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      SpaceX just got exactly what it wanted from the FAA for Texas Starship launches

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 20 November 2024

    A day after SpaceX launched its Starship rocket for the sixth time , the company received good news from the Federal Aviation Administration regarding future launch operations from its Starbase facility in South Texas.

    In a draft version of what is known as an "Environmental Assessment," the FAA indicated that it will grant SpaceX permission to increase the number of Starship launches in South Texas to 25 per year from the current limit of five. Additionally, the company will likely be allowed to continue increasing the size and power of the Super Heavy booster stage and Starship upper stage.

    "FAA has concluded that the modification of SpaceX’s existing vehicle operator license for Starship/Super Heavy operations conforms to the prior environmental documentation, consistent with the data contained in the 2022 PEA, that there are no significant environmental changes, and all pertinent conditions and requirements of the prior approval have been met or will be met in the current action," the federal agency stated in its conclusion.

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    • Ar chevron_right

      SpaceX just got exactly what it wanted from the FAA for Texas Starship launches

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 20 November 2024

    A day after SpaceX launched its Starship rocket for the sixth time , the company received good news from the Federal Aviation Administration regarding future launch operations from its Starbase facility in South Texas.

    In a draft version of what is known as an "Environmental Assessment," the FAA indicated that it will grant SpaceX permission to increase the number of Starship launches in South Texas to 25 per year from the current limit of five. Additionally, the company will likely be allowed to continue increasing the size and power of the Super Heavy booster stage and Starship upper stage.

    "FAA has concluded that the modification of SpaceX’s existing vehicle operator license for Starship/Super Heavy operations conforms to the prior environmental documentation, consistent with the data contained in the 2022 PEA, that there are no significant environmental changes, and all pertinent conditions and requirements of the prior approval have been met or will be met in the current action," the federal agency stated in its conclusion.

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    • tagscience tagscience tagscience tagspace tagspace tagspace tagfaa tagfaa tagfaa tagspacex tagspacex tagspacex tagscience tagscience tagscience tagspace tagspace tagspace tagfaa tagfaa tagfaa tagspacex tagspacex tagspacex tagscience tagscience tagscience tagspace tagspace tagspace tagfaa tagfaa tagfaa tagspacex tagspacex tagspacex

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    • Ar chevron_right

      SpaceX just got exactly what it wanted from the FAA for Texas Starship launches

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 20 November 2024

    A day after SpaceX launched its Starship rocket for the sixth time , the company received good news from the Federal Aviation Administration regarding future launch operations from its Starbase facility in South Texas.

    In a draft version of what is known as an "Environmental Assessment," the FAA indicated that it will grant SpaceX permission to increase the number of Starship launches in South Texas to 25 per year from the current limit of five. Additionally, the company will likely be allowed to continue increasing the size and power of the Super Heavy booster stage and Starship upper stage.

    "FAA has concluded that the modification of SpaceX’s existing vehicle operator license for Starship/Super Heavy operations conforms to the prior environmental documentation, consistent with the data contained in the 2022 PEA, that there are no significant environmental changes, and all pertinent conditions and requirements of the prior approval have been met or will be met in the current action," the federal agency stated in its conclusion.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagscience tagscience tagscience tagspace tagspace tagspace tagfaa tagfaa tagfaa tagspacex tagspacex tagspacex tagscience tagscience tagscience tagspace tagspace tagspace tagfaa tagfaa tagfaa tagspacex tagspacex tagspacex tagscience tagscience tagscience tagspace tagspace tagspace tagfaa tagfaa tagfaa tagspacex tagspacex tagspacex

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      Fitness app Strava is tightening third-party access to user data

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 20 November 2024 • 1 minute

    The Strava app is one of the most popular ways for cyclists, runners, hikers, and other distance sports enthusiasts to track their performance and grab some bragging rights. Because most athletic types will have the app installed already—and because it's hard or impossible to run two tracking apps at once—many apps use Strava's API as a go-between for workout data.

    Strava emailed its more than 100 million users earlier this week to notify them about "important updates on how Strava data can be displayed, accessed, and used by third-party apps." In the update , Strava noted that third-party apps "are no longer able to display your Strava activity data on their surfaces to other users," that Strava's API data cannot be used "in artificial intelligence models or other similar applications," and that third-party apps must be designed so as to "complement" Strava's look and feel "rather than replicating it."

    What does this actually mean? It depends on which apps you're using. DC Rainmaker, a longtime fitness tech blogger, sees the "other users" clause as something that "immediately break[s] almost all coaching apps that have connections to Strava." If an app needs to see your Strava workout to provide insights on performance or connect you to a group, Strava's API seems to block it now. A manager at the training app Intervals posted on the app's official forum that the API change would break Intervals' ability to use Strava as its data source.

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    • tagtech tagtech tagtech tagai tagai tagai tagapi tagapi tagapi tagcycling tagcycling tagcycling tagfitness tagfitness tagfitness taghiking taghiking taghiking tagrunning tagrunning tagrunning tagsports tagsports tagsports tagstrava tagstrava tagstrava tagtech tagtech tagtech tagai tagai tagai tagapi tagapi tagapi tagcycling tagcycling tagcycling tagfitness tagfitness tagfitness taghiking taghiking taghiking tagrunning tagrunning tagrunning tagsports tagsports tagsports tagstrava tagstrava tagstrava tagtech tagtech tagtech tagai tagai tagai tagapi tagapi tagapi tagcycling tagcycling tagcycling tagfitness tagfitness tagfitness taghiking taghiking taghiking tagrunning tagrunning tagrunning tagsports tagsports tagsports tagstrava tagstrava tagstrava

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    • Ar chevron_right

      Fitness app Strava is tightening third-party access to user data

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 20 November 2024 • 1 minute

    The Strava app is one of the most popular ways for cyclists, runners, hikers, and other distance sports enthusiasts to track their performance and grab some bragging rights. Because most athletic types will have the app installed already—and because it's hard or impossible to run two tracking apps at once—many apps use Strava's API as a go-between for workout data.

    Strava emailed its more than 100 million users earlier this week to notify them about "important updates on how Strava data can be displayed, accessed, and used by third-party apps." In the update , Strava noted that third-party apps "are no longer able to display your Strava activity data on their surfaces to other users," that Strava's API data cannot be used "in artificial intelligence models or other similar applications," and that third-party apps must be designed so as to "complement" Strava's look and feel "rather than replicating it."

    What does this actually mean? It depends on which apps you're using. DC Rainmaker, a longtime fitness tech blogger, sees the "other users" clause as something that "immediately break[s] almost all coaching apps that have connections to Strava." If an app needs to see your Strava workout to provide insights on performance or connect you to a group, Strava's API seems to block it now. A manager at the training app Intervals posted on the app's official forum that the API change would break Intervals' ability to use Strava as its data source.

    Read full article

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    • tagtech tagtech tagtech tagai tagai tagai tagapi tagapi tagapi tagcycling tagcycling tagcycling tagfitness tagfitness tagfitness taghiking taghiking taghiking tagrunning tagrunning tagrunning tagsports tagsports tagsports tagstrava tagstrava tagstrava tagtech tagtech tagtech tagai tagai tagai tagapi tagapi tagapi tagcycling tagcycling tagcycling tagfitness tagfitness tagfitness taghiking taghiking taghiking tagrunning tagrunning tagrunning tagsports tagsports tagsports tagstrava tagstrava tagstrava tagtech tagtech tagtech tagai tagai tagai tagapi tagapi tagapi tagcycling tagcycling tagcycling tagfitness tagfitness tagfitness taghiking taghiking taghiking tagrunning tagrunning tagrunning tagsports tagsports tagsports tagstrava tagstrava tagstrava

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    • Ar chevron_right

      Fitness app Strava is tightening third-party access to user data

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 20 November 2024 • 1 minute

    The Strava app is one of the most popular ways for cyclists, runners, hikers, and other distance sports enthusiasts to track their performance and grab some bragging rights. Because most athletic types will have the app installed already—and because it's hard or impossible to run two tracking apps at once—many apps use Strava's API as a go-between for workout data.

    Strava emailed its more than 100 million users earlier this week to notify them about "important updates on how Strava data can be displayed, accessed, and used by third-party apps." In the update , Strava noted that third-party apps "are no longer able to display your Strava activity data on their surfaces to other users," that Strava's API data cannot be used "in artificial intelligence models or other similar applications," and that third-party apps must be designed so as to "complement" Strava's look and feel "rather than replicating it."

    What does this actually mean? It depends on which apps you're using. DC Rainmaker, a longtime fitness tech blogger, sees the "other users" clause as something that "immediately break[s] almost all coaching apps that have connections to Strava." If an app needs to see your Strava workout to provide insights on performance or connect you to a group, Strava's API seems to block it now. A manager at the training app Intervals posted on the app's official forum that the API change would break Intervals' ability to use Strava as its data source.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagtech tagtech tagtech tagai tagai tagai tagapi tagapi tagapi tagcycling tagcycling tagcycling tagfitness tagfitness tagfitness taghiking taghiking taghiking tagrunning tagrunning tagrunning tagsports tagsports tagsports tagstrava tagstrava tagstrava tagtech tagtech tagtech tagai tagai tagai tagapi tagapi tagapi tagcycling tagcycling tagcycling tagfitness tagfitness tagfitness taghiking taghiking taghiking tagrunning tagrunning tagrunning tagsports tagsports tagsports tagstrava tagstrava tagstrava tagtech tagtech tagtech tagai tagai tagai tagapi tagapi tagapi tagcycling tagcycling tagcycling tagfitness tagfitness tagfitness taghiking taghiking taghiking tagrunning tagrunning tagrunning tagsports tagsports tagsports tagstrava tagstrava tagstrava

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      Comcast to ditch cable TV networks in partial spinoff of NBCUniversal assets

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 20 November 2024

    Comcast today announced plans to spin off NBCUniversal cable TV networks such as USA, CNBC, and MSNBC into a new publicly traded company. Comcast is trying to complete the spinoff in one year, effectively unwinding part of the NBCUniversal acquisition it completed in 2011.

    The entities in the planned spinoff generated about $7 billion of revenue in the 12 months that ended September 30, 2024, Comcast said. But cable TV channels have become less lucrative in an industry that's shifting to the streaming model, and the spinoff would let Comcast remove those assets from its earnings reports. Comcast's total revenue in the 12-month period was about $123 billion.

    Comcast President Mike Cavanagh said in the Q3 earnings call on October 31 that Comcast is "experiencing the effects of the transition in our video businesses and have been studying the best path forward for these assets."

    Read full article

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    • tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagcomcast tagcomcast tagcomcast tagcomcast spinoff tagcomcast spinoff tagcomcast spinoff tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagcomcast tagcomcast tagcomcast tagcomcast spinoff tagcomcast spinoff tagcomcast spinoff tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagcomcast tagcomcast tagcomcast tagcomcast spinoff tagcomcast spinoff tagcomcast spinoff

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    • Ar chevron_right

      Comcast to ditch cable TV networks in partial spinoff of NBCUniversal assets

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 20 November 2024

    Comcast today announced plans to spin off NBCUniversal cable TV networks such as USA, CNBC, and MSNBC into a new publicly traded company. Comcast is trying to complete the spinoff in one year, effectively unwinding part of the NBCUniversal acquisition it completed in 2011.

    The entities in the planned spinoff generated about $7 billion of revenue in the 12 months that ended September 30, 2024, Comcast said. But cable TV channels have become less lucrative in an industry that's shifting to the streaming model, and the spinoff would let Comcast remove those assets from its earnings reports. Comcast's total revenue in the 12-month period was about $123 billion.

    Comcast President Mike Cavanagh said in the Q3 earnings call on October 31 that Comcast is "experiencing the effects of the transition in our video businesses and have been studying the best path forward for these assets."

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagcomcast tagcomcast tagcomcast tagcomcast spinoff tagcomcast spinoff tagcomcast spinoff tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagcomcast tagcomcast tagcomcast tagcomcast spinoff tagcomcast spinoff tagcomcast spinoff tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagcomcast tagcomcast tagcomcast tagcomcast spinoff tagcomcast spinoff tagcomcast spinoff

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    • Ar chevron_right

      Comcast to ditch cable TV networks in partial spinoff of NBCUniversal assets

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 20 November 2024

    Comcast today announced plans to spin off NBCUniversal cable TV networks such as USA, CNBC, and MSNBC into a new publicly traded company. Comcast is trying to complete the spinoff in one year, effectively unwinding part of the NBCUniversal acquisition it completed in 2011.

    The entities in the planned spinoff generated about $7 billion of revenue in the 12 months that ended September 30, 2024, Comcast said. But cable TV channels have become less lucrative in an industry that's shifting to the streaming model, and the spinoff would let Comcast remove those assets from its earnings reports. Comcast's total revenue in the 12-month period was about $123 billion.

    Comcast President Mike Cavanagh said in the Q3 earnings call on October 31 that Comcast is "experiencing the effects of the transition in our video businesses and have been studying the best path forward for these assets."

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagcomcast tagcomcast tagcomcast tagcomcast spinoff tagcomcast spinoff tagcomcast spinoff tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagcomcast tagcomcast tagcomcast tagcomcast spinoff tagcomcast spinoff tagcomcast spinoff tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagcomcast tagcomcast tagcomcast tagcomcast spinoff tagcomcast spinoff tagcomcast spinoff

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