The IPhone’s Secret Flights From China to Your Local Apple Store

The IPhone’s Secret Flights From China to Your Local Apple Store

By Adam Satariano  Sep 11, 2013

As Apple CEO Tim Cook unveiled new iPhones yesterday, a complex operation had already kicked into gear behind the scenes to send millions of the handsets to store shelves worldwide. The process starts in China, where pallets of iPhones are moved from factories in unmarked containers accompanied by a security detail. The containers are then loaded onto trucks and shipped via pre-bought airfreight space, including on old Russian military transports. The journey ends in stores where the world’s biggest technology company makes constant adjustments based on demand, said people who have worked on Apple’s logistics and asked not to be identified because the process is secret. Read more of this post

NQ Mobile: it pays to be less Chinese

NQ Mobile: it pays to be less Chinese

Sep 12, 2013 3:00am by Peter Vanham

“How many Chinese brands can you name?”, a Chinese host asked at the beginning of the WEF session on ‘Rebranding China’. His American interviewee, Richard Edelman, knew only three: Huawei, Air China, and Lenovo. But this isn’t Edelman’s problem. The limited awareness about Chinese brands is mostly due to the faulty branding strategy by Chinese companies going abroad themselves. What then, can they do about it? Read more of this post

Entrepreneurial internet users in China are taking full advantage of the massive garssroots user base of microblog giant Sina Weibo

Entrepreneurs cashing in on Sina Weibo

Staff Reporter

2013-09-12

Entrepreneurial internet users in China are taking full advantage of the massive garssroots user base of microblog giant Sina Weibo, reports the Guangzhou-based Nanfang People Weekly magazine. Sina Weibo, which turned four on Aug. 28, currently has more than 500 million users, including 46.2 million active daily users. In April this year, Chinese internet juggernaut Alibaba acquired an 18% stake in the company for US$586 million, placing Sina Weibo’s total market value at a staggering US$3.3 billion. The company’s stock has also risen from around US$40 to as high as US$140, forcing former critics who claimed that the microblog has no value to eat their words. Read more of this post

Apple Won’t Go for Broke in China

Updated September 11, 2013, 6:09 p.m. ET

Apple Won’t Go for Broke in China

The Company Is Trying to Maintain Its Industry-Leading Profitability

AARON BACK

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Apple AAPL -5.44% still isn’t going all out for growth in China, preferring instead to protect its high profit margins. Its new devices simply aren’t priced to sell there—so much for the ballyhooed cheap iPhone targeted at consumers in emerging markets. China matters to Apple because, as developed markets become saturated with smartphones, the country stands out for its size and growth potential. Research firm Canalys estimates that total smartphone sales in China will reach 421 million units next year, and Apple has only 5% of the market. Read more of this post

Through the dark times of Indonesia: the journey of Toto Sugiri in building Sigma Group that was acquired by Telkom Indonesia in 2007

Through the dark times of Indonesia: the journey of Toto Sugiri

September 11, 2013

by Teoh Minghao

Screen-Shot-2013-09-11-at-1.54.09-AM

Toto Sugiri is a veteran in the Indonesia technology scene. But not many people know his story and the things he has done over the past three decades as he maintains low profile and shies away from media attention. Some may know him as the founder self-funder of Indonesia’s firsttier four data center, DCI; others may know him as a mentor in Founder Institute Jakarta; but fewer may know this 60-year-old entrepreneur is the founder of the 900 man Sigma Group that was acquired by Telkom Indonesia in 2007, or what he went through and his entrepreneurial journey. Read more of this post

Why is a US billionaire punting on Murdoch?

Why is a US billionaire punting on Murdoch?

September 12, 2013

Elizabeth Knight

Rupert Murdoch’s recently formed international print business, News Corp, has a new 12 per cent shareholder – Southeastern Asset Management – which has declared its agenda as benign, but whose motives still need to be questioned. Southeastern is the investment vehicle of American billionaire O. Mason Hawkins, who has built a reputation as a value investor who is not afraid of engaging in a bit of intervention after he invests. Read more of this post

Big Data From Talking Turbines Signal Productivity Boom

Talking Windmills Herald Gust of U.S. Productivity Growth

At the Top Crop farm in Dwight, Illinois, 200 turbines rise from a sea of corn and soybeans, their blades gently turning day and night to spin up wind energy. They talk to one another, unheard by the human ear, seeking to keep pace with their neighbors’ output. If one falls behind, sensors reach out to an office about 850 miles away in Schenectady, New York, where General Electric Co. (GE)’s remote operations center, using data from 19,000 windmills, finds the most efficient way to help. Intelligent monitoring of the machines has helped GE fix faults, limit snags and pre-empt thousands of failures. Read more of this post

How Social Commerce Is Winning By Going After The Entire Shopping Experience, From Browsing To Sale

How Social Commerce Is Winning By Going After The Entire Shopping Experience, From Browsing To Sale

COOPER SMITH SEP. 11, 2013, 10:15 AM 752

bii-social-commerce-funnel

If social commerce is ever going to fulfill its ambitions, it must go after all parts of what is known as the consumer purchase funnel. The classic funnel might be divided into three main stages: consumers discover new products on Facebook or Pinterest, then form an opinion, and finally move on to the purchase stage.  Social commerce is all about inspiration and product discovery, but entrepreneurs and retailers are anxious to transform that interest at the “top-of-the-funnel,” into sales. In a new report from BI Intelligence, we analyzed the most recent data and spoke to leaders in the social commerce space to understand how their companies are adding value at different stages of the retail and e-commerce purchase funnel. To do so they’re building social networks around e-commerce platforms, partnering with brands, or otherwise transforming social commerce’s strengths in Pinterest-style digital window-shopping into a clear value proposition. Here’s how social commerce companies are driving sales:  Read more of this post

Suning Clicks On the Future of Retailing; Can a traditional appliance retailer with a nationwide store network metamorphosize to compete in the online shopping era?

09.11.2013 12:43

Suning Clicks On the Future of Retailing

One of China’s biggest store chains is remaking itself as an Internet retailer, apparently just in time

By staff reporter Wang Shanshan

Can a traditional appliance retailer with a nationwide store network metamorphosize to compete in the online shopping era? Suning Commerce Group Co. Ltd. Zhang Jindong thinks his company can – and that it can succeed. Over the past four years, the 1,500-store Suning chain has been pouring money into Internet sales research, website platform building and logistics system designs to prove Zhang’s point. It’s also branched into new business sectors, such as financial services, while revamping the company’s operating structure and vastly expanding its product line. Read more of this post

Alibaba founder sheds light on group’s structure, pressuring HK regulators

Alibaba founder sheds light on group’s structure, pressuring HK regulators

5:27am EDT

HONG KONG (Reuters) – Alibaba Group founder Jack Ma revealed details of its internal partnership structure on Tuesday, ratcheting up pressure on Hong Kong regulators as they grapple with the ecommerce giant’s initial public offering plans. The two sides are debating the ability for Alibaba to list in Hong Kong and, at the same time, allow its “partners” – a group of founders and senior employees – to keep control over the makeup of its board. Read more of this post

Cheap iPhone Not Cheap Enough in China; unsubsidized 16GB iPhone 5c is being offered at 4,488 yuan ($733) in China, barely less the 5,000 yuan Chinese consumers had to fork out for the old iPhone 5 and significantly higher than the 3,000 yuan analysts had predicted

September 11, 2013, 2:00 AM

Cheap iPhone Not Cheap Enough in China

MK-CG170_APPLE_F_20130910163943

Apple Senior Vice President of Worldwide Marketing at Phil Schiller speaks about the new iPhone 5C during an Apple product announcement at the Apple campus on September 10, 2013 in Cupertino, California.

It has come to pass. The world now has an “affordable” iPhone. While detractors of Apple‘sAAPL -2.28%new iPhone 5c, unveiled in Cupertino, Calif. today, have said the “c” stands for cheap, fans in the world’s largest smartphone market are saying it stands for something else: China. In part that’s because more so than in any other market, Apple stands to gain sales in China from the cheaper offering thanks to the country’s huge number of low- and middle-income smartphone users. But it’s also because in China the new iPhone quite frankly won’t be all that cheap. Read more of this post

Apple IPhone Models Show Shift From Pioneer to Emulator

Apple IPhone Models Show Shift From Pioneer to Emulator

Apple Inc. (AAPL), the company that pioneered the era of mobile touch-based computing with the iPhone’s 2007 debut, is taking more cues from the competition. In a break with the past, when the company introduced one iPhone a year, Apple yesterday unveiled two new models. The iPhone 5C will cost $99 to $199 with a wireless contract and comes in five different colors. A high-end iPhone 5S with fingerprint-security features, a speedier processor and better camera will cost $199 to $399 and be available in three colors. Read more of this post

YC grad Leaky quietly shuts down auto insurance comparison business, a valuable lesson in disruption

YC grad Leaky quietly shuts down, a valuable lesson in disruption

BY CARMEL DEAMICIS 
ON SEPTEMBER 9, 2013

Y Combinator grad Leaky shut down a week and a half ago, and practically no one noticed. The startup, founded in 2010, aimed to be an Expedia for car insurance, allowing users to enter their personal information and receive customized rate comparisons. Leaky got $670,000 in seed funding from YC, 500 Startups, Box Group, and Start Fund. There’s a message on the website telling users:

On August 31, 2013, we wrapped up operations on our auto insurance comparison business and will no longer be providing prices to new or existing users. Moving forward, our focus will be on our commercial insurance business, which has been acquired by Navion Insurance.

When I reached out to Leaky for comment, co-founder Jason Traff responded via email, “[W]e were sad to shut down our auto insurance comparisons… For over two years, we tried to get a foothold in the industry, which proved difficult as industry outsiders with a disruptive business model.” Read more of this post

The New Style Influencers Are Digital; Brands Court Stars With Active Audiences to Try Turning Followers Into Shoppers

September 10, 2013, 7:02 p.m. ET

The New Style Influencers Are Digital

Brands Court Stars With Active Audiences to Try Turning Followers Into Shoppers

ELIZABETH HOLMES

New York Fashion Week is back, but the front row elite is getting swapped out for the up-and-coming style bloggers that used to live on the sidelines of the fashion world. Elizabeth Holmes gives the low-down on the industry’s new “influencers.” Photo: Andrew Spear for The Wall Street Journal.

Jen Hsieh ducked out of the office at lunchtime last Friday and took the crosstown bus to Kate Spade’s presentation during New York Fashion Week. Ms. Hsieh, 22, has a full-time job at a social media agency as well as her own personal style blog on the side—and it was the latter that got her the coveted chance to preview the designer’s spring collection. Read more of this post

Samsung Sets Sights on TV Apps

Sep 10, 2013

Samsung Sets Sights on TV Apps

MIN-JEONG LEE

Samsung Electronics Co.005930.SE -0.64% has been beefing up its software capabilities for its smartphones to compete with Apple Inc.  Now, it’s also setting its sights on apps for its Internet-connected TVs. At the IFA trade show in Berlin last week, the company unveiled two new applications for its Smart TVs allowing users to view high-quality pictures or video clips. The ‘Opera App’ allows users to view around 100 opera shows that are performed in Austria’s Wien National Opera House, while the ‘Gallery App’ allows users to view high-definition photos taken by popular photographers like Alex Maclean. Both apps can be downloaded for free from Samsung’s proprietary TV app platform. The move is part of Samsung’s bid to keep its dominant TV market share and highlights its  ambitions in improving content for its consumer products. But the question remains whether consumers will be fascinated by the availability of more TV apps.  Software has been a key weakness for Samsung and when it comes to smartphones, the South Korean company predominantly uses Google Inc.’sGOOG +0.07% Android for its mobile devices. Samsung, along with rivals such as LG Electronics Inc.066570.SE -1.20% and Sony Corp.6758.TO -0.70% has been fighting sluggish demand for TVs worldwide, with its TV unit sales falling 7.5% in the second quarter from a year earlier. Samsung doesn’t break out profit figures for its TV business separately. Coming out with a number of new premium models has been a key strategy for Samsung’s TV business this year, with the company announcing the launch of 55-inch and 65-inch ultra high definition TVs earlier this year. Samsung has been racing against crosstown rival LG to sell both flat-panel TVs and curved ones that use organic light-emitting diode display technology. Aside from the hefty rice tags of  these TV models, the lack of video streaming content that match the high resolution of UHD TVs has been a big deterrent to adoption, analysts say.

Netflix Tops Record as Hastings Recovers From 2011 Gaffes

Netflix Tops Record as Hastings Recovers From 2011 Gaffes

Netflix Inc. (SPX) eclipsed its all-time high set in mid-2011, capping a two-year recovery for Chief Executive Officer Reed Hastings from marketing missteps that angered customers and cratered the stock. Netflix, which has more than tripled this year to lead the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index, gained 6.4 percent to $313.06 at the close in New York. The previous closing high of $298.73 was set on July 13, 2011. A day earlier, Netflix had raised prices for users who wanted DVDs and streaming — triggering a backlash that cost the service 800,000 subscribers.

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McDonald’s Testing Mobile Order App for U.S. Stores

McDonald’s Testing Mobile Order App for U.S. Stores

Americans will soon be able to order and pay for Big Macs from their mobile phones. McDonald’s Corp. (MCD) is currently testing a mobile payment application in Salt Lake City and in Austin, Texas, Lisa McComb, a spokeswoman, said today in an e-mail. McDonald’s, which today reported U.S. same-store sales that trailed estimates for August, is looking for ways to make it easier for diners to load up on Big Macs, McWraps and smoothies. It’s not alone in seeking to ignite growth at a time when many Americans are eating out less. Burger King Worldwide Inc. (BKW) offers a delivery service with a $10 minimum order in some U.S. cities, while Chipotle Mexican Grill Inc. (CMG) has a mobile ordering app. Read more of this post

Marc Benioff Says, ‘There Would Be No Salesforce.com Without Steve Jobs’

Marc Benioff Says, ‘There Would Be No Salesforce.com Without Steve Jobs’

SARAH PEREZ ANTHONY HA

posted 8 hours ago

Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff spoke of his relationship with Apple founder Steve Jobs at TechCrunch Disrupt SF this morning  (on the same day that executives from Apple were introducing new iPhones in neighboring Cupertino) offering some timely advice as to what Apple needs to do next, now that Steve Jobs is gone. He complained that today’s Apple is trying to look like Steve and act like Steve, when really, “they need to find themselves and be who they are,” says Benioff. “Respect the past, but as Steve would say, project the future.”

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Learn More About What You’re Reading; Curiyo lets online readers learn more about a word or phrase in a story without ever leaving the Web page. It’s a valuable and easy-to-use addition to Web browsing

September 10, 2013, 9:00 p.m. ET

A Valuable Tool for Web Browsing

Learn More About a Word or Phrase in a Story

WALTER S. MOSSBERG

Curiyo is an add-on to all major web browsers that lets you look up names, places and other terms in a pop-up window without leaving the page you’re reading. Walt Mossberg tells us that, despite a few downsides, it is very effective

When activist investor Carl Icahn gave up his quest to block a buyout of computer maker Dell this week, he compared the attitude of the company’s board with 1930s movie idol Clark Gable’s most famous line: “Frankly, my dear, I don’t give a damn.” What if you were reading this news online and didn’t know who Clark Gable was? You could look him up in a source like Wikipedia, but that would mean leaving the page where the Icahn story was, and possibly never returning to learn more about the story. Read more of this post

Intel prepares ultra-small chips for Dick Tracy-style wearable gadgets

Intel prepares ultra-small chips for Dick Tracy-style gadgets

3:51pm EDT

By Noel Randewich

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SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) – Intel is working on a new line of ultra-small and ultra-low-power microchips for wearable devices like smartwatches and bracelets, a bid by the company to make sure it will be at the crest of the next big technology wave after arriving late to the smartphone and tablet revolution. The new line of chips, called Intel Quark, will ship next year and include an ingestible version aimed at biomedical uses, Intel’s president, Renee James, told reporters late on Monday. The Quark chips will be five times smaller and 10 times more power efficient than Intel’s Atom chips for tablets and smartphones, she said. “We’re very committed to not missing the next big thing,” James said. Read more of this post

Here’s What Could Go Wrong With Apple’s New Fingerprint Tech, According To A Security Expert; “Having a central database of fingerprints in the cloud would be incredibly dangerous”

Here’s What Could Go Wrong With Apple’s New Fingerprint Tech, According To A Security Expert

JULIE BORT SEP. 10, 2013, 4:32 PM 11,131 17

After months of rumors, Apple today confirmed that the new iPhone 5S will include a fingerprint scanner. You can use your fingerprint to unlock your phone simply by placing your finger on top of the home button. You can also use your fingerprint with the iTunes store instead of entering a password every time you want to make a purchase. Is trusting Apple with your fingerprint safe? What could go wrong? We turned to security expert Shuman Ghosemajumder, a former Google security guru who is now working at buzzy, stealthy security startup Shape Security to find out. Ghosemajumder said the fingerprint scanner sounds safe to use and that he, himself, would probably use it, once he found out some details about it. The good news is that fingerprints will only be stored on the phone, not in the cloud, and that’s really important. “Having a central database of fingerprints in the cloud would be incredibly dangerous,” Ghosemajumder told us. “But you would expect Apple has world class security experts advising and working with them on this.” Read more of this post

First Rule of Patent Reform: Do No Harm

September 10, 2013, 6:54 p.m. ET

First Rule of Patent Reform: Do No Harm

More rigorous study of patent problems is needed before Congress tries to fix them.

DON ROSENBERG

With Congress back in session, lawmakers are drafting new patent legislation in response to a perceived increase in patent-infringement lawsuits lodged by “trolls” who are accused of being more interested in payoffs than in progress. Judging by the number of proposals, the current patent regime may need improvement. But the stakes are high, and Congress must be careful not to get patent reform wrong. Read more of this post

Cisco enters data storage market with purchase of Whiptail for $415 million

Cisco enters data storage market with purchase of Whiptail

12:37pm EDT

By Nicola Leske and Nadia Damouni

(Reuters) – Cisco Systems Inc on Tuesday announced its first foray into the data storage market, saying it would pay $415 million to acquire privately held storage system maker Whiptail. Cisco said it will pay cash and incentives for the acquisition, expected to close in the first quarter of 2014. Whiptail, founded in 2008 and based in Whippany, New Jersey, makes storage systems based on flash memory chips, which allow data to move through servers with greater speed and efficiency as well as higher volume. One flash server can manage the workload of a number of servers on traditional hard disk drives. Read more of this post

Kyocera seeks niche path to smartphone profits with ‘tough’ handsets

Kyocera seeks niche path to smartphone profits with ‘tough’ handsets

12:18pm EDT

By Yoshiyuki Osada

KYOTO, Japan (Reuters) – Kyocera Corp, an electronic components maker with businesses from office machines to mobile phones, is aiming to expand in smartphones this year while several other second-tier Japanese handset makers are throwing in the towel. Kyocera, unlike its peers, has put its primary focus not on the familiar home market but on the competitive U.S. market, while pursuing a niche in rugged handsets that is shielded from smartphone juggernauts Apple Inc and Samsung Electronics Co Ltd. Read more of this post

DoCoMo Ends IPhone Holdout to Win Back Customers

DoCoMo Ends IPhone Holdout to Win Back Customers

NTT DoCoMo Inc. (9437) agreed to offer Apple Inc. (AAPL)’s iPhones as Japan’s largest mobile carrier backs the latest handset to reverse market-share losses as customers flock to smaller rivals. Two new smartphones, including a cheaper $99 version in bright colors and an updated high-end device, will go on sale Sept. 20 for the Japanese carrier’s network, Tokyo-based DoCoMo said in a statement. Apple debuted the 5C and 5S iPhones at an event at its Cupertino, California, headquarters. Read more of this post

Singapore’s EDB bet on 3D printing industry to be the next big thing; some experts warn that too much available funding in a new venture could risk the formation of another industry bubble ready to burst

Singapore’s 3D printing industry could be the next big thing

POSTED: 11 Sep 2013 12:47 AM
Three-dimensional (3D) printing may be the next industry to propel growth in Singapore’s economy but experts remain wary.

SINGAPORE: Singapore’s Economic Development Board has set aside S$500 million over the next five years to develop the three-dimensional (3D) printing sector. However, some experts warn that too much available funding in a new venture could risk the formation of another industry bubble ready to burst. 3D printing is the process of building up successive micro-layers of material, typically from plastic or metal. It has been touted as the next industry to propel growth in Singapore’s economy. Read more of this post

In China, being retweeted 500 times can get you three years in prison

In China, being retweeted 500 times can get you three years in prison

By Gwynn Guilford @sinoceros September 9, 2013

Details of a new law issued by China’s supreme court are bound to make loose talkers on Sina Weibo and other social media platforms think twice before speaking freely. The law says that any libelous posts or messages will be considered “severebreaches of the law if they are visited or clicked on more than 5,000 times or forwarded (or “retweeted,” in Western parlance) more than 500 times. Those found guilty could face up to three years in jail, reports Reuters, citing Chinese state media. Read more of this post

Alibaba’s Jack Ma Says Partnership Best Way to Protect Business

Alibaba’s Jack Ma Says Partnership Best Way to Protect Business

Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. founder Jack Ma said a partnership system is the best way to protect the company’s value, and it is “not concerned” about where to hold potentially the largest initial share sale since Facebook Inc. Ma said in an e-mail provided to Bloomberg News that the current 28 partners are most likely to create value for customers, employees and shareholders. The partnership system “is not a mere profit sharing mechanism, nor is it a vehicle of power to exert greater control over the company,” he said. Read more of this post

How Does Alibaba Make Money?

Sep 9, 2013

How Does Alibaba Make Money?

By Juro Osawa

To get a glimpse of how Alibaba Group Holding Ltd.’s e-commerce sites work, meet Steven Wong. Mr. Wong, a 39-year-old entrepreneur who lives in Hong Kong, is a regular shopper on Taobao, China’s largest online marketplace run by Alibaba. His most recent purchase was a black T-shirt that said “New York” in white letters, which cost a little over $3. The transaction took place between Mr. Wong and the merchant who sold the T-shirt on Taobao, which serves as a platform where sellers and shoppers find each other. Read more of this post

Why Apple remains king of the mobile game; Samsung may be winning in device volume, but Apple’s App Store attracts paying customers and makes developers’ lives a little easier

Why Apple remains king of the mobile game

September 9, 2013: 12:27 PM ET

Samsung may be winning in device volume, but Apple’s App Store attracts paying customers and makes developers’ lives a little easier.

By John Gaudiosi

FORTUNE — The tech world’s attention will turn to Apple headquarters in Cupertino, Calif. Tuesday, where the company is rumored to debut the enhanced high-end iPhone 5S and the lower-cost iPhone 5C. Other devices, potentially the long-rumored iWatch, could also be showcased. While new Apple products at press events multiple times a year are now common in the cutthroat mobile industry, this week’s event is especially important for Apple (AAPL) and its investors, as well as for the company’s rivals like Samsung, Microsoft (MSFT), Nokia (NOK), Google (GOOG), and Motorola. Read more of this post