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GeneralPhones

Charge your phone easily with iOttie’s new iON Wireless Fast Charging Stand

iOttie just released its new iON Wireless Fast Charging Stand. It is currently available from Amazon for $44.95, but as of press time, the stock is dwindling. You may still be able to purchase it by the time you read this, though, so definitely check it out if you’re interested.

This device, unlike some charging pads and stands, looks as good as it performs. The base is built to stay balanced and features anti-slip material for extra stability. There are three fabric colors, available in Ash, Ivory, and Ruby, which are similar to the iOttie iON Wireless Mini Chargers. Currently only the Ash color is listed on Amazon but more should be available soon. The charging stand has two Qi coils so you can charge your phone in both portrait and landscape mode, which is a very nice touch.

These would make a great gift for any tech junkie, or, you know, live your best life and Treat Yo Self. Having a wireless charging stand near your workspace or on your nightstand is a huge game-changer, and once you start using one, you won’t ever go back. This will work with all Qi-enabled devices, but in case you’re curious, the iPhone 8, iPhone 8 Plus, and iPhone X all support wireless charging.

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Net NeutralityNews

Telecom group will ‘aggressively challenge’ any state enforcing net neutrality rules

USTelecom says it wants net neutrality protections, but not at the state level.

States attempting to preserve net neutrality regulations will soon see challenges in court, according to a blog post from the leading lobbying firm for the telecom industry.

USTelecom, which represents major broadband providers, says it will fight current state-level net neutrality rules and any more that may come in the future.

The post, published Monday, is a response to states that have acted individually to govern internet traffic in a way similar to the Obama administration’s net neutrality rules, which the Trump administration rolled back recently. Five governors have issued executive orders that leverage the purchasing power of their states to force companies to adhere to net neutrality principles, and Washington and Oregon have passed laws explicitly establishing net neutrality as the status quo.

More than half of U.S. states are considering similar legislation. The Obama-era rules prevented internet service providers from giving priority access to particular content or services over any other. The Federal Communications Commission voted in December, however, to dismantle them.

Any effort to regulate should come from the top down, USTelecom said.

“We will aggressively challenge state or municipal attempts to fracture the federal regulatory structure that made all this progress possible,” the blog post says, referring to the “ever more sophisticated, faster and higher-capacity networks” installed across the U.S. as the progress that broadband providers have made over the last 20 years.

USTelecom counts AT&T, Oracle, Verizon and CenturyLink representatives on its board of directors and supports the interests of everything from the “nation’s largest telecom companies to small rural cooperatives.”

The post, authored by USTelecom CEO Jonathan Spalter, states the intention of broadband providers is to “uphold net neutrality protections for all” — but not through individual laws and orders at the state level.

“Protections should be no different for consumers in Minnesota or Iowa than they are in California or Florida. Equally true, consumers deserve consistent safeguards across the online world, whether engaging with Facebook, Google, AT&T or Comcast,” Spalter writes.

USTelecom and the companies it represents have played a large role the last three years in lobbying against the Obama-era rules.

When asked by StateScoop for additional clarification on the group’s position, a USTelecom spokesperson said the blog post is self-explanatory — when states act in contradiction to the FCC’s reversal on net neutrality, USTelecom will look for “legal opportunities.” The spokesperson said the group doesn’t yet have a specific legal strategy.

Read the rest: statescoop.com

 

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News

Broadband Availability, Speeds Increasing According to New Report

Broadband

Broadband availability is given high priority and likely the most common topic among legislatures, and industry professionals.  However, broadband availability and speeds remain positive according to reports.

About 96 percent of Americans had at least one wired broadband option by mid-2016 and 84 percent had two options, according to a new analysis of Federal Communications Commission data by USTelecom and consultant Telcodata CensusNBM. (more…)

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