The Next Front in Cancer Care; As More Patients Survive, Cancer Centers Handle Disease’s Knock-On Effects

The Next Front in Cancer Care

As More Patients Survive, Cancer Centers Handle Disease’s Knock-On Effects

LAURA LANDRO

Dec. 9, 2013 7:34 p.m. ET

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For cancer patients, getting through the rigors of treatment is the first hurdle. Then, life as a cancer survivor poses its own daunting physical and emotional challenges. A growing number of hospitals and community cancer centers, which treat the majority of the nation’s cancer patients, are launching survivorship-care programs. These include treatment follow-up plans, physical rehabilitation and emotional assistance, such as counseling and support groups. They resemble programs currently offered by big urban cancer centers like MD Anderson in Houston and Memorial Sloan-Kettering in New York. Read more of this post

Tata Steel’s Rise Isn’t Iron Clad

Tata Steel’s Rise Isn’t Iron Clad

Europe Is Reeling From Too Much Steel Capacity

ABHEEK BHATTACHARYA

Updated Dec. 13, 2013 3:59 a.m. ET

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Green shoots of economic revival in Europe and India are making Tata Steel500470.BY +0.20% investors euphoric. They may have gotten ahead of themselves. The Mumbai-listed steelmaker has become a play on the industrial sectors in both parts of the world. After Tata bought Britain’s Corus Steel in 2007, about 60% of its revenue comes from Europe, and most of the rest from India. Read more of this post

Big data can blind us to the long term

December 9, 2013 4:52 pm

Big data can blind us to the long term

By Andrew Hill

The numbers look good but without technical expertise and intuition do not add up to much

Before long, “everything that computes will connect, and everything that connects will compute”, Abhi Ingle, who spearheads innovation at AT&T, told last week’sFT Innovate America conference in Silicon Valley. Read more of this post

What Yahoo Didn’t Want Investors to Know

What Yahoo Didn’t Want Investors to Know

There have been two developments of note at Yahoo! Inc. this week. One was the news that Yahoo was forced to make an unflattering disclosure against its wishes, although investors don’t seem terribly unnerved by the information that came out. The other was an analyst’s report reminding investors that Yahoo’s value doesn’t have much to do with its core business anymore. Read more of this post

The spectre of flawed IT ought to scare us all; It is only when a system suffers a failure that the techies come into their own; One of the few CIOs to end up running a large corporate is Phil Clarke, the boss of Tesco

December 10, 2013 4:37 pm

The spectre of flawed IT ought to scare us all

By Luke Johnson

It is only when a system suffers a failure that the techies come into their own

Iam worried that most of my companies are not tech-savvy enough. Despite our bias towards sectors such as hospitality, technology needs to be front and centre in our thinking. From mobile meal ordering to digital menus to social media wizardry, the eating experience is being reinvented by technology. In the years ahead, any business that fails in its IT strategy will surely go broke. Read more of this post

Some Cisco investors urge an exit from set-top box unit

Some Cisco investors urge an exit from set-top box unit

7:04am EST

By Sinead Carew

NEW YORK (Reuters) – Cisco Systems Inc Chief Executive John Chambers is facing growing pressure from investors to exit its television set-top box business, where revenue has been plummeting and profit margins trail the rest of the company. The problem is that there are few obvious buyers for the unit – the former Scientific Atlanta that Cisco bought for $6.9 billion in 2005 – so Chambers might have no choice but to close the business, analysts said. Read more of this post

Netflix Says Binge Viewing is No ‘House of Cards’; Half the users it studied watch an entire season in one week.

Netflix Says Binge Viewing is No ‘House of Cards’

Half the users it studied watch an entire season in one week.

JOHN JURGENSEN

Dec. 12, 2013 8:26 p.m. ET

Netflix NFLX -0.91% is trying to better understand your binge-viewing habits. The company Friday will reveal a snapshot of a phenomenon that is reshaping TV culture—viewers devouring shows in lengthy chunks, episode after episode. Executives say they found a strikingly consistent pattern in the pace at which people binge: In general, about half the viewers studied finished a season (up to 22 episodes) within one week Read more of this post

Microsoft’s Xbox One Sales Hit 2 Million Amid Race to Catch Sony

Microsoft’s Xbox One Sales Hit 2 Million Amid Race to Catch Sony

Microsoft Corp. (MSFT) said sales of the new Xbox One video-game console reached more than 2 million in its first 18 days on the market, as the company vies to keep pace with Sony Corp.’s PlayStation 4 during the holiday season. Sony said on Dec. 3 that it had sold 2.1 million of its machines since they went on sale Nov. 15 in North America. Microsoft, which introduced Xbox One on Nov. 22 in 13 countries, is selling pretty much every console it can get into stores and has “aggressive” plans to restock, said David Dennis, a spokesman for Xbox, in an interview yesterday. Read more of this post

How LinkedIn Manages Hyper-growth over the Long-term

How LinkedIn Manages Hyper-growth over the Long-term

Dec 10, 2013

The last few years have seen the emergence of a number of successful public technology companies. The social networking site LinkedIn would likely be at the top of many of those rankings. Read more of this post

Google Puts Money on Robots, Using the Man Behind Android

December 4, 2013

Google Puts Money on Robots, Using the Man Behind Android

By JOHN MARKOFF

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PALO ALTO, Calif. — In an out-of-the-way Google office, two life-size humanoid robots hang suspended in a corner. If Amazon can imagine delivering books by drones, is it too much to think that Google might be planning to one day have one of the robots hop off an automated Google Car and race to your doorstep to deliver a package? Read more of this post

Google Adds to Its Menagerie of Robots; Boston Dynamics’ four-legged robot named WildCat can gallop at high speeds.

December 14, 2013

Google Adds to Its Menagerie of Robots

By JOHN MARKOFF

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Boston Dynamics’ four-legged robot named WildCat can gallop at high speeds.

SAN FRANCISCO — BigDog, Cheetah, WildCat and Atlas have joined Google’s growing robot menagerie. Google confirmed on Friday that it had completed the acquisition of Boston Dynamics, an engineering company that has designed mobile research robots for the Pentagon. The company, based in Waltham, Mass., has gained an international reputation for machines that walk with an uncanny sense of balance and even — cheetahlike — run faster than the fastest humans. Read more of this post

Future technology is bright, says Intel guru Steve Brown

Future technology is bright, says Intel guru Steve Brown

December 12, 2013

Katie Cincotta

I can see clearly now: Intel futurist Steve Brown says our evolving computers are on the brink of some big advances. here is something evocative, almost spiritual, about someone who gets to have the title ”chief evangelist and futurist” on their business card. Steve Brown is that person, the professional crystal-ball gazer for Intel. He has been a researcher at the computer giant’s semi-conductor super-site in Oregon, in the US Pacific north-west, for more than 28 years, looking ahead as many as 10 or 15 years to see what’s in store for consumer and business technology. Read more of this post

Alibaba, Samsung making own version of Google Glass: Sources

Alibaba, Samsung making own version of Google Glas: Sources

Thursday, December 12, 2013 – 09:52

Kim Ji-hyun

The Korea Herald/Asia News Network

SEOUL – Jack Ma, founder of Alibaba Group, China’s largest online trading company, on Wednesday met with Samsung Electronics executives including mobile chief Shin Jong-kyun. While Samsung remained tight-lipped on the matter, sources said the two sides had much to talk about, including Alibaba’s ambitions to manufacture its own version of the Google Glass – a wearable computer fitted with an optical head-mounted display that is to serve as a ubiquitous computer. Read more of this post

After Setbacks, Online Courses Are Rethought

December 10, 2013

After Setbacks, Online Courses Are Rethought

By TAMAR LEWIN

Two years after a Stanford professor drew 160,000 students from around the globe to a free online course on artificial intelligence, starting what was widely viewed as a revolution in higher education, early results for such large-scale courses are disappointing, forcing a rethinking of how college instruction can best use the Internet. Read more of this post

Lessons From a Hot Market: Stocks are booming. But don’t get smug. Here’s what you can learn from this year’s rally

Lessons From a Hot Market

Stocks are booming. But don’t get smug. Here’s what you can learn from this year’s rally.

LIAM PLEVEN

Dec. 13, 2013 6:56 p.m. ET

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The stock market is teaching investors some valuable lessons in 2013. But in order to make the most of them, you should first acknowledge that this year’s outsize gains don’t necessarily make you a genius. It is easy to feel smart during a broad, sustained rally. Major U.S. stock indexes are up at least 20% to 30% in 2013, on top of double-digit increases last year. Foreign markets are mixed, but Japan and Germany are among those that have risen sharply. Read more of this post

Samsung Shifts Plants From China to Protect Margins

Samsung Shifts Plants From China to Protect Margins

Samsung Electronics Co. (005930) built the world’s largest smartphone business by tapping China’s cheap and abundant workforce. Not for much longer: it’s shifting output to Vietnam to secure even lower wages and defend profit margins as growth in sales of high-end handsets slows. By the time a new $2 billion plant reaches full production in 2015, China’s communist neighbor will be making more than 40 percent of the phones that generate the majority of Samsung’s operating profit. The Suwon, South Korea-based company’s second handset factory in Vietnam is due to begin operations in February, according to a Nov. 22 statement on the local government’s website. Read more of this post

In Japan, traditionally a land of subtle smells, Scented Fabric Softeners Wrinkle Some Noses

In Japan, Scented Fabric Softeners Wrinkle Some Noses

Boom in Strong Fragrances Has Raised a Stink

MAYUMI NEGISHI and PHRED DVORAK

Updated Dec. 13, 2013 5:15 a.m. ET

TOKYO—Japan’s environment ministry came up with a novel suggestion earlier this year for women sweating out the summer in hot, energy-scrimping offices. “Combat body odor,” the ministry suggested in a tip-filled Web page touting its turn-up-the-thermostat campaign, “by using scented fabric softener.” In the fragrance-happy U.S., that would have been just so much background scent, but in Japan—traditionally a land of subtle smells—it raised quite a stink. Call it the war of the noses. Read more of this post

How Japan Is Winning in Mobile Games ;Publishers Master the Psychology of Payments in a Country Conditioned to Buy on Phones

How Japan Is Winning in Mobile Games

Publishers Master the Psychology of Payments in a Country Conditioned to Buy on Phones

MAYUMI NEGISHI

Updated Dec. 11, 2013 3:38 a.m. ET

TOKYO—Like many other mobile games, “PokoPang” features cartoonish animals and requires players to defeat monsters. Hironori Tomobe, data scientist at Mobage game platform operator DeNA Co., talks about how big data is used to retain users and to improve long-term profits in an exclusive interview with the Wall Street Journal. But the puzzle game—little known outside Japan—stands out for its developer’s ability to conquer revenue. Read more of this post

Abe Breaks Micro-Farms to End Japan Agriculture Slide: Economy

Abe Breaks Micro-Farms to End Japan Agriculture Slide: Economy

Takashi Nakajima earns $100,000 a year growing lettuces, employs Chinese laborers to harvest them, and has four months off in winter to indulge his passion for speed skating. He’s the result of a protected farming system that Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe is about to dismantle. Read more of this post

Reimagining India: Google’s executive chairman expresses optimism about India’s technology sector but urges companies to prioritize domestic excellence over global dominance

Reimagining India: A conversation with Eric Schmidt

Google’s executive chairman expresses optimism about India’s technology sector but urges companies to prioritize domestic excellence over global dominance.

December 2013

Google openedInterview transcript its first office in India almost a decade ago, and executive chairman Eric Schmidt has since watched the country’s technology sector expand rapidly. In this video interview, Schmidt is optimistic about the role technology can continue to play in India’s development but warns that the regulatory environment must keep improving. This interview was conducted by James Manyika, a director in McKinsey’s San Francisco office, and what follows is an edited transcript of Eric Schmidt’s remarks. Read more of this post

Reimagining India: The global CEO of Ogilvy Public Relations Worldwide discusses the difficulties in simultaneously promoting India as exotic and amazing to tourists, while assuring foreign investors of the country’s stability and potential

Reimagining India: A conversation with Christopher Graves

The global CEO of Ogilvy Public Relations Worldwide discusses the difficulties in simultaneously promoting India as exotic and amazing to tourists, while assuring foreign investors of the country’s stability and potential.

December 2013

Launched in 2002, Ogilvy & Mather’s “Incredible !ndia” marketing campaign—with its now-iconic exclamation mark—increased the size of the country’s tourism industry more than fivefold in barely a decade. Yet as Ogilvy Public Relations Worldwide global CEO Christopher Graves explains in this video interview, foreign and portfolio investors aren’t looking for “incredible”; they want a stable and reliable investment climate. What follows is an edited transcript of Graves’s remarks. Read more of this post

Reimagining India: MIT Sloan School of Management professor Yasheng Huang warns of the dangers of India’s reliance on the IT sector for economic growth, calling for regulatory reforms and greater investment in basic services

Reimagining India: A conversation with Yasheng Huang

MIT Sloan School of Management professor Yasheng Huang warns of the dangers of India’s reliance on the IT sector for economic growth, calling for regulatory reforms and greater investment in basic services.

November 2013

Needed reforms

Leapfrogging wisely

India is known globally for the rise of its information-technology and software industry. Yet in this video interview, Yasheng Huang, a professor of global economics and management at MIT’s Sloan School of Management and essayist from Reimagining India: Unlocking the Potential of Asia’s Next Superpower(Simon & Schuster, November 2013), warns the country against becoming too dependent on those sectors. He argues India’s potential will only be realized if the country develops its manufacturing and services sectors, which requires labor-market reforms and significant investments in both education and social services. Without those, India will not only face growing social inequality but could also jeopardize its pipeline of college-ready students critical to the high-tech industry. What follows is an edited transcript of his remarks. Read more of this post

Rajan Faces India Rate Quandary as CPI Tops 11% Amid Growth Woes

Rajan Faces India Rate Quandary as CPI Tops 11% Amid Growth Woes

India’s consumer-price inflation exceeded 11 percent last month, adding pressure on central bank Governor Raghuram Rajan to raise interest rates again next week even as industrial output slid more than expected. Consumer prices rose a more-than-estimated 11.24 percent in November from a year earlier, official data yesterday showed. Most economists in a Bloomberg News survey predict Rajan will hold the benchmark interest rate at 7.75 percent in a policy decision due Dec. 18, after raising it 50 basis points since he took over the Reserve Bank of India in September. Read more of this post

Narendra Modi could be India’s Shinzo Abe

Narendra Modi could be India’s Shinzo Abe

Tue, Dec 10 2013

(The author is a Reuters Breakingviews columnist. The opinions expressed are his own)

By Andy Mukherjee

SINGAPORE, Dec 10 (Reuters Breakingviews) – Narendra Modi could be India’s Shinzo Abe. If the recent state polls are any indicator of the electorate’s mood, the opposition politician will be prime minister of the world’s largest democracy by May next year. Just like his Japanese counterpart, Modi would oversee higher asset prices and revive growth, but struggle with structural reforms. Read more of this post

India toughens insider trading rules

India toughens insider trading rules

Wed, Dec 11 2013

By Himank Sharma

MUMBAI (Reuters) – India’s financial market regulator unveiled new proposals on Wednesday, broadening the scope of who can be held liable for insider trading violations, as it steps up its fight against securities fraud. The Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) plans to include company employees, directors and their immediate relatives and other stakeholders such as founders, handling market sensitive information under its purview. Read more of this post

India Readies Big Move Into Solar Energy

India Readies Big Move Into Solar Energy

Proposed 4,000-Megawatt Plant in Rajasthan Would Power Homes in the Northwest

BIMAN MUKHERJI

Dec. 13, 2013 9:03 p.m. ET

SAMBHAR, India—Here on the shores of a salt-water lake in the desert state of Rajasthan, India hopes to build a solar-power station that eventually will dwarf the world’s largest such plants under construction today. Read more of this post

‘An Uncertain Glory’ by Jean Drèze and Amartya Sen | ‘Transforming India’ by Sumantra Bose

‘An Uncertain Glory’ by Jean Drèze and Amartya Sen | ‘Transforming India’ by Sumantra Bose

Indian reformers did not sell their liberal reforms to the people, who concluded the free market helps the rich alone.

GURCHARAN DAS

Dec. 13, 2013 5:44 p.m. ET

Two and a half years ago India was the envy of the world. It had survived the global financial crisis, and its economy was growing at a rate of 9% a year, creating masses of jobs and lifting millions out of poverty. This happy situation was the reward of free-market reforms that began in 1991. As government reduced the regulatory shackles on business, dozens of innovative firms emerged that competed brutally at home and began to succeed on the global stage. India’s governments after 1991 kept reforming, if slowly. Even slow reforms added up to make India the world’s second fastest-growing economy. Read more of this post

Americans Say Dream Fading as Income Gap Hurts Chances

Americans Say Dream Fading as Income Gap Hurts Chances

The widening gap between rich and poor is eroding faith in the American dream.

By almost two to one — 64 percent to 33 percent — Americans say the U.S. no longer offers everyone an equal chance to get ahead, according to a Bloomberg National Poll. And some say the government isn’t doing much to help. Read more of this post

Hong Kong’s cooling measures force real estate agents out of jobs

Hong Kong’s cooling measures force real estate agents out of jobs

HONG KONG — Ms Chu Kin Lan has already closed six out of 11 offices of her Hong Kong real estate agency, whose Chinese name translates as Precious Prosperity, and let go of half of her 70 employees amid the city’s toughest curbs on home buying in its history. But the worst pain may be still to come.

22 HOURS 51 MIN AGO

HONG KONG — Ms Chu Kin Lan has already closed six out of 11 offices of her Hong Kong real estate agency, whose Chinese name translates as Precious Prosperity, and let go of half of her 70 employees amid the city’s toughest curbs on home buying in its history. But the worst pain may be still to come. Read more of this post

Shirt tales from TAL, an apparel powerhouse

December 11, 2013 5:54 pm

Shirt tales from TAL, an apparel powerhouse

By Demetri Sevastopulo

Tailor-made: Harry Lee is now chairman of TAL, while his son Roger is chief executive

When Harry Lee took over TAL, a Hong Kong apparel company that manufactures shirts and trousers for dozens of big global brands in 1980, one of the first challenges he tackled was bribery. Read more of this post