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Monash Uni, BoM sense bushfire haze with microwave backhaul signals

By Ry Crozier on Apr 26, 2021 9:27AM May prove a useful input into air quality monitoring systems. Microwave backhaul links used by mobile network operators may be a useful input into air quality measurement after research led by Monash University found that signal transmission patterns could be used to identify haze or smoke pollution in an area. Led by Dr Adrien Guyot, a research fellow in Monash University’s Department of Civil Engineering, and involving the Australian Bureau of Meteorology (BoM) and Dutch researchers, the study “analysed radio link signal fluctuations during smoke events associated with the 2019-2020 Australian bushfires.” Radio links, as defined by the study, are “commercial microwave links (CMLs) [and] are the backbone of cellular communication networks.”

iTWire - eOS launches on AWS marketplace

iTWire Friday, 23 April 2021 14:00 eOS launches on AWS marketplace Shares The decision to make eOs, energyOS’ digital energy service platform, available on the AWS market was driven by strong customer growth in Australia, and will push utility companies to implement clean energy capabilities. energyOS, an energy Software as a Service company, announced its “leading digital energy services platform, eOs”, is now available on AWS Marketplace, “a curated digital catalogue that makes it easy for Amazon Web Services (AWS) customers to find, test, buy, and deploy third-party software that runs on AWS.” According to the company, this will allow “utility companies to support their climate change initiatives by purchasing and implementing clean energy capabilities.”

iTWire - Staff Writer

iTWire WEBINARS ONLINE & ON-DEMAND WEBINAR INVITE: Vix Vizion, developers of Imagus Facial Recognition software,… GUEST ARTICLES WEBINAR INVITE: Vix Vizion, developers of Imagus Facial Recognition software,… VENDOR NEWS Leading life insurer uses Talend in data lake environment for… Guest Opinion Guest Interviews Guest Reviews Guest Research Guest Research & Case Studies Guest Research: New Adobe and Deloitte research reveals the majority… Zscaler, the leader in cloud security, today announced a new…

Telstra treads fine line when sending - or suppressing - marketing messages

By Ry Crozier on Apr 21, 2021 6:50AM But says tech deployed under T22 transformation is helping. Telstra said it is treading a fine line in the kinds of digital marketing messages it sends and suppresses based on what it deduces about customers, particularly when it comes to guessing at what they might be able to afford. Chief marketing officer Jeremy Nicholas told Salesforce Live A/NZ that the telco took into account a larger amount of data when marketing to its customers after system changes made in the T22 transformation. Nicholas said the carrier’s use of Salesforce marketing cloud, in particular, enabled it to personalise in-store, agent and online experiences for customers to a much greater degree.

iTWire - How might we build a new internet?

iTWire Wednesday, 21 April 2021 13:29 How might we build a new internet? Featured Industry experts offer their thoughts on what Internet 2.0 might look like. In this edition of the Controversial Question series, we asked our panel of experts how they might go about building an entire new internet, learning from all the mistakes made in the construction and maintenance of the one we have right now. This is the question we posed: We all know that the original design of the Internet assumed everyone was friendly and there was no expectation of malicious activity. However, once the Internet was opened to the big wide world, that became a major problem as security had to be shoe-horned into a structure that was never designed to be secure. Further, the Internet has grown far beyond anything anticipated by the original designers. The obvious choke-points are IPv4 and DNS (yes, I know we re moving to IPv6!).

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