they’ve been affected. Meanwhile, T-Mobile has reported that in New York, 20-percent of its cell network was down, as well as up to 10-percent in Washington. T-Mobile and AT&T announced earlier today that their respective customers in New York and New Jersey will have access to both companies’ networks to increase the odds of getting service in the areas.

Said FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski, “The crisis is not over. Over all, the condition of our communications networks is improving, but serious outages remain, particularly in New York, New Jersey, and other hard-hit areas.” The FCC is continuing to expect the worse. Unfortunately, neither carriers nor the Federal Communications Commission have offered a statement on when customers can expect full service again.

Finally, the emergency calls centers that went down as a result of the storm have all been restored. According to the FCC’s Chief of Public Safety, all emergency calls will be received at 911 centers. Still, “a limited number” of emergency calls center still cannot see the caller’s location, and some calls are still being rerouted to other centers.

[via New York Times]


FCC provides Hurricane Sandy cellphone disruption data is written by Brittany Hillen & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


The status of official CableCARD tuner support for Windows 8

HDHomeRun Prime

With the official launch of Windows 8 comes the official support of premium cable content via one of the various CableCARD tuners originally designed for Windows 7 Media Center. Silicon Dust is at the front of the pack as Media Center on Windows 8 is already officially supported and the documentation is available for both the HDHomeRun Prime as well as the ATSC or QAM HDHomeRun. The only feature we noticed was not supported for now, is WMC Sync. Ceton is still working on the official driver for its InfiniTV 4, but reassures us that the Windows 7 driver “does work relatively well,” although, is unsupported — the real loss here is that there are no plans to bring the InfiniTV tuner sharing feature to Windows 8. Last up is Hauppauge, who doesn’t have a single mention of support of Windows 8 for the WinTV-DCR-2650 on its site (we reached out to them, will update once we hear back). Of course, support by Media Center and Windows 8 is one thing, but we’re really waiting for a mention that any “Windows Store Apps” that can play nicely with all this premium HD content.

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The status of official CableCARD tuner support for Windows 8 originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 31 Oct 2012 20:59:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Mark Chesnut: Rainbow Caribbean: A Gay Bar Guide to San Juan, Puerto Rico

In the Caribbean, San Juan, Puerto Rico, is the vacation destination with the best infrastructure and the widest variety of activities available for gay and lesbian travelers. If you’re looking for a fun place to enjoy gay beaches and nightlife, look no further than the so-called “Isla del Encanto.”
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Michael Bloomberg Super PAC Wades Into Florida House Race

WASHINGTON — New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg’s political committee is making its biggest expenditure to date in this year’s congressional campaigns, spending $1.1 million for TV ads opposing the re-election of a freshman Florida Republican from the Orlando area.

The ad attacks Rep. Daniel Webster for being “a professional politician” and supports his Democratic challenger, Val Demings, Orlando’s former police chief. He credits her for getting “guns off our streets” – a top issue for Bloomberg.

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Gray Foxes Rescued And Released In East Bay (PHOTOS)

Fans of cute, prepare yourselves.

Three young, orphaned gray foxes were released into the wild on Sunday after spending six months at the Lindsay Wildlife Museum. And the photos are heart-melting.

According to the San Francisco Chronicle, the three baby foxes were discovered in a Moraga backyard, abandoned and so tiny they could not yet open their eyes.

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Health Care System Bends Under Hurricane Sandy But Doesn’t Break

The health care system seems to have withstood the worst of Hurricane Sandy despite some high-profile breakdowns, including the evacuation of several New York City hospitals. But experts warn that mounting budget cuts could hamper the ability of hospitals and government agencies to respond to future disasters.

Local, state and federal government agencies coordinated with each other and health care facilities to ensure the safety net would hold together during the disaster. In the hardest-hit areas of New York and New Jersey, hospitals remain open despite power outages affecting the region.

“The health care system is pretty robust around the country. We’ve evidenced that here,” said Jerome Hauer, commissioner of the New York state Division of Homeland Security and Emergency Services. Hauer especially praised the federal government’s response to Sandy, saying the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services moved 2,100 medical personnel to New York and set up six temporary treatment sites with 1,500 beds in Brooklyn and Long Island.

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Tricia Spencer: The Magically Artful Wedding

When venue rules limit your use of wall art, turn to the stock and trade of the business seminar — the art projector. With art projectors, any photograph or artistic design can be beamed onto a broad surface without the need to attach anything to the wall.
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SlashGear Evening Wrap-Up: October 31, 2012

Welcome to the special Halloween edition of the Evening Wrap-Up! The Halloween edition is pretty much the same as regular Wrap-Ups, the only difference is that I’m dressed as Ginger Spice as I type this. Let’s spice up our lives with a recap, shall we? Microsoft is being sued over its Windows 8 live tiles, and Apple has removed delivery dates from iPad Mini LTE pre-orders, leading some to suspect that the company has been forced to delay them. T-Mobile and AT&T have opened up their networks in areas hit hard by Hurricane Sandy, letting customers of both carriers use either network – a respectable move by the two carriers in this time of need.


Google has added Amber Alerts to search and maps results, while we heard that the LG Nexus 4 will be landing at 02 UK on November 13. Apple released its iPhone 5 launch video earlier today, and Microsoft dropped a full list of devices that are compatible with Windows RT. Apple delayed turn-by-turn navigation in Australia today, while Samsung finally pulled the veil off the long-rumored Galaxy Premier I9260 smartphone.

ASUS says that close to 1 million Nexus 7 tablets are sold each and every month, which definitely isn’t bad, and Kickstarter has launched in the UK, so it’s officially time to get your crowd-funding on. RIM has started BlackBerry 10 testing with its carrier partners, and the Google Nexus Q has disappeared from the Nexus landing page, suggesting that the big G may have pulled the plug on the project. What may be the Samsung Galaxy Note 7 cleared testing today, and a new dock that turns the Galaxy Note II into a desktop has gone up for sale.

LG has a new touchscreen monitor ready for some Windows 8 action, and Curiosity has found that some of the dust on Mars is similar to Hawaiian volcanic basalt. Netflix made a pretty big error in one of its SEC filings today, while Microsoft was busy transforming Lichtenstein for the launch of Halo 4. Speaking of Halo 4, Microsoft announced today that the Halo series has sold 46 million copies worldwide, so Halo 4 has a lot to live up to when it launches next week.

Finally tonight, we have a couple of original posts for you to have a look at. Chris Burns checks out the Galaxy Note II’s gaming capabilities and goes hands-on with the Nokia Lumia 920 from AT&T. That does it for tonight’s Evening Wrap-Up, enjoy the rest of your night everyone!


SlashGear Evening Wrap-Up: October 31, 2012 is written by Eric Abent & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Engadget HD Podcast 322 – 10.31.2012

Engadget HD Podcast 320 - 10.16.2012Hurricane Sandy (and a flood of news courtesy of Google, Microsoft and Apple) pushed our podcast back to a Halloween edition, but for some the scariest thing is news that Disney will take over Lucasfilm and its franchises like Star Wars and Indiana Jones. We’ll tell you why we’re actually encouraged by the development (hint: Pixar), and dive into the latest news about Xbox 360 and SmartGlass, Media center on Windows 8 and Google’s connection to your HDTV with Android 4.2. Of course other standbys like Netflix, Roku and TiVo have news for us to discuss and Ben’s new laptop means we can record as long as we want. Distribute the credit / blame for this week’s XXL-sized edition as necessary, and press play below.

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Hosts: Ben Drawbaugh (@bjdraw), Richard Lawler (@rjcc)

Producer: Trent Wolbe

00:21:43 – Disney acquires Lucasfilm for $4.05 billion, plans more Star Wars movies
00:29:13 – Xbox SmartGlass now available in Google Play, brings console integration to Android
00:34:29 – Microsoft offering free Media Center upgrade to Windows 8 Pro users until January 31st 2013
00:50:58 – Google bumps Android to 4.2, keeps Jelly Bean moniker
00:53:54 – TiVo Premiere fall update starts rolling out with more HD menu screens and a few other tweaks
00:58:49 – Tim Cook: 1.3 million Apple TVs sold in Q4, 5 million for 2012 fiscal year
01:02:50 – BBC iPlayer comes to Sky+, Hell reports incoming frost
01:04:43 – ITV Player revamp brings ad-free TV rentals, keeps the free catch-ups
01:05:25 – Roku update adds cross-provider search over Netflix, Amazon, Hulu, HBO, Vudu and Crackle
01:09:40 – Boxee hands out free Boxee TVs to its most eager cloud DVR fans
01:10:38 – Netflix Q3 2012 earnings: 2 million more streaming subscribers worldwide, $8 million net income
01:12:00 – Open webOS-powered HDTVs said to be on the way from… LG?
01:13:30 – Samsung 2012 Smart TVs get Amazon Instant Video streaming app, synchronicity with your Kindle Fire
01:22:40 – Barnes & Noble bolstering Nook Video catalogue, bringing UltraViolet to the HD and HD+
01:24:45 – LG’s 84-inch 4K TV goes on sale in the US for $19,999, home mortgage optional
01:26:42 – Warner, Redbox agree to 28 day delay on disc rentals, UltraViolet support for Redbox Instant
01:29:10 – The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey to receive the Dolby Atmos treatment
01:30:40 – Must See HDTV (October 29th – November 4th)

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Engadget HD Podcast 322 – 10.31.2012 originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 31 Oct 2012 20:17:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Apple’s Phil Schiller confirms the iPad mini has stereo speakers

Rumors have floated around for quite a while that the iPad mini features dual-speakers. Apple didn’t mention this during the product’s announcement, however, leaving many to wonder if it is true. Now we have confirmation that the rumors are true via a simple email from Apple’s Philip Schiller, which simply reads, “It is stereo.”

On Apple’s website, the iPad mini is listed as having a built-in speaker, which is a tad ambiguous. When the device was unveiled, no word was given either way on whether it contained single or stereo speakers. Further muddling up the speculation pool was Amazon’s advertisement comparing its Kindle Fire HD with the iPad mini, which it listed as having a “mono speaker.”

Trying to solve this once and for all, a reader over at 9to5Mac named Alex sent Apple’s Vice President of Worldwide Marketing an email stating, “I understand the tech specs about iPad Mini online should cover everything, but the tech specs online neither confirm or deny the rumors of iPad Mini’s speakers being stereo. Is it possible to get confirmation from the man himself as to whether these are mono or stereo?” Schiller replied in the affirmative, forever settling the great iPad mini speaker mystery.

Shortly after this email was published, Amazon pulled the Kindle Fire HD vs. iPad mini comparison chart from its homepage. However, at the moment, when you search for “iPad mini” on Google, Amazon’s comparison page still shows up listing the Apple device as having a “single speaker.” The copy above the comparison chart still touts the Kindle Fire HD as having superior audio partly due to its stereo speakers.

[via 9to5Mac]


Apple’s Phil Schiller confirms the iPad mini has stereo speakers is written by Brittany Hillen & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.