Year: 2018

Star Trek: Discovery wins Saturn Award: Best Streaming Series

The Saturn Awards, honoring the best in genre entertainment, was held on Wednesday evening in Burbank, CA.  Star Trek: Discovery  came into the night with five nominations, and won two of them.

The biggest win for the night for Star Trek: Discoverywas for Best New Media Television Series. The latest Trek show beat out genre entries from other steaming services including Altered Carbon(Netflix), Black Mirror(Netflix), The Handmaid’s Tale(Hulu), Mindhunter(Netflix), Philip K. Dick’s Electric Dreams(Amazon), and Stranger Things(Netflix). On hand to accept the award were Klingon actors Mary Chieffo (L’Rell) and Kenneth Mitchell (Kol).

Star Trek: Discovery is scheduled for season 2 sometime in 2019 and can be seen on CBS All Access.

AT&T fined $5.25M for ‘911’ call outages that impacted more than 15,000 users

The U.S. Federal Trade Commission and AT&T on Thursday issued a joint statement saying the telco will pay out $5.25 million to settle a government probe into two "911" service outages.

According to an FCC statement, the pair of nationwide outages occurred in 2017 as a result of planned VoLTE network modifications that inadvertently affected 911 call routing, reports Reuters.

In March 2017, a five-hour outage impacted 12,600 callers, while a second downtime in May lasted 47 minutes and resulted in 2,600 dropped calls. An FCC investigation found AT&T failed to "quickly, clearly, and fully" notify affected 911 call centers during the March outage. Federal regulations mandate cellular providers transmit all 911 calls and inform call centers when a network outage lasts 30 minutes or more.

"Such preventable outages are unacceptable," the FCC said in a prepared statement. "Robust and reliable 911 service is a national priority, as repeatedly expressed by both Congress and the Commission."

In addition to the $5.25 million fine, AT&T is required to implement system changes that reduce the likelihood and impact of future emergency call outages. The company must also improve internal practices for notifying 911 call centers of problems, work to improve emergency call completion and file regular compliance reports with the FCC.

"Providing access to emergency 911 services is critically important, and to that end we cooperated with the FCC in their review," the company said in a statement to AppleInsider. "These events resulted from planned network changes that inadvertently interfered with the routing of 911 calls. We've taken steps to prevent this from happening again."

The monetary fine is a slap on the wrist for the telco, which generated $190 billion in revenue in 2017. More important are stipulations of the settlement that require AT&T to improve and report its handling of emergency calls, an important service for all mobile network subscribers that has only become more vital with the proliferation of smartphones.

Via: AppleInsider.com

Apple cutting off payment source changes for older iOS, MacOS, and TVOS systems

As of June 30th, Apple customers will not be able to change their method of credit card, Paypal, and other payment for services on such services as the iOS App store, iTunes, and the Mac App Store without updating to the newest version of the operating system software.

In an email going out to customers, Apple is alerting people that the cutoff prevents payment switches in iOS 4.3.5, OS X 10.8.5, and Apple TV Software 4.4.4 or earlier. Customers will still be able to access iTunes and the App Store, including making new purchases and downloading previous ones, but will have to use whatever payment method they selected before the end of June assuming that they have no other devices to change the information.

The change is related to unspecified back end security improvements for these services.

These changes may not effect the Marjory of users running iOS 11 (or above starting this Fall).

Captain Kirk has his own bourbon

If you’ve been thinking what you need in your life is Star Trek bourbon, you’re in luck because it’s available in your sector now. The James T. Kirk straight bourbon whiskey is Paramont-approved and made by Silver Screen Bottling Company. The whiskey is small batch from barrels aged between four and 12 years and is touted as “for the Star Trek fan and the serious bourbon fan alike.” You can pre-order a bottle now for delivery in October for US$59.99, which is $10 off the list price, or pick up a bottle at San Diego Comic Con. And drink responsibly because no one wants your starship to crash.

Read more: Captain Kirk Has His Own Bourbon

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