Sony to Add Original TV Shows for PlayStation

Sony to Add Original TV Shows for PlayStation
Move Is Part of Effort to Broaden Console’s Appeal Beyond Videogames
AMOL SHARMA
March 19, 2014 7:23 p.m. ET
Sony Corp. 6758.TO +1.50% is venturing into original TV programming for its PlayStation as part of an ambitious effort to make the device a home for TV and not just videogames.
The electronics and entertainment giant plans to offer original series through the gaming console, on top of an online pay-TV service it plans for users of the device.

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Inditex Builds for the Future: Fashion Giant Continues to Invest in New Stores

Inditex Builds for the Future
Fashion Giant Continues to Invest in New Stores
CHRISTOPHER BJORK
Updated March 19, 2014 12:04 p.m. ET

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Pablo Isla at the new distribution hub in Cabanillas del Campo, Wednesday. Reuters
Zara parent Inditex’s CEO said the retailer will continue investing heavily. Shown, a distribution center near Madrid. Reuters
CABANILLAS DEL CAMPO—On dusty Spanish scrubland just outside Madrid, the world’s largest fashion retailer is laying bricks to support growth for the next decade. Read more of this post

Free Isn’t Easy for Higher Ed; Private Schools Push Back at Tennessee Plan for No-Cost Community College

Free Isn’t Easy for Higher Ed
Private Schools Push Back at Tennessee Plan for No-Cost Community College
CAMERON MCWHIRTER and CAROLINE PORTER
March 19, 2014 7:40 p.m. ET

Tennessee Gov. Bill Haslam wants every high-school graduate in his state to be able to attend a community or technical college free of charge, a goal he says will strengthen the workforce and attract investment.

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To fund the “Tennessee Promise” plan, estimated to cost about $35 million a year when fully implemented, the governor wants to trim the money Tennessee spends on scholarships at four-year colleges. Read more of this post

U.S. Alleges Inside Traders Used Spycraft, Ate Evidence; Three Ran Ring Using Information From Top M&A Law Firm, Prosecutors Say

U.S. Alleges Inside Traders Used Spycraft, Ate Evidence
Three Ran Ring Using Information From Top M&A Law Firm, Prosecutors Say
JENNIFER SMITH
Updated March 19, 2014 8:55 p.m. ET
Prosecutors allege stock tips were often swapped by a clock in New York’s Grand Central Terminal.Associated Press
Three men ran an insider-trading ring with information from one of New York’s premier mergers-and-acquisitions law firms, prosecutors say, taking care to chat in code and flash stock tips on napkins or sticky notes before gobbling them down under the clock inside the teeming great hall of Grand Central Terminal.

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Crossing China’s Big Red Currency Line

Crossing China’s Big Red Currency Line
ALEX FRANGOS
March 20, 2014 1:32 a.m. ET
China’s currency slide continues, crossing a level that traders worry will trigger turmoil for investors. Heard on the Street columnists Alex Frangos, Abheek Bhattacharya and Aaron Back debate what Beijing is aiming to do by letting its currency move sharply lower.
The big red currency has crossed a big red line. It might not be so scary on the other side.

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Too Much Love for Tencent’s Success

Too Much Love for Tencent’s Success
AARON BACK
Updated March 19, 2014 7:11 p.m. ET
Tencent Holdings TCEHY -1.24% is collecting mobile users at a rapid pace. But hype about mobile payments is pushing the stock to heights at which investors should brace themselves.
In the fourth quarter, the Chinese Internet giant saw revenue rise 40% year over year, boosted by its dominant position selling virtual paraphernalia in its mobile-games universe. Net profit rose a less impressive 13% due to marketing costs. But that spending is yielding results. Mobile messaging platform WeChat had 355 million users at the end of 2013. QQ, Tencent’s old desktop messaging product, has a mobile version with 426 million monthly users.

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The ‘Singapore Solution’ to China’s Stock Woes?

The ‘Singapore Solution’ to China’s Stock Woes
Allowing companies to list directly overseas is good for regulators and investors.
PAUL GILLIS
March 19, 2014 11:34 a.m. ET
Alibaba has finally announced its plan to list its shares in New York, after months of speculation about the location. This is a blow to Hong Kong, which had courted the Chinese tech company but was unwilling to change its rules to allow founder Jack Ma to keep control of the company after the listing. But this is also a blow to Chinese investors, who will yet again be denied an opportunity to invest in one of their country’s most successful firms.

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What Is Weibo Anyway?

Mar 19, 2014
What Is Weibo Anyway?
NED LEVIN
Nobody seems to know what Weibo Corp. is worth, though its IPO should value it at several billion dollars. And in honor of Weibo’s U.S. IPO filing last Friday—the company is spinning off from Chinese web media parent SinaSINA -1.34% Corp–MoneyBeat took to the Journal archives to answer another imponderable: just what is Weibo anyway?

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FedEx Takes Sloppy E-Tailers to Task

FedEx Takes Sloppy E-Tailers to Task
Snowstorms Hurt Earnings, but E-Commerce Firms Need to Shape Up, CEO Says
LAURA STEVENS and SERENA NG
Updated March 19, 2014 6:46 p.m. ET
Around 2.4% of FedEx’s five million tracked packages in the first two months of the year were disrupted.Getty Images
FedEx Corp. FDX -1.71% Chief Executive Fred Smith took a tough line with e-commerce companies on Wednesday, saying they need to shape up sloppy shipping practices or risk losing customers.

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A month after Fitbit issued a recall of its fitness-tracking bracelet following complaints of blisters and rashes, the startup now faces its first lawsuit

Mar 19, 2014
Fitbit Now Faces a Class-Action Suit in Rash Fallout
KATHERINE ROSMAN
A month after Fitbit issued a recall of its fitness-tracking bracelet following complaints of blisters and rashes, the startup now faces its first lawsuit.
The suit, filed on Monday in the Superior Court of California in the County of San Diego, is seeking class-action status and alleges the company misled consumers in promoting and advertising the Fitbit Force device.

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Developers Offer a Peek at Shanghai’s Dream Center; Big projects like the Dream Center have been more heavily scrutinized lately amid concerns about over building and tightened credit in China

Developers Offer a Peek at Shanghai’s Dream Center
ESTHER FUNG
March 20, 2014 9:48 a.m. ET
SHANGHAI— DreamWorks Animation SKG Inc. DWA +0.22% and its Chinese partners say they plan to build live performance theaters and concert halls in a 15 billion yuan ($2.4 billion) Shanghai project that will open in 2017 or early 2018.
“The size and scale [of the project] has gotten bigger and bigger,” said Jeffrey Katzenberg, DreamWorks Animation’s chief executive. “Securing the necessary approvals and getting financing took a longer time than expected.”

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Luxury Brands Look to South Korea for China Sales Boost; Korean Sitcoms Are Popular Among Fashion-Conscious Chinese Consumers

Luxury Brands Look to South Korea for China Sales Boost
Korean Sitcoms Are Popular Among Fashion-Conscious Chinese Consumers
WEI GU
Updated March 20, 2014 8:44 a.m. ET

Luxury brands see sales jump thanks to Korean wave in China. HSBC’s Erwan Rambourg tells the WSJ’s Wei Gu who is benefiting from the popularity of Korean style in China.
To succeed in China, luxury brands are getting help from South Korea.

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Investors Blame Bankers for Japan Display Flop

Investors Blame Bankers for Japan Display Flop
Jittery Markets Also Seen as Factor in Weak Debut
KANA INAGAKI
March 19, 2014 10:02 a.m. ET

image001-6image002-5Shuichi Otsuka, chief executive officer of Japan Display Inc., left, holds a listing notice with Akira Kiyota, president of Tokyo Stock Exchange Inc., as they pose for a photograph during an initial public offering ceremony for the company’s listing at the Tokyo Stock Exchange. Bloomberg News

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Bank Indonesia Governor: Rates Could Potentially Continue to Rise

March 20, 2014, 9:42 a.m. ET
Bank Indonesia Governor: Rates Could Potentially Continue to Rise
By Farida Husna
JAKARTA, Indonesia–Bank Indonesia Governor Agus Martowardojo said Thursday that interest rates in emerging markets, including Indonesia, could potentially continue to rise if borrowing costs in the U.S. Increase.
“Such a condition is the new norm. Interest rates can’t fall too much,” Mr. Martowardojo told reporters.
Bank Indonesia last year increased interest rates by a total of 175 basis points since June as inflationary pressures increase and the country’s current-account deficit widened to a level it won’t be able to sustain for a long period.

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Bond Investors Are Skittish Over Chinese Property Developers; Prices, Volume Have Fallen After Reports of Potential Defaults

Bond Investors Are Skittish Over Chinese Property Developers
Prices, Volume Have Fallen After Reports of Potential Defaults
FIONA LAW
March 20, 2014 8:29 a.m. ET
Growing worries over the health of Chinese property developers are driving down bond prices and drying up trading volumes in the $47 billion market that had been a favorite of global investors.

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Foreign Investors Rush to Sell Japanese Stocks; Worries Grow That the Government Won’t Spur the Economy

Foreign Investors Rush to Sell Japanese Stocks
Worries Grow That the Government Won’t Spur the Economy
KOSAKU NARIOKA
March 20, 2014 8:12 a.m. ET
After pushing Japan’s stock market to its biggest gain in more than 40 years in 2013, the bulls are having second thoughts.
Foreign investors are selling Japanese stocks at the fastest pace in almost a decade, government data show, as worries grow that the country’s government won’t be able to follow through on its promises to spur the economy. Hedge funds and other speculative investors lifted the ratio of bets against Tokyo shares this week to the highest in five years, according to the Tokyo Stock Exchange.
That has helped drive down the Nikkei Stock Average 13% in 2014, after a 57% jump last year. By contrast, the S&P 500 index had eked out a 1% gain through Wednesday.

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Falling Chinese Stocks, Alibaba IPO Loss Dim Hong Kong’s Luster

Falling Chinese Stocks, Alibaba IPO Loss Dim Hong Kong’s Luster
Hang Seng Among Worst-Performing Major Stock Indexes This Year
MIA LAMAR
March 20, 2014 6:14 a.m. ET
Hong Kong’s stock market, a longtime gateway to China for global investors, is losing its luster as signs of financial stress mount on the mainland and the exchange reels from the loss of Alibaba Group Holding Ltd.’s initial public offering.

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Dropping Like Flies: Largest Steel Maker In China’s Shanxi Province Defaults On CNY 3 Billion In Debt

Dropping Like Flies: Largest Steel Maker In China’s Shanxi Province Defaults On CNY 3 Billion In Debt
Tyler Durden on 03/20/2014 09:09 -0400
When we started discussing the upcoming onslaught of corporate defaults in “Minsky Moment” China, now that the bankruptcy seal has been broken, we warned that the worst is about to come.

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Well, it’s coming.
Overnight, Hong Kong’s The Standard reported that in addition to the solar, coal and real-estate developer companies that are on everyone’s radar as potential future bankruptcy candidates, one can also add steel makers to the list, with its report that Highsee Group, the largest private steel makers in Shanxi province has defaulted on CNY3 billion of debt, unable to repay its bonds on time.

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According to The Standard, “Highsee Group’s 3 billion yuan debt was overdue last week,” the 21st Century Business Herald reported yesterday. “The company is running in red, and has failed to pay workers for months. Many of its furnaces have stopped operating.”
The reason for this most recent collapse: the plunge of domestic steel prices , which have fallen to their lowest level in more than eight years in mid-March as a result of weak demand and a surge in output.
Earlier, Shanxi coal miner Liansheng Resources Group went bankrupt while its loans, which were packaged into a wealth management product distributed by China Construction Bank (0939), are likely to be bailed out. UBS Securities securities analyst Chen Li said it is the peak season for corporate debt dues. Up to 80 percent of the nation’s trusts have obligations to meet within the second quarter, he added.
IBT adds that “Highsee Iron and Steel Group … is just one of numerous steel mills facing issues in the country. Data from the National Bureau of Statistics revealed that China produced 2.22 million tonnes of crude steel a day over the first two months of 2014, Reuters reports. This record amount was manufactured even though demand wasn’t as strong.”
It remains to be seen if Highsee is bailed out, however now that pretty much any corporation with exposure to the commodity and real estate space that has maturing debt is on the rocks, the PBOC may be better suited just to let the system cleanse itself, even if that means the collapse in both the Chinese stock market, which unlike the US is largely irrelevant (especially since it once again dropped below 2000 while the Hang Seng entered a bear market), but the bigger issue is that the Chinese housing bubble is set to burst both domestically and abroad,as we reported yesterday.
And lest readers are left with the impression that merely operational companies with direct exposure to the deleveraging carnage that is taking place in China – at least until such time as China unleashes another multi-trillion stimulus – are exposed, also overnight financial firm Southchina Futures announced it is terminating it business on “major operation risks.”
From the company’s website:
About South China Futures Brokerage Co. closure announcement

As the Company has significant business risks, some of the bank account was frozen Guizhou Court of Justice, in order to protect the legitimate rights and interests of investors, the company passed a resolution to stop the shareholders’ meeting brokerage business futures, now specific announcement is as follows:

First, the announcement issued by the date, the South China Futures Brokerage Co., Ltd. (hereinafter referred to as “the South China Futures”) is no longer accepting new customers open positions instructions.

Second, within five working days of the date of this announcement, make customers to handle the South China Futures cancellation procedures.

Third, the five working days after the publication of the notice, did not apply for cancellation procedures futures customer account funds will be transferred to the unified Huatai Great Wall Futures Co., Ltd. (hereinafter referred to as “Huatai Great Wall Futures”).

Fourth, since the date of this announcement within ten working days from customers willing to open an account at Huatai Great Wall Futures, futures and South China Huatai Great Wall Futures will jointly provide customers with convenient handle channel, during the South China Huatai Great Wall Futures futures and customer acceptance , Tel: South Futures, (020) 38791617 ; Huatai Great Wall Futures, 4006280888.

Notice is hereby given.
Dropping like flies now.
We wonder how long until the US stock market, floating in its cloud of manipulated, centrally-planned oblivious innocence, realizes that a China on the verge of all out deflationary recession is not a good thing?

Airbnb In Advanced Talks to Raise Funding at a $10 Billion Valuation

Airbnb In Advanced Talks to Raise Funding at a $10 Billion Valuation
Private-Equity Firm TPG Likely to Lead Funding Round for the Online Home-Rental Marketplace
EVELYN M. RUSLI and DOUGLAS MACMILLAN
Updated March 20, 2014 9:21 a.m. ET
Airbnb Inc. is in advanced talks to raise funds that would value the online home-rental marketplace at more than $10 billion and place it among the world’s most valuable startups, according to several people familiar with the process.

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Foreign Investors Rush to Sell Japanese Stocks; Worries Grow That the Government Won’t Spur the Economy

Foreign Investors Rush to Sell Japanese Stocks
Worries Grow That the Government Won’t Spur the Economy
KOSAKU NARIOKA
March 20, 2014 8:12 a.m. ET
After pushing Japan’s stock market to its biggest gain in more than 40 years in 2013, the bulls are having second thoughts.
Foreign investors are selling Japanese stocks at the fastest pace in almost a decade, government data show, as worries grow that the country’s government won’t be able to follow through on its promises to spur the economy. Hedge funds and other speculative investors lifted the ratio of bets against Tokyo shares this week to the highest in five years, according to the Tokyo Stock Exchange.

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Why “Grit” Is the Key to Success in Business

Published: February 11, 2014 / Spring 2014 / Issue 74
Angela Duckworth’s Gritty View of Success
A psychologist and new MacArthur Fellow says you need employees with stamina and tenacity above all else.
by Laura W. Geller
If someone asked you to define grit, what images would come to mind? Windburned cowboys? Pioneers on the open plain? Grit has long been used in describing those who dig in their heels in the face of hardship, who persevere in even the most challenging circumstances and emerge victorious.

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Organize Like a Startup: Legacy companies looking to increase agility and collaboration can take a few lessons from new firms

Posted: March 17, 2014
Eric J. McNulty is the director of research at the National Preparedness Leadership Initiative and writes frequently about leadership and resilience.
Organize Like a Startup
Organizational dysfunction. Failure to align strategy and execution. Resistance to change. Distorted communications. These are common maladies that leaders wrestle with every day. I’ve written before about complexity—and the importance of understanding its impact on organizational design and function. Recently, I read a new book on the subject: Startup Leadership by Derek Lidow, the founder of iSuppli, which provides data and analysis to the electronics industry. Lidow led the company to a successful sale, and he has insights from his entrepreneurial endeavors that are equally applicable to startups and legacy firms.

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George Harrison: Now That Guy Knew How to Listen; Just like musicians, executives must hear themselves and others at the same time

Posted: March 18, 2014
David Silverman is an author, teacher and senior executive at a Fortune 100 firm.
George Harrison: Now That Guy Knew How to Listen
“Start again,” Hector, my guitar teacher, said patiently. He’s half my age, but that’s not stopping him from making me get the 83-note solo in Let It Be right. When he leans over and highlights in red note number 60, where I blew it (again), I’m reminded that listening—intently listening—is among the critical skills in life.

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A Sour Bean Sweetens Cocoa Supply

A Sour Bean Sweetens Cocoa Supply
LESLIE JOSEPHS
Updated March 19, 2014 9:05 p.m. ET

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With a name reminiscent of a “Star Wars” droid and a reputation for having an acidic taste, the CCN 51 cocoa bean is an unlikely savior of the $110 billion chocolate market.

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Protein May Hold the Key to Who Gets Alzheimer’s

Protein May Hold the Key to Who Gets Alzheimer’s
By PAM BELLUCKMARCH 19, 2014
It is one of the big scientific mysteries of Alzheimer’s disease: Why do some people whose brains accumulate the plaques and tangles so strongly associated with Alzheimer’s not develop the disease?

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Students Occupy Taiwan’s Legislature to Protest China Pact

Students Occupy Taiwan’s Legislature to Protest China Pact
Trade Deal Is One of President Ma Ying-jeou’s Signature Achievements
JENNY HSU
Updated March 19, 2014 11:55 a.m. ET
TAIPEI—More than 1,000 students have occupied Taiwan’s legislature to protest the ruling party’s handling of a trade pact with China that has become a divisive political issue for the island.

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Shanghai Stock Exchange Raises Shareholding Cap for Foreign Investors; Foreigners Can Now Collectively Own 30% in a Single Firm

Shanghai Stock Exchange Raises Shareholding Cap for Foreign Investors
Foreigners Can Now Collectively Own 30% in a Single Firm
CHAO DENG
March 19, 2014 11:16 p.m. ET
SHANGHAI—The Shanghai Stock Exchange is easing restrictions on overseas investors, giving them more flexibility to invest in China’s tightly controlled capital markets.
With immediate effect, foreign investors can collectively own up to 30% in a single company, up from 20%, according to a statement on the exchange’s website on Wednesday. If foreign investors’ collective shareholding in a company exceeds 26%, the stock exchange will make a relevant announcement on the following trading day.
The cap on ownership in a company by an individual foreign investor remains at 10%.
The exchange also said that foreigners will be able to trade asset-backed securities.
Foreign investors currently buy Chinese stocks and bonds through the Qualified Foreign Institutional Investor and the Renminbi Qualified Foreign Institutional Investor programs. Both have expanded in recent years, giving foreigners greater quotas for investing on the mainland, although their ownership remains a fraction of China’s overall market.

Managing the Intangible Aspects of a Project: The Affect of Vision, Artifacts, and Leader Values on Project Spirit and Success in Technology-Driven Projects

Managing the Intangible Aspects of a Project: The Affect of Vision, Artifacts, and Leader Values on Project Spirit and Success in Technology-Driven Projects

Zvi H. Aronson
Stevens Institute of Technology – Wesley J. Howe School of Technology Management
Aaron J. Shenhar
Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey – Rutgers Business School at Newark & New Brunswick
Peerasit Patanakul
Stevens Institute of Technology – Wesley J. Howe School of Technology Management
November 1, 2013
Howe School Research Paper No. 2013-22
Abstract:
Successful projects are often characterized by a unique spirit. Phase one results, based on 193 employees partaking in 60 projects across organizations, support a model positing that leader building activities affect employees’ emotions, attitudes, and behavioral norms that are focused on expected project outcomes, termed project spirit. Spirit affects employees’ contextual performance behavior, which in turn affects success as proposed. Phase two cases, designed to ground these results in technology driven project contexts, highlight the value of managing the project’s intangible aspects captured by spirit. Quantitative and qualitative findings imply that leaders can be coached to execute behaviors that generate a project’s spirit, which boosts contextual performance behavior and increases project success.

The Music Just Ended: “Wealthy” Chinese Are Liquidating Offshore Luxury Homes In Scramble For Cash

The Music Just Ended: “Wealthy” Chinese Are Liquidating Offshore Luxury Homes In Scramble For Cash
Tyler Durden on 03/19/2014 21:11 -0400
One of the primary drivers of the real estate bubble in the past several years, particularly in the ultra-luxury segment, were megawealthy Chinese buyers, seeking to park their cash into the safety of offshore real estate where it was deemed inaccessible to mainland regulators and overseers, tracking just where the Chinese record credit bubble would end up. Some, such as us, called it “hot money laundering”, and together with foreclosure stuffing and institutional flipping (of rental units and otherwise), we said this was the third leg of the recent US housing bubble. However, while the impact of Chinese buying in the US has been tangible, it has paled in comparison with the epic Chinese buying frenzy in other offshore metropolitan centers like London and Hong Kong. This is understandable: after all as Chuck Prince famously said in 2007, just before the first US mega-bubble burst, “as long as the music is playing, you’ve got to get up and dance.” In China, the music just ended.

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Jonathan Ive Designs Tomorrow: Apple’s design chief helped transform computing, phones and music. The company’s secrecy and Ive’s modesty mean he has never given an in-depth interview-until now

Apple’s design chief helped transform computing, phones and music. The company’s secrecy and Ive’s modesty mean he has never given an in-depth interview—until now.
John Arlidge
March 17, 2014
Hello. Thanks for Coming’
We use Jonathan Ive’s products to help us to eat, drink and sleep, to work, travel, relax, read, listen and watch, to shop, chat, date and have sex. Many of us spend more time with his screens than with our families. Some of us like his screens more than our families. For years, Ive’s natural shyness, coupled with the secrecy bordering on paranoia of his employer, Apple, has meant we have known little about the man who shapes the future, with such innovations as the iMac, the iPod, the iPhone and the iPad. But last month, he invited me to Cupertino in Silicon Valley where Apple is based, for his first in-depth interview since he became head of design almost 20 years ago.

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