Technology

Office Of Broadband Access & Expansion Announces Third Wave Of Connect New Mexico Pilot Program Funding

OBAE News:

The New Mexico Office of Broadband Access and Expansion (OBAE) recently extended the deadline for Wave Three of the Connect New Mexico Pilot Program (“Pilot Program”).

The application period will close April 3.

The Pilot Program aims to bridge the digital divide and foster socioeconomic progress by providing infrastructure grants for broadband deployment to unserved and underserved communities across New Mexico. The $123 million pilot program is funded by the American Rescue Plan Act’s Coronavirus Capital Projects Fund. OBAE launched the program in August 2022 and announced Read More

Catch Of The Week: Phone Scams

Courtesy photo

By REBECCA RUTHERFORD
Los Alamos

I received this question from a Los Alamos Daily Post reader:

“We receive a lot of robocalls and other spam calls, while there does not seem to be a way to block them, we were wondering if you know why flooding everyone with scam calls is effective? We have answered a few of these calls and nobody is there, and when we call the number back it is disconnected.”

I would not recommend answering or calling back any of these scam calls, it’s always better to avoid interaction. That said, good question, and what possible benefit can it be to scammers to send out Read More

Catch Of The Week: Ransomware? That’s Bananas!

By REBECCA RUTHERFORD
Los Alamos

In a less than appealing turn of events last week Dole corporation reported a massive ransomware attack.

What is ransomware? In a ransomware attack malware, a type of malicious software, is installed on your system, this then quietly runs and encrypts your operating system, or possibly just individual files. You will lose access to your system/files unless you can pay a ransom to retrieve the encryption key.

On the individual level this can be bad, at the corporate level it can be a disaster, as Dole seems to be finding out. Consumers had been reporting packaged Read More

Luján Joins Colleagues To Reintroduce Bipartisan Legislation To Strengthen Online Content Moderation & Hold Internet Companies Accountable

U.S. Sen. Ben Ray Luján

U.S. SENATE News:

WASHINGTON, D.C. U.S. Senators Ben Ray Luján (D-N.M.) joined Brian Schatz (D-Hawaii), and John Thune (R-S.D.) to reintroduce the Internet Platform Accountability and Consumer Transparency (Internet PACT) Act, bipartisan legislation which updates the Communications Act of 1934 by requiring social media companies to establish clear content moderation policies and holding them accountable for content that violates their own policies or is illegal.

The bill is cosponsored by U.S. Senators Tammy Baldwin (D-Wis.), John Barrasso (R-Wyo.), Bill Read More

US Air Force Recognizes Two AFRL Researchers

Dr. Preston T. Webster, left, and Dr. Andrew J. ‘AJ’ Metcalf are the U.S. Air Force nominees to the 74th Annual Arthur S. Flemming Award. Webster leads an AFRL team that develops novel space sensor technologies for the nation’s infrared surveillance, missile warning and tracking, weather monitoring and other systems. Metcalf serves as the AFRL space mission area lead in the Office of the Deputy Technology Executive Officer for Space Science and Technology. Courtesy/AFRL

AFRL News:

KAFB — The Air Force Research Laboratory (AFRL), recently announced that engineers Dr. Andrew J. “AJ” Metcalf Read More

Luján, Stansbury Welcome First-Ever DOE Foundation For Energy Security And Innovation

Congressional News:

WASHINGTON, D.C. — U.S. Sen. Ben Ray Luján (D-N.M.) and U.S. Rep. Melanie Stansbury (D-N.M.) welcomed Monday the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) first-ever agency-related Foundation for Energy Security and Innovation (FESI).

During the 117th Congress, Luján and Stansbury introduced the Partnerships for Energy Security and Innovation Act, bipartisan legislation to establish a nonprofit foundation for the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) that would channel private-sector investments to support DOE’s mission and to accelerate the commercialization of innovative Read More

LANL: Predicting Pandemics Through Museum Animal Collections

A preserved vampire bat, part of the UNM Museum of Southwest Biology collection, is held by Jonathan L. Dunnum, Ph.D., Senior Collection Manager, Division of Mammals, Museum of Southwestern Biology. Items from this collection will be sampled by Los Alamos and UNM scientists to explore how pathogens travel from one species to another. Courtesy/LANL

LANL News:

Zoonotic pathogens, those that spill over from animals to humans such as SARS-CoV-2 and hantavirus, present a challenge for scientists in terms of how the diseases evolve and spread in animal populations. Now, a broad coalition of Read More

Verus Research Awarded $52 Million Naval Surface Warfare Center Crane Division Contract

Verus Research News:

ALBUQUERQUE — Verus® Research, a New Mexico-based team of scientists and engineers specializing in advanced research and development, announces it has received a $52 million research contract from the Naval Surface Warfare Center (NSWC) Crane Division in Indiana.

The 56-month contract supports the development of “Orthus”, a neutron and gamma test capability comprised of a dense plasma focus (DPF) neutron source and an electron linear accelerator gamma simulator. The work builds on Verus Research’s current development of the Axial Radiator for Electronic Exposure Read More

NNSA Announces $25 Million Cooperative Agreement With University Of Florida-Led Consortium For Research In Nuclear Forensics

NNSA News:

WASHINGTON, D.C. — The Department of Energy’s National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) has announced the establishment of a $25 million cooperative agreement with a University of Florida-led consortium of 16 universities for research in topical areas relevant to nuclear forensics.

This long-term investment will support the consortium at $5 million per year for five years. The purpose of this consortium is to educate the next generation of nuclear forensic scientists and engineers while engaging in research and development spanning basic aspects of new technology Read More

LANL: Physics-Guided Machine-Learning Models Will Improve Subsurface Imaging

Machine-learning models can help researchers improve subsurface imaging. Courtesy/LANL
LANL News:
  • Potential applications include energy exploration and earthquake early warning, among others

A team of scientists at Los Alamos National Laboratory is applying machine-learning algorithms to subsurface imaging that will impact a variety of applications, including energy exploration, carbon capture and sequestration and estimating pathways of subsurface contaminant transport, according to new research published in IEEE Signal Processing Magazine.

“The subsurface is extremely Read More