Twitter CEO accused of ‘playing God’ in stoush with Australian start-up ManageFlitter

Twitter CEO accused of ‘playing God’ in stoush with Australian start-up ManageFlitter

September 5, 2013 – 1:18PM

Ben Grubb

The chief executive of Twitter has been involved in an online stoush with an Australian start-up founder after disabling a feature the start-up relied upon in a product it markets mostly to big-name brands. ManageFlitter, founded by 39-year-old Sydney-based African entrepreneur Kevin Garber, allows Twitter users to manage whom they follow in a way that many have found much easier to use than Twitter. It has amassed nearly 2 million users who either access the website’s services for free, with limited functionality, or upgrade to the professional or business versions for a fee.

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The ManageFlitter interface. Photo: ManageFlitter Read more of this post

Thorny Side Effects in Silicon Valley Tactic to Keep Control

SEPTEMBER 3, 2013, 5:16 PM

Thorny Side Effects in Silicon Valley Tactic to Keep Control

By STEVEN M. DAVIDOFF

The gods of Silicon Valley have repeatedly sought to take the companies they founded public while retaining control as if they were still private. Recent events at Google and other technology companies show that perhaps this control may be bad not only for the companies but also for the founders, who are increasingly living in a world bereft of checks and balances. Silicon Valley has for the most part held public shareholders in mixed regard. Preferring to keep them on the sidelines is not a new development. Read more of this post

Tesla has stolen a march on rival electric car makers but can it make the vehicle affordable?

September 4, 2013 6:31 pm

Automobiles: Electric shock

By Henry Foy and Richard Waters

Tesla has stolen a march on rival electric car makers but can it make the vehicle affordable? Move over PorscheAudi and Jaguar. In the world’s most cutting-edge car market, Tesla Motors has the fastest-growing luxury sedan. And it has no exhaust pipe. Barely a year after its launch, the company’s electric Model S is California’s third most popular luxury car. It is a must-have for Hollywood superstars and technology titans, a serious challenger to established premium marques and an answer to the biggest question in the automotive industry: can green cars sell?

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Qualcomm jumps into ‘wearables’ fray with Toq smartwatch

Qualcomm jumps into ‘wearables’ fray with Toq smartwatch

5:25pm EDT

By Noel Randewich

SAN DIEGO (Reuters) – Qualcomm Inc has unveiled the Toq, a smartwatch that can play music and handle phone calls and messages, and said it would start selling the device in the fourth quarter, marking the chipmaker’s entry into the emerging arena of wearable computing. The company, which dominates the global market for applications processors for smartphones and tablets, introduced the device on Wednesday in a bid to showcase its own technology to manufacturers as Samsung Electronics Co Ltd unveiled its own much-anticipated “Galaxy Gear” in Berlin. Read more of this post

Social commerce in Korea to surge sixtyfold over three years

Social commerce to surge sixtyfold over three years

Kim Gyu-sik, Sohn Dong-woo, Won Yo-hwan

2013.09.04 18:12:36

The social commerce market is growing and evolving rapidly due to cheap price chasers, who go for lower prices, and its edge in the mobile environment. Social commerce has recently started diversifying its product line-up from intangible goods including tickets for dining at restaurants and watching performance to electronics, cars and food, seizing on the areas that have been reserved for other online shopping malls. The social commerce market in its infancy totaled 50 billion won ($45.6 million) in terms of the value of total transactions in 2010. Now the number is projected to exceed three trillion won this year. All of the three biggest social commerce players in Korea, Ticket Monster, Coupang, and We Make Price, are confident that their respective transactions would surpass one trillion won this year.  Read more of this post

Passwords will become obsolete when you can log-in with your heartbeat

Passwords will become obsolete when you can log-in with your heartbeat

By Rebecca J. Rosen, The Atlantic 10 hours ago

Nearly all of computer security boils down to one question: How can a device know that you are you? Passwords are the most basic tactic for confirming your identity. If you can come up with your secret string of numbers and letters, you must be you. But everyone knows that passwords are pretty weak barriers, in part because people are bad at choosing them (tending to use innovative combinations such as “password” and “123456″) and because computers are good at breaking them. Other than passwords, there are a host of other tricks, all with that same goal in mind: verifying that you are you. Two of the most common are security questions (silliness) and two-step verification such as Gmail’s, which involves a secondary code that only you have access to.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jUO7Qnmc8vE Read more of this post

A Multitasking Video Game Makes Old Brains Act Younger

September 4, 2013

A Multitasking Video Game Makes Old Brains Act Younger

By MATT RICHTEL

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Findings on video games published in the journal Nature are a significant development in understanding how to strengthen older brains.

There may be a new market for video games: octogenarians. Brain scientists have discovered that swerving around cars while simultaneously picking out road signs in a video game can improve the short-term memory and long-term focus of older adults. Some people as old as 80, the researchers say, begin to show neurological patterns of people in their 20s. Cognitive scientists say the findings, to be published Thursday in the scientific journal Nature, are a significant development in understanding how to strengthen older brains. That is because the improvements in brain performance did not come just within the game but were shown outside the game in other cognitive tasks. Read more of this post

Dish, Disney Gird for Showdown Over ESPN

Updated September 4, 2013, 8:56 p.m. ET

Dish, Disney Gird for Showdown Over ESPN

AMOL SHARMA And SHALINI RAMACHANDRAN

Dish Network Corp. DISH +0.13% chairman Charlie Ergen has long railed against the high cost of sports on TV. Now he has a chance to do something about it. Dish’s agreement to carry ESPN, the highest profile and most expensive of the national sports channels, expires at the end of September. Dish and ESPN’s majority-owner Walt Disney DIS +0.30% Co are now in negotiations on a renewal for the agreement, which dates back to 2005. The talks will also address the fees Dish must pay to carry Disney’s other channels, including ABC broadcast stations. As a result, the negotiations will likely revolve around some the pay-TV industry’s most contentious issues—broadcast fees and sports costs—even more than Time Warner Cable Inc.’s TWC +0.60% battle withCBS Corp., CBS +2.06% which ended just Monday after a monthlong blackout. Read more of this post

Green Mountain is betting consumers want to get soup from the same machine that brews their morning joe

Updated September 4, 2013, 7:14 p.m. ET

Maker of Coffee Pods Adds New Flavor: Soup

Green Mountain, Campbell to Introduce Packets for Broth

ANNIE GASPARRO

Green Mountain Coffee Roasters Inc. GMCR +1.34% is betting consumers want to get soup from the same machine that brews their morning joe. The company on Wednesday announced a deal with Campbell Soup Co.CPB +0.40% to sell K-Cups for Green Mountain’s Keurig machines that will brew a cup of chicken broth. The K-cups will come with packets of dried noodles and vegetables to mix in. The deal marks Green Mountain’s first attempt to expand its single-serve coffee brewers beyond beverages. Read more of this post

Zhaoniya: Shanghai-based Mobile Pharmaceutical Platform

Zhaoniya: Shanghai-based Mobile Pharmaceutical Platform

By Emma Lee on September 4, 2013

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Zhaoniya, also known as Uyi Uyao, is a mobile app targeted to balance the demands of pharmacies and patients. The app provides separate apps for merchants and users. Zhaoniya distributes orders placed by users to pharmacies within 2 miles of the user’s location. The pharmacists will connect the patients after receiving the orders to give professional advices and to decide which kind of medicine to deliver. The app now provides free service to both pharmacies and patients. But the customers are allowed to pay extra tips to pharmacies, especially when the medicine has to be delivered at night. Read more of this post

China and India: The Roadster and the Minivan; China Beats India Hands Down When It Comes to Growth in Vehicle Demand, but Profits Are Another Matter

September 4, 2013, 12:51 p.m. ET

China and India: The Roadster and the Minivan

China Beats India Hands Down When It Comes to Growth in Vehicle Demand, but Profits Are Another Matter

ABHEEK BHATTACHARYA

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China’s car industry is running much faster than India’s right now. But down the road, Indian auto makers may find the going smoother. Though both emerging-market giants are slowing, China’s demand for cars is stronger. The number sold there will rise 13% this year, against a 7% drop in India, according to research firm LMC Automotive. That gap mirrors the big difference in each country’s economic performance. India’s gross-domestic-product growth in the June quarter was 4.4%, whereas China’s was 7.5%. Meanwhile, India’s inflation rate of 9% is almost three times that of China. And while both countries import oil, the rupee’s 19% fall against the dollar this year, compared to the yuan’s 2% rise, increases fuel costs in local terms. Read more of this post

The rarity of quality work, low income from television broadcasts and the insufficient development of related merchandise has put 85% of Chinese comic and animation companies in the red

Lack of quality puts China’s animation industry in a rut

Staff Reporter

2013-09-05

The rarity of quality work, low income from television broadcasts and the insufficient development of related merchandise has put 85% of Chinese comic and animation companies in the red. Meanwhile in Japan, legendary animator and manga artist Hayao Miyazaki announced his retirement on Sept. 1. His final feature film — The Wind Rises — set a box office record of 4.3 billion yen (US$43.22 million) within 16 days, a healthy earning in a gigantic market. According to data compiled by the Ministry of Culture, China’s output value for 2012 touched 76 billion yuan (US$12.4 billion), up 22.23% year-on-year. Nevertheless, the figure still lagged Japan’s 1.67 trillion yuan (US$273 billion) market scale. Read more of this post

Sober Day Dawns for China’s Baijiu Distillers; Makers of the nation’s favorite spirits are waking up to a business slowdown after a decade of growth

09.04.2013 18:41

Sober Day Dawns for China’s Baijiu Distillers

Makers of the nation’s favorite spirits are waking up to a business slowdown after a decade of growth

By staff reporter Qu Yunxu

(Beijing) – Distillers of China’s most popular spirits, baijiu, are sobering up to a business slowdown and tight financing after a decade of outstanding growth. Sales are off and company market values have fallen over the past year, prompting some investors to cash in their bets on minor and big-name distillers alike. Industry leaders such as Tuopai Shede Wine Co., Kweichow Moutai Co. Ltd. and Luzhou Laojiao Co. attracted plenty of investors by racking up huge profits for four years straight starting in 2008. Read more of this post

Rampant bridge lending posing threat to China’s financial market

Rampant bridge lending posing threat to China’s financial market

Staff Reporter

2013-09-05

The increasingly popular bridge lending business, which involves providing capital to individuals or companies in acute need of funds to repay bank loans, is posing a threat to China’s financial market, Shanghai’s First Financial Daily reports. The lending practice is typically used by private lenders, who mainly provide bridge loans, or short-term loans, to small and medium enterprises in urgent need of cash by charging them extremely high interest rates. Under the practice, borrowers usually repay their debt after securing new bank loans, the paper said. Read more of this post

Luxury goods create vanity economy in China

Luxury goods create vanity economy in China

Staff Reporter

2013-09-05

Luxury goods and their high quality replicas have created a vanity business of considerable value in China. The Sanyuanli leather wholesale market in Guangzhou offers the highest number of world famous luxury brands, the Guangzhou-based 21st Century Business Review reported. Around 10am every day, wholesalers from Saudi Arabia to South Africa as well as local vendors pack the market, selling handmade leather goods both original and counterfeit. Read more of this post

Following Bank of America’s sale of two billion shares in China Construction Bank, almost all foreign banks with the exception of HSBC no longer hold strategic stakes in any Chinese banks

Sale of CCB shares not a good sign
Thursday, September 05, 2013, The Standard
Global stock markets found an excuse to rise yesterday as US President Barack Obama awaited his lawmakers’ approval to strike Syria. The Shanghai Composite Index rose 0.2 percent to 2,127, hitting a multiweek high. But it is still 13 percent below the year-high – 2,444 – set in February, or 38 percent below its 2009 high of 3,478 reached in August of that year. We have no reason to turn bullish. Following Bank of America’s sale of two billion shares in China Construction Bank, almost all foreign banks with the exception of HSBC Holdings (0005) no longer hold strategic stakes in any mainland lender. This is not a good sign. Foreigners are selling while state-owned China Investment Corporation is buying. The market has kept discounting possible systemic risk in China linked to shadow banking, wealth management products or local government debt. As more senior officials of PetroChina (0857) face investigations, companies linked to the firm are also coming under scrutiny. I am talking specifically about Wison Engineering Services (2236). Its yearly profit is about 500 million yuan (HK$630 million). The stock is now suspended.

Energy-Hungry China Struggles to Join Shale-Gas Revolution; Royal Dutch Shell Finds Drilling for Shale Gas in China Isn’t Easy

September 4, 2013, 11:03 p.m. ET

Energy-Hungry China Struggles to Join Shale-Gas Revolution

Royal Dutch Shell Finds Drilling for Shale Gas in China Isn’t Easy

BRIAN SPEGELE and JUSTIN SCHECK

MAOBA, China—When Royal Dutch Shell RDSB.LN +0.14% PLC began a multibillion-dollar effort to tap China shale gas a few years ago, it seemed like a can’t-miss wager. China has the world’s most extensive shale gas reserves, biggest energy market, and a government pushing for expanded gas production. But for Shell and its state-controlled partner, China National Petroleum Corp. the reality on the ground makes its bet look riskier. Read more of this post

China Weighs Deregulating Aviation Market; Change Would Give Startup Carriers Access to Prime International Routes

September 4, 2013, 2:04 p.m. ET

China Weighs Deregulating Aviation Market

Change Would Give Startup Carriers Access to Prime International Routes

DOUG CAMERON

CHICAGO—China is taking steps to deregulate its domestic and international aviation market, and may amend its closely watched air-transport treaty with the U.S., according to a senior Chinese airline executive. Flag carrier Air China Ltd. 601111.SH -0.98% could lose its effective monopoly on some prime international routes within a year while regulators are opening the door to new carriers in the country’s interior for the first time after half-a-decade of breakneck growth, according to Wei Hou, vice president of Hainan Airlines Co.,600221.SH -1.49% the country’s fourth-largest by traffic. Read more of this post

Not all Asian countries need to fear the Fed

Not all Asian countries need to fear the Fed

Filed 4 hours ago

By Andy Mukherjee

AsiaFear

Falling Asian currencies have triggered a sell-off in bonds and equities. Some investors now fear a repeat of a 1997-style crisis. Yet while a new Breakingviews’ interactive risk map shows no economy in the Asia-Pacific region is entirely sober, it is India that has become most addicted to cheap money. The risk map ranks the region’s economies according to eight vulnerabilities by measuring the deterioration since just before the onset of the global financial crisis. The most pressing concern for investors is the region’s worsening trade balance. Read more of this post

Seoul ‘jeonse’ price equivalent to 5 years of income

Seoul ‘jeonse’ price equivalent to 5 years of income

2013.09.03 14:27:09

The average ‘Jeonse’ apartment price in Seoul, South Korea is on a par with five-year average income of urban worker households, data showed. “Jeonse,”refers to a lease system in which a tenant pays a large lump-sum deposit for typically a two-year rental period.  Jeonse price of a 99 to 132-square-meter apartment in the Seoul metropolitan area was at 216 million won ($197,807) as of year-end, which is a 3.94-fold increase from the previous year’s average annual income of 55 million won, according to a local realtor’s data on jeonse prices of 6.99 million apartments nationwide and the Statistics Korea’s urban worker household (comprising two or more persons) annual income.  Read more of this post

SBY Seeks Return of Suharto-Era Elections

SBY Seeks Return of Suharto-Era Elections

By SP/Robertus Wardi & SP/Carlos Paath on 9:59 am September 5, 2013.
Under Suharto’s presidency, universally denounced as undemocratic, there was no such thing as direct elections for regional leaders. And if President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono has his way, that could once again be the case by the end of this year. That is when the government hopes the House of Representatives will pass a set of proposed amendments to the 2004 Regional Governance Law to eliminate the election of mayors and district heads — a plan widely criticized as a throwback to the days of Suharto’s New Order regime. Read more of this post

Like India, Indonesia will pay for resting on its laurels

September 4, 2013 4:40 pm

Like India, Indonesia will pay for resting on its laurels

By David Pilling

Manmohan Singh was hailed as the superman of Indian reform – now he is merely Clark Kent

Indonesia has often been described as the next India. With 250m people, it has a huge population of aspiring consumers. Like India, it is a democracy, albeit a far more recent convert. Like India, too, its solid record of growth has been propelled not by manufactured exports but by domestic demand. When the global financial crisis struck, both economies weathered the storm better than most. Read more of this post

The complicated relationship between man and cow in India; India is the world’s largest exporter of beef – ironic, in a country where the cow is considered sacred

The complicated relationship between man and cow in India

By Zain Awan
POSTED: 05 Sep 2013 10:52 AM
India is the world’s largest exporter of beef — ironic, in a country where the cow is considered sacred. A visit to India remains somewhat incomplete without bumping into cows and cattle on the roads.  

NEW DELHI: With a frail body and a strong will, Gopal Das launched a fast-unto-death. His cause — cows and their welfare. Such is the importance of the relationship that exists between man and cow in India. Gopal Das said: “I have donated my property worth billions of dollars to the Haryana province government. If they want, they can have it but they should help the mute animals. Cows are wandering in the streets without food.” Cows are considered sacred in India where their slaughter is banned. There are believed to be more than 300 million cows in India and critics argue that they compete with people for food in a country where some 20 per cent of the population live below the poverty line. Read more of this post

India’s inverted yield curve fails rupee and slams economy

India’s inverted yield curve fails rupee and slams economy

1:14am EDT

By Vidya Ranganathan

SINGAPORE (Reuters) – Viewed in one light, India’s steeply inverted yield curve is the result of a deliberate and classic policy strategy to defend a weak currency. From another perspective, it is pointing at deep economic problems to come, possibly even recession. Short-term interest rates in India are about 2 percentage points higher than long-term government bond yields, which makes the yield curve inverted. Typically short-term rates are lower than longer-term ones. Read more of this post

India scrambling to reduce oil bill inflated by sinking rupee

India scrambling to reduce oil bill inflated by sinking rupee

8:55pm EDT

By Jo Winterbottom and Manash Goswami

NEW DELHI/SINGAPORE (Reuters) – India’s top oil official is grasping at desperate measures to cut the country’s oil costs by nearly $20 billion after the rupee’s slide to record lows has left India facing an oil bill potentially 50 percent higher than on May 1. Oil Minister M. Veerappa Moily has suggested pricking the ballooning oil bill with everything from a street theatre campaign encouraging lower fuel use, to shutting fuel stations, to increasing imports from Iran. Read more of this post

India crisis threatens big hit on banks; NPLs stand at about 9% of assets and could reach 15.5 per cent over the next two years, according to Morgan Stanley

September 4, 2013 10:28 am

India crisis threatens big hit on banks

By James Crabtree in Mumbai and Victor Mallet in New Delhi

The arrival of Raghuram Rajan at the Reserve Bank of India has been eagerly awaited by investors anticipating what monetary steps he will take to rescue the rupee, restore economic growth and curb inflation. On his first day as central bank governor, however, Mr Rajan postponed comment on monetary policy until September 20, just after the US Federal Reserve policy meeting, and spoke almost entirely about his plans for liberalising the banking sector, which he regards as essential for poverty alleviation and long-term growth in one of the world’s most underbanked economies. Read more of this post

Falling Economic Tide in India Is Exposing Its Chronic Troubles

September 4, 2013

Falling Economic Tide in India Is Exposing Its Chronic Troubles

By KEITH BRADSHER

MUMBAI — India had seemed tantalizingly close to embarking on the same dash for economic growth that has lifted hundreds of millions of people out of poverty in China and across East Asia. Its economy now stands in disarray, with the prospect of worse to come in the next few months. Vinod Vanigota, a Mumbai wholesaler of imported computer hard drives, said sales dropped by a quarter in the last two weeks. The rupee, India’s currency, has been so volatile in recent days that he began revising his price lists every half-hour. Business activity at Chip Com Traders, where he is the managing director and co-owner, has slowed so sharply that trucking companies plead for business. “One of the companies called today and said, ‘Don’t you have a parcel of any sort for us to deliver today?’ ” Mr. Vanigota said. Read more of this post

Hong Kong’s Property Curbs Hurt Furniture Sales

September 4, 2013, 4:52 PM

Hong Kong’s Property Curbs Hurt Furniture Sales

For a sense of how Hong Kong’s overheated property market is slowing, look no further than furniture sales. Census data this week showed the city’s sales volume of fixtures and furniture—including things like lamps and sofas—slumped 12% in July from a year earlier. That was the biggest decline in a year, and followed a 3% drop in June. Wong Cheung-choi, 60, who has run a furniture shop in Hong Kong’s Western district for the past 13 years, said he has noticed a slowdown in sales this year. Mr. Wong blamed the decline in sales on the city’s aggressive property cooling measures, and said his business is having the toughest year in more than a decade. Read more of this post

U.S. Treasuries rout may be far from over

U.S. Treasuries rout may be far from over

1:19am EDT

By Luciana Lopez and Jennifer Ablan

NEW YORK (Reuters) – It has already been a horrid year for investors in U.S. Treasuries – and it could easily get much worse. U.S. government bonds ended August with their fourth straight monthly loss, down 3.43 percent on a total return basis in the four months, their worst such stretch since 1996, according to the Barclays Aggregate U.S. Treasury Index .BCUSATSY. Yields on benchmark 10-year Treasury notes have surged by 1.29 percentage points since their low-water mark around 1.6 percent in early May. But even at 2.89 percent on Wednesday, yields could move even higher, and prices lower, when the U.S. Federal Reserve pulls back on its $85-billion-a-month buying of Treasuries and mortgage-backed securities, a process largely expected to begin with the September 17-18 meeting of the Federal Open Market Committee. “I don’t know what the magic number is, but Treasury yields will be much higher than they are now by year-end,” said Dan Fuss, vice chairman and portfolio manager at Loomis Sayles, which has $190 billion in assets. Read more of this post

U.S. Can Catch Emerging Nations’ Malaise; Developing Markets Not Only Are Much Bigger Today but Also Are Potentially a Leading Indicator, Not a Lagging One

September 4, 2013, 6:16 p.m. ET

U.S. Can Catch Emerging Nations’ Malaise

Developing Markets Not Only Are Much Bigger Today but Also Are Potentially a Leading Indicator, Not a Lagging One

SPENCER JAKAB

There’s no place like home. That is the message from most, but not all, economic data lately. It is also what global stock markets are saying. The S&P 500 is off its record high but is still up nearly 16% year-to-date—12.5 percentage points more than the Dow Jones Global Ex-U.S. Index. Strip out a resurgent Japan, and the gap would be bigger. Expectations are that Thursday’s closely watched nonmanufacturing index from the Institute for Supply Management will continue the hit parade. Economists polled by Dow Jones Newswires see a reading of 55, which is strongly in expansion territory. It would follow a surprisingly good 55.7 reading in the manufacturing index released Tuesday.

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