Showing posts with label snap. Show all posts
Showing posts with label snap. Show all posts

2016-10-15

TechReview | Digital Disruption: Next 10 Years, 40% of Businesses Vanish

TechReview | © DomainMondo.com
Domain Mondo's weekly review of technology news:

Feature • Cisco System’s John Chambers tells IMF that 40% of businesses will disappear over the next decade: Technology will fuel an increase of up to 3% in the gross domestic product of every country over the next decade, John Chambers, Cisco Systems Executive Chairman told an International Monetary Fund panel: “If you look at what is in front of us, I think it will transform every person’s life. A digital world that we are now about to encompass will transform every country. Economically, my view is that the next decade, incrementally we’ll have $19 trillion in economic growth.” But Chambers raised some eyebrows when he said more than 40% of businesses will disappear over the next decade,” explaining that the impact Uber, Lyft and Amazon have had on legacy industries will spread to every industry in the near future, including the automobile business. IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde moderated a discussion on how technology could be used to bridge the global economic gap, and what role it will play in the future of developing markets across the globe. Lagarde said “there is still a huge technology divide,” adding “six billion people do not have access to broadband or fast internet.”--read more at MarketWatch.com

• Disrupted: Legacy (Traditional) Media, particularly newspapers:
Above courtesy of Visual Capitalist

Much of traditional media has finally reached the inflection point, particularly newspapers. Legacy media have to maintain their old business models based on subscription and print ad revenue, while successfully venturing into the digital world. Among other things, the cost structure of legacy media just doesn’t make sense in today’s digital world. Overhead is high, and revenue is harder to find due to the limited success of paywalls, rampant ad blocking, and the steady fall in display ad prices due to the emergence of programmatic bidding. In 2015, there was only one age demographic with more than half of its constituents reading a daily newspaper, and that was “65 years old and up.” Even the advertising industry itself ("Madison Avenue") has been notoriously slow at evolving to meet the needs of the "digital revolution." Digital will become the largest channel for ad revenue globally by 2019 (see chart above)--Editor's note: the chart above is misleading in respect to the category "Television" since that category is comprised of 1) broadcast TV, 2) cable TV, and 3) streaming video via an internet connection (another form of "digital media") just consumed via a TV screen or monitor. Both cable and broadcast TV (the legacy TV media) are declining, while "digital TV" (on-demand and live streaming) is increasing. See, e.g., NFL ratings plunge could spell doom for traditional TV | WashingtonPost.com.

More on Digital Disruption:

•  Most "news" is misinformation and establishment media (MSM) are no longer trusted "gatekeepers." We’re also drowning in content, from long-form writing on LinkedIn and Medium, to snackable content on Twitter and Instagram, to an explosion of self-published books. Eliot Peper said: 'Blogs made everyone a journalist. Self-publishing made everyone an author. YouTube made everyone a filmmaker. iTunes made everyone a musician. Publishing houses, record labels, and newsrooms have lost their long-held position as gatekeepers of taste' (emphasis added). See also: The Power and Limits of Curation | DigitalBookWorld.com.

•  Daily Mail owner warns of further cost cutting | FT.com: half of the layoffs come from the company’s media division, the "latest sign of cutbacks among traditional British newspapers groups battling against disruptive digital rivals." See also Daily Mail owner to slash 400 jobs amid pressure on print advertising | pressgazette.co.uk: "DMGT said the move comes in the face of “challenging market conditions” as underlying advertising revenues across its newspaper division have come under further pressure. It saw DMG Media underlying ad revenues fall by 4 per cent over the 11 months of its financial year so far, but worsen in the five weeks since 21 August, tumbling by 10 per cent as print advertising plunged by nearly a fifth."

Other Tech News:

•  Twitter’s Troubles and Snap’s Appeal: "... we have a case in which Silicon Valley’s over reliance on momentum creates an unrealistic proxy for valuation. Snap will reap billions as a result, while Twitter will struggle to salvage what it can from what was once a valuation of more than $40 billion. It is a story that will have real consequences."--NYTimes.com; see also Twitter suitors vanish as Salesforce rules out bid | FT.com.

•  Thanks Marissa! Ex-Yahoo Employee Says Government Spy Program Could Have Given a Hacker Access to All Email--TheIntercept.com. Verizon Communications Inc., might renegotiate its $4.8 billion offer to acquire certain Yahoo assets, as a result of Yahoo's disclosure of the data breach that impacted 500 million Yahoo customers.

•  Uber's #1 Problem: Nobody's Talking About The Biggest, Most Obvious Problem With Uber--SeekingAlpha.com"I see the upfront pricing shift as part of a broader problem with Uber. Namely, the company's app is a mess." On the other hand, France's transportation department launches Le.Taxi, a "confusing platform" that hosts cab-hailing apps from taxi companies; most taxi apps compare poorly to Uber--France’s Government-Backed Uber Replacement Should Thrill Uber | Motherboard.vice.com.

•  AT&T, T-Mobile, and Verizon halt sales and replacements of Galaxy Note7 amid reports of newer models catching fire--Recode.net and Samsung ends production of Galaxy Note7 after global recall due to battery fires; shares drop 8% wiping out $17B of market value--Bloomberg.com  See also: Samsung expects to lose around $3 billion due to Note 7 recall | TheVerge.com.

•  Apple's iPhone 6 and 6 Plus Problem Not Going Away: "Apple’s potential design flaw (touch disease error) in the iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Plus continues to attract attention."--Forbes.com

•  How 5G Technology Will Impact Your Portfolio--SeekingAlpha.com (audio)--featuring John Miley, Associate Editor with The Kiplinger Letter with a special focus on technology--TopicsA history of the progression from 2G to 5G; What 5G is expected to "look like" (ex: speeds, latency, reliability, connectivity); What the biggest fears are for AT&T, Verizon, T-Mobile, and Sprint regarding 5G; Which underlying wireless tech companies are likely to benefit most from 5G; What 5G will mean for smartphones and smartphone makers.

•   Nokia sets new record for submarine cable capacity as demand jumps--Reuters.com

•   Google's response deadline to EU charges extended againa new deadline has now been set for November 7 on shopping charges, while responses to two separate cases involving Android and online search advertising are due October 31 and October 26, respectively. European Commission has warned penalties in the shopping and Android cases may be significant.

•  Google reportedly aims to start on London mega office by end of 2017--BusinessInsider.com

 Alibaba's Jack Ma and Daniel Zhang issue annual letters to shareholders | Alibaba Group Holding Limited (NYSE:BABA)--SeekingAlpha.comJack Ma letterDaniel Zhang letter. Jack Ma Yun has ambitious plans to create a group trading platform for small businesses and farmers, an open e-commerce system that would include cross-nation agricultural trading. Ma says the long-term goal for Alibaba is to quintuple its user base to 2 billion by 2036."--SeekingAlpha.com

•  Google in China: Amazon's (NASDAQ:AMZN) Echo home speaker is a non-entity in China, it does not understand spoken Chinese. Google, on the other hand, is quite adept at Chinese. While Google Maps, Gmail, Drive are all blocked in China, Google Translate is not. The Chinese government quietly stopped blocking it about a year ago. It is the only major Google online service that can be readily accessed in China. The reasonGoogle Translate is an essential tool for Chinese companies active internationally, as well as for many of the 150 million middle class Chinese now vacationing abroad each year. Sundar Pichai, Google's CEO, says the world, including China, is moving from a "mobile-first to an AI-first world." Google is already miles ahead of any Chinese company in translation and therefore it may not need to reestablish its search engine business in China to be a major force there says Peter Fuhrman, Chairman & CEO of China First Capital [ChinaFirstCapital.com], a boutique investment bank, in SeekingAlpha.com.

•  Major RAM Management Improvements Coming To Chrome"developers have just announced that Chrome 54 will utilize a brand new JavaScript engine which will cut JavaScript-related memory usage in half."--Androidheadlines.com

•  Facebook, Google, TE SubCom, and Pacific Light Data Communication Co.,  are co-builders of Los Angeles-Hong Kong submarine cable network, launch date summer of 2018. Named the Pacific Light Cable Network, it will span nearly 8,000 miles and be the highest-capacity transpacific route to date.--SeekingAlpha.com. As Facebook and Google drive ever-increasing amounts of global internet traffic, a greater stake in the infrastructure facilitating delivery could yield competitive advantages.

•  Google outlines Asia cloud plans, four upcoming regions: Singapore, Sydney, Mumbai, and Tokyo will be added as new Google Cloud regions over the next year, as it looks to ramp up its rollout in Asia where it is seeing "triple-digit" growth rates.--ZDNet.com

•  Amazon plans to hire 120,000 temporary workers in the U.S. this holiday season--Fortune.com

•  Foreign investors sue Toshiba over accounting scandal--Reuters.com

•  Google Noto, an open source font family for more than 800 languages: Monotype and Google have developed and released a font family called Noto, for people living all around the world. Monotype is the same typeface company that developed Times New Roman and Arial. The fonts are available here, and are released under the SIL Open Font License, an open source license used for type faces.--Tech2 | tech.firstpost.com

•  Indian call center employees posing as the IRS may have bilked Americans out of millions | WashingtonPost.com"The call centers were making more than $150,000 a day through scams that took place for a little over a year, police said.--
"It was not the first time that fraudulent call centers targeting U.S. citizens have been raided in India. As more and more American businesses outsourced their back-end operations to India in the past two decades, a thriving IT industry arose here, employing millions of English-speaking software professionals. But some have also taken advantage of the trend and found ways to access data of U.S. customers and defraud them. Call center crimes targeting Indian customers have also become a big “nuisance” for Indians, said Raj Kumar Mishra, deputy superintendent of police in Noida’s special task force. In the neighboring state of Uttar Pradesh, for example, such crimes have increased 4,300 percent in the last five years. Most of the complaints are about online bank frauds and callers who try to access customers’ ATM identification numbers, he said. Nearly 300 people involved in such crimes were arrested in the state last year. “There are leakages from unscrupulous bank staff who are selling the customer data illegally. That is a hole we have to plug,” Mishra said."
•  Finally, "A Brief History of Who Ruined Burning Man"--Journal.BurningMan.org

-- John Poole, Editor, Domain Mondo


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2016-10-14

Winners: Snapchat; Amazon; Google | Losers: Costco; Sam's Club; Fashion

Scott Galloway: Innovation is a Snap:

NYU Stern Marketing Professor Scott Galloway presents this week's "biggest winners and losers in digital"--

Winner: Snapchat. No longer just an app, the company aims to reinvent the camera with Spectacles, its new hardware product. Domains: snap.com, snapchat.com, spectacles.com

Loser: Warehouse clubs like Costco and Sam's Club, which are rapidly losing share to Amazon Prime. Domains: costco.com, samsclub.com, amazon.com

Loser: Fashion insiders. As brands adopt the see now, buy now format and post on Instagram and Snapchat, fashion executives need to keep pace with the changing times.

Winner: Google, which recently celebrated its 18th birthday. Domain: google.com

Video above published Oct 13, 2016, by L2inc.com.

Auto-generated transcript via YouTube.com:
0:00 a winner snap chatters they like to be
0:04 called snap inc no longer just a nap
0:07 the firm is releasing a hardware product
0:09 called spectacles spectacles lets users
0:12 snap with the push of a button
0:14 chief strategy officer in Ron contoured
0:16 advertiser's last week that snap bank is
0:19 not a social media company but a camera
0:21 company he believes the reinventing the
0:23 camera is snaps greatest opportunity
0:26 with a price tag ten percent that of the
0:29 predecessor google glass it's easy to
0:31 see that snap-in gets its users the last
0:34 24 months have been a constant march of
0:36 innovation from the good people at
0:38 snapping concluding geo filters discover
0:41 lenses chat and memories losers
0:45 warehouse clubs in the past four years
0:46 the share of us households only paying
0:49 for a costco membership decline from 15
0:52 to ten percent remember subscribing only
0:54 to sam's club plunge from 17 to ten
0:57 percent at the same time the percentage
0:59 of amazon prime only subscribers has
1:01 more than doubled from seven to sixteen
1:03 percent what a shocker is Amazon
1:06 creating havoc with these guys prime is
1:07 also benefiting from a new trend of
1:10 households joining multiple retail clubs
1:12 forty-four percent of u.s. households
1:13 are amazon prime members think about
1:15 that if cord-cutting continues in five
1:18 to eight years they'll be more
1:19 households in america with a membership
1:21 to amazon prime then have cable
1:23 television a loser fashion insiders
1:26 after Milan Fashion Week vogue editors
1:28 called fashion influencers and bloggers
1:30 pathetic and said they were heralding
1:33 the death of style neiman marcus blame
1:35 bloggers for the past year falling sales
1:37 but who's the real loser here
1:39 fashion retail executive stuck in the
1:41 past who aren't angry at bloggers but
1:44 angry themselves in the world because
1:45 bottom line they're becoming less
1:47 relevant who's into fashion
1:49 Jack Dorsey Marissa Mayer who's not mark
1:52 zuckerberg you do the math a hundred
1:54 percent of brands showing at Fashion Week
1:56 had an Instagram account and seventy
1:59 percent were on snapchat a fifth of
2:00 brands and integrated the new director
2:02 consumer seen out by now
2:04 runway format the devil used to wear
2:07 Prada what does she wear now no one
2:09 gives a shit a winner google in
2:12 September 27 this
2:13 search engine turned 18 so Google
2:16 congratulations you can drive you can
2:18 buy a bullet bike you can serve your
2:20 country join the army
2:22 you can buy a gun but you can't drink
2:23  that makes sense with a market cap of
2:25 541 billion google is second only to
2:28 apple and value the google doodle was
2:31 launched in august of $YEAR 98 a month
2:33 prior to the company's incorporation the
2:35 first doodle inserted the Burning Man
2:37 symbol behind the OS a subtle out of the
2:40 office message is the two founders
2:42 headed to the festival the most popular
2:45 doodle the playable guitar published in
2:47 june 2011 and 48 hours 5.1 million years
2:52 of music was created we leave you with
2:54 some of our favorite Google Doodles
2:56 we'll see you next week
3:15 ok
4:01 proud to announce l2 glass
4:18 subscribe now
4:20 I said what's your problem


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