The FCC Public Safety Bureau Friday rejected a waiver request from the Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission asking that its use of frequencies 159.045 MHz and 159.075 MHz as mobile relay repeater transmit channels be granted co-primary rather than secondary status. The Pennsylvania commission used the frequencies for 40 years before recently discovering they had secondary status, the bureau said (http://bit.ly/1u7bhOl). “We are not persuaded by the Turnpike’s hyperbolic claim that secondary operation ‘has technically, financially and operationally placed immense challenges and impediments on the Turnpike’s present and future use of its system,'” the bureau said. “The claim that -- after 40 years of apparently interference-free operation -- it is going to have to cease operations on a moment’s notice is wholly speculative.”
Odin Mobile urged the FCC to approve its compliance plan, allowing it to start offering Lifeline service to blind Americans, in a filing posted by the FCC Thursday in docket 09-197. “Unfortunately, despite meetings, letters and the support of blind organizations ... Odin Mobile’s compliance plan, which was filed in December 2012, has not yet been approved,” the carrier said (http://bit.ly/1uCdShH).
Though not an exhibitor at IFA, Microsoft chose the second of two IFA media days Thursday to hold its first global event for Nokia Lumia smartphones since taking over the Nokia Devices and Services business in the spring (CD April 28 p15). The venue, a weddings and conference center called Kaufhaus Jandorf, was seven miles east of the Messe Berlin fairgrounds, so the event’s 10 a.m. start time ensured that no one attending the Microsoft event could also make it to an 11 a.m. Samsung news conference at Hall 7.3 on the IFA grounds. In the end, Samsung devoted its news conference to Ultra HD TVs and home appliances, not to smartphones and tablets. But Chris Weber, Microsoft corporate vice president-mobile device sales, missed no opportunity at the event to compare smartphones from competitors Apple and Samsung unfavorably with Nokia Lumia devices. The rival products carry “an expense premium,” Weber said. Photos taken in low light with a Galaxy phone “were not worth the PowerPoint space” when compared with similar shots taken with a new Lumia 830 phone, he said. Microsoft hailed the Lumia 830 as an “affordable flagship that delivers high-end innovations such as optical image stabilization and PureView imaging to more people.”
Pioneer will team with Treasure Data, a supplier of cloud-based data collection services, on a business alliance to develop telematics data services for the global automotive industry, the companies said Thursday. Using the Treasure Data cloud service, Pioneer will release new data and analytics-based services for automobile manufacturers and related businesses, including dealers, repair shops, insurance and rental car companies, they said. They also plan to “drive new research” on more effective use of automotive telematics data, they said in a news release (http://bit.ly/1lCfcRS).
Qualcomm said its Qualcomm Atheros subsidiary expanded distribution with Arrow Electronics for the U.S. and China and Codico for Europe in an effort to broaden support for QCA4002/4004, its low-power Wi-Fi platform designed for the Internet of Things. Qualcomm Atheros is offering an IoT development kit to enable low-power Wi-Fi in a range of connected products including light bulbs, home automation devices and security systems, it said in a Thursday news release (http://bit.ly/1oHVBuA).
In North America, LTE technology provided 33 percent of the total 391 million mobile connections for the first half of 2014, a 4G Americas report found. North America has 45 percent of all LTE connections worldwide; Asia Pacific has 36 percent; and Western Europe, more than 13 percent, it said Thursday in a news release (http://bit.ly/1r93FWz). Research for the report was done by Ovum, 4G Americas said. North America has an LTE penetration rate of nearly 36 percent, it said. Western Europe’s penetration rate is 8 percent, and Asia Pacific has a nearly 3 percent penetration rate, it said. Subscriber demand for mobile broadband data applications and services in the U.S. and Canada is driven in part by innovations in regulatory policy, new advanced LTE networks and significant smartphone penetration, 4G Americas said. Although LTE subscriptions remain low in Latin America, they're growing rapidly, with 4.8 million connections at the end of Q2 2014, “representing an annual increase of 900 percent at the end of the second quarter,” it said. Global LTE subscriptions grew 179 percent year-over-year from 2012 to 2013, it said. They're expected to grow 95 percent from 2013 to 2014 to reach 386 million subscriptions, it said.
The 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals Thursday vacated its previous ruling that police need a warrant to acquire cellphone location data from service providers (CD June 13 p9). The decision (http://1.usa.gov/1qhBjxx) said a majority of the 11th Circuit judges voted to rehear the case en banc (No. 12-12928). The previous ruling had been seen as a remarkable victory for privacy advocates fighting for legal protection of electronic data (WID July 14 p1).
Lab and field tests conducted by Google, Federated Wireless and Virginia Tech show that fixed exclusion zones are not needed in the 3.5 GHz band, they said in a filing posted Thursday in FCC docket 12-354. The FCC is looking at use of the band for sharing and small cells, but questions remain about whether proposed exclusion zones are too large (CD Aug 25 p1). The filing follows a Tuesday meeting with commission staff, it said (http://bit.ly/1qh3D30). “Wi-Fi can operate within close proximity of the incumbent naval radar system without substantial degradation in performance,” the filing said. It said tests “demonstrate that fixed exclusion zones are not needed to protect the radar from interference from commercial operations and that dynamic exclusion zones can be implemented with existing technology."
The FCC must include wireless in its upcoming broadband progress report, since wireless services are the services “consumers are purchasing in the marketplace,” CTIA said in comments filed Thursday at the FCC on the commission’s Tenth Broadband Progress Notice of Inquiry. “It is time for the Section 706 report to embrace mobile broadband and the extensive role it plans in Americans’ lives,” CTIA said. In analyzing mobile broadband speeds the FCC should focus on existing offerings, the group said. “Such an approach is particularly warranted in the competitive mobile wireless sector, where providers are aggressively vying to provide the fastest speeds and most extensive network coverage.” CTIA said smartphone speeds have increased eightfold in just four years. The group urged the agency to avoid setting “arbitrary latency or usage thresholds,” which could exclude wireless offerings “widely deployed in the market and demonstrably valued by consumers.” The comments (http://bit.ly/1lD9OOn) were filed in docket 14-126.
The FirstNet board is getting five new members, the Department of Commerce said Thursday (http://1.usa.gov/1nyZaUz). Among major changes, Paul Fitzgerald, sheriff of Story County, Iowa, will no longer be a board member. Fitzgerald made headlines last year when he sharply criticized the leadership of the board (CD April 24/13 p1). Also leaving is Charles Dowd, a deputy police chief with the New York Police Department. But the board got two new first responders -- Chris Burbank, chief of police, Salt Lake City, and Richard Stanek, sheriff, Hennepin County, Minnesota. Also leaving the board are former Denver Mayor Wellington Webb and the board’s original chairman, former telecom executive Sam Ginn. Other new members are James Douglas, former governor of Vermont; Annise Parker, mayor of Houston; and Frank Plastina, a technology executive from North Carolina. Ed Reynolds, a former telecom executive, was reappointed. The department noted that the terms of office for Ginn, Dowd, Fitzgerald and Reynolds expired Aug. 20.