Samsung announced the Gear S2 smartwatch Tuesday in two versions geared to classic and minimalist tastes. The 0.4-inch-thick watch has a 1.2-inch round screen with 360 x 360 resolution and has a 1-GHz dual-core processor running the Tizen operating system. Users who choose 3G connectivity have access to e-SIM with voice capability, allowing them to perform quick functions without being closely tethered to the phone, said Samsung. The S2 has Bluetooth and near-field communications connectivity and built-in sensors including accelerometer, gyroscope, heart rate, ambient light and barometer. Internal memory is 4 GB with 512 MB RAM, it said. The battery, with wireless charging, has a typical life of two days, said the company.
The Department of Transportation delayed various deadlines on a rulemaking on whether it should prohibit voice calls on scheduled flights within, to and from the U.S. DOT originally expected to release the rulemaking last December, but that was pushed back until March 31, 2016, said a DOT report. Comments are now expected to be due May 23, 2016, DOT said. In December 2013, the FCC approved an NPRM seeking comment on modernizing rules to allow mobile wireless calls on airplanes while in flight (see 1312130061).
Security company AVG said 72 percent of U.S. parents with children aged 3-17 say their children received their first connected mobile device before seventh grade, and one in two “connected” children received his or her first device before first grade, citing findings from a poll conducted by Harris for AVG. Parents are “on the right track” in talking about Internet security with their K-12 children, but they “can do better,” AVG said. Some 72 percent of parents with children aged 3-17 have proactively spoken to their children about the dangers of the Internet, but only 56 percent know the passwords to their children’s connected devices, said AVG. Forty-one percent have installed a parental block on the mobile devices, it said. Some 51 percent of parents said they check their child’s activity at least weekly and one in five monitored the activities less than once a month or not at all, said the survey. "The numbers suggest that many parents are not engaged in knowing what their children are really doing on their devices,” said Tony Anscombe, AVG senior security evangelist. The security company recommends parents have an ongoing discussion on the potential dangers of the Internet with their children and use parental features and other safety measures on the devices. It also encouraged parents to be sure devices are protected from malware. The survey was done online in the U.S. by Harris Poll Aug. 5-12 among 893 parents of children ages 3-17.
CTIA released a request for proposal (RFP) for an administrator for the 911 location accuracy test bed. Proposals are due Oct. 16. CTIA also said Tuesday the Alliance for Telecommunications Industry Solutions was chosen as the program manager for the test bed. The RFP follows an FCC order approved in January, requiring carriers to improve their performance in identifying the location of wireless calls to 911 (see 1501290066). “By establishing the test bed and working with ATIS, we are taking key steps toward meeting the FCC’s aggressive timelines,” said 911 Location Technologies Test Bed Vice President Tom Sawanobori.
The FCC released comment deadlines on a proposal to designate a second available vacant channel in the UHF band for use by white space devices and wireless mics in areas where the “duplex gap” is impaired by a TV station. The FCC agreed to seek comment on making the channel available in its incentive auction procedures rules approved in August (see 1508060029). Comments are due Sept. 30, replies Oct. 30, a notice in Tuesday's Federal Register said.
The FCC Wireless Bureau approved PTC-220’s grant of the Alaska portion of five nationwide 220-222 MHz band licenses to the Alaska Railroad so the company can implement positive train control. PTC-220 is a joint venture of the nation’s seven Class I freight railroads. The Alaska Railroad provides freight and passenger service “linking ports and communities to major metropolitan centers such as Anchorage, Fairbanks, and other communities throughout South-central and Interior Alaska,” the bureau said. PTC emerged as a big issue after the deadly May 12 Amtrak derailment in Philadelphia (see 1505150047). “PTC systems, once implemented, are intended to reduce the risk of rail accidents caused by human error, including train-to-train collisions, derailments caused by excessive speed, and unauthorized train movements in work zones,” the bureau said.
The FCC Enforcement Bureau gave Flat Wireless and Verizon Wireless the protective order they jointly sought last month (see 1508050062) as the two carriers file data on a roaming complaint Flat filed against Verizon in June. “We are satisfied that granting the Joint Motion will serve the public interest,” the bureau said Monday.
Qualcomm Technologies announced Qualcomm Snapdragon Smart Protect, an app designed to provide real-time, on-device machine learning to detect zero-day malware threats on mobile devices. It will debut on the upcoming Qualcomm Snapdragon 820 processor. Smart Protect also will be the launch vehicle for Qualcomm’s Zeroth technology that works with conventional anti-malware solutions on real-time malware detection, classification and cause analysis using a cognitive computing behavioral engine, the company said Monday. Smart Protect analyzes and identifies new threats before signature updates, Qualcomm said. OEMs and mobile anti-malware app providers can also use Smart Protect’s application programming interface for analysis to receive real-time information on identified threats, it said. With consumers storing an increasing amount of personal information on their devices, data leakage incidents and malware are on the rise, said Asaf Ashkenazi, Qualcomm Technologies director-product management. Qualcomm is able to address the security issues because of its ability to “access lower layers of the software stack and dedicated security hardware to create a device-based, behavioral analysis approach for mobile security," Ashkenazi said. The technology supports "deep on-device monitoring for nearly instantaneous notifications of detected privacy violations and malicious activity,” he said. Qualcomm is working with OEMs and mobile security providers Avast, AVG and Lookout to make Snapdragon Smart Protect capabilities available within commercial anti-malware apps, the company said. Smart Protector can enable operators to reduce incidents of fraudulent charges and network congestion associated with malware-infected devices, while consumers benefit from better protection of personal data, the company said. The technology has minimal impact on battery life, it said.
Android Wear watches can now be used with iPhones, Google said in a company blog post Monday. The new release allows consumers with an Android watch to pair it with an iPhone 5, 5c, 5s, 6, or 6 Plus running iOS 8.2 software or higher, Google said. The new iOS compatibility is available for the LG Watch Urbane, but all future Android Wear watches will support iOS, it said.
Comments are due Sept. 30, replies Oct. 15, on a July 8 rulemaking notice seeking comment on changes to FCC Part 5 experimental radio service (ERS) rules. The FCC made some changes to the rules on experimentation involving medical devices in the July order accompanying the NPRM (see 1507080050). The Further NPRM proposed to modify the rules “to permit experimentation for RF-based medical devices, if the device being tested is designed to comply with all applicable service rules in Part 18 (Industrial, Scientific, and Medical Equipment), Part 95 (Personal Radio Services), Subpart H (Wireless Medical Telemetry Service), or Part 95, Subpart I (Medical Device Radiocommunication Service).” A notice in Monday’s Federal Register set the comment dates. The FCC created the experimental license program “to reduce regulatory delay and uncertainty and to promote innovation,” the July order said, saying a license is granted for a five-year term allowing the licensee to “conduct multiple unrelated experiments within a broad range of frequencies.”