Fewer than 70,000 people are expected to travel by train or freeway bus during the three-day Dragon Boat Festival holiday amid a nationwide level 3 COVID-19 alert, the Ministry of Transportation and Communications said yesterday.
Many have expressed concern that traveling and family gatherings during the long weekend, which begins tomorrow and ends on Monday, would spread the disease and worsen the outbreak.
As such, the ministry has encouraged people to avoid travel and stay home as much as possible.
As of Wednesday, 38,863 high-speed rail tickets had been sold, accounting for 5.55 percent of total capacity, data from the Department of
Beats Studio Buds appear in Taiwan regulatory database
Credit: MacRumors
Compared to current Beats By Dre headphones or Apple s AirPods, the Beats Studio Buds are expected to feature a smaller design without an earwrap a form factor akin to earbuds released by Google or Samsung. The existence of the Beats Studio Buds was first revealed in an iOS beta in May.
Credit: MacRumors
Ahead of a potential release, it appears that Beats Studio Buds keep surfacing in regulatory databases. In May 24, the earbuds appeared in an FCC filing. Now, additional pictures and details about the unreleased earbuds have shown up in Taiwan s National Communications Commission database.
New images and specifications of the rumored Beats Studio Buds have appeared in a Taiwanese government regulatory database ahead of a potential upcoming release.
Compared to current Beats By Dre headphones or Apple s AirPods, the Beats Studio Buds are expected to feature a smaller design without an earwrap a form factor akin to earbuds released by Google or Samsung. The existence of the Beats Studio Buds was first revealed in an iOS beta in May.
Credit: MacRumors
Ahead of a potential release, it appears that Beats Studio Buds keep surfacing in regulatory databases. In May 24, the earbuds appeared in an FCC filing. Now, additional pictures and details about the unreleased earbuds have shown up in Taiwan s National Communications Commission database.
The National Communications Commission (NCC) yesterday gave Broadcasting Corp of China (BCC) a passing grade for its performance from 2016 to 2019, but ordered it to submit within three months a plan that would make a clear distinction between programs and commercials.
The nation’s largest radio station was penalized five times during the three-year period for promoting specific products in its programs, accumulating NT$600,000 (US$21,608) in fines, NCC senior specialist Chen Shu-ming (陳書銘) said.
The company must also reinforce educational training for workers and ensure that it has a sound financial management plan, the commission said.
The Ill-gotten Party Assets Settlement Committee on