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Sliding Headfirst by Kristin Lee
Sliding Headfirst by Kristin Lee








Sliding Headfirst by Kristin Lee

Including “items” like bluejeans, flip flops, tattoos and a burkini, it largely evades the air of expense, exclusivity and hauteur typical of these ventures. Around 30 prototypes, including 20 newly commissioned by the museum, add sparks of ingenuity - and of course there is a gift shop fuller than usual of sartorial temptations.īut all in all, “Items” has few of the showstopping moments of extreme craftsmanship, innovation or material lavishness that are a staple of the Met’s productions. Brilliant use is made of video and slide shows. This week we take a deep dive into the regional cellular scene and uncover the cellcos serving rural America.It’s big, occupying all of the sixth floor’s galleries for temporary exhibitions, which hasn’t happened since the de Kooning extravaganza of 2011. After going live in 2010, the project was completed in October 2015, when all 21 participants were confirmed to be operational.Īt the program’s peak, operators collectively covered more than 2.7 million people across 169 rural counties in 15 states.ĭespite Verizon’s low-key takeover spree, dozens of smaller players continue to thrive in the U.S. Tellingly, all four operators were participants in the telecom giant’s “LTE in Rural America” program, which leased 700MHz of spectrum to regional players in areas where Verizon had no intention of deploying infrastructure. Since 2020, Verizon Wireless has snapped up regional players such as Chat Mobility, Bluegrass Cellular, Triangle Mobile, and Chariton Valley Communications.

Sliding Headfirst by Kristin Lee

mobile market is notoriously ultra-competitive, and household names like Sprint aren't the only ones to have been squeezed out in recent years. Meet the Cellcos Serving Rural America: Part 1

Sliding Headfirst by Kristin Lee

We’ve looked at the enterprise SD-WAN market every two years to see what has changed and solidified. Over the past four years, early adopters who finished their deployments have started to assess the impact, and more enterprises than ever are in the rollout stage. When we first asked our WAN Manager Survey respondents about SD-WAN in 2018, interest was high, but few respondents had installed the technology or begun the rollout process. SD-WAN is becoming more complex, integrating SASE architectures and improving services to meet the needs of the WAN world. These changes in the underlay shifted the cybersecurity threat landscape and drove SD-WAN vendors and customers to focus more on security than ever before.

Sliding Headfirst by Kristin Lee

The COVID-19 pandemic forced IT infrastructure teams to accommodate remote work and accelerated the shift to cloud services. Approaching a decade since SD-WAN emerged as a networking technology, it is safe to say nearly all corporate network managers have at least heard of SD-WAN.










Sliding Headfirst by Kristin Lee