With Catalogs, Flipboard Dips Its Toe Into E-Commerce

With Catalogs, Flipboard Dips Its Toe Into E-Commerce

NOVEMBER 11, 2013 AT 6:27 AM PT

Mike Isaac

Just in time for the holidays, Flipboard is beginning to look more shopper-friendly. The startup, which has offered mobile magazines populated with news and editorial content from your various social streams, announced on Monday its new “catalogs” product, a way for users to browse and purchase items directly from Flipboard, much like the paper gift guides that flood mailboxes year-round. Read more of this post

Self-healing computers will change the world: Jeff Hawkins

Self-healing computers will change the world: Jeff Hawkins

November 11, 2013 – 10:45AM

Matthew Hall

In one man’s vision of the future, helpdesks and IT departments will be redundant because computers mimicking the human brain will self-heal. That’s if Jeff Hawkins has his way. A neuroscientist who previously founded mobile computing companies Palm and Handspring, Hawkins is developing software that mimics the human brain and can currently correct computer glitches without human intervention. Read more of this post

Same Time, Same Channel? TV Woos Kids Who Can’t Wait; In their efforts to attract children, television networks are starting to show programs online before they appear on old-fashioned TV

November 10, 2013

Same Time, Same Channel? TV Woos Kids Who Can’t Wait

By BRIAN STELTER

When Eric Nelson’s 6-year-old daughter, Charlotte, and 10-year-old son, Asa, discover that they cannot rewind or fast-forward a TV show, they are perplexed — and their father is, too. It is hard to explain the limitations of live television to children who have grown up in an on-demand world. “They say ‘live TV’ the way I say ‘doing my taxes’ — with resignation,” said Mr. Nelson, a literary agent in Manhattan. Read more of this post

Postal Service to Make Sunday Deliveries for Amazon

November 11, 2013

Postal Service to Make Sunday Deliveries for Amazon

By RON NIXON

WASHINGTON — The cash-short United States Postal Service, which has failed to win congressional approval to stop delivering mail on Saturdays to save money, has struck a deal with the online retailer Amazon.com to deliver the company’s packages on Sundays — a first for both, with obvious advantages for each. For the Postal Service, which lost nearly $16 billion last year, first-class mail delivery, particularly on Saturdays, is often a money loser, whereas package delivery is profitable. Read more of this post

Big Data’s Little Brother

November 10, 2013

Big Data’s Little Brother

By QUENTIN HARDY

SAN FRANCISCO — David Soloff is recruiting an army of “hyperdata” collectors. The company he co-founded, Premise, created a smartphone application that is now used by 700 people in 25 developing countries. Using guidance from Mr. Soloff and his co-workers, these people, mostly college students and homemakers, photograph food and goods in public markets. By analyzing the photos of prices and the placement of everyday items like piles of tomatoes and bottles of shampoo and matching that to other data, Premise is building a real-time inflation index to sell to companies and Wall Street traders, who are hungry for insightful data. Read more of this post

Japanese companies see Taiwan as bridge to China

November 10, 2013 6:30 pm

Japanese companies see Taiwan as bridge to China

By Sarah Mishkin in Taipei

When Japanese e-commerce company Rakuten decided to expand overseas, it looked first to Taiwan, whose close ties with Tokyo have long made it attractive to Japanese companies eager to escape slow growth at home. “You know how bad the economy has been in Japan – it has only recovered recently,” said Ejiri Yuichi, Rakuten Taiwan’s chief executive, of an economy that has been struggling to restart inflation after years of overall meagre growth. With real wages largely flat, “especially in the service industry, it has indeed been a difficult time”, he said. Read more of this post

Full and timely disclosures important for capital market

Updated: Monday November 11, 2013 MYT 10:40:38 AM

Full and timely disclosures important for capital market

BY RISEN JAYASEELAN

FULL and timely disclosures are the essence of a well-functioning capital market. Without such accurate information, investors will be disadvantaged. The recent case of Ranhill Energy and Resources Bhd indicates that the authorities take this seriously and rightly so. The fine imposed by the Securities Commission (SC) on Ranhill, the company, and its head honcho Tan Sri Hamdan Mohamad, is referred. Read more of this post

Why central bankers’ composure is pure theatre

Why central bankers’ composure is pure theatre

Federal Reserve, European Central Bank and Bank of England know extricating from stimulus policies is fraught with danger

Central bankers like to project a sense of serenity. The markets may be traumatised and the politicians may be panicking, but nothing fazes the technocrats in charge of our money. They are headmasterly figures: slightly detached but with their fingers on the pulse. That’s the image. In reality, the central bankers are in a funk about the health of their nations’ economies and the challenge of extricating their institutions from the stimulus policies that have been responsible for what has, so far, been a tepid global recovery. Read more of this post

Ray Dalio’s Bridgewater On The Fed’s Dilemma: “We’re Worried That There’s No Gas Left In The QE Tank”

Ray Dalio’s Bridgewater On The Fed’s Dilemma: “We’re Worried That There’s No Gas Left In The QE Tank”

Tyler Durden on 11/10/2013 18:21 -0500

“The Fed’s real dilemma is that its policy is creating a financial market bubble that is large relative to the pickup in the economy that it is producing,” Bridgewater notes as the relationship between US equity markets and the Fed’s balance sheet (here and here for example) and “disconcerting disconnects” (here and here) indicate how the Fed is “trapped.” However, as the incoming Yellen faces up to her ‘tough’ decisions to taper or not, Ray Dalio’s team is concerned about something else – “we’re not worried about whether the Fed is going to hit or release the gas pedal, we’re worried about whether there’s much gas left in the tank and what will happen if there isn’t.Read more of this post

Canada’s housing market teeters precariously; Analysts warn nation is on verge of ‘prolonged correction’

November 10, 2013 8:37 pm

Canada’s housing market teeters precariously

By Anjli Raval in New York

Robert MacFarlane, a long-time crane operator, surveys his empire from the top of one of Toronto’s flashy new apartment buildings. “I can see more than 50 tower cranes,” said Mr MacFarlane, whose bird’s-eye photography from the country’s tallest crane has gained him online notoriety as interest in Toronto’s property sector escalates. These cranes – which can offer clues to bubble-like conditions – emerged in response to lofty demand for condominiums from investors and homebuyers taking advantage of Canada’s ultra-low interest rates. Read more of this post

Cadillac Needs About A Decade To Become A Top Global Luxury Brand

Cadillac Needs About A Decade To Become A Top Global Luxury Brand

BEN KLAYMANREUTERS 43 MINUTES AGO 278

DETROIT (Reuters) – General Motors Co’s <GM.N> new Cadillac marketing chief believes it could take as long as a decade to build its reputation as a global luxury brand. Uwe Ellinghaus, a former marketing executive with German luxury automaker BMW AG <BMWG.DE>, will assume his duties on January 1, but was introduced this week as the person responsible for shaping Cadillac’s image around the world. Read more of this post

Commodities: Destination Africa; Trading houses are looking at the vast potential that lies in meeting the continent’s surging consumer demand

November 10, 2013 2:49 pm

Commodities: Destination Africa

By Javier Blas in Lagos, Nigeria

Trading houses are looking at the vast potential that lies in meeting the continent’s surging consumer demand

At the food processing plant he runs in Lagos, Mukul Mathur describes the thousands of miles that his tomatoes travel. At first, their odyssey betweenNigeria and California appears unremarkable in an age of globalisation. Mr Mathur would seem to be just another trader buying raw materials in Africa and selling them to distant, wealthier markets. But he actually runs a supply chain at odds with old, colonial-era trade routes. Read more of this post

As Plenum Starts, an Economist Sees Crisis Ahead; Wu Jinglian argues that predatory officials and rent-seeking bureaucracies will suffocate essential innovation and productivity improvements

NOVEMBER 8, 2013, 12:54 AM

As Plenum Starts, an Economist Sees Crisis Ahead

By CHRIS BUCKLEY

The Chinese state news media has hailed a Communist Party conference on reinvigorating the economy as a triumph even before it opens Saturday. But beforehand, one of the country’s most prominent economists has delivered a warning: China faces a crisis unless big economic changes are accompanied by a political overhaul. Wu Jinglian is one of China’s best-known liberal economists and at 83 has the demeanor of a wizened professor. Yet he is also a policy insider whose books and speeches are widely read in China. Read more of this post

Portrait of Deng as Reformer in 1978 Plenum Ignores History

NOVEMBER 9, 2013, 3:44 AM

Portrait of Deng as Reformer in 1978 Plenum Ignores History

By CHRIS BUCKLEY

China’s Communist Party leader, Xi Jinping, wants the late Deng Xiaoping’s magic. Mr. Xi will lay out proposals for economic rejuvenation at a leadership conference that started Saturday, and state-run media have likened the event to a historic meeting in 1978 when, they say, Mr. Deng began an era of market “reform and opening up.” But anyone looking for inspiration and instruction from Mr. Deng should beware: the conventional account of the 1978 meeting is a compound of selective memories, and a deceptive guide to how China’s steps to economic transformation really happened. Read more of this post

No Quick Fixes for China’s Overwhelmed Organ Transplant System

NOVEMBER 10, 2013, 7:15 PM

No Quick Fixes for China’s Overwhelmed Organ Transplant System

By AUSTIN RAMZY

Suffering from bile duct cancer and with no family to support him and little money for treatment, Xu Bao, 35, vowed that if he suffered an early death he would give something back to society. He decided that he would donate his corneas to fellow Chinese waiting for transplants. It was a remarkable gesture in a country where organ donations are rare, and executed prisoners have been the main source of transplant organs. Local news media in Hefei, the city where Mr. Xu was being treated, gathered at his hospital bedside in April to report as he signed documents declaring his intentions. Representatives from two organizations, the Red Cross Society of China office in Mr. Xu’s home province of Anhui and the Aier Ophthalmology Hospital, came to finalize the arrangements. Read more of this post

Reform, Ahoy? A Newspaper Heralds New Horizons for the Chinese Ship of State

NOVEMBER 8, 2013, 4:29 AM

Reform, Ahoy? A Newspaper Heralds New Horizons for the Chinese Ship of State

By DIDI KIRSTEN TATLOW

A leading Beijing newspaper has published a hefty, 96-page report titled “Reform: Setting Off Again” the day before hundreds of China’s Communist leaders were to begin a four-day meeting to discuss the country’s future. In an image freighted with symbolism, the cover of the supplement in The Beijing News on Friday showed a fully-rigged tall ship in choppy waters sailing straight into the future. To its left are rocks, threateningly close. The only way it can safely turn is right, or it could put distance between itself and the rocks by forging ahead, a set of choices that left some wondering if this was a political message. The Beijing News didn’t return calls seeking an interview with the artist or comment from the newspaper. Read more of this post

FT: An exclusive interview with the Dalai Lama

November 7, 2013 11:03 pm

An exclusive interview with the Dalai Lama

By Amy Kazmin

‘I always pray the Chinese leadership should develop more common sense’

Iarrive in Dharamsala, the Indian home of Tibet’s exiled spiritual leader the Dalai Lama, groggy after an overnight train journey from New Delhi and a two-hour drive into the Himalayas. The weather is grey and drizzly but the mood is festive as crowds flock to Tsuglagkhang Temple, where the Dalai Lama is giving a three-day public teaching on a 14th-century Buddhist text about the path to enlightenment. Read more of this post

Strange Doings on the Sun; Scientists say that solar activity is odder than in a century or more, with the sun producing barely half the number of sunspots as expected and its magnetic poles out of sync

Strange Doings on the Sun

Sunspots, Which Can Harm Electronics on Earth, Are Half the Number Expected

The sun should be at the climax of its usual 11-year cycle of activity, but solar physicists are puzzled by its mellow solar maximum. WSJ’s Robert Lee Hotz reports.

ROBERT LEE HOTZ

Nov. 10, 2013 7:25 p.m. ET

NA-BY856_FLIP_G_20131110184816

Something is up with the sun. Scientists say that solar activity is stranger than in a century or more, with the sun producing barely half the number of sunspots as expected and its magnetic poles oddly out of sync. The sun generates immense magnetic fields as it spins. Sunspots—often broader in diameter than Earth—mark areas of intense magnetic force that brew disruptive solar storms. These storms may abruptly lash their charged particles across millions of miles of space toward Earth, where they can short-circuit satellites, smother cellular signals or damage electrical systems.

Read more of this post

Report Raises Concerns on Robotic Surgery Device

Report Raises Concerns on Robotic Surgery Device

THOMAS M. BURTON

Updated Nov. 8, 2013 8:06 p.m. ET

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Surgeons in Paris using the da Vinci Surgical System in March 2012. A new analysis raised safety concerns. ABK/BSIP/Corbis

A robotic-surgery device called the da Vinci Surgical System is linked to “an overall increasing trend in the rate of injury and death reports” since 2004, according to a draft analysis of such events reported to the Food and Drug Administration. The draft analysis, by the chief of adult cardiac surgery at Rush University Medical Center and co-authors from the University of Illinois and Massachusetts Institute of Technology, focused on all adverse-event reports made to the FDA from January 2000 through last December. The da Vinci device is made by Intuitive Surgical Inc., ISRG +2.70% of Sunnyvale, Calif. Read more of this post

Iskandar’s property investment appeal ‘likely to decline’

Iskandar’s property investment appeal ‘likely to decline’

SINGAPORE — The clock is ticking for Singaporeans who want to buy a mass-market home in the booming Iskandar region, as foreigners will only be able to buy properties in Malaysia priced above RM1 million (S$390,000) from next year.

BY LEE YEN NEE –

4 HOURS 25 MIN AGO

SINGAPORE — The clock is ticking for Singaporeans who want to buy a mass-market home in the booming Iskandar region, as foreigners will only be able to buy properties in Malaysia priced above RM1 million (S$390,000) from next year. At that threshold, Singaporeans will not be able to buy the sort of property that they have been snapping up in droves. As a result, the region’s position as a top investment destination may take a hit, said analysts. Read more of this post

Will Jellyfish Take Over the World?

Will Jellyfish Take Over the World?

Are jellyfish massing against humankind? Not really; it just seems that way. They may be sending us a message, though.

Enormous aggregations of the diaphanous sea creatures have been wreaking havoc from shore to shore — clogging water intake valves on seaside power plants, destroying fish farms, crowding fishing nets and, yes, stinging people (sometimes fatally). It’s nothing personal. Jellyfish, lacking brains, do not wish us harm. They’re merely going about their lives as they have for more than half a billion years: swimming, eating and reproducing, lately in mind-boggling numbers. Read more of this post

The Singapore Exchange (SGX) is mulling new rules on penny stocks after last month’s meltdown in these counters caused huge losses to some investors

SGX looking at new penny stock rules

Monday, November 11, 2013 – 06:00

Anita Gabriel

The Straits Times

SINGAPORE – The Singapore Exchange (SGX) is mulling new rules on penny stocks after last month’s meltdown in these counters caused huge losses to some investors. SGX chief executive Magnus Bocker acknowledged that the saga, which wiped out billions of dollars in market value, has harmed the bourse’s reputation. “Is it reasonable to trade stocks that are denominated in a few cents? I don’t think so. Some markets in the world have rules on how low the price of a stock can be,” he told The Straits Times on Wednesday. Read more of this post

Dengue dread spreads to Singapore’s Orchard Road’s offices, homes

Dengue dread spreads to Orchard’s offices, homes

Monday, November 11, 2013 – 08:37

My Paper

SINGAPORE – The Orchard Road lights are up and ready to usher in the Christmas festivities. But an unwelcome visitor is threatening to spoil the party. The number of dengue cases in the Orchard Cluster continues to climb, hitting 82 on Friday. What’s more, the threat no longer seems limited to the Orchard Gateway construction site, as an increasing number of individuals working and living in the area have started falling prey to the mosquito menace. Read more of this post

Biting the hand that feeds: India’s small towns favor opposition

Biting the hand that feeds: India’s small towns favor opposition

4:07pm EST

By Krishna N Das and Shyamantha Asokan

KASBA BONLI, India (Reuters) – Kasba Bonli is a newly prosperous market town in the northern Indian state of Rajasthan and it should be a perfect advertisement for the ruling Congress party’s pro-farmer policies. Instead the buzz in the bazaar is for the opposition. In just a few years, handouts for farmers by Congress have helped turn the once-deprived village into a thriving retail centre, selling everything from glittery bangles to satellite dishes. Read more of this post

Hong Kong Luxury Property Prices Choked by Tightening

Hong Kong Luxury Property Prices Choked by Tightening

Hong Kong businessman Raymond Chiu says he has perfect credit and is prepared to spend about HK$16 million ($2 million) on a 1,000-square-foot apartment in the city’s Mid-Levels residential area. There’s just one catch. The government requires a 50 percent down payment. That’s “really putting us off,” said Chiu, 45, who owns an information technology consulting company. “I run a business so cash flow is important. It’s frustrating because this is non-negotiable, though I have perfect credit history.” Read more of this post

China’s cautious land-reform tests cast doubt on big urban vision

China’s cautious land-reform tests cast doubt on big urban vision

4:13pm EST

By Kevin Yao

CHENGDU, China (Reuters) – Tan Yingyu is one of China’s 200 million migrant workers and like many he is stuck: he does not want to return to his village but also cannot become a legal resident in the city of Chengdu, where he has worked for nearly 20 years. His dilemma highlights a key issue for China’s reformist leaders as they look for ways to encourage more people to move to cities to help turn a credit- and investment-driven economy into a consumer-powered one. Read more of this post

China’s Building Push Goes Underground

China’s Building Push Goes Underground

Party Leaders Signal Subway Expansions Are About Urbanization, Not Infrastructure Binging

JAMES T. AREDDY

Nov. 10, 2013 7:57 p.m. ET

KUNSHAN, China—Twenty years ago, China’s Communist Party leadership earmarked money for an expressway network modeled on the U.S. interstate highway system. A decade ago, they spent big on bullet trains. As a fresh team of Chinese leaders gathers this week in Beijing to lay out broad economic goals, the effort to keep China moving has shifted underground, with dozens of cities spending billions of dollars on subway systems. Read more of this post

Nokia’s Ollila had been surrounded by “sycophants who had no competence to address software challenges.”; Nokia’s fall should be a cautionary tale

Nokia’s fall should be a cautionary tale

Monday, November 11, 2013 – 09:04

AFP

HELSINKI – In just five years Nokia fell from dominating the mobile phone industry to abandoning the handset business, a swift fall from grace with lessons for market leaders. The story of Nokia, now at the toughest stage of the restructuring cycle, is a particularly salutary business case about the fast-moving, high-risk, high-reward, tech sector for hip consumer goods. Read more of this post

Twitter Puts Spotlight on How Firms Burnish Results

Twitter Puts Spotlight on How Firms Burnish Results

MICHAEL RAPOPORT

Nov. 9, 2013 7:06 p.m. ET

Twitter Inc. TWTR -7.24% lost money in the first nine months of the year. But when the company used a different set of measurements, it posted a profit. The strong interest in Twitter’s initial public offering brought back to the fore the accounting methods that companies can use to burnish otherwise lackluster results. Twitter has recorded a loss of more than $130 million this year using traditional accounting measures. But after stripping out several costs, Twitter posted a nine-month profit of almost $31 million. Read more of this post

Amazon and J&J Clash Over Third-Party Sales; J&J Complained Damaged or Expired Products Were Sold on Site

Amazon and J&J Clash Over Third-Party Sales

J&J Complained Damaged or Expired Products Were Sold on Site

SERENA NG and JONATHAN D. ROCKOFF

Updated Nov. 10, 2013 8:22 p.m. ET

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Johnson & Johnson JNJ +1.47% and Amazon.com Inc. AMZN +1.96% are clashing over complaints that Amazon isn’t doing enough to prevent people from selling damaged or expired J&J products—Tylenol painkillers and Rogaine baldness treatments, among others—on its website. The behind-the-scenes dispute is a prime example of a widening fear among consumer-products companies: On the Internet, it is easier to lose control over a brand image. Read more of this post

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