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25 Apr 13:09

Understanding 4G in the UK: Everything you need to know

by Alex Dobie

Cutting through the technobabble.

Everyone knows 4G comes after 3G. It's faster, better, not to mention more expensive. But "4G" can refer to a bunch of different things, and the various UK operators use 4G in different ways to offer different features to customers.

It can all be a bit confusing, but we've brought together all the major details of how 4G works in the United Kingdom to help you understand how it all works — and how it affects you and your phone.

What is 4G?

4G is the latest standard for sending and receiving data on mobile networks, and has the benefit of being significantly faster than the 3G networks that came before it. In the UK, it's been available since EE launched the country's first 4G network in late 2012. All four major UK network operators now offer 4G coverage of some sort.

The definition of 4G varies depending on who you ask. Strictly speaking, 4G doesn't apply to any particular type of technology, but what a mobile data network is capable of doing. The ITU (International Telecommunications Union) has its own set of requirements for what makes a network "4G," including 100Mbps data speeds when mobile, and 1Gbps when stationary.

4G has a bunch of different meanings, but in the UK we use it to refer to fast LTE networks

But in most countries including the UK, the term "4G" refers to a standard called LTE (Long Term Evolution) that fulfills some, but not all of the ITU's requirements for a 4G network. So really, the decision to call something "4G" as opposed to 3.5G (or something else entirely), comes down to marketing. It's easier to appreciate 4G as being faster than 3G, even though, strictly speaking, no current LTE networks meet all the ITU's 4G requirements.

(In some other countries, the "4G" branding is applied to different technologies like HSPA+ — which in the UK is considered to be 3G — and Wimax, which was never rolled out here.)

Compared to 3G standards, LTE has greater capacity, transferring data more quickly over the airwaves. LTE also allows for lower latency — the amount of time it takes for one packet of data to reach its destination — and smoother handoffs between masts, so you're less likely to lose connectivity on the go.

In real terms, this means it's much easier to stream music and video on 4G networks compared to 3G, with a faster, more reliable network ensuring smooth playback without buffering or stuttering. Files download faster, with fewer failures, and image-rich websites load much more quickly.

Frequencies and bands

Even when you're dealing exclusively with LTE, not all 4G networks are the same. The major UK carriers — EE, Vodafone, O2 and Three — operate on different radio frequencies ("bands"), and have different portions of spectrum available to them on each band.

The three main LTE bands in use in the UK right now are:

  • Band 20 (800MHz)
  • Band 3 (1800MHz)
  • Band 7 (2600MHz)

Different frequency bands have their own advantages and disadvantages. Lower frequencies like 800MHz are capable of transmitting over a wider area and are affected less by thick walls and buildings. Higher frequencies like 2600MHz can transfer data more quickly, but over a shorter distance, and are more susceptible to interference.

Different frequencies have their own advantages and disadvantages.

As such, lower frequencies are often used in rural areas, where one mast can cover a wide area where people are more spread out. And higher frequencies are often used in big cities, where the demand for high-speed data is greater, and it's easier to have several smaller towers covering one area.

Here's how the main four UK network operators divide up in terms of LTE bands:

Network Bands
Three Band 3 (1800MHz), Band 20 (800MHz)
EE Band 3 (1800MHz), Band 7 (2600MHz)
O2 Band 20 (800MHz)
(Limited 1800MHz coverage reportedly in London)
Vodafone Band 20 (800MHz), Band 7 (2600MHz)

Not all 4G phones support all LTE bands, but most current 4G handsets sold in the UK support at least the main three — bands 3, 7 and 20. (The major exception is the four-year-old iPhone 5, which only works on Band 3.)

This means if you're bringing a phone from abroad into the UK and want 4G coverage, you'll need to make sure it supports whichever bands your chosen operator uses. If it supports some, but not all bands — for example, many North American Android phones support Band 3 but not Band 20 — you may only get partial 4G coverage.

Different flavors of 4G

There are a couple of things that can affect data speeds on 4G networks, besides the usual factors like the strength of your signal and how many other people are using the network.

The first is the amount of spectrum available to your operator. This varies for each company, with a bigger "slice" of spectrum allowing more data to be transferred at once.

Network Bands
Three 5MHz of Band 20 (used for VoLTE)
15MHz of Band 3
EE 20MHz of Band 3
20MHz of Band 7
O2 10MHz of Band 20
Vodafone 10MHz of Band 20
20MHz of Band 7

The second is the "category" of LTE being used, which determines the maximum possible throughput. At the time of writing, O2 and Three have launched LTE Cat. 3 (up to 100Mbps), while Vodafone and EE have launched Cat. 6 LTE (up to 300Mbps).

(To take advantage of higher Cat. 6 speeds, you'll need a phone that supports the standard.)

What about 'Double Speed' 4G?

"Double speed" 4G is EE's way of taking advantage of its lead in 4G spectrum. Because it has a 20MHz available on Band 7 and Band 3, it offers customers two speed options: 2x10MHz for "normal speed" customers, and 2x20MHz for "double speed" customers.

From there, it's pretty simple — double-speed customers have twice as much spectrum available to them, and as such can enjoy data speeds twice as fast as normal.

It's worth remembering that "double speed" isn't a standard in itself, nor are there any special handset requirements needed to use it. It's just EE's way of describing how it's offering two different speed tiers to customers.

Understanding 4G+

Think of 4G+ as adding additional lanes of traffic to a road.

4G+ is the friendly marketing name used by most UK and European operators for what's technically termed LTE-Advanced. The big advantage here is that it allows operators with two (or more) slices of spectrum in different bands to combine them into one extra-large slice, known as carrier aggregation. It's like adding additional lanes of traffic to a road.

Right now only EE and Vodafone have launched 4G+ in the UK — EE on band 3 + band 7, Vodafone on band 7 + band 20.

Not all 4G phones support 4G+, and not all phones that do support 4G+ automatically support all combinations of bands. (EE has a list of compatible phones here) That said, if you're buying a high-end phone in the UK and it does do 4G+, chances are it'll support 4G+ on both EE and Vodafone.

Voice over LTE (VoLTE)

VoLTE is what's next for good old-fashioned phone calls, with calls being made over the 4G network as opposed to the older 3G or GSM networks. This allows for clearer audio for calls with less interference, and in the long-term gives operators a way to free up extra spectrum for 4G, as fewer customers are using those airwaves for old-style voice calls.

All the major UK operators will eventually have VoLTE.

All the major UK networks have committed to launching VoLTE, though the marketing terms differ slightly between networks. (On Three it's "4G Super-Voice," on Vodafone it's "Voice over 4G," for example.)

Three is the first provider to have launched VoLTE, and EE is continuing its nationwide trial at the time of writing.

As with other types of LTE technology, just because a phone supports LTE doesn't necessarily mean it'll do voice over LTE. (And even then you won't necessarily get VoLTE everywhere you get a 4G signal.) While many newer, high-end handsets do support VoLTE, you may need to update your firmware before it'll work.

Does using 4G drain a phone's battery?

In the early days of 4G, there was often a sizeable battery hit involved with using high-speed LTE networks. More recently, with newer and more efficient radio hardware in phones — not to mention more widespread LTE coverage and stronger 4G signals — the difference is much less noticeable.

While you may notice a slight battery life gain by disabling 4G, generally it's advisable to keep it turned on, as it's supposed to be. The only exception is you're spending a lot of time an area with very weak, unusable 4G coverage — or you know for a fact your area doesn't have 4G, and won't be getting it anytime soon.

While sending and receiving data over the mobile network can contribute to battery drain, other factors like screen brightness, background app usage and the age of your phone can play a much larger role.

25 Apr 13:09

EE plans to have 95% of the UK covered with 4G by 2020

by Rich Edmonds

EE has announced the UK mobile operator is set to increase 4G coverage to 95% and bring back customer support to within country borders. The company will introduce 600 new positions across the UK and Ireland, which should please customers who both expect and appreciate customer support based in the UK.

By 2020 EE hopes to have around 95% of the UK covered with 4G with a focus on eradicating parts of the country that have next to no signal coverage. With the backing of BT post-purchase, the mobile network will have the resources to ramp up network enhancements and extension. All customer calls will be answered within the UK and Ireland by the end of 2016.

23 Apr 20:20

Government withdraws from New York iPhone unlocking case

by Colin Lecher

The Justice Department has withdrawn from its legal dispute with Apple over a locked iPhone in New York, the government said in a court filing made late Friday. The department said the FBI no longer needs the company's help unlocking the phone, involved in a drug-trafficking case, as it has obtained the passcode from someone else.

The withdrawal is the second high-profile case the FBI has stepped away from in recent weeks after finding alternative means to unlocking a phone without Apple's help. Last month, the agency ended a similar case in San Bernardino after paying a third party for a way to hack into a phone. Recently, Director James Comey said the FBI paid more than $1 million for the help.

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23 Apr 10:07

Why so many celebrities have died in 2016

by Bill Crider
22 Apr 22:30

The studio behind Minecraft just released a free strategy game on Steam

by Andrew Webster

Mojang, the Swedish game studio best known for a little game called Minecraft, not only just announced its next game, it just released it, too. The new title is called Crown and Council, and it's described as "a fast-paced strategy game about conquering land and obliterating rival monarchs." It looks sort of like a pixelated and streamlined Civilization, and as with most strategy games, the goal is to build up your empire by acquiring land, raising money, and building up a military force. Surprisingly, the game was actually developed in its entirety by just one member of the Mojang team, Henrik Pettersson. The best part is, Crown and Council is entirely free: you can download the game for free on Steam right now.

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22 Apr 22:27

The NSA won't tell Congress how many Americans it's spying on because our democracy is broken

by Russell Brandom

Congress is trying to learn more about the NSA's surveillance programs, and it's not going well. In a letter delivered today to director of National Intelligence James Clapper, a group of 14 legislators (eight Democrats and six Republicans) asked for a ballpark figure on how many Americans are having their data collected under Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act.

Section 702 is the legal justification for many of the NSA's most invasive programs, including PRISM. But we still don't have an exact idea of how broad its reach is. So Congress asked! They passed FISA, after all, so it's only right that they should know how it's being used. They don't need an exact number of Americans caught up in PRISM, just a ballpark....

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22 Apr 20:25

DeWalt's first smartphone looks like the love child of an iPhone and a power drill

by Dan Seifert

DeWalt is a common brand of power tools, but this week it announced its first smartphone, the MD501. The new phone pairs rugged looks with tough durability — it's rated IP68 for water resistants (up to 2m of immersion for 30 minutes), 810G for drops (survives 2m drops to concrete), and can work in temperatures from -20 degrees up to 60 degrees centigrade. The MD501 can also work with gloves, even though it's a full touchscreen device.

Perhaps unsurprisingly, DeWalt doesn't actually manufacture the MD501 — that job's handled by Global Mobile Communications — it's just providing the brand on the device. In addition to its rugged specs, the MD501 has LTE support (unfortunately not for US networks), a 13-megapixel camera, 1.3GHz processor...

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22 Apr 17:06

Two years after launching, Casper prepares for European expansion

by Anthony Ha
Casper_L9 It’s been exactly two years since Casper started selling mattresses, and CEO Philip Krim said it’s already turned into a big business, with $100 million in revenue (not to mention a $550 million valuation) in 2015. Next up is international expansion, with the New York City-headquartered startup opening an office in Berlin. That office currently has four employees, but Krim said… Read More
22 Apr 15:21

The Prince Playlist

by Eric Ravenscraft
The Prince Playlist

Today, we lost legendary artist and performer Prince. Instead of our usual weekly featured playlist, we’ve gathered up a collection of Prince’s live performances to remember how fantastic a person and artist he truly was.

Much of Prince’s music isn’t available on streaming services, but a few live performances are available on YouTube. Which is perfect: Prince excelled at showmanship, so it’s fitting to revisit his work on stage, including the time he played Purple Rain at the Super Bowl during a downpour, which was absolutely legendary.

Photo by Wikimedia Commons.

22 Apr 15:18

Hackers take $81 million from Bangladesh's central bank by pwning its $10 second-hand routers

by Cory Doctorow

2890262414_47dd52dd85_b

The central bank of Bangladesh lost $81M in a digital heist whose perpetrators have not been caught, thanks in large part to the bank's decision to run its computers without a firewall, and to run networking with second-hand cheapie routers it sourced for $10 each. (more…)

22 Apr 15:17

British Library posts 1 million copyright-free images online

by Richard Kaufman

Top Image

The British Library has posted over a million copyright free images taken from books prior to 1900 on Flickr. That means if you need decorations of virtually any type for a website or book, you’ll find more than you can imagine among these visual riches. Just click through!

Illustration 1

Illustration 2

Illustration 3 [Via Digital Arts Online]

22 Apr 15:16

Hype Machine Drops From $3.99 To Completely Free On The Play Store

by Rita El Khoury

HypeMachine-logo

Hype Machine isn't your typical music discovery service. It relies on music blogs to aggregate the most recent and talked about music tracks across the internet and from various genres. You can only listen to songs when the original blog has posted a link to SoundCloud, Bandcamp, or Official.fm for example, but the track itself isn't hosted on Hype Machine.

The service is more geared toward the music blogging scene, providing links to the articles where each song was shared and letting you favorite blogs and users to follow what they've been posting.

Read More

Hype Machine Drops From $3.99 To Completely Free On The Play Store was written by the awesome team at Android Police.

22 Apr 15:11

Twitter integrates with Yelp for location tags in the UK and Japan, bypassing Foursquare

by Ingrid Lunden
yelp twitter A year ago, Twitter ramped up its game in location services when it announced an integration with Foursquare to provide venue suggestions when you wanted to tag where you were tweeting. Interestingly, that deal appears to have applied only to the U.S., and now that Twitter’s expanding the service, it has partnered with one of Foursquare’s big competitors, Yelp, to power it. Read More
22 Apr 14:57

From Gavin Park to Broadway royalty.

http://www.theatermania.com/broadway/news/marin-mazzie-daniel-dae-kim-king-and-i-photos_76805.html

TheaterMania gives a first look at Marin Mazzie and Daniel Dae Kim in costume for "The King and I". The pair enter the Broadway revival on May 3.

21 Apr 22:17

Inaugural Google Play Awards will highlight killer apps at Google I/O 2016

by Dan Thorp-Lancaster

Google has announced that this year's Google I/O will feature the first-ever Google Play Awards. In an effort to recognize the work of developers, Google has handpicked what it feels are some of the best apps on Google Play across a number of categories.

In all, the program features 10 categories with five nominees each. Categories include:

  • Standout Startup
  • Standout Indie
  • Best Families App
  • Best Use of Material Design
  • Best Use of Google Play Game Services
  • Early Adopter
  • Go Global
  • Most Innovative
  • Best App
  • Best Game

Nominated apps include everything from Dubsmash and Alto's Adventure, to Robinhood and Minecraft: Story Mode. For the full list of nominees, be sure to check out Google's announcement. Winners will be announced at Google I/O on May 19.

21 Apr 22:16

Alphabet slides 5% after missing earnings expectations on revenue of $20.3B

by Matthew Lynley
alphabet-earnings For a split second, Alphabet was the most valuable company in the world. Not so much any more, however, with the company’s market cap continuing to slide after it reported its first-quarter earnings. Relatively speaking, shares of Alphabet are only down around 5 percent in extended trading. But for a company worth more than $500 billion, that’s erasing tens of billions of dollars… Read More
21 Apr 16:44

Mozilla's Web Literacy Map Teaches the Essential Web Skills Everyone Should Know

by Melanie Pinola
Mozilla's Web Literacy Map Teaches the Essential Web Skills Everyone Should Know

Reading, writing, and math are no longer the only essential subjects everyone should learn. Today’s essential skills include navigating the web, writing code, and engaging with others online. This web literacy map from Mozilla presents activities that cover these 21st-century skills.

Most of the activities are for beginners, but they’re all fun and interesting, such as #allthestickerz:

Learners will create pixel art stickers, publish them for others, and use them to annotate and remix the Web, learning community participation, composing, open practices, remix, and sharing.

Web Literacy Skills: CodeComposeConnectEvaluateOpen PracticeRemixSynthesize

21C Skills: CommunicationCreativityProblem-SolvingCollaboration

Other activities center around online privacy, search engine skills, HTML, web design, using open source tools, and so on. They also emphasize problem-solving, communication, creativity, and collaboration—all critical skills we might not have learned in school.

This is a great resource for parents, educators, and those catching up on basic web skills.

Web Literacy | Mozilla

21 Apr 16:43

Amazon rolls out colorful $70 Fire tablets with double the storage of its $50 tablet

by Sarah Perez
Screen Shot 2016-04-21 at 9.09.03 AM Amazon made waves last year when it introduced a $50 Fire tablet that was actually a fairly decent device for the price. Today, the company is rolling out a middle-of-road option for those who want a bit more storage, but who still aren’t interested in paying for the higher-end Fire HD 8 and Fire HD 10 tablets, at $150 and $230, respectively. The earlier $50 Fire tablet offered 8 GB… Read More
21 Apr 16:38

Acer shows off a rugged new Chromebook for work and a whole bunch of new notebooks

by Brian Heater
OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA Acer hit the stage a small event in the shadow of Manhattan’s One World Trade to show off some notebooks, notebooks and also some notebooks. Oh, and one more thing: notebooks, notebooks, and notebooks (also there were some notebooks). The star notebook amongst the notebooky notebooks is the company’s latest take on the Chromebook — the straightforwardly-named Chromebook 14… Read More
21 Apr 16:37

These itty-bitty food cooking videos will bring immense joy and tranquility to your heart

by Dami Lee

I don't know why, but things not being their intended size, whether they're comically big or diminutively tiny, is always hilarious to me. Extremely large wine glasses? Very funny. Basketball personality Shaq? A human knee-slapper!

That's why I was so tickled when I stumbled upon Korean artist Mimine's Facebook page. Mimine makes miniature versions of food that are actually edible. The step-by-step videos of her process have a strangely hypnotizing quality to them. It's like those soothing ASMR videos you accidentally click on when you're aimlessly browsing the 'Tube and only three hours later do you realize, "Oh god, I'm in the weird part of YouTube again."

Watch this video of her carving a tiny roast turkey, and then ask yourself if...

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21 Apr 14:28

Website serves endless stream of "epic" music

by Rob Beschizza

Bierstadt_Looking_Down_Yosemite_Valley

Epic Music Time is a website that plays only epic music. Other single-serving web radio sites include jazzandrain.com, which plays jazz and the sound of rain, and relaxingbeats.com, which plays Industrial Pornogrind Metal. Just kidding. It actually plays relaxing beats.
21 Apr 13:01

UK spy agencies systematically amass data on innocent people, legal challenge reveals

by Natasha Lomas
800px-GCHQ-aerial Privacy campaign group Privacy International says documents it has obtained through a legal challenge to the UK security agencies data-harvesting practices illustrate the extent to which spies have systematically and secretly amassed a cache of data on UK citizens for the past 15 years — regardless of whether a particular individual is suspected of a crime. Read More
21 Apr 12:57

Printer ink wars may make private property the exclusive domain of corporations

by Cory Doctorow

Serfs paying their feudal lords

Printer manufacturer Lexmark hates America, and everything good and right in the world, because we keep stubbornly insisting that if we buy a printer cartridge, we can refill it, because it's ours.

(more…)

21 Apr 12:50

Watch the first trailer for the new Jason Bourne movie

by Rich McCormick

Matt Damon's super spy Jason Bourne is coming back this summer, in the aptly named Jason Bourne, and he's bulked up. The first trailer for the movie shows Damon out in the desert delivering a one-hit knockout punch as part of what appears to be a bare-knuckle fight club, before working his way back to bed in a sweaty room and reminiscing about his murky past. Thanks to the events of the previous Bourne trilogy, the ex-secret agent has his memory back, but as Julia Stiles says in the new clip, "remembering everything doesn't mean you know everything."

It's also directed by series stalwart Paul Greengrass new Bourne movie takes place in a very different political climate to 2002's The Bourne Identity, as the new trailer is careful to lay...

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21 Apr 12:48

Microsoft’s Android Translator app now works on images too

by James Vincent

Microsoft's Translator app lags behind Google's own offering, but the Redmond company is slowly catching up. In an update to Microsoft Translator for Android the company has added two new features: the ability to translate text from saved images, and an option to translate text anywhere on your phone. The update also brings the total number of languages available for download and offline use up to 43.

Image translation has been available in Microsoft's iOS app since February, and on the company's Windows Phone app since 2010. "With the new image translation feature [...] you no longer need to type text or say foreign languages phrases out loud," said the company in a blog post. "Instead you can translate pictures instantly from your...

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20 Apr 19:58

Chrome: 50 releases and counting!

by Chrome Blog
Chrome reached a pretty big milestone this week – its 50th release! We originally launched Chrome to give users a fast, simple and secure browser. That still remains our mission today.  And while there’s still much more to do – especially with the shift to mobile and providing a great experience for people using the mobile web for the first time – we thought we’d take a step back and reflect on our journey so far.  Here at Google, we’re obsessed with stats, so we thought you might enjoy a whirlwind tour of Chrome, by the numbers.

Rahul Roy-Chowdhury, Director and Stats Stockpiler


20 Apr 19:58

Google says Chrome now has more than 1 billion users on mobile

by Frederic Lardinois
2016-04-20_0941 Google released version 50 of its Chrome browser last week and it has been rolling out to users for the last few days. The major new feature in Chrome 50 is support for improved push notifications. To celebrate this release, Google today announced a number of new stats for Chrome, which originally launched back in 2008. Maybe the most significant of these is that Chrome now has more than… Read More
20 Apr 17:14

Scientists are studying what made Queen singer Freddie Mercury's voice so amazing and unique

by David Pescovitz

Freddie-Mercury-Resized1

In a new scientific study, researchers conducted acoustical analysis of Queen singer Freddie Mercury's singing voice. While he spoke in a baritone voice, Mercury had a tremendous singing range. But his real vocal superpowers were a rather unique vibrato combined with his ability to use subharmonics, like a Tuvan throat singer. The Austrian, Czech, and Swedish scientists report on their research in the journal Logopedics Phoniatrics Vocology.

"Perceptually, Freddie Mercury's irregular (and typically faster) vibrato is clearly audible in the sustained notes of famous songs such as 'Bohemian Rhapsody' (A Night at the Opera) or 'We Are the Champions' (News of the World), and it appears to be one of the hallmarks of his vocal style," they wrote.

In other Mercury news, a notebook containing some of his last lyrics will be auctioned off at Bonham's in June. It's estimated to go for £50,000-£70,000.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fJ9rUzIMcZQ

20 Apr 17:11

Inbox by Gmail: a better way to keep track of events, newsletters and links

by The Gmail Team
Posted by Pras Sarkar, Software Engineer

Life can get really busy. Inboxes too. Just think about everything inside your own inbox, from personal messages and trip itineraries to promotional offers and yes, even bills. It's all (mostly) important, but it can be overwhelming to stay on top of everything. And sometimes, you might miss something really important amidst all the rest.

Starting today, you'll discover three new experiences in Inbox—streamlined events, glanceable newsletters and saved links—that help you better keep track of things that matter to you and feel more in control.

Keep up with Google Calendar events
Events can be hard to keep track of in your inbox because details—and people’s plans—may change. Inbox now gathers emails from a single event together and shows you what's changed at a glance. When you tap on an event, you'll see a comprehensive overview, all in one place.
Stay on top of your favorite email newsletters
Similarly, it’s now easier to preview the newsletters you read often and click through to the articles that interest you most. And once you've taken a look at the latest, newsletters will minimize to save space in the inbox.
Store links to remember with "Save to Inbox"
Lastly, your inbox is much more than just the emails sent to you. Chances are you've emailed yourself a link or two (or three)—to an article you want to read later or a recipe you want to try. Now instead of sending yourself a bunch of separate emails, try the new "Save to Inbox" feature to easily save links for later.

Simply share the link to Inbox on Android or iOS, or use the new Inbox by Gmail Chrome extension on web. When you check your email, you'll see your saved links grouped together in one place.

With these updates, Inbox helps you organize and access the information that matters most, saving time and reducing email overload. Take these new features for a spin by sharing to Inbox on mobile, installing the Chrome extension, subscribing to an email newsletter or scheduling an event.
20 Apr 17:11

The US Air Force just broke the world speed record for magnetic levitation

by Andrew J . Hawkins

The US Air Force's 846th Test Squadron is on a bit of a roll when it comes to breaking world speed records. A couple of years ago, the unit set the speed record for magnetic levitation at 510 mph. Then earlier this year on March 2nd, the squad broke the record again at Holloman's Air Force Base in New Mexico, sending a 2,000 pound, magnetically levitated, rocket-powered sled down a nearly frictionless track at 513 mph. But that record only stood for two days, when the 846th set a new one at an incredible 633 mph.

US Air Force

The sled covered a distance equal to seven football fields in about two seconds. Whoever wrote the official Air Force press release about this achievement clearly earned their MFA from the...

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