Global IT spending on cloud-based infrastructure grew 2.2% in Q1, while investments in “non-cloud environments plunged 16.3%, reported IDC Thursday. “The broadening impact of the COVID-19 pandemic was the major factor driving infrastructure spending,” it said. “Widespread lockdowns across the world and staged reopening of economies triggered increased demand for cloud-based consumer and business services.” IDC forecasts the Q1 pace “will continue through rest of the year as cloud adoption continues to get an additional boost."
World Wrestling Entertainment's annual shareholder meeting, postponed from April due to the COVID-19 pandemic (see 2004100003), will be held virtually on July 16 because of health concerns, it said Friday.
Auction 903 and rural broadband experiment funding recipients have a limited waiver until the end of 2021 from letter of credit rules, the Wireline Bureau said Friday. Skybeam and the Connect America Fund Phase II Coalition petitioned for waivers to conform with recent Rural Digital Opportunity Fund rules (see 2003110034). Staff said waiver is justified given how the pandemic has increased demand for broadband while impeding business.
With more employees working from home now, and possibly beyond the COVID-19 pandemic, home network security is a growing concern, experts told a webinar with cybersecurity company Bitdefender. Nearly 80% of U.S. consumers surveyed by Parks Associates are concerned about a data security break or privacy issues, said analyst Brad Russell. The increasing time households are spending on their Wi-Fi networks heightened home network exposure to phishing attacks, Russell noted. WFH puts the home network “in a completely different spotlight,” said Alex Balan, Bitdefender chief security researcher. Bitdefender is tracking 350 IoT-oriented botnets in its labs that are compromising such smart home devices as routers, power outlets, smart cameras, printers, smart TVs and connected coffee makers. Eventually, all devices in the home will be connected and the number of attacks on home networks will “dramatically expand,” said Balan. Vulnerabilities are present in 90% of the devices Bitdefender analyzes, he said, and are “very difficult to defend against.” Consumers can’t buy anti-virus software “for a smart light bulb or a Roomba,” he said. “You don’t know how to tackle security for your smart devices.” The average broadband household has 22 devices, up from 12-15 two years ago, said Razvan Todor, Bitdefender director-connected home security, and that will keep growing. “We’ve just now become painfully aware that we need to protect them,” ideally from a single point, said Todor. ISPs can help with cybersecurity, while clearing up their networks with fewer distributed denial-of-service attacks, experts said.
Microsoft is closing its physical stores and will provide sales, training and support remotely, it said Friday. The company will “reimagine” spaces that serve customers, including Microsoft Experience Centers in New York; London; Redmond, Washington; and Sydney. Store closings will result in a pretax charge of $450 million, to be recorded in Q2. “Our sales have grown online as our product portfolio has evolved to largely digital offerings," said Microsoft Corporate Vice President David Porter. The company has been serving customers remotely over the past few months during the pandemic, he said. New online services include 1:1 video chat support, online tutorial videos and virtual workshops.
The FCC Media Bureau extended a waiver of sponsorship identification rules for donated COVID-19-related public service announcements through Aug. 31, said a public notice Friday. Since the PSAs are created by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and don’t include the names of the entities that donated advertising time to air them, they would otherwise violate sponsorship ID rules. Despite some states lifting stay-at-home orders, “many restrictions, including 'social distancing' measures, remain in effect with uncertain timetables for their removal,” MB said.
The Wireless Bureau released an electronic process for FCC licensees to apply for expedited Section 106 historic review or emergency authorization of wireless facilities during the COVID-19 pandemic. Advisory Council on Historic Preservation rules “include provisions to allow certain critical infrastructure projects to proceed under expedited Section 106 review during emergencies such as the COVID-19 crisis,” said a notice in Friday’s Daily Digest. “The Commission may issue emergency authorizations for infrastructure projects critical for responding to emergency situations."
Some 31 Apple stores were shown closed on the company’s website Thursday, including seven in Texas, where Gov. Greg Abbott (R) announced the state will pause further reopening phases amid the surge in COVID-19 cases. The Department of Health State Services estimated 50,774 active cases statewide. Apple showed all four Houston stores closed; the Texas Medical Center reported intensive care unit beds at 100% capacity Wednesday. Harris County, Houston's home, led with 25,786 confirmed cases Wednesday, said Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. Seven states reported new highs for current coronavirus hospitalizations this week, said The Washington Post : Arizona, Arkansas, California, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee and Texas. All six Apple stores in Arizona were temporarily shuttered. The state had the biggest upward trend of new cases, said Johns Hopkins. In Florida, Apple stores in Estero and Naples were shown closed, while four of five stores in North Carolina -- and both South Carolina stores -- were shuttered. Two of four Tennessee stores -- Germantown and Nashville -- were closed. Apple began a gradual reopening of U.S. stores last month (see 2005180043) after it temporarily shut all U.S. storefronts in March. The company didn't comment.
More than a quarter of the more than 1 million people searching online for new homes at the peak of COVID-19 in April and May were looking at locales in other U.S. regions, said Redfin. There was a “huge increase” in people in large metropolitan areas “looking online at homes in small towns,” it said Thursday: The pandemic and resulting work-from-home trends are “accelerating migration patterns.” New York, San Francisco and Los Angeles had the biggest “net outflow” of users in April and May, the digital real estate brokerage said.
The global cellular baseband processor market grew 9% in Q1, reaching $5.2 billion in revenue, reported Strategy Analytics Thursday. Qualcomm maintained its baseband market share leadership with 42% of revenue, followed by HiSilicon (20%) and MediaTek (14%), it said. The pandemic combined with weak seasonal demand to restrict baseband shipment growth. But 5G baseband shipments spurred revenue growth because they command a “significant premium” over 4G basebands, said SA: 5G basebands were nearly 10% of the units shipped, 30% of revenue.