Tag Archive for: Bowl

Hey, drone owners! Don’t fly at the Super Bowl

Do not be trying to get aerial shots of Peyton Manning. Thanks, the FAA. (credit: Kevin Baird)

Hey, all you newly minted unmanned air vehicle enthusiasts out there (and especially those of you in the San Francisco Bay area)! The Know Before You Fly campaign has an important message for you: don’t bring (or fly) your drone to Super Bowl 50. The campaign—a joint effort of the Association for Unmanned Vehicle Systems International (AUVSI), the Academy of Model Aeronautics (AMA), and the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA)—is urging drone and model aircraft owners to respect the temporary flight restrictions (TFR) covering everywhere in a 32 nautical mile radius around Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, California, on February 7.

The FAA usually places restrictions on the airspace around any major event with attendance of 30,000 people or more, including sporting events and concerts. But because of its high-security profile, the Super Bowl is getting a much larger no-fly zone than usual. The Super Bowl TFR, which lasts from 2:00pm Pacific Time until midnight, covers almost all of the Bay Area, including all of San Francisco and Oakland to the north and Santa Cruz and most of the northern Monterey Bay coast to the south.

Super Bowl Sunday’s flight restriction zone (the two red concentric circles) are a no-fly zone for drones or model aircraft of any kind.

The Know Before You Fly campaign, which operates the website for registering new drones under the FAA’s recently announced regulations, is part of a broader effort by the FAA and its industry and nonprofit partners to reduce the risk of drones interfering with commercial and government aircraft or injuring people on the ground. The FAA has also launched a mobile app, called B4UFLY, to allow drone operators to check for TFRs where they are, based on geolocation data. Hint: if you live in a major urban area, you are probably in a restricted flight area, since any hospital or other facility with a helicopter pad qualifies as an “airport” for FAA purposes. The app is in Apple’s iOS App Store, and an Android version is in testing now through the Google Play Store (though Ars was unable to access the test version).

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Technology Lab – Ars Technica

How wireless carriers prepared for Super Bowl XLIX

The important stats from Super Bowl XLIX are finally here – wireless data usage among those attending the games.

Well, those stats are at least important to the carriers. Verizon Wireless reported that its customers in attendance at University of Phoenix Stadium consumed more than twice as much data as they did at last year’s game. Verizon customers used 4.1 TB of data while at the game, compared to 1.9 TB of data at Super Bowl XLVIII at MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey, last year.

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Network World Colin Neagle

Microsoft’s inspirational Super Bowl ad shows why technology is vital

“From snipers to plainclothes officers in the stands, NFL security goes all out for the Super Bowl,” wrote SBNation. But during the CBS This Morning segment, “Inside the massive operation to protect the Super Bowl,” the cameras showed some screens in the security headquarters and broadcasted the SSID (marko) and Wi-Fi password (w3Lc0m3!HERE).
Ms. Smith’s blog

23Mbps down, 44 up: A tech insider’s view from the Super Bowl

When the lights went off at the Super Bowl during the big game’s infamous power outage, not everything went offline.

The stadium-wide Wi-Fi network kept working—or at least it did in some areas and for part of the outage. But it was a very old-school technology—a landline phone—that saved the day for Andrew Stern, a broadcast engineer for a San Francisco radio station.

After coming home from New Orleans, Stern gave me a rundown on how the Super Bowl’s technology held up. Was the Wi-Fi network as good as promised? Answer: yes. Did the 35-minute power outage cause problems? Answer: yes—but Stern and team found a way to manage.

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