![]() That turned into a discussion of mobile virtual network operators (or MVNOs), and the differing phone standards (GSM vs CDMA), which are not compatible with each other. Gary talked about T-Mobile buying Sprint to be a more viable competitor to AT&T and Verizon (though they have to get approvals from the FCC and DOJ first, as The Verge notes). Randy followed on with news that RFID-style hotel room locks are vulnerable, as explained by Gizmodo. (Hat-tip to listener Michael in Australia for the sound clip of Kay's "Breach of the Week!" bumper.) Leo's Breach of the Week involves Bezop cryptocurrency, but it points more to the Mongo data base platform, since its security is "open" by default. There's a nice article on Space News, which also has a brief video recap of the test mission. Randy talked about the successful launch and landing of the Blue Origin rocket, New Shepherd. And Leo mentioned he likes the cross-platform screencap program, Snagit. Gary was just signed to do the 11th edition(!!) of his book, My iPad. In the warmup, Randy mentioned he is playing with the new iPad (sixth generation - "Space Gray" of course!), which supports the Apple Pencil. ![]() Gary Rosenzweig host and producer of MacMost, and mobile game developer at Clever Media. Leo Notenboom, "Chief Question Answerer," at tech education site Ask Leo! Randy Cassingham, founder of This is True and the Internet Spam Primer. Millions of hotel doors may be easily opened by hackers. ![]() The latest Breach of the Week should have Bezop cryptocurrency investors on guard (and any site using the Mongo data base). In This Episode: Blue Origin successfully test-launches - and lands - their New Shepherd rocket and human-capable capsule. ![]()
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