 Your new post is loading...
 Your new post is loading...
Yesterday’s blog looked at AT&T cellular coverage in a typical rural county in Illinois and included the following map. The map shows where AT&T can provide 5G coverage in a moving vehicle in the dark areas, and where somebody standing stationary outdoors could get a 5G signal in the lighter colored areas. Let’s look at the maps for the other two major carriers in the same areas. The first map below is T-Mobile, and the second is Verizon.
Pat Gelsinger was Intel’s CEO from 2021 to 2024, and served on the President’s Council of Advisors on Science and Technology in the Biden administration. He helped usher in the CHIPS and Science Act during his tenure at Intel, and was at the helm when the company suddenly found itself playing catch-up with Nvidia in the race to produce chips to power the artificial intelligence boom. Gelsinger is now a general partner at the venture firm Playground Global, where he helps manage a tech-focused portfolio that includes semiconductor, quantum and AI infrastructure companies. In advance of Playground’s America by Design Summit on Tuesday, he spoke with DFD about the debate over chip tariffs, and the Trump administration’s unorthodox move to take a stake in Intel. This interview has been edited for length and clarity.
Alternative search engine DuckDuckGo launches 'no AI' web extensions for Chrome and Firefox users. As its traffic continues to climb, alternative search engine DuckDuckGo is leaning into anti-AI sentiment with the launch of new browser extensions that allow users to set its no-AI search experience, noai.duckduckgo.com, as their default search engine.
Spectrum has expanded its fiber broadband network to bring Internet, Mobile, TV and Voice services to more than 900 additional homes and businesses in Osceola County, Michigan.
"Taxing AI directly ties the solution directly to the problem," wrote Rep. Greg Casar. "If AI use grows quickly, driving layoffs alongside it, the revenue from an AI tax would go up too." Two leading progressives in the US Congress are calling for a tax on artificial intelligence to fund programs that would help prevent an economic catastrophe for workers displaced by the rapidly advancing technology. In separate op-eds published Wednesday and Thursday, Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) and Rep. Greg Casar (D-Texas) warned that AI risks turbocharging existing wealth and income inequality by driving up the fortunes of large companies and their executives, while hurling millions of workers into joblessness without an adequate safety net.
Elon Musk's SpaceX IPO could make him the world's first trillionaire. Learn how ordinary investors may unknowingly fund this risky venture. Billionaire Elon Musk has ambitions to become the world’s first trillionaire when his company SpaceX makes what is expected to be the biggest initial public offering in history—and money unwittingly invested by ordinary Americans may help him get there. Progressive media outlet More Perfect Union on Wednesday published a video detailing how the Nasdaq stock market exchange changed its own rules so that SpaceX can be immediately included in index funds without having to wait through the one-year “seasoning” period that used to be required for newly public companies. SpaceX is a particularly risky bet,
The launch of the Ojai minivan robotaxi comes after years of development and testing, but arrives amid a challenging time for Waymo. Waymo has started giving select riders in Los Angeles, Phoenix, and San Francisco access to its newest robotaxi: an all-electric, minivan-like vehicle that is designed to lower costs and handle the use and abuse of hundreds of thousands of riders. Waymo said Thursday it will eventually expand access to the vehicle, a modified Zeekr-made minivan called the Ojai (pronounced oh-hi), to more riders and cities. For now, the Alphabet-owned company is offering a limited number of customers free rides in the Ojai to gather feedback and further refine the robotaxi experience.
On Thursday, Anthropic released Opus 4.8, the newest version of its most advanced publicly available model. The model is available everywhere, with standard pricing at the same level as the previous Opus release. The new model comes just 41 days after Opus 4.7 was released, a much faster upgrade cycle than normal for Anthropic. The new Opus model comes with a tool called Dynamic Workflows, for coordinating swarms of subagents.
I’ve been in this industry long enough to know the most interesting question is rarely what happened. It’s why rational actors made a specific move at a specific moment. Last week gave us three important signals that, taken together, say a lot about where mobile is heading: - The AT&T/T-Mobile/Verizon joint venture announcement
- The FCC’s approval of the $40 billion EchoStar spectrum sale to SpaceX and AT&T
- And SpaceX’s S-1 filing, submitted to the SEC on May 20, timing that was very likely intentional
Individually, each story matters. Together, they tell a much bigger one. Let’s unpack it.
Massive data centers are gobbling up resources across the United States. The boom has just begun—and you may be paying for it. John Steinbach was shocked to receive a $281 electricity bill in January 2026—a huge spike from the roughly $100 he’d paid the previous month. “It’s just so far beyond any bill that I’ve ever had,” he says. Steinbach, who has lived in his Manassas, Va., home for nearly 40 years, worries his rates will keep climbing as the outsized electricity demand from AI data centers grows. “They’re building them like it’s ‘Field of Dreams’—build it and the electricity will come—but we don’t see how that’s going to happen.” The contribution of AI data centers to higher bills is just one of the ways the development boom is affecting consumers. The facilities also compete for critical resources like water and land, and they can lower air quality and increase traffic, often while benefiting from changes to zoning laws and huge tax breaks. Data centers are not new. Such buildings have been around for decades, housing the servers and other hardware needed to power the internet. But since the introduction of ChatGPT to the public in late 2022, generative artificial intelligence has exploded, requiring mountains of new, power-hungry equipment. To meet this ballooning demand, and in a race to drive AI’s growth, tech giants like Amazon, Google, Meta, and Microsoft have been investing billions to build immense new facilities packed with servers and other equipment. Known as hyperscale data centers, they are far bigger than earlier versions, and are often built in sprawling industrial parks.
I tend to avoid writing about topics that others are already discussing. So I usually avoid the “AI is going to kill us”/”The AI is stealing our jobs”/ “The AI is not as good as I thought” articles. However, when the topic of AI intersects with supply chain management and the Bullwhip effect, I have to write about it. I am not making up the rules here. One thing is clear: The artificial intelligence boom has sparked one of the most costly technology buildouts in history.
On a Monday night in late April, nearly 100 people gathered in a public library conference room in Bloomington, Illinois. Sipping on seltzer water and snacking on granola bars, the crowd’s focus was on a projector screen, where a title slide read, “Let’s Talk Data Centers!” A few of the event-goers had brought notebooks, their pens poised to take notes during the presentation. Others held up their phones to snap photos of slides showing Illinois’ power grid and maps of its water resources. The event, first conceptualized by Bloomington librarian Kerrie Parker over the winter, was a joint effort between the library and several area nonprofits to educate people about data centers in central Illinois. Parker, who’s been with the library for 14 years, said she was surprised by the turnout. But on the heels of a controversial decision to approve a $500 million data center in Sangamon County, Illinois, just southwest of Bloomington, awareness around data centers in the region appears to be growing. At a time when seven in ten Americans nationwide oppose the construction of AI data centers in their area, according to a May 2026 Gallup poll, the turnout at April’s informational session is a testament to the interest in increasing community protections around data centers in central Illinois.
I recently read an article that touted residential 25-gigabit fiber in Switzerland. The article made it sound like the product was available everywhere, and the reality is different, but it is still a great story. The fiber network being discussed is funded and owned by Swisscom. The company is owned 51% by the Swiss government and 49% by investors. During nationwide discussions in 2008 about the best future path for building fiber in the country, Swisscom pushed for the idea of building multiple fibers whenever new fiber is built. The decision was made to adopt what was called a four-fiber point-to-point model, which means four separate fiber paths built between the network core and each home and business. This would allow for an open-access network with four separate ISPs getting direct layer 1 fiber access to each customer.
|
Tell New York Times, The Atlantic, and USA Today to keep the crucial work of journalists in the Wayback Machine! The news isn’t getting preserved in the Wayback Machine anymore because major media outlets are blocking it. This petition is a demand for them to stop.
Several users on social media reported having their Instagram accounts hacked over the weekend. Meta's own support chatbot was blamed for allowing hackers to hijack accounts.
A few megawatts will humble you fast. Now try a few gigawatts. The numbers in the announcements have lost their meaning. A gigawatt here, ten gigawatts there, half a trillion dollars for one program. We've read so many of these that the scale stopped registering, which is exactly the problem. Behind every figure is a physical plant that has to be built, energized, staffed, and defended from the community next door. The press release is the easy part. What follows is the work, the cost, and the risk that never makes the rendering. Working with megawatts is dangerous. Now imagine gigawatts. Walk a live data hall during a load test and you feel it before you understand it. The hum. Heat rolling off the busway. A breaker lineup that could drop half a campus if someone keys the wrong sequence into the controls. We talk about power like it's a line on a spreadsheet, because that's how it reaches most people, as a number on a one-line diagram. It is not a number. It's a physical force with a short temper, and at scale it does not forgive lazy work. Now the industry is tossing around gigawatt campuses like they're a footnote in a press release. I'm even becoming immune to these types of projects.
For decades, local broadcasters regarded public-access television with a kind of bemused condescension. It was cable’s civic obligation — the ramshackle corner of the media ecosystem reserved for awkward call-in programs, amateur hosts, low-budget ethnic programming, municipal hearings, church broadcasts, and eccentric local personalities speaking passionately to audiences that often barely existed. Public access was chaotic, technically uneven, aesthetically crude, and culturally unserious. Real television, broadcasters believed, happened elsewhere. And yet, in 2026, public access suddenly feels strangely ahead of its time. The recent spectacle of Stephen Colbert’s return appearance on a tiny Michigan public-access program resonated for reasons that extended well beyond novelty. What audiences seemed to respond to was not merely the humor of watching a national television personality descend into hyperlocal obscurity. It was the startling sense of authenticity that accompanied it. The program felt human, unpolished, deeply local, and refreshingly disconnected from the homogenized rhythms that increasingly define modern television. That reaction should unsettle the broadcast television industry more than it probably does.
“This administration is rushing toward another disastrous war, putting countless American and foreign lives at risk," said Rep. Nydia Velázquez. "Congress must reassert its constitutional authority." With US military forces prepared to launch an unprovoked attack on Cuba, a group of congressional Democrats on Wednesday introduced a new war powers resolution in a bid to block President Donald Trump from launching yet another illegal war of choice. Reps. Nydia Velázquez and Gregory Meeks, both of New York, introduced the resolution, which would bar US forces from hostilities within or against Cuba without congressional authorization, as required under the 1973 War Powers Act. The measure is cosponsored by Reps. Jim McGovern of Massachusetts and Joaquin Castro of Texas.
Europe’s startup ecosystem has matured significantly; its founders are increasingly willing to scale companies domestically instead of immediately looking to relocate to the U.S. For decades, the geography of the tech industry has felt largely fixed, with Silicon Valley dominating the global startup economy. While cities like London, Beijing, and Tel Aviv have competed for secondary influence, one of the most important conversations in artificial intelligence is happening somewhere else entirely: Paris. France has aggressively invested in artificial intelligence research and infrastructure, with startups like Mistral AI helping Europe become a legitimate force in the global AI race. At the same time, Europe’s startup ecosystem has matured significantly; its founders are increasingly willing to scale companies domestically instead of immediately looking to relocate to the U.S.
This document is also a Sledgehammer of Facts to Halt All FCC Chairman Carr’s Proceedings The chart above is an excerpt from the 2025 Verizon NY Annual Report, published May 21, 2026. We will first present an analysis of this financial and business information. Then we will detail why Congress needs to step in and investigate the FCC Chairman Brendan Carr’ plans, which is a collection of inter locking proceedings, known as Delete 3. Partial Background We have tracked Verizon NY financial reports for over 16 years with detailed analysis of the annual reports in just Verizon NY, and since 2010, the IRREGULATORS have filed at the FCC, NTIA and state utility regulatory agencies. And this current analysis is important as it directly relates to all of the FCC Chairman Brendan Carr proceedings, where, since 2025 there has been a barrage of now over 30+ interlocking proceedings — and this also contradicts every FCC statement and analysis, as we will discuss. Our adverse comments, application for full review, and decades of filings at the FCC, NY PSC and CA PUC are now all tied to the findings in New York — — all directly contradict the AT&T case against the CA PUC and the FCC’s Delete 3 proceedings..
In fact, AT&T is taking the California Commission to court to allow the company to remove carrier of last resort (COLR) and shut off the copper wires. At the same time, the FCC has started a new proceeding to help force the state to comply with AT&T’s request. Light reading reports: “AT&T filed a suit with a California court and an application with the FCC that aims to spark the operator’s shutdown of copper networks and services in the Golden State and expand on similar initiatives underway in 20 other states, where AT&T has service areas.
SpaceX recently filed comments in the FCC’s open docket looking at the Universal Service Fund (USF) with a recommendation that the FCC should sunset the High-Cost Fund and eventually eliminate it. This is one of the four major components of USF, with an annual budget of $4.5 billion. SpaceX argues that Starlink has now solved rural broadband connectivity issues with ubiquitous broadband available throughout the country. SpaceX argues that ongoing subsidy payments to support rural voice and broadband networks are no longer needed. To put the SpaceX comments into perspective, let me start by reviewing the stated goals of the High Cost Fund:
Today I’m going to speak from the heart, and tell you that we’re ruled by fucking imbeciles. AI is a perfect storm of failed concepts and organizations, and the apex of the Era of the Business Idiot, an epoch where we’re ruled by people so thoroughly disconnected from the actual workforce that it was inevitable that a technology would be created specifically to grift them. Just ask Aaron Levie, CEO of Box:
Growing AI infrastructure demands extensive land preparation and massive industrial campuses to support advanced computing equipment. These facilities also require expanded power grids, underground utility networks, advanced cooling systems, and reinforced security infrastructure before operations can begin. Supporting facilities and continuous expansion projects are further increasing construction activity as companies rush to expand AI capacity. Goldman Sachs Research predicts the demand for data centers to rise by roughly 50% to 92 gigawatts by 2027, with rapid expansion expected to continue into 2028. The growing demand is creating more work for construction firms as companies race to build more computing infrastructure. How Much Does One AI Data Center Cost to Build? Large AI data centers often cost between $500 million and more than $1 billion, depending on size, power capacity, and the amount of computing hardware planned for the site. A huge share of that spending goes into:
WASHINGTON, May 27, 2026 – The Trump administration urged federal judges Tuesday to grant its request to dismiss a lawsuit over the cancellation of $2.75 billion in broadband adoption funding. In May 2025, the Commerce Department told recipients of grant funding under the Digital Equity Act that the law unconstitutionally directed funding to racial minorities and that the grants were canceled. The National Digital Inclusion Alliance urged judges not to dismiss its case over canceled grant funding.
Tungsten is a metal that’s incredibly important to all kinds of industries — especially manufacturers that need to cut other kinds of metal. Most of the tungsten used in the U.S. comes from China, which controls roughly 80% of the world’s supply. Trade tensions between the U.S. and China have hit the tungsten market hard. The price of the metal has shot up 300% over the past year or so, according to the CRU Group. That inflation has less to do with tariffs than it does with another weapon in the global trade war: export controls. A big reason tungsten is unique is that it has a very high resistance to heat. “And so that makes it ideal for handling the temperatures required to melt other metals without it melting itself,” said Chris Blench, CEO of Mavericks Manufacturing Partners, a company near San Diego that makes components for the energy and defense sectors.
|