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Tech Transforms podcast: What we don’t know about America’s “Wireless Wars” with China – but should

Dynatrace

On the Tech Transforms podcast , MITRE’s Tracy Bannon and I sat down with Jon Pelson , author of the bestselling book Wireless Wars. Dynatrace for the public sector Wireless Wars: Understanding China’s impact on national security and federal cybersecurity Today, China commands a ubiquitous presence in telecommunications.

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Real user monitoring vs. synthetic monitoring: Understanding best practices

Dynatrace

RUM works best only when people actively visit the application, website, or services. For example, the ability to test against a wireless provider in a remote area. Instead, when working with websites, applications, or services, you may need both. In some cases, you will lack benchmarking capabilities.

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DROAM - Dreaming about Cheap Data Roaming - All Things.

All Things Distributed

One wireless company for example has an international plan that will charge you $25 per month for 50MB after which they will charge you $20 per MB. New AWS feature: Run your website from Amazon S3. The one thing that I have always struggled with during my travels are the data plans of the cell phone companies.

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The Paradox of Connection

Edge Perspectives

Wireless technology has made it possible for us to connect to this digital infrastructure (and to each other) regardless of where we are in the world with much less expense and effort. Now we can just go online and use a search tool to find the information on some website.

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Generative AI in the Enterprise

O'Reilly

A year after the first web servers became available, how many companies had websites or were experimenting with building them? Second, while OpenAI’s GPT-4 announcement last March demoed generating website code from a hand-drawn sketch, that capability wasn’t available until after the survey closed. Certainly not two-thirds of them.

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HTTP/3: Performance Improvements (Part 2)

Smashing Magazine

This means that it will not magically download your website resources much more quickly than TCP. Some examples of the latter are heavily cached websites, as well as single-page apps that periodically fetch small updates via APIs and other protocols such as DNS-over-QUIC. What Does It All Mean? 0-RTT Connection Set-Up.

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HTTP/3: Practical Deployment Options (Part 3)

Smashing Magazine

Your user has requested that you navigate to example.com (a website you’ve never visited before), and you’ve used DNS to resolve that to an IP. Even if a server supports HTTP/3, however, clients (and website owners!) Packet loss on cable might be bursty, but wireless links might benefit more from QUIC’s head-of-line blocking removal.

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