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Wiring Rural America with Next Gen Broadband: Frontier's Story

4/23/2012 · Posted by Bernie Tylor
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JDSU is proud to issue a new insallment of "JDSU from a Different View" on WWW.JDSU.TV, where we post timely video capturing a close collaboration story that is making a difference.  

This time, we look at extending broadband connections far and wide.  Especially in the rural parts of our country. Today, access to broadband is critical to keep up in American society. For example, finding and applying for jobs often requires an Internet connection. More and more teachers today are teaching with multimedia and many students receive their assignments via email. Basic government services are routinely offered online. These are just a few examples of how vitally important it is to be connected.

People without broadband access remain on the wrong side of our nation’s “digital divide.” Service providers nationwide are working hard to reach rural areas where connectivity to the Internet is nonexistent, or too slow and unable to handle today’s bandwidth-rich applications and services, such as streaming video.

For West Virginians, however, JDSU and Frontier Communications have worked toward bridging its digital divide.
 

The JDSU/Frontier partnership has helped establish a high quality, fiber-optic, next-generation broadband infrastructure as Frontier plays a leading role in making affordable broadband service available to more Americans.  For more, please visit WWW.JDSU.TV.

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Ken Arndt, President of Southeast Region for Frontier, appears on JDSU.TV's latest feature: "JDSU and Frontier Collaborate to Deliver Broadband Services to Rural Communities."
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Categories:Broadband

 

How Network Health Can Improve Your Health

4/19/2012 · Posted by Bernie Tylor
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It’s no secret that technology is changing our approach to healthcare.  Consider these scenarios:

 

·         A hospital initiates a mobile health platform to deliver radiological images and lab results of patients to physicians’ smartphones.
 
·         A diabetic woman uploads a glucose reading wirelessly on her smartphone, which can then send results over a network to her physician.
 
·         An elderly man recovering from cardiac surgery is monitored through wireless devices, reducing his hospital stay.
 
·         A  Weight Watchers member downloads the iPhone app to track food consumption and daily exercise.
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The mobile health – or mHealth – industry is booming. One recent report from Telenor and Boston Consulting Group suggests that 30 percent of smartphone users are likely to use ‘wellness apps’ by 2015, and “the smartphone is the most popular technology among doctors since the stethoscope.” Frost & Sullivan’s Analysis of the U.S. Broadband mHealth Applications Market study finds that the mHealth market earned $230 million in revenues in 2010 and expects this to jump to $392 million in 2015.
 
While these advancements in mobile healthcare are potentially advantageous to healthcare providers in terms of reduced costs and expedited patient care, they also present some challenges to mobile carriers. Of course, network security is critical, but what about network performance overall?
Patients, physicians and hospital administrators alike depend on network reliability to access critical information to track and manage health outcomes.
 
JDSU offers test and measurement solutions that monitor and troubleshoot networks to ensure continuous service to the smartphone user.
 
For the cardiac patient, diabetic and dieter who rely on mHealth services, network vitality is essential for their vitality.

 

 

Seizures for Counterfeit Goods Continue to Rise

4/17/2012 · Posted by Noël Bilodeau
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By Paul Wiener

Product Line Manager, Digital Systems, JDSU

Counterfeit goods pose a threat to the health and safety of Americans. They can find their way into manufacturing processes and goods, military systems, and a wide variety of consumer products. The U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) and U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) continue to step up enforcement each year. They estimate that the number of IPR seizures has increased about 325% over the past decade.

According to a report released in January 2012 by CBP and ICE, the number of Intellectual Property Rights (IPR) seizures increased by 24%, from 19,959 in FY 2010 to 24,792 in FY 2011. The estimated Manufacturer’s Suggested Retail Price (MSRP) for all FY 2011 IPR seizures is $1.1 billion.
 
The top 10 categories of IPR-infringing products seized in FY 2011 were pharmaceuticals, health/personal care, eyewear/parts, critical technology components, electronic articles, cigarettes, perfumes/colognes, batteries, exercise equipment and transportation/parts. For the first time since FY 2005, footwear was not the top commodity seized. Consumer electronics led, and about one-third of the total was IPR-infringing cellular phones. Two areas grew notably: counterfeit pharmaceutical seizures increased almost 200% over FY 2010, and the number of consumer safety and critical technology seizures increased by 44% compared to FY 2010.
  
As volumes increased, however, the domestic value of all IPR seizures decreased 5 percent from $188 million in FY 2010 to $179 million in FY 2011. CBP and ICE attribute this to more counterfeiters using international mail, express courier and consolidated shipping services to ship smaller amounts of goods with smaller values. This is supported by the fact that the number of low-value (under $1,000) IPR seizures is now 80 percent of the total increase in seizures.

 

Driving factors behind the increases include growth in direct-to-consumer sales, as well as an increase in the number of rogue websites. Behind the growing number of illicit pathways to market, however, is a more serious issue: the increasing number of consumers who don’t care about authenticity and are satisfied with owning fake merchandise.

 
The U.S. government and law enforcement officials are bringing more resources to bear each year to help brand owners, but more needs to be done.
 
JDSU promotes a layered solution for a variety of labels, seals and sleeves, where overt, covert and digital elements are blended together to make it difficult for counterfeiters to copy, easy for consumers and field investigators to check information. A unique element, such as the brand owner’s logo, can be embedded to appear when the image is tilted. For greater protection a variety of covert and forensic taggants can be included. Each label, seal, or sleeve can also be encoded with serialization registered on a JDSU on-line database called AuthentiTrak. This allows manufacturers to track products through their distribution channels to their end users. Serialization can be adapted for use by field investigators to verify products, by customs officials to inspect products, and by consumers who wish to participate in loyalty programs. All of these activities can be supported by a smart phone with a native matrix code scanning application.
 
JDSU has the experience, the track record, and the breadth of relevant technologies. This gives us the ability to ask the right questions and explore options with customers before advocating solutions.

 

The Danger of Identity Theft

4/3/2012 · Posted by Noël Bilodeau
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According to the Federal Trade Commission, identity theft is the fastest-growing property crime in America with California ranking third in the nation per capita for the offense. Citizens in the San Francisco Bay Area filed 4,521 complaints related to identity theft last year.

In a segment that aired last night, NBC Bay Area's Investigative Unit sheds light on the growing issue and includes a comment from Greg Miller about technology that JDSU provides to help combat the problem.
 

http://www.nbcbayarea.com/news/local/Stolen-Identity-Dangers-145827645.html

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