Fitbit launched Ready for Work, a COVID-19-inspired health-monitoring solution for employers to help staffers determine whether to go into the workplace. It shows trends in users' Fitbit-tracked health metrics along with self-reported symptoms so they can assess their health from home, said the company. Changes in resting heart rate, heart rate variability and breathing rate are shown in a dashboard alongside self-reported symptoms including temperature and COVID-19 exposure, it said.
Online and other non-store sales last month rose 9% sequentially and 25.3% from May 2019, reported the National Retail Federation Tuesday. It said "businesses closed by the coronavirus pandemic began to reopen."
Voxx hired a banker to help evaluate “strategic alternatives” for EyeLock, its iris-authentication subsidiary, said Voxx CEO Pat Lavelle on a fiscal Q4 call Tuesday. “This could be a spinoff, a financing partner, a joint venture or an outright sale.” The segment never was profitable and generated sales of $100,000 for the year. COVID-19 has created much “inbound interest” in EyeLock, said Lavelle. “With everyone wearing masks and gloves, iris is quickly becoming the preferred choice for authentication.” The result is “renewed interest in EyeLock’s technology and in the company,” he said. The competitive facial-recognition technology, he said, is facing “additional backlash, given the events of recent weeks” (see 2006110059). It’s “challenging to forecast” the consumer tech business during normal times, and with COVID-19 “that remains even more so,” Lavelle said. The company is “anticipating a slow start” to fiscal 2021, expecting growth to recover in the year’s second half, he said. Q4 ended Feb. 29.
The Association for Unmanned Vehicle Systems International (AUVSI) and the Transportation Research Board said Tuesday they have reconfigured the annual Automated Vehicles Symposium, scheduled to be held in San Diego at the end of July, as a fully interactive virtual event July 27-30. Citing COVID-19 as the reason for the change, AUVSI CEO Brian Wynne said attendees will have access to networking opportunities and content about future research, development and deployment of automated vehicles. Registration fees have been reduced "to reflect the virtual nature of the event."
Reps. Ann McLane Kuster, D-N.H., and Chris Stewart, R-Utah, urged the FCC Monday to "halt any increases to annual regulatory fees" for 2020 (see 2005130057). Kuster and Stewart wrote Chairman Ajit Pai that this "does not require an act of Congress." Uncertainty about "when state and local economies will fully reopen and how consumer behavior will be impacted" means "it is nearly impossible for broadcasters to predict when, or if, operating revenues may return to normal," the lawmakers said. "What is certain for these broadcasters is that expenses will continue to be incurred for the duration of the year," including regulatory fees. "Immediately notify Congress of any statutory change necessary to allow payment of regulatory fees after September 30," the lawmakers said. The agency "will review [the letter] once we receive it," a spokesperson emailed.
The U.S. imported more laptops and tablets in April than in any previous April in the history of the category, showed Census Bureau data we accessed Monday through the International Trade Commission. There was a surge in demand for work-from-home and remote-learning tools. U.S. importers sourced 9.36 million laptops and tablets in April, a 75% sequential increase and up 28% from April 2019. The average device was worth $459.01. April also was a record-high month for China, which shipped 8.7 million devices here and was 93% of all laptop and tablet imports to the U.S.
Apple and Google should bar third-party contact tracing apps from using data for targeted advertising, New York Attorney General Letitia James (D) wrote the companies Monday (see 2004170060). She also recommended the apps be prohibited from using data to identify anonymous users and be required to delete data “on a rolling, 14-day basis.” The measures will help protect consumer data and ensure appropriate collection, she said. The companies didn’t comment.
Planning for the first COVID-19-era CES is “in full swing” for a physical show in Las Vegas with a digital online component, said CTA Monday. “Though we do expect the show to be smaller, many of the world's leading tech brands are confirmed to showcase the latest technologies, and we will be announcing soon the tech luminaries who will speak on our CES stages.” Registration for the Jan. 6-9 event will open “later in the fall,” said CTA: “We all face new considerations about attending conferences, conducting business and traveling to meetings.”
President Donald Trump said Friday he wants the Republican National Committee to update the party’s platform for the 2020 election campaign, in response to reports the RNC executive committee voted Thursday to leave the GOP’s manifesto unchanged from what it used in 2016, including on tech and telecom. The executive committee passed rules for its planned August convention in Charlotte that limit the number of delegates in attendance in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. The RNC decided to move other major parts of the convention to Jacksonville after Democratic North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper was unable to guarantee high-attendance gatherings could happen amid the pandemic. RNC rules say if the national convention isn’t able to fully convene in the convention city, then only roll call votes for the presidential and vice presidential nominees can occur. That would in effect bar the RNC from updating its platform for 2020. The 2016 one includes language on cybersecurity and privacy issues (see 1607270061). “The Republican Party has not yet voted on a Platform,” Trump tweeted. “No rush. I prefer a new and updated Platform, short form, if possible.” Republicans “intend to advance policies that protect data privacy while fostering innovation and growth and ensuring the free flow of data across borders” and “our agenda includes balanced protections for intellectual property,” the 2016 platform said. “We intend to facilitate access to spectrum by paving the way for high-speed, next-generation broadband deployment and competition on the internet and for internet services. We want government to encourage the sharing economy and on-demand platforms to compete in an open market, and we believe public policies should encourage the innovation and competition that are essential for an Internet of Things to thrive.” That platform criticized President Barack Obama’s administration for doing “little to advance our goal of universal broadband coverage.”