Online Courses Fail to Reach Poor Students as Richest Benefit

Online Courses Fail to Reach Poor Students as Richest Benefit

Most people taking free online courses worldwide are among the best-educated and wealthiest of the population, casting doubt on the idea that the classes will benefit the disenfranchised, a survey showed. More than half of those taking massive open online courses, or MOOCs, were men and the majority were already employed, according to Ezekiel Emanuel, vice provost for Global Initiatives at the University of Pennsylvania and one of the authors of the correspondence piece in today’s journal Nature. Read more of this post

Intel CEO says contract manufacturing business to expand

Intel CEO says contract manufacturing business to expand

4:15pm EST

By Noel Randewich

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) – Intel CEO Brian Krzanich said on Thursday he planned to expand his company’s small contract manufacturing business, paving the way for more chipmakers to tap into the world’s most advanced process technology. With Intel far behind rivals in making chips for smartphones and tablets, many on Wall Street have urged the company to expand its contract manufacturing business, which currently contributes little to its overall revenue, and to open its factories to high-volume clients making mobile chips. Read more of this post

Here’s The $8 Billion Ending To Steve Jobs’ Failed Attempt To Kill Dropbox

Here’s The $8 Billion Ending To Steve Jobs’ Failed Attempt To Kill Dropbox

JIM EDWARDS NOV. 20, 2013, 10:33 AM 8,260 14

We now have the full story of how Apple founder Steve Jobs vowed in 2011 to kill Dropbox, the so-simple-it’s-addictive cloud storage company. Jobs failed, of course. Dropbox just raised another round of investment funding which values the company at a staggering $8 billion. And it has $200 million in revenues. Meanwhile, the product that Jobs developed in order to punish Dropbox for not agreeing to be acquired by Apple — iCloud — is a confusing also-ran in the cloud storage wars. Dropbox CEO Drew Houston retold the story of his meeting with Jobs to Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff yesterday, at the latter company’s big conference, according to IT Business: “I kind of couldn’t believe it when the meeting was getting set up,” Houston recalls from the Jobs encounter. Typing the address for 1 Infinite Loop, the Apple headquarters, on his iPhone for directions, he realized the address was already pre-stored on the device. Read more of this post

Google’s stores are a lame challenge to the magic of Apple’s retail stores

Google’s stores are a lame challenge to the magic of Apple’s retail stores.

By Dominic Basulto, Updated: November 21 at 9:43 am

When it comes to innovative brick-and-mortar retail concepts, it’s hard to argue with the success of the Apple retail store, which was first launched in 2001. While the Apple store concept may not be as buzzy as when it launched more than a decade ago, the fact remains that not a single tech competitor has been able to come up with a retail concept superior to it. So, when Google announced that it was establishing a series of Winter Wonderlab pop-up stores across the country for the holidays, it was only natural to ask: Had Google finally created a radically new retail concept to challenge Apple’s brick-and-mortar stores? Read more of this post

Gadget start-ups are a neat fit for investors

November 20, 2013 5:36 pm

Gadget start-ups are a neat fit for investors

By Tim Bradshaw in San Francisco

New electronics start-ups that aim to demystify how computers and gadgets are created are beginning to emerge from the “maker” movement of tech hobbyists. littleBits, which sells electronics modules such as lights and sensors that can be easily combined to create DIY gadgets, said on Wednesday it had raised $11.1m in new venture capital. The funds will help the New York-based company to expand its kits, which include a modular synthesiser in partnership with music company Korg and $99 “exploration” starter packs that include motors, buzzers and LEDs, all of which can be snapped together using magnets. Read more of this post

For Intel, Hollywood dreams prove a leap too far

For Intel, Hollywood dreams prove a leap too far

3:54pm EST

By Noel Randewich, Ronald Grover and Liana B. Baker

(Reuters) – Earlier this year, Intel Corp rented temporary retail space in New York, Los Angeles and Chicago for a splashy launch of Intel TV, a new Internet entertainment service that the chipmaker promised could revolutionize the television industry. But when customers walk into those stores this holiday season, they will not find any set-top TV boxes or programming services for sale. Instead, they will see ultra thin laptops and new tablets from a variety of vendors that Intel hopes will help boost its massive but flagging computer chip business. Read more of this post

EXCLUSIVE: How Snapchat Plans To Make Money; Already, more photos are shared on Snapchat than on Facebook

EXCLUSIVE: How Snapchat Plans To Make Money

HENRY BLODGET NOV. 20, 2013, 10:02 AM 20,847 28

Last week, news broke that a ~2.5 year old company called Snapchat had rejected an all-cash $3 billion takeover offer from Facebook. Predictably, the cat-calls and howls of indignation began. Snapchat and its investors were obviously delusional idiots, Twitter pundits agreed. And arrogant! How else could they pass on a crazy offer from a “desperate” Facebook? Snapchat doesn’t even have revenue. Even a one billion dollar offer for a company like that was “insane,” let alone a three billion-dollar offer. If anyone needed confirmation that we’re right back in a “tech bubble,” this was it. Read more of this post

Dropbox has the sort of subscription-based business model that many investors prefer to reliance on advertising. Users who want more than a free 2GB of storage pay $99 a year. Few people choose to pay, though

November 20, 2013 12:33 pm

Value of cloud in spotlight as Dropbox seeks funding

By Richard Waters

Dropbox has more to do to convince Wall Street to pay a premium

Even amid the current mania for investing in internet companies, there are few more intriguing cases than the cloud storage providers. Saving your pictures or other files, synching them across devices and creating back-up copies sound like the kind of tedious tasks that few people would want to spend much time thinking about, let alone actually pay for. Should not this kind of thing just, well, happen? Read more of this post

Bill Gates Should Return to Lead Microsoft, Charles Schwab Says

Bill Gates Should Return to Lead Microsoft, Schwab Says

Bill Gates should serve as Microsoft Corp.’s chief executive officer for a year as the software company he co-founded seeks a replacement for Steve Ballmer, according to Charles Schwab. The world’s largest software maker is seeking a new leader after Ballmer said in August that he would retire within a year. The management change is happening as Microsoft adopts a new corporate structure focused on devices and services. Read more of this post

Amazon tests techie comedy ‘Betas’ in original programming push

Amazon tests techie comedy ‘Betas’ in original programming push

5:58pm EST

By Piya Sinha-Roy

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) – When online retail giant Amazon decided to join Netflix and Hulu in the online original programming race, it didn’t have to look further than its own tech backyard to find a world ripe for comedy. “Betas,” starring newcomers Joe Dinicol, Karan Soni and Charlie Saxton as dating app entrepreneurs, explores the hyper- ambition that vibrates among the inhabitants of Northern California’s tech-savvy Bay Area. Read more of this post

Acer Founder Returns to Lead Computer Maker After Record Loss

Acer Founder Returns to Lead Computer Maker After Record Loss

Acer Inc. (2353) founder Stan Shih returned to the company he started in 1976 after a record loss and the resignation of leaders he’d entrusted with its management. Shih returns as chairman without a salary while Jim Wong, president since 2011, resigned his post and will not take up the role of chief executive officer vacated by J.T. Wang, Acer said in a statement yesterday. The company said Nov. 5 Wong would become CEO while Wang would remain chairman until June. Read more of this post

Can Singapore’s political model be transplanted into China?

Can Singapore’s political model be transplanted into China?

Thursday, November 21, 2013 – 08:10

Li Xueying

Hong Kong Correspondent

The Straits Times

For years, the Chinese government sent thousands of officials to be trained in Singapore’s universities, trying to tease out how their country can emulate the Singapore system that combines a dominant-party rule with an open economy. At the end of their course, they “remain unconvinced that we have told them everything”, says Straits Times journalist Peh Shing Huei, recounting what a Singapore diplomat once told him. Read more of this post

Asian credit hedge fund manager Blue Rice Investment Management to close

Asian credit hedge fund manager Blue Rice Investment Management to close

BY DOUGLAS APPELL | NOVEMBER 20, 2013 3:40 AM | UPDATED 12:45 PM

Blue Rice Investment Management, a hedge fund manager focused on Asian credit, will return capital to investors and close down by the end of 2013. In a telephone interview, Guan Ong, founder and principal of Blue Rice, said the likelihood of a long period of market turbulence as the U.S. Federal Reserve “tapers” its monetary stimulus made “doing the right thing” by investors while they’re still enjoying gains for the year the best option. Read more of this post

Italian-Thai ditched as Thailand, Myanmar seize Dawei special economic development zone

Italian-Thai ditched as Thailand, Myanmar seize Dawei development zone

Thursday, November 21, 2013 – 19:10

Reuters

BANGKOK – Thailand and Myanmar seized control on Thursday of the multi-billion dollar Dawei special economic zone from Italian Thai Development Pcl to rescue the floundering project and convince foreign investors to finally come on board. The takeover of the strategically located complex, billed as a gateway for trade with Southeast Asia, follows years of delays that have been blamed largely on the Thai firm’s failure to secure private investment and agree on a power source for the 250 sq km (100 sq mile) deep-sea port, petrochemical and heavy industry hub. “If ITD continues, it’s impossible for new investors to come in,” Set Aung, a former economist and now a deputy central bank governor in Myanmar, said during a meeting of Thai and Myanmar officials in Bangkok on Thursday. Read more of this post

Vietnamese Lessons for Burma; What Asia’s new investment hot spot can learn from the successes—and failures—of the last Big Thing

Vietnamese Lessons for Burma

What Asia’s new investment hot spot can learn from the successes—and failures—of the last Big Thing.

CURTIS S. CHIN AND JOSE B. COLLAZO

Nov. 20, 2013 11:42 a.m. ET

There’s an undeniable buzz about Burma among business leaders these days, with investors betting on the long-stagnant economy becoming the next Asian tiger. But as exciting as this situation is, it helps to recall that it is not unprecedented. The case to study is Vietnam, another once-hot economy that has fallen out of favor, and now offers investors pointers on things to watch out for in Burma, as well as tips to Burma’s leaders on traps to avoid. Read more of this post

KL plans sharp hike in tax on homes

KL plans sharp hike in tax on homes

Wednesday, Nov 20, 2013

Pauline Ng

The Business Times/MyPaper

KUALA LUMPUR – Kuala Lumpur property owners, an estimated 10-16 per cent of whom are foreigners, are facing sharply higher assessment payments of up to 300 per cent, following the latest move by City Hall (DBKL) to boost its coffers. DBKL’s “Notice of revision of valuation list” has been posted to home owners, detailing the proposed annual value on which assessment is payable. Read more of this post

Sony says to make fewer films as it shifts to television

Updated: Friday November 22, 2013 MYT 11:00:48 AM

Sony says to make fewer films as it shifts to television

LOS ANGELES:  Sony Pictures Entertainment will produce fewer films as it makes a “significant” shift from motion pictures to higher-margin television production and to operating TV channels, Sony Corp executives told investors gathered at the company’s Culver City, California, studio lot. The declaration came as Sony battles to win investor support after a letter from hedge fund investor Daniel Loeb in May called on Sony to spin off to investors a portion of its entertainment business and take steps to improve the studio’s profitability. Read more of this post

Yellen Should Focus on Innovation, Not Inflation

Yellen Should Focus on Innovation, Not Inflation

President Barack Obama has shown a determination to redistribute wealth by increasing government spending, despite unsustainable deficits. We shouldn’t be surprised if Janet Yellen, the president’s nominee to be Federal Reserve chairman, shares his objective. After 30 years of Fed chairmen who pursued anti-inflationary policies, the central bank is now attempting to engineer an unexpected bout of inflation. One consequence of this policy is that it transfers wealth from lenders to borrowers. Yellen, whose nomination could be put to a Senate vote the week of Dec. 9, will probably redouble these efforts. Read more of this post

Wall Street’s Short Sellers Are Salivating Waiting For This Bubble To Pop; “Short selling as a strategy is like an umbrella. People don’t think they need one until it starts to rain and they get wet.”

Wall Street’s Short Sellers Are Salivating Waiting For This Bubble To Pop

LAWRENCE DELEVIGNECNBC
NOV. 20, 2013, 10:39 AM 4,053 2

With the Dow Jones industrial average flirting with 16,000, hedge fund managers that focus on betting against stocks see a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to make money on what they see as an epic equity bubble. “This is it. It’s the bottom of the ninth and we’re about to hit a home run,” said John Fichthorn, co-founder of Dialectic Capital Management and an expert on shorting stocks. “I believe this is the best opportunity I will see in my life as a short seller.” Read more of this post

Virtual-Currency Craze Spawns Bitcoin Wannabes; Entrants Include Litecoin, Worldcoin and Even Bbqcoin; a Ticket to Fortune?

Virtual-Currency Craze Spawns Bitcoin Wannabes

Entrants Include Litecoin, Worldcoin and Even Bbqcoin; a Ticket to Fortune?

JOE LIGHT

Updated Nov. 20, 2013 9:00 p.m. ET

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Owner Taylor Minor waits on customers at Stoney Creek Roasters in Cedarville, Ohio, which accepts a form of payment called bbqcoin. Ty Wright for The Wall Street Journal 

Gary Thomas plans to get rich off virtual currencies—but not bitcoin. The electrical engineer is betting big on newcomers like alphacoin and fastcoin. Mr. Thomas started trading the digital currencies from his home outside Boston earlier this year. He said he is convinced this is his ticket to fortune, even after an earlier attempt—investing in Internet stocks during the dot-com bubble—ended in disaster. Read more of this post

Turning workers into capitalists: Employee share ownership has merit. But that does not justify further government incentives

Turning workers into capitalists: Employee share ownership has merit. But that does not justify further government incentives

Nov 23rd 2013 |From the print edition

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IN AN effort to rebuild New England’s cod industry after the war of independence, George Washington signed a law in 1792 giving shipowners “allowances” (ie, subsidies) to offset the tariffs they had to pay on their inputs. Two conditions were attached to the support: shipowners had to sign a profit-sharing agreement with their crew, with whom they also had to split the allowance. Thus one of America’s first tax breaks was designed to encourage owners to share profits with their workers. Read more of this post

The chief of Europe’s sixth-biggest PE group EQT urged his peers to “focus more on building companies than avoiding taxes” if they want to keep their licence to operate amid greater regulatory and political scrutiny of the sector

November 21, 2013 5:29 pm

Private equity groups told to alter focus

By Anne-Sylvaine Chassany in Paris

The chief of Europe’s sixth-biggest private equity group has urged his peers to “focus more on building companies than avoiding taxes” if they want to keep their licence to operate amid greater regulatory and political scrutiny of the sector. The plea made by Conni Jonsson, EQT’s managing partner, on Thursday at a conference in Paris was received with a warm round of applause, as private equity companies both in Europe and in the US face criticism from politicians and unions that they exploit tax loopholes to boost their returns. Read more of this post

Slowing buybacks could spell trouble for U.S. stocks

Slowing buybacks could spell trouble for U.S. stocks

12:20pm EST

By Chuck Mikolajczak

NEW YORK (Reuters) – With just over a month remaining in a year that has seen the S&P 500 rocket to new records, one of the rally’s drivers could have peaked: stock buybacks. In the last few years, major U.S. companies, including IBM, Apple and Exxon Mobil have dramatically boosted share repurchases. Overall, Federal Reserve data shows corporations are the primary buyer of equities – while pension funds, mutual funds and households have increasingly been sellers in recent years. Read more of this post

Pubs turns focus from property to staff; For a long time in the pub industry, the property market came before pubs. Whoever was running the pub – and how well they were doing it – did not matter

November 21, 2013 7:05 pm

Pubs turns focus from property to staff

By Duncan Robinson

For a long time in the pub industry, the property market came before pubs. Whoever was running the pub – and how well they were doing it – did not matter. “In the past, you used to churn the tenants,” says Stephen Billingham, executive chairman of Punch Taverns, which has 4,000 pubs across the UK. “If they failed, you brought in somebody new.” Read more of this post

Nobelist’s Valuation Measure Draws Questions

Nobelist’s Valuation Measure Draws Questions

ALEXANDRA SCAGGS

Nov. 21, 2013 12:06 p.m. ET

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Bubble-hunting economist Robert Shiller‘s stock-market valuation measure is waving a yellow flag, but there is a debate brewing over whether even that is too alarming a picture. Of 15 stock-market valuation measures tracked by Bank of America BAC +2.97% Merrill Lynch’s stock strategy team, Mr. Shiller’s cyclically adjusted price/earnings ratio is the only one above its long-term average. Read more of this post

Goodwill Testing May Soon Get Simpler for Private Companies

November 22, 2013, 3:14 AM ET

Goodwill Testing May Soon Get Simpler for Private Companies

EMILY CHASAN

Senior Editor

Annual tests companies use to check whether assets they have acquired have lost value and need to be written down could become simpler soon. The Financial Accounting Standards Board is set to decide on Monday whether to endorse changes proposed by its new Private Company Council that would let private firms choose to amortize so-called goodwill from past acquisitions on their balance sheets. The proposal would also allow simplify and limit the testing that triggers write-downs. Read more of this post

Get big or die trying: Finding a better way to deliver pensions

Get big or die trying: Finding a better way to deliver pensions

Nov 23rd 2013 |From the print edition

PENSION funds have had a pretty good 2013: rising share prices and higher bond yields have reduced their funding deficits. Nevertheless, the combined strains of volatile markets and improved longevity are causing the industry to have a rethink, as a World Bank conference in Cape Town revealed this week. Some funds in the Dutch system, long regarded as among the best in the world, have been forced to cut benefits to pensioners because of funding shortfalls. In Canada, the Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan, often praised for its sophistication, has had to reduce inflation protection for workers who retired after 2009—a cut in pensioners’ real incomes. Read more of this post

Fed Casts About for Endgame on Easy-Money Policy

Fed Casts About for Endgame on Easy-Money Policy

JON HILSENRATH and VICTORIA MCGRANE

Updated Nov. 20, 2013 3:35 p.m. ET

Federal Reserve officials, mindful of a still-fragile economy, are laboring to devise a strategy to avoid another round of market turmoil when they pull back on one of their signature easy-money programs in the months ahead. Central-bank officials have been debating for months when to start paring the $85 billion-a-month bond-purchase program. They were surprised during the summer when their discussions and public pronouncements on the potential timing rocked markets, pushing interest rates higher and stock prices down. Read more of this post

Every month that the Fed’s quantitative easing goes on, the exit strategy becomes more difficult and dangerous

Phil Gramm and Thomas R. Saving: Janet Yellen’s Greatest Challenge

Every month that the Fed’s quantitative easing goes on, the exit strategy becomes more difficult and dangerous.

PHIL GRAMM and THOMAS R. SAVING

Nov. 21, 2013 6:50 p.m. ET

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With the Senate Banking Committee on Thursday approving Janet Yellen‘s nomination to lead the Federal Reserve, her confirmation is virtually assured. Less certain is what Ms. Yellen ultimately intends to do with Fed policy on quantitative easing, now entering its 34th month. She is committed to maintaining QE for now, but does she have an exit strategy? The Fed needs one, because the economic stakes could not be higher. Read more of this post

Eurozone banks’ asset shedding hits SMEs

Last updated: November 19, 2013 7:23 pm

Eurozone banks’ asset shedding hits SMEs

By Christopher Thompson

Never mind the banks, the bigger impact of next year’s eurozone stress tests could be on small businesses. As banks shed assets ahead of the tests, pruning their assets, lending to companies across the single currency zone has suffered. And the scale of bank deleveraging yet to come is daunting. To comply with new capital requirements Royal Bank of Scotland estimates the eurozone’s biggest banks need to cut an additional €2.6tn from their balance sheets – at €31.3tn collectively in September, they remain among the biggest of any region in the world. That is on top of €3.5tn in asset cuts already made since May 2012. Read more of this post

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