Japanese Firm Uses a Single-Worker System to Make Its Products; With the Help of Digital Tools, Any Roland DG Employee Can Build Any Product; The computer even gives workers a pat on the back at the end of the day

Japanese Firm Uses a Single-Worker System to Make Its Products

With the Help of Digital Tools, Any Roland DG Employee Can Build Any Product

MAYUMI NEGISHI

image001-15

June 1, 2014 4:48 p.m. ET

A Roland worker making an industrial printer follows prompts on the computer (1), pulling pieces from the rotating parts rack (2) and using digital screwdrivers (3) that track number of turns and torque. The Japanese manufacturer Roland DG has replaced it’s assembly line with single-person stalls call a D-Shop, inspired by Japanese noodle stands. The D-Shop can produce a wider variety of products in lower quantities than an assembly line. Read more of this post

Read Tim Cook’s Internal Memo About The Beats Deal And Apple’s History In Music

Read Tim Cook’s Internal Memo About The Beats Deal And Apple’s History In Music

KARYNE LEVY TECH  MAY. 29, 2014, 5:36 AM

Apple confirmed today that it is buying Beats Electronics and Beats Music in a $3 billion deal. In an internal memo to employees, Tim Cook explains why the acquisition is important.

The memo, obtained by 9to5Mac, details Apple’s history of focusing on music:

Apple’s history in music began with selling Macs to musicians. That remains important to us today, but we also bring music to hundreds of millions of customers with iTunes, which is at the forefront of the digital music revolution. Music holds a special place in our hearts at Apple, and we know that we can make an even bigger contribution to something that is so important to our society. That’s why we have kept investing in music and why we’re bringing together these extraordinary teams — so we can continue to create the most innovative music products and services in the world.

Beats co-founders and music industry pioneers Jimmy Iovine and Dr. Dre will join Apple, along with their team of employees. Jimmy has been on the cutting edge of innovation in the music industry for decades, including as a key partner for Apple in the launch of the iTunes Music Store more than ten years ago. He has produced or collaborated with some of the most popular artists in history, and been an important contributor to the success of the iTunes Store.

The deal has been at the forefront of the rumor mill for weeks, with people speculating that the real reason for the deal wasn’t for the technology, but, in fact, for the talent.

The memo goes on: Read more of this post

Apple’s Latest iBeacon Offering Explores the Great Indoors

Apple’s Latest Offering Explores the Great Indoors

Tech Giant Will Provide iBeacon Plans at San Francisco Developers Conference

DAISUKE WAKABAYASHI, ELIZABETH DWOSKIN and GREG BENSINGER

June 1, 2014 4:44 p.m. ET

Apple Inc. AAPL -0.37% ‘s latest product to carry the “i” prefix—following theiPhone and iPad—promises to do for indoor spaces what GPS did for the outdoors.

Apple’s iBeacon allows apps to locate a user within a few inches, so that a phone can direct a driver to the nearest open spot in a parking garage or the shortest hot-dog line in a crowded stadium. It allows restaurant diners to pay the check and leave without a waiter’s assistance or museum-goers to learn about exhibits by walking past. Soon, it might make shopping-mall maps unnecessary. Read more of this post

Advice to Microsoft’s Satya Nadella: Be More Brave

Advice to Microsoft’s Satya Nadella: Be More Brave

Tech Columnist Christopher Mims Suggests Five Moves for New CEO

CHRISTOPHER MIMS

Updated June 1, 2014 9:55 p.m. ET

Dear Satya,

We haven’t met, but I’m a fan of yours. I don’t want to throw shade on your predecessor, Steve Ballmer —your first, record quarter at the company was arguably his doing—but it’s obvious you were the right person to succeed him. He was a salesman; you’re an engineer. And MicrosoftMSFT +1.49% land of hard-core technologists, is at its best when it’s led by one of its own.

But I’m worried about your company. Yeah, right now you’re making money hand over fist. But so did BlackBerry BB.T -1.55% as recently as the end of 2010. Then, well, we all know what happened. Read more of this post

Apple Is Set to Make a Bigger Push Into Monitoring Health and Home

Apple Is Set to Make a Bigger Push Into Monitoring Health and Home

By BRIAN X. CHENJUNE 1, 2014

SAN FRANCISCO — Apple is unlikely to introduce new devices this week, the things that most excite customers and investors these days. But the company is expected to dive deeper into two new areas: connected health and the so-called smart home.

Along with operating system updates for mobile and desktop machines, Apple plans to introducex a new health-tracking app at its annual developers’ conference on Monday, according to a person briefed on the product, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because the plans were confidential. The app for mobile devices will track statistics for health or fitness, like a user’s footsteps, heart rate and sleep activity. Read more of this post

Palantir Technologies’ intelligence software is gaining fans worldwide, and some investors want to cash in

Unlocking Secrets, if Not Its Own Value

By QUENTIN HARDYMAY 31, 2014

Alex Karp, chief of Palantir Technologies, has resisted calls for it go public. Despite a growing number of private clients, he says an I.P.O.’s emphasis on stock price would be “corrosive to our culture.”CreditPeter DaSilva for The New York Times

image001-3

Palantir Technologies will not help you share, message, pin, post or chat. It does not exist to make you more social or connected, or even to help advertisers get to you. Its technology is deeply geeky, its work secretive. Nonetheless, it’s one of the most valuable private tech companies in Silicon Valley. Read more of this post

Lenovo to move away from Chinese market

Lenovo to move away from Chinese market

Staff Reporter

2014-05-31

Wong Wai-Ming, CFO of Lenovo Group, said that the company plans to refocus its business on the international arena instead of China, reports the official website of the China’s nationalistic Global Times. China, Wong said, is no longer the most profitable market for Lenovo, according to the report. Read more of this post

Ginni Rometty: Reinventing Big Blue; Naysayers are ganging up on IBM CEO Ginni Rometty. But her plan to turn around the 103-year-old company just might work

Ginni Rometty: Reinventing Big Blue

Naysayers are ganging up on IBM CEO Ginni Rometty. But her plan to turn around the 103-year-old company just might work.

LESLIE P. NORTON

May 31, 2014 1:40 a.m. ET

Ginni Rometty likes to say that there’s no such thing as a bad day if you learn from it. And since taking over as chief executive of International Business Machines in January 2012, she has learned a lot. Big Blue’s revenue has fallen for eight straight quarters, reaching the lowest level in five years in the first quarter of this year.

image001-2

IBM (ticker: IBM) is still hugely profitable, of course, earning $18 billion last year on revenue of $100 billion. But in many ways, it faces its biggest challenge since the early 1990s, when it was on the verge of bankruptcy. Read more of this post

A Study Being Passed Around Silicon Valley Shows That Raising Tons Of Money Can Hurt Startups

A Study Being Passed Around Silicon Valley Shows That Raising Tons Of Money Can Hurt Startups

ALYSON SHONTELL TECH  MAY. 31, 2014, 9:49 PM

When startups raise large rounds of financing from investors, it’s often praised in the press. And in Silicon Valley, founders are often encouraged to raise as much money as possible. But a new study shows that most startups shouldn’t strive to raise gobs of cash, and they can actually exit for more money if they take less funding.

Exitround, a startup that matches early stage companies with potential acquirers,analyzed the sales of 200 startups. It worked with startup accelerator programs Y Combinator, Techstars and SoftTech VC to compile the data and only looked at companies with sale prices under $100 million. Exitround says 88% of all startups are sold for less than that price. The study has been

The study found that startups with the most lucrative exits raised either $2-3 million or $5-10 million. They also tend to be about four years old.

From the study:

image001-1

In Exitround’s analysis, companies that raised $5 million to $10 million actually generated larger average exits than those that raised $10 million to $50 million. And those companies that raised $3 million to $5 million had a lower average exit price than those that raised $2 million to $3 million.

Here’s a chart that supports the data.

The Exit Curve: Exitround’s Report On Tech M&A

Exitround NewsMarket Analysis

By Tomio Geron on May 30, 2014

image002-1

inShare54

image003-1

Raising as much capital as possible is often seen as a badge of honor in Silicon Valley. And there are many great reasons for startups to raise as much capital as possible. But raising more capital may not always be the best option. Exitround’s analysis of proprietary exit data has found that there are good reasons to remain cautious.

There’s a sweet spot for how much capital to raise for startups that want to get the most money out of their sale. Exitround determined these particular exit ranges based on data we analyzed covering more than 200 companies acquired since 2006 for less than $100 million. The best exits from a return-on-capital perspective form a pattern, which we call the Exit Curve. The best average exits tend to cluster around companies with total capital raises of between $2 million to $3 million and between $5 million to $10 million. But exit prices drop after companies raise more than $3 million and $10 million, respectively.

The information in the report will be of particular interest to entrepreneurs and investors seeking to understand the trajectories of startups and what possible outcomes are for their companies–particularly since 88% of tech M&A deals happen below $100 million. Determining potential outcomes is a useful baseline to have in mind as entrepreneurs and investors think about how much to invest or raise, and at what valuations. Knowing the market is also important when entrepreneurs and investors go through an acquisition process.

Here are some other key findings from the Exitround report:

– Raising more capital does not necessarily result in a larger exit price. Exitround’s analysis of proprietary exit data has found that exit prices do not always get larger as companies raise more capital. They sometimes go down.

– Companies that generate substantial exits are usually at least four years old. Companies below four years old on average did not show a substantial variation in price, but those more than four years old increased substantially in price. In other words, companies are not built overnight.

– Exit prices varied among companies in different sectors. Some sectors, such as cloud and mobile showed the best return on invested capital.

David Cohen founder & CEO of TechStars, a contributor to the study, said, “I was excited to participate and contribute data to Exitround’s report because for the first time we’ll have a broad-scale industry look into the long tail of tech M&A activity, which will help me make more informed decisions as an investor, and generally contribute to increased transparency within our industry.”

Seed Investing

The emergence of the seed investing has become a key part of the startup and venture investing landscape. The data in Exitround’s report shows that companies that have raised relatively small amounts of capital can generate substantial returns for those investing at the seed stage.

Michael Kim, founder and managing partner of fund of funds Cendana Capital, which invests in seed funds and is a contributor to the Exit Report, said, “The findings help support our thesis—with real data—that seed VC funds have potentially higher alpha with lower beta (risk) because meaningful returns can be generated by capital efficient start ups early in their life.”

Other topics covered in the report:

The Data Behind The New Seed/Venture Investing Landscape

What Size Exits Have The Best Returns?

Which Size Exits Have The Best Multiples?

How Long Does It Take to Build a Successful Startup?

Which Generates Better Return Multiples: Consumer or Enterprise?

How Does Team Size Affect Price? (or vice versa)

Who Pays More: Public Or Private Buyers

How Are Investors Paid?

How Much Of A Deal Is Held Back For Earn-out/Retention?

Which Sectors Have The Best Outcomes?

Methodology

Information on tech M&A is difficult to find, particularly for exits below $100 million. For founders this can make anacquisition process difficult, particularly for those who have not gone through it before or who do not have strong advisors to help them.

Typically, most M&A reports analyze already-available public data. The Exitround Exit Report is different because it is based on Exitround’s data, which is previously undisclosed data, and which we are presenting in an aggregate anonymized form. Read more of this post

Apple’s emphasis on the human angle of Beats provides an intriguing peek into how Apple sees itself – and how executives wants customers to think of Apple

What the Beats Deal Says About Apple: It Loves Tastemakers

By FARHAD MANJOO

MAY 30, 2014 1:47 PM 7 Comments

There’s one thing executives at Apple would like you to know about their decision to buy Beats Music: Apple really loves humans. It loves us in the general sense — the company believes we’re better than computers are at deciding what kinds of music we like — and it loves the specific humans who run Beats, especially the firm’s founders, the music impresarios Dr. Dre and Jimmy Iovine. Read more of this post

For Web startups with big ambitions, regulation increasingly on the radar

For Web startups with big ambitions, regulation increasingly on the radar

Fri, May 30 2014

By Alexei Oreskovic

RANCHO PALOS VERDES Calif. (Reuters) – Internet startups are starting to see what could come between them and their ambitions: regulators.

Recent lawsuits and government investigations into high-flying “sharing economy” services have put the issue front and center. Now, Web companies developing services in everything from healthcare to transportation are crafting strategies for working with government agencies. Read more of this post

Would You Believe It? Miami Has a Real Tech Scene Now; Tech companies flock to Miami to reach Latin America

Would You Believe It? Miami Has a Real Tech Scene Now

Tech companies flock to Miami to reach Latin America.

ARIAN CAMPO-FLORES

May 30, 2014 6:59 p.m. ET

MIAMI—This city is well known for its coastline, club scene and condo-building crazes. Now it is adding a new distinction: tech hub.

A startup scene is stirring here, driven in part by U.S. companies seeking to tap Latin America’s expanding technology market and a growing crop of Latin American entrepreneurs hoping to gain a foothold here. Read more of this post

A key reason for Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company’s (TSMC) success is that the company has never competed with clients, company president and co-CEO CC Wei

TSMC never competes with clients, says co-CEO

Josephine Lien, Taipei; Adam Hwang, DIGITIMES [Thursday 29 May 2014]

A key reason for Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company’s (TSMC) success is that the company has never competed with clients, company president and co-CEO CC Wei said at the TSMC 2014 Technology Symposium in Taiwan on May 29. Read more of this post

Driverless cars: Google is miles ahead of its rivals in the race for autonomous motoring

Driverless cars: Google is miles ahead of its rivals in the race for autonomous motoring

May 31st 2014 | From the print edition

TO GOOGLE is now in broad usage as a verb for retrieving information from the internet. If the tech giant has its way, “I Googled” will become a standard reply to the question, “How did you get here?” On May 28th Google said it would build 100 prototype driverless cars devoid of pedals, steering wheel or controls save an on/off switch. It is the next stage in its apparent quest to be as ubiquitous on the road as on computer screens. Read more of this post

Technationalism: China uses a cyber-security row with America to boost national champions

Technationalism: China uses a cyber-security row with America to boost national champions

May 31st 2014 | SHANGHAI | From the print edition

WESTERN fashion models have long been in high demand for catwalk shows and photo shoots in Shanghai and Beijing. However, dozens of them were rounded up recently on alleged visa infractions and chucked out of the country. Leggy beauties are not the only foreign models now under threat in China. Unsourced rumours are swirling of a forthcoming ban on state-owned enterprises (SOEs) buying Cisco telecoms equipment and IBM computer servers. This week the Financial Times reported that American consulting firms like McKinsey and Bain would be blocked from working for SOEs. Read more of this post

Daum and KakaoTalk merge: Getting the message; The latest tie-up between messaging apps and broader online firms

Daum and KakaoTalk merge: Getting the message; The latest tie-up between messaging apps and broader online firms

May 31st 2014 | From the print edition

IN THEORY Daum, an internet portal in South Korea, is acquiring Kakao, a startup whose messaging app, KakaoTalk, is on most of the country’s smartphones. In practice, it is the other way around: the merger unveiled on May 26th gives Kakao’s shareholders the lion’s share of the new company, although Daum has more revenue, profits and staff, plus a stockmarket listing. The deal, valuing Kakao at $3 billion-odd, shows that messaging apps are still hot property. Read more of this post

Alibaba Adds a Dash of Foreign Flavor

Alibaba Adds a Dash of Foreign Flavor

AARON BACK

May 29, 2014 5:37 a.m. ET

Alibaba Group has gone from dipping a toe in international waters to dunking a whole foot. It may be some time before it’s worth diving in all the way.

The Chinese e-commerce giant, which is preparing for what could be the largest ever U.S. initial public offering, sent the strongest signal yet of its intention to expand outside China by acquiring a 10% stake in Singapore Post S08.SG -2.08%for $249 million. The likes of Amazon and eBay EBAY -0.03% shouldn’t quiver in their boots just yet. Read more of this post

Intel Unveils Technology for Cars; Chip Maker, Seeking New Revenue Sources, Shows Off Entertainment, Navigation Tool

Intel Unveils Technology for Cars

Chip Maker, Seeking New Revenue Sources, Shows Off Entertainment, Navigation Tool

DON CLARK

Updated May 29, 2014 11:29 p.m. ET

Intel Corp. INTC +1.21% , continuing a search for additional revenue sources, is stepping up efforts to place its technology into cars.

The Silicon Valley company on Thursday is unveiling what it describes as an “in-vehicle solutions platform,” which includes a circuit board with an Intel processor that comes prepackaged with special-purpose software. Intel hopes the combination can provide a foundation for applications such as digital entertainment and navigation, the company said. Read more of this post

Why Is Amazon Squeezing Hachette? Maybe It Really Needs the Money

Why Is Amazon Squeezing Hachette? Maybe It Really Needs the Money

By DAVID STREITFELD and MELISSA EDDY

MAY 30, 2014 7:00 AM 1 Comments

Over the course of nearly two decades, Amazon has hewed to a consistent philosophy: It’s all about the customer. The retailer is so devoted to its customers that it takes the profits that would normally go to shareholders and gives them to shoppers in the form of faster delivery and lower prices. It was a brilliant strategy that has propelled the company to the top ranks of American businesses. Read more of this post

Acer expands into smart vehicle development

Acer expands into smart vehicle development
Friday, May 30, 2014

image002-3

TAIPEI — Acer Inc. (宏碁) is working with two providers of connected car technology to design a cloud-based advanced remote device management system, in an ambitious expansion of the Taiwanese PC manufacturer into smart vehicle development. Read more of this post

Wine producers band together to sell online

Wine producers band together to sell online

Published 30 May 2014 14:12, Updated 30 May 2014 14:27

Simon Evans

The Winemakers’ Federation of Australia, which represents 2500 wine companies, has enlisted 60 producers for an online venture enabling direct sales to the public for companies that may have been bruised by the bigger supermarket chains. Read more of this post

The Beats acquisition isn’t about headphones, its about Android; Apple Now Makes Apps For Other Mobile Platforms – Which Could Be Huge For The Future Of Media

End to End: The Beats acquisition isn’t about headphones, its about Android.

To make sense of the Beats deal, stop looking at Beats and start looking at Apple: Apple doesn’t care about selling music[1]. Apple doesn’t care about selling headphones[2]. Apple cares about selling phones, tablets and computers.

So why buy a headphone and music company?

To sell more iPhones, iPads and Macbooks.

Apple is at war for the future of computing with Android.

Android is as much an opposing army you fight during the day as a ghost you fight in your dreams. Android has the massive armies of Google and Samsung assembled on the front lines but Android isn’t just a threat materialized, its a shape-shifter; a Microsoft fork, a Facebook phone. Android is everywhere and can become anything, so the threat to Apple can come from anywhere. Read more of this post

Bonjour, world: French technology, innovation set for global invasion

Bonjour, world: French technology, innovation set for global invasion

SINGAPORE — On the western suburban street of Vaucresson, around 20km from Champs-Elysees in Paris, a silver all-electric hatchback nips around quietly as it climbs smoothly to its top speed of 130kmh before finally coming to rest at a designated kerbside car-sharing kiosk, waiting to be taken for a spin by another driver.

BY WONG WEI HAN –

MAY 30

SINGAPORE — On the western suburban street of Vaucresson, around 20km from Champs-Elysees in Paris, a silver all-electric hatchback nips around quietly as it climbs smoothly to its top speed of 130kmh before finally coming to rest at a designated kerbside car-sharing kiosk, waiting to be taken for a spin by another driver. Read more of this post

Forget apps, old-school mobiles ring in a comeback

Forget apps, old-school mobiles ring in a comeback

Sunday, May 25, 2014 – 12:34

AFP

PARIS – They fit in a pocket, have batteries that last all week and are almost indestructible: old-school Nokias, Ericssons and Motorolas are making a comeback as consumers tired of fragile and overly-wired smartphones go retro.

Forget apps, video calls and smiley faces, handsets like the Nokia 3310 or the Motorola StarTec 130 allows just basic text messaging and phone calls. Read more of this post

As Publishers Fight Amazon, Books Vanish

As Publishers Fight Amazon, Books Vanish

By DAVID STREITFELD and MELISSA EDDY

MAY 23, 2014 7:24 AM 560 Comments

Amazon’s power over the publishing and bookselling industries is unrivaled in the modern era. Now it has started wielding its might in a more brazen way than ever before. Read more of this post

Why Nascar Is Putting RFID Sensors On Every Person In The Pit; A company called Zebra will allow teams to track every turn of the wrench, maximizing speed in the pit and preventing penalties

Why Nascar Is Putting RFID Sensors On Every Person In The Pit

A company called Zebra will allow teams to track every turn of the wrench, maximizing speed in the pit and preventing penalties.

By Matt Hartigan

To date, Nascar pit crews have relied on videotape and stopwatches to measure pit stops. But no more. Michael Waltrip Racing has announced a partnership with Zebra, makers of MotionWorks, a software package designed to bring RFID tracking technology to nearly every lug-nut on the track. Using technology developed to maximize industrial efficiency, Zebra hopes to lend its experience in manufacturing to the track. Read more of this post

The Homepage Is Dead! Long Live The Homepage! When the New York Times plummeting homepage traffic numbers were revealed last week, the Internet again declared the homepage dead. But that may not be so true

THE HOMEPAGE IS DEAD! LONG LIVE THE HOMEPAGE!

WHEN THE NEW YORK TIMES’S PLUMMETING HOMEPAGE TRAFFIC NUMBERS WERE REVEALED LAST WEEK, THE INTERNET AGAIN DECLARED THE HOMEPAGE DEAD. BUT THAT MAY NOT BE SO TRUE.

BY ELIZABETH FLOCK

When the founders of Upworthy were planning their site, they considered a question that a few years ago would have sounded suicidal: “Should we have no homepage?” They wondered whether staffers’ time would be better spent meeting readers where they were already hanging out–on social media, largely–than to hope readers would type a URL into their address bar. It was clear that most people simply didn’t find content through homepages as much anymore, and that is was only a matter of time before a media outlet didn’t even bother with one. Read more of this post

Computer Chips and Dip: Big Data Comes to the Food Industry

Computer Chips and Dip

By Kevin Maney / May 15, 2014 1:51 PM EDT

In 1969, Honeywell tried to sell a Kitchen Computer, which was about as practical as a home nuclear reactor. It cost $10,600, weighed 100 pounds and came, the ad said, “complete with a two-week programming course” for Donna Reed–esque housewives who would then be able to punch its buttons and read recipe combinations off a teletype machine. Read more of this post

YouTube resists independent music streaming ultimatum despite talks

YouTube resists independent music streaming ultimatum despite talks
Saturday, May 24, 2014
AFP

LONDON–The independent music trade organization on Friday said YouTube had refused to withdraw threats over the Silicon Valley giant’s plans to launch a music streaming service, despite 24 hours of negotiations. Read more of this post

Intel readies 3D-printed robots for handy consumers

Intel readies 3D-printed robots for handy consumers

image001

Wed, May 28 2014

By Noel Randewich and Alexei Oreskovic

RANCHO PALOS VERDE California (Reuters) – Intel Corp introduced a walking, talking robot on Wednesday made from 3D-printed parts that will be available to consumers later this year, if they are willing to assemble it with a kit that costs around $1,600. Read more of this post