<![CDATA[Gizmodo: coverage]]> http://tags.gizmodo.com/assets/base/img/thumbs140x140/gizmodo.com.png <![CDATA[Gizmodo: coverage]]> http://gizmodo.com/tag/coverage http://gizmodo.com/tag/coverage <![CDATA[Judge Tells AT&T to Stop Whining as the Verizon Ads Will Stay]]> Looks like we'll keep seeing Verizon's "There's a map for that" commercials as AT&T's injunction to have them taken off the air was denied. Unfortunately this isn't the end of this debacle as the judge is allowing a follow-up hearing.

U.S. District Court Judge Timothy Batten Sr remarked that people might "misunderstand" the commercials, "but that doesn't mean they're misleading." He continued to add that "most people who are watching TV are semi-catatonic" to begin with. Let's hope his train of thought remains during the follow-up hearing on December 16, because the case is starting to lose any entertainment value. [AJC via Engadget]

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<![CDATA[Watch the Hubble Repair Mission Live Video Feed Now]]> Astronauts are risking their lives, fixing the Hubble telescope right now. It's attached to the bay of the Atlantis, all big and shiny. You can see them working inside its guts here.












Everything seems to be going ok right now, although they are having some problems with one of their cameras.

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<![CDATA[Space Shuttle Launch Live Video Coverage Here]]> Space week may be over, but the epic quest to reach the stars lives on. Atlantis is launching today in the riskiest shuttle mission ever. See the launch live. [Update: Atlantis is now in space]

Mission STS-125—which will service and upgrade the space telescope Hubble for the last time—is scheduled to launch today at 2:01 PM.

It seems that everything is going according to schedule. If you have time, watch it live, as they have an astronaut explaining the incredible complexities and checks they have to go through before launching, as well as other details about how the shuttle works. Not to talk about all those awesome voices in mission control saying all kinds of cool phrases like "All systems nominal" and "We hear you loud and clear!"

Seriously, I never get tired of watching this.











Enjoy the show. [NASA]

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<![CDATA[AT&T's Internal Plans To Fix Their Network]]>

AT&T was calling me to set up an interview with their CTO, but all I could hear was garbled noise on my AT&T iPhone. "I can't really hear you!" I shouted, as if volume would clear the channel. It's always been like this, in my home in San Francisco.

While the howls of iPhone 3G reception issues get louder and louder, I've always wondered if it was the network's fault, as some Swedish scientists and journalists have recently suggested. Maybe it's just new AT&T customers making the bulk of the noise. From my experience, the phone isn't blameless, but the network is a major part of the issue.

Continuing the call on an land line, I said I'd be glad to meet with John Donovan. To be perfectly honest, on a certain level, I didn't really want to ask questions. All I wanted to do was get the guy in front of me and berate him for his network's voice quality and reception, relatively slow 3G rollout and coverage. AT&T's been last in all those metrics for years (according to JD Powers) and they were still raking in the bucks as the nation's largest carrier. But after meeting him, I'm certain John Donovan has the intent the Old AT&T didn't. And a detailed plan on how to make "More Bars in More Places" less like a joke and more like a promise. In fact, Donovan surprised me when he said, "We want to be number one in all those metrics" — That's a lot of big talk when I can't even make a call from my own house right now. Here's the outline of the plan, which Donovan provided later — as well as some straight talk from an AT&T engineer on whether or not the plans will work.

•Cell site splitting. We’re deploying about 1,500 new cell sites this year. This enhances service quality in two ways – we’re expanding the geographic reach of the network, and in some places, we’re adding cell sites in existing territory to improve coverage and capacity.

•We monitor the usage for both data and voice on each and every cell site sector, combine that with our forecasts and customer feedback to target specific locations where we need to augment capacity via further cell splits.

•TDMA turndown. Earlier this year we turned down our TDMA/Analog networks. That allowed us to free up key spectrum to redeploy into the UMTS/HSPA network. Not only does that give us the opportunity to increase overall capacity on UMTS/HSPA, it enables us to deploy UMTS/HSPA at 850 Mhz (vs 1900 Mhz). This 850 spectrum provides optimum in-building coverage. We’re in the midst of turning up this spectrum on the UMTS-HSPA network across the country.

•Short measurement intervals. We’re deploying capabilities to measure network performance in much shorter intervals. This capability will be especially important to maximize service quality during major events. For example, during a Final Four or World Series game, traffic on the network will spike during time outs, or when a great play, bad call, or something else big happens. In normal circumstances, we might measure traffic and performance a few times per hour, but in these situations, we’ll monitor every few minutes to ensure maximum performance during the spikes that occur in real time.

•Wireless backhaul. We’re leveraging our U-verse and metro Ethernet fiber deployments to enhance wireless backhaul connections in many areas. We’re moving more and more of our wireless backhaul onto the 40 Gbps AT&T backbone network. So … the investments we’re making to maximize service quality on the wired side also benefit our wireless customers.

•Drive testing. AT&T technicians and other third-party vendors will drive-test its network nearly 30 million miles in the next year to improve the network’s coverage and quality.

•Hundreds of technicians from third-party testing companies, infrastructure vendors and AT&T technicians use specially designed vehicles to travel throughout the country and test the signal strength and coverage of AT&T’s ALLOVER Network.

•Along with drive-testing its own network, AT&T drive-tests competitors’ networks to ensure that its coverage and quality are equal to or better than other companies providing service in the area.

•The drive-test results help to prioritize where the company invests in new cell sites and equipment that enhances the network quality and coverage.

While a great deal of the document above is fairly obvious, there are many roadblocks to executing the plan and improving the network. Donovan's interview revealed some details of the plan above, but some engineers within the ranks gave me a great deal of insight, too.

A large part of the problem, Donovan said, is that people would complain, and yet, by all of their measurements, the user should have had full bars in the place and at the time they reported the poor coverage. Hence the need for better tools and more frequent sampling, instead of several times per hour, they'd do it every few minutes during congested periods. A great deal of that testing is done using network tools, but drive testing will help, and AT&T also tests their competitors' networks for comparison.

Adding more towers in a place is not simple. It's a local affair, requiring navigation of local building codes and politics. Somewhere like SF makes that hard, but the hilly terrain wouldn't help the situation either. And while 30 million miles of driving sounds like a good idea, the engineers I talked to insisted that drive testing is really just a final check once you've got enough towers in place. "Save the money on drive testing and build sites or improve sites we already have...[by] buying t-1s to increase capacity." He also commented that adding 1500 towers alone isn't enough to solve the problem.

Turning down analog networks sounds like a winning strategy, as long as you don't mind grandma's cell call quality being degraded. The activation of the 850MHz band will also enable better indoor reception, which is going to be critical in expanding data/voice quality as user counts go up. Donovan also said that they'd shift their allocation of bandwidth towards data from voice, which makes sense. Analog aside, the EDGE legacy is taking up resources on the towers which are shared with 3G. As one of the engineers said, having UMTS and GSM use the same antennas causes "interference and performance. It’s like putting a splitter on a garden hose the flow is still there but volume is cut in half on each side." (This is where Verizon and Sprint have an advantage.)

And as Wired has realized, 3G range being more limited, AT&T can't actually blanket a city by using the same tower locations as their EDGE counterparts. But my engineer friend also said, "We went from 2.5g experts to 3g novices." They don't have the training or experience to find or fix issues as well as they do on EDGE networks. Many in the field are also lacking the expensive test gear for UMTS to find bad channels and interference.

Why didn't AT&T make these investments in the first place, while Starbucks and T-Mobile worked on Wi-Fi hotspots and Sprint/Verizon went 3G ahead of the curve? Money.

And while AT&T's financially conservative strategies in the past have limited expansion, there's no reason they couldn't also do so in the future. I asked Donovan if caution was the overriding strategy behind waiting to match Sprint's initial 3G rollout, he replied, "I'd like to say we're deliberate. " He added that initially meeting the voice quality and data rates of Sprint's 3G network would have been both technically and financially impossible, despite the customer benefit. (One only needs to look at Sprint's financial weakness now to appreciate the wisdom of his point.) He also pointed out that by waiting, they got to leapfrog the limitations of Sprint's EVDO networks, referring to the extended data rates their network will eventually run at, at a better value. "The most astute thing you can do is be as late as possible and as fast as possible. Because it's going to cost you more if you do it too early, and if you do it too late, you don't get the features you want."

When AT&T's LTE networks do make the jump past Sprint, from 1.7Mbit to 7Mbit to 11Mbit to 20Mbit, their bottle neck will move to their backend infrastructure. To counteract that, they'll depend on their extensive wired and fiber backhauls the company has. But, in areas where the telco is owned by AT&T, AT&T wireless still has to buy lines from themselves and the budget isn’t there. According to at least one engineer, "We still operate at the field as two completely different companies. While at the top they see “ONE” we see many."

Will AT&T succeed at having the best call quality, coverage and reception? Who knows. But at least here, we have their plans on record and can hold them to the goal. After all, they're the biggest carrier — they've got a responsibility to all of us to make their network the best, no matter what the cost.

I just want to be able to hear the other person on the end of the line.

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<![CDATA[Keep This in Mind Before You Buy an Amazon Kindle]]> I'm not sure if this is a widespread problem, but just in case — if you live within any of those gaping white spots in the image above, you probably shouldn't waste your money on the Kindle. Keep in mind that Amazon's wireless connectivity for the device is dependent on the Sprint network and, as everyone knows, Sprint's network blows goats in rural areas.

As a rightfully irritated commenter on BookofJoe noted, Amazon should have notified him of this when it bought it. That may be true, but you wouldn't expect your phone company to do that right? Besides, Amazon did mention all of this in the product page, but it could have been easily lost in the long list of information. Hit the link to check your coverage [Amazon and BookofJoe]

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<![CDATA[PMA 07 So Far: Complete Roundup]]> As the Photo Marketing Association (PMA) convention rages on in Las Vegas, we're jumping all over it, showing you the best and brightest of the goings-on.

Trends? It looks like the digital SLR is making a run for the lower-end camera dollar, while at the same time, point-and-shoot models are vying for attention with fashion statements, oddball features such as waterproofness and capabilities only seen on high-end models in the past.

Here's a list of what we've covered so far, with more on the way:

HP Announces DreamColor

GE Goes All Hep Cat on Those Digital Cameras

Elinchrom EL-Skyport

Olympus E-510 and E-410 Hands-On

AlwaysOn Armadillo + Millipod Combo for Protection and Support


Minox Leica M3 Replica of a Classic Updated

D-Flector: Photography Studio in a Suitcase

Canon Selphy ES1 Photo Printer

Olympus E-Pro Concept

Canon EOS-1D Mark III Snapping Off Frames Like a House Afire


Jobo photoGPS Brings Easy GPS Photo Tagging to the Masses

Sony Alpha Prototype, First Pics of 'High Amateur' Model

Sony Alpha Flagship: First Pics

Sony Announces Expansions to Alpha DSLR Line

Canon EOS-1D Mark III Hands-On

Joby Gives GorillaPod a Dose of Growth Hormone

Pandigital 15" Frame

Canon Powershot TX-1 Hands-On With 720p in the Palm of Your Hand

Kodak Easyshare Z712IS

Hewlett-Packard R837: No More Pet Pics With Zombie Eyes

Sony Cyber-shot DSC-G1: Look Mom, No Wires!


Olympus P-1: E-1's Top-Slot Replacement

Ricoh Caplio R6: Instant 16x Zoom

Nikon Spruces Up Its D40, Now the 10.2-Megapixel D40x

Olympus Mju 780: if this Camera was a Bug, it Would be a Cockroach

Olympus EVolt E410 and E510 DSLRs Now at 10MP, Both With Live View

Canon TX1 vs Xacti vs Lumix

Canon Blink Shot Cameras Won't Shoot Till Everyone's Eyes Are Open

Sony T100 and T20: for Staying In and Going Out

Canon EOS-1D Mark III Shoots 10 Frames Per Second

Canon PowerShot TX1 Shoots 720p HD, 7.1MP Stills

Canon Intros PowerShot A560 and A570 IS Entry-Level Cameras

Canon Rolls Out Two 7.1MP Digital Elph Cameras: the SD750 and SD1000

Nikon L-Series Coolpix Tickles Our Low End: 120 Bucks for 5MP

Nikon Intros Coolpix P5000 Has DSLR Brains, Point and Shoot Sensor

Nikon S50c is a Slick Point and Shoot with WiFi

Nikon S200 and S500 Cams: Start Up and Shoot in an Instant

Pentax Optio W30 Waterproof Shooter Dives Deeper Than Ever

Pentax Optio A30 Boots Up, Shoots and Focuses Quicker

Fujifilm's S700 Packs 10x Zooming Muscle and "Smart" Flash

Foveon x3-Packing Sigma SD14 DSLR to Finally Ship

Sony's PMA Leaks Reveal the Mysterious G1 and Nine Cybershot Offspring (Updated)

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<![CDATA[PMA 07: We Hit the Ground Running]]> Boots are on the ground in Las Vegas for the annual PMA 2007 Convention, when purveyors of imaging devices from all over the world and their press watchdog counterparts converge on this fabulous sleazetown to show off, expose, overexpose and otherwise fondle cameras and accessories of every size and shape.

We hit the ground running at the show's advance events, getting our hands on some of these shiny new trinkets that happen to take pictures. Stick with us for lively coverage from the show floor, right here: it's PMA 2007 where cameras rule and everybody seems to be taking pictures.

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