Some 43% of U.S. homes will have used an online grocery service by the end of June -- and 49% by year-end -- and it’s likely to be a continuing trend, eMarketer reported Thursday. "As consumers stay home and governments increasingly push for consumers to avoid contact with others, online grocery services' near contactless nature will likely entice more consumers," said analyst Daniel Keyes. If the pandemic subsides in a few months, online grocery's rise will likely taper by the end of 2020. If it lasts longer -- and society needs a vaccine to resume regular life, or a second wave of the pandemic occurs -- online grocery usage penetration will continue to climb and 60%-plus of U.S. consumers could try it through 2022.
Display Week 2020 is rescheduled for Aug. 2-7 at the San Jose Convention Center “to allow time for business operations to return to more normal functioning,” said the Society for Information Display Thursday. The show “will have a strong digital programming component, increasing access and convenience for attendees from around the globe,” it said. Moving the June conference in San Francisco to August in San Jose was an open secret for weeks (see 2004070051).
The growing number of newly unemployed need access to broadband and voice services more than ever during the COVID-19 pandemic and economic crisis, FCC Commissioners Jessica Rosenworcel and Geoffrey Starks said during a MediaJustice online event Thursday. Speakers shared stories of how the lack of robust telecom access hurt their ability to reach healthcare providers, complete online schooling and keep in touch with relatives. Bolster Lifeline benefits and enrollment, close the homework gap and lower inmate calling service rates, Rosenworcel asked of her agency. Starks recalled a visit several months ago to a District of Columbia Department of Corrections facility where he listened to 20 prisoners. They told him how important it was to stay connected to their communities. The push to make ICS free for those in local and state jails and prisons, and not just federal facilities (see 2004150061), is important, he said. Starks said the FCC should do more to keep people on tribal lands connected. Foster the Lifeline program because connectivity is a central aspect of social distancing, Starks said. Leonard Edwards, an advocate with D.C.-based Bread for the City, wants the Lifeline program to extend unlimited voice minutes and broadband data to customers even after the pandemic.
Six COVID-19 telehealth applications were approved, including to hospital facilities in Atlanta, New York City and New Orleans, three days after the FCC Wireline Bureau began taking applications, it said Thursday (see 2004090010). Commissioner Brendan Carr, who has been a point person on this issue, cheered the quick OK.
The growth in peak data traffic nationally seems to be slowing and, in some places, plateauing, NCTA said Wednesday. National downstream peak growth remains flat for the second consecutive week, up 0.65% last week, while national upstream peak growth continues to decelerate for the second consecutive week, it said. Upstream growth of 0.71% last week compares with increases of 4% and 7% the previous two weeks, it said.
Charter Communications' annual shareholder meeting this year will be held virtually due to the pandemic, it said Tuesday. It meets April 28, it said.
WWE is furloughing a portion of its staff, cutting executive compensation and putting off a buildout of its headquarters for at least six months due to the pandemic's effects on business (see 2004100003), it said Wednesday. Asked for specifics about furlough size, it didn't comment.
Verizon said its May 7 annual shareholders meeting, at 12:45 p.m. EDT, will be virtual because of the COVID-19 pandemic.
More than half of U.S. broadband households say they value technology more than before COVID-19, social distancing and stay-at-home orders, said Parks Associates Wednesday. Intention to buy consumer electronics in the next 12 months is 5% higher than a year ago, and 21% of households subscribed to at least one new over-the-top video service in the past three months. Some 70% of consumers report following social distancing rules, 30% are following shelter-in-place orders or “otherwise self-quarantining,” and 28% of heads of broadband households over 75 report self-quarantining. The survey was fielded March 8-April 3.
Senate Minority Whip Dick Durbin of Illinois and Sen. Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota, lauded the Federal Bureau of Prisons Wednesday for agreeing to make inmate phone calls and videoconferencing services free during the COVID-19 pandemic. BOP responded to a push by Klobuchar, Durbin and 10 other Democratic senators for a waiver of phone and video call fees due to the suspension of in-person visits during the epidemic. They cited language in the Coronavirus Aid, Relief and Economic Security Act that allowed BOP to waive phone and video fees for inmates if the attorney general determines emergency conditions will materially affect the bureau’s functioning. Phone calls “were made free for the inmate population” effective April 9, BOP Director Michael Carvajal said in a letter to the senators. Video conferencing was made free the same day, though only for female inmates. “We increased each inmate’s monthly telephone time to 500 minutes per month to help compensate for the lack of visits," Carvajal said. BOP’s Trust Fund Limited Inmate Computer System added a feature to its instant messaging service that will allow prison staff to filter out inmates' messages to attorneys. Durbin tweeted he’s “glad to see” BOP has “taken our advice” to “make phone & video calls free for federal inmates.” Klobuchar noted her push.