Newspaper Association of America CEO Caroline Little: Newspapers aren’t dying and Jeff Bezos isn’t crazy

Newspapers aren’t dying and Jeff Bezos isn’t crazy

August 22, 2013: 12:09 PM ET

Companies change with the times, and newspapers are no different. But they are now emerging in a strong position.

By Caroline Little

FORTUNE — Jeff Bezos, John Henry, and Warren Buffett are not investing in dying businesses. They don’t do that. They are investing in assets poised for a rebound. Despite the recent spate of media last week about the spiraling of newspapers, there are a few facts for industry pundits to consider. Newspaper media comprised a $38.6 billion industry in 2012. While those revenues saw a 2% decline compared to 2011 revenues ($39.5 billion), we’re also starting to see promising shifts in the newspaper business model: growing revenue streams across several categories — some of which have only emerged in recent years. Read more of this post

Travelocity Teams Up With Expedia to Power Searches; Rivals in Online Travel Industry Strike Long-Term Agreement

August 22, 2013, 8:19 p.m. ET

Travelocity Teams Up With Expedia to Power Searches

Rivals in Online Travel Industry Strike Long-Term Agreement

JACK NICAS And DREW FITZGERALD

Travelocity is teaming up with longtime rival Expedia Inc. EXPE +1.68% to power the core of its business: finding hotels and airfares. The two companies said Thursday that they are entering a long-term agreement under which Expedia will handle most of Travelocity’s operations, from running searches to answering customers’ questions to processing bookings. In turn, Travelocity will largely become a brand aimed at attracting customers to its website rather than a true travel agency. Read more of this post

The wristband that records everything you hear

The wristband that records everything you hear

If you have been whipped up into an angry frenzy by Google Glass, it’s probably best to look away now.

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The device is always on but can only store the last 60 seconds of sound

By Andrew Trotman

5:14PM BST 22 Aug 2013

Supporters of the search giant’s glasses that can make phone calls, give you directions as you walk and record video believe it will revolutionise the wearable technology sector. Those on the other side of the divide ask how non-users will be affected, with Senator Joe Barton even sending a letter to Google to voice his concern at possible invasions of privacy. Now there is a new product for Mr Barton to worry about. Kapture is planning to release a wristband later this year that can record every sound around you, which you can then share with the world. The device is always on but can only store the last 60 seconds of sound. The makers see it as a way of preserving those moments in life that are difficult to capture. Read more of this post

The Pentagon as Silicon Valley’s Incubator

August 22, 2013

The Pentagon as Silicon Valley’s Incubator

By SOMINI SENGUPTA

SAN FRANCISCO — In the ranks of technology incubator programs, there is AngelPad here in San Francisco and Y Combinator about 40 miles south in Mountain View. And then there is the Pentagon. In the last year, former Department of Defense and intelligence agency operatives have headed to Silicon Valley to create technology start-ups specializing in tools aimed at thwarting online threats. Frequent reports of cyberattacks have expanded the demand for security tools, in both the public and private sectors, and venture capital money has followed. In 2012, more than $1 billion in venture financing poured into security start-ups, more than double the amount in 2010, according to the National Venture Capital Association. Read more of this post

Tesla Aiming for China After Hundreds of Hong Kong Orders; “If you drive a Ferrari, people will give you a really nasty look. But if you drive an electric car, everybody’s going to be happy.”

Tesla Aiming for China After Hundreds of Hong Kong Orders

When Bem Ho discovered the minivan he drives doesn’t earn him much respect, he ordered a set of wheels that will turn more heads: a Model S electric sedan from Tesla Motors Inc. (TSLA) “I’m getting sick of driving my van because when people see the car they always think I’m a chauffeur,” said Ho, who runs an apparel manufacturer in Hong Kong. “It’ll be like a talking point when you go out: ‘Oh that’s an electric car.’”

Read more of this post

Technology companies fight for funds as venture capitalists look elsewhere; Investors reluctant to take further stakes in perceivedly volatile sector until earlier ventures such as Spotify start to pay off

Technology companies fight for funds as venture capitalists look elsewhere

Investors reluctant to take further stakes in perceivedly volatile sector until earlier ventures such as Spotify start to pay off

Jemima Kiss

The Guardian, Thursday 22 August 2013 21.35 BST

European technology companies are trapped in a funding bottleneck asventure capital firms refuse to reinvest in the sector until they see a return from earlier investments, such as music service Spotify, via successful stock market flotations. As US companies such as Twitter gear up for multibillion-dollar flotations, European venture capitalists say that they need to see share issues that will recoup their initial forays into the technology sector before seeking out the next Google. Read more of this post

Nokia’s dilemma is different now. Back then in early 1990s, the world was on the verge of a decade-long explosion in mobile phone use. This time, however, the company is coming at the tail-end of the smartphone boom

August 22, 2013 7:26 pm

Nokia: A bet with a safety net

By Richard Milne and Daniel Thomas

The ailing company is betting on a new smartphone but some believe salvation lies elsewhere

As Nokia was developing its latest smartphone, Stephen Elop came up with an unusual challenge for the engineers. Mr Elop, the Finnish company’s Canadian chief executive, would stand in the darkened corner of a room while the engineers stood on the other side, taking his picture. The goal? To see if they could produce a photograph sharp enough so that you could tell the time on his watch. Eventually they did. Read more of this post

Internet radio service Pandora: Sing a song of slumping shares

Pandora: Sing a song of slumping shares

8:43pm EDT

By Gerry Shih

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) – Internet radio service Pandora Media Inc (P.N: QuoteProfileResearchStock Buzz) said on Thursday that rising expenditures to acquire music and expand its sales force would push fiscal 2014 earnings below analyst expectations, and its shares slumped 5 percent. The company also backtracked on a 40-hour monthly limit on free music streaming that was announced just six months ago, a measure originally implemented to control rising costs. Pandora said it will lift the monthly cap September 1 after watching its margins improve. Read more of this post

How BlackBerry Handled Past Wealth: As the company’s fortunes spiral down, a look back shows little reward for loyal shareholders even in its heyday. But executives did well

August 22, 2013

How BlackBerry Handled Past Wealth

By FLOYD NORRIS

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It started in an unlikely place, far from the headquarters of more established technology companies, and grew to become a dominant player. Along the way, investors piled in, undeterred by the company’s policy of never paying a dividend. But then the technology changed, and the company struggled to keep up. Eventually it realized it could not continue as it was. It was broken up and acquired, with investors receiving a fraction of what their shares had been worth at the peak. Read more of this post

How binge viewing of Netflix’s original series might end up accelerating expenditures

How Binge-Viewing Could Rock Netflix Stock

AUGUST 22, 2013 | 09:00AM PT

Binge viewing of original series might end up accelerating expenditures

Andrew Wallenstein

Binge-viewing may lead to binge-spending at Netflix, which could eventually see the impact in its stock price. What went unmentioned among the myriad issues its top execs addressed when the streaming service announced its second quarter earnings last month was a potentially significant shift in accounting practices hinted at in the company’s 10-Q. “We are in the early stages of original content, and continue to monitor whether the viewing pattern is higher than initially expected in the first few months to suggest that we amortize at a faster initial rate,” the disclosure read. Read more of this post

Apple Engineers Want Out, Say Recruiters; “Apple culture has started to change with the new leadership on top.”

Apple Engineers Want Out, Say Recruiters

NICHOLAS CARLSON AUG. 22, 2013, 10:26 AM 8,438 9

Silicon Valley recruiters and former Apple employees say Apple hardware engineers are sending out more resumes than ever before, according to Reuters reporters Porrnima Gupta and Peter Henderson. The reason: under CEO Tim Cook, Apple is not the company it used to be under Steve Jobs. One “recruiter with ties to Apple” told Gupta and Henderson, “I am being inundated by LinkedIn messages and emails both by people who I never imagined would leave Apple and by people who have been at Apple for a year, and who joined expecting something different than what they encountered.” Read more of this post

3-D printer company MakerBot Reaches for the Masses with $1,400 Digitizer; designing new objects can require specialized skills in 3-D modeling or engineering, which can be a barrier for novices

AUGUST 22, 2013, 3:12 PM

A 3-D Scanner Reaches for the Masses

By AMY O’LEARY

The 3-D printer company MakerBot on Thursday entered the new market for scanning, introducing a desktop device called the Digitizer that could help push more of the public into 3-D printing. The $1,400 Digitizer looks a little like a classic record player, but with lasers. It rotates small objects on a turntable near two lasers and a camera to create a three-dimensional model that can then be reproduced by a 3-D printer. Read more of this post

Translating Cookpad, Japan’s top cooking and recipe-sharing site with 20 million users, including 80-90% of all Jap women in their 20s and 30s, and more than 1.5 million registered recipes

Translating Japan’s top cooking site

BY MAKIKO ITOH

AUG 22, 2013

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The Internet isn’t all kitten videos and saucy stuff, you know. In Japan, food and cooking makes up a large part of the Net — and recipe-sharing site Cookpad is its biggest juggernaut. With 20 million users — including an astonishing 80 to 90 percent of all Japanese women in their 20s and 30s — and more than 1.5 million registered recipes, it’s the go-to source for Japanese home cooks. Earlier this month it launched an English-language website (en.cookpad.com), a pared-down version with around 1,600 recipes initially translated from the mother site; this number is promised to grow to at least 30,000. I’ve been involved in working on several of the translations myself. Read more of this post

Lee Kai-Fu, China’s Innovation Idol

Lee Kai-Fu, China’s Innovation Idol

By Lauren Hilgers on August 22, 2013

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Lee Kai-Fu, China’s foremost evangelist for innovation, works on the 12th floor of a Beijing office building with a sprawling electronics mall in the basement. On a hot, gray summer day, the view outside his window is anything but inspiring. That doesn’t seem to bother Lee, who’s thinking about Steve Jobs. “One would believe, because China has four times as many people as the U.S., for every American Steve Jobs, China should have four,” he says as he fixes his wire-rimmed glasses. “But we don’t. We don’t have a single Steve Jobs.”

Read more of this post

Apple’s Falling China Share Vexes IPhone Case Makers; “Apple has no fresh ideas, no new designs. The market changes very quickly. If you don’t change, you will die.”

Apple’s Falling China Share Vexes IPhone Case Makers

Apple Inc. (AAPL)’s falling market share in China is prompting thousands of local accessory makers to give more attention to products that fit mobile phones and tablet computers made by Samsung Electronics Co. (005930) and domestic rivals.

A shift to devices from Samsung, Lenovo Group Ltd. (992) and a widening array of Chinese makers offering cheaper handsets is pushing up costs for those that previously relied on the iPad and iPhone, said Vincent Kwok, chief executive officer of Guangzhou-based Magic Kingdom, a maker of protective cases. Read more of this post

Alibaba vs. Tencent: China’s Growing Internet Turf War

Alibaba vs. Tencent: China’s Growing Internet Turf War

By Lulu Yilun Chen on August 22, 2013

Two of China’s richest men are intensifying their rivalry in the world’s biggest Internet market. The country’s largest e-commerce company, Alibaba Group Holding, led by Executive Chairman Jack Ma, is under assault from top Internet player Tencent Holdings (700:HK), chaired by Pony Ma. (The two aren’t related.) Tencent, a megaportal and China’s version of AOL (AOL), got a jump on Alibaba in mobile apps. Its chat software WeChat, released two years ago, has more than 300 million users—eclipsing the mobile app of Sina Weibo, a Twitter-like microblogging site in which Alibaba bought a stake in April. Now Tencent is trying to expand into the kind of fee-generating online payment services Alibaba dominates. Read more of this post

‘Jurassic Park 3D’ Opens No. 1 in China

August 21, 2013, 7:49 PM

‘Jurassic Park 3D’ Opens No. 1 in China

By Alexandra Cheney

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“Jurassic Park” (1993)

“Jurassic Park 3D,” the re-release of the 1993 science-fiction film from Steven Spielberg, debuted Tuesday in China at No. 1. The film, which brought in $6.3 million from 2,500 screens, marks the fourth-highest opening day of the year in China. “Iron Man 3” ($19.1 million), “Pacific Rim,” ($8.6 million) and “Fast and Furious 6,” ($8.3 million) are ahead of the dinosaur re-release, while “Man of Steel” ($6.2 million) and “The Hobbit” ($5.6 million) trail the 20-year old Universal Studios film. The film has grossed more than $45.4 million domestically since it was re-released in 3D in April, and more than $20.7 million internationally. “Jurassic Park 3D” will open this weekend in Panama, Mexico, Spain, Ireland and the United Kingdom. When the film originally premiered in 1993, it grossed $970 million worldwide, overtaking “E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial” as the highest-grossing film at that time. This is the first time the film is being shown in China, a country with proven success in 3D conversions. In 2012, “Titanic 3D” grossed $11.2 million opening weekend and took in a total of $150.2 million there.

Indonesia to See Big Growth in Digital Media: PwC

Indonesia to See Big Growth in Digital Media: PwC

By Jakarta Globe on 9:24 am August 23, 2013.
With increasing access to the Internet and an explosive growth in mobile devices and entertainment, most notably in the BRIC countries, businesses must engage in constant innovation in order to keep pace with evolving markets, PricewaterhouseCooper projected on Thursday. In its annual Global Entertainment and Media Outlook 2013-2017, PwC said that growth in the industry will come from spending on digitally delivered media in the next five years, although most spending will continue to be on on-digital media. Read more of this post

China’s movie market booms with local content, cinema expansion

China’s movie market booms with local content, cinema expansion

2:11am EDT

By Grace Li

HONG KONG (Reuters) – In “American Dreams in China”, Cheng Dongqing is giving a lecture in an abandoned factory in Beijing. Snow falls through the damaged roof and a power cut sends students reaching for their flashlights.

The movie, about how young Chinese in the 1990s tried every means to learn English so they could study overseas, is part of a boom in domestic productions that is outpacing foreign films at the box office in China – the world’s second-largest market after the United States and Canada. Read more of this post

Gartner’s 2013 Hype Cycle for Emerging Technologies Maps Out Evolving Relationship Between Humans and Machines

STAMFORD, Conn., August 19, 2013

Gartner’s 2013 Hype Cycle for Emerging Technologies Maps Out Evolving Relationship Between Humans and Machines

2013 Hype Cycle Special Report Evaluates the Maturity of More Than 1,900 Technologies

Gartner to Host Complimentary Webinar “Emerging Technologies Hype Cycle for 2013: Redefining the Relationship,” August 21 at 10 a.m. EDT and 1 p.m. EDT

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The evolving relationship between humans and machines is the key theme of Gartner, Inc.’s “Hype Cycle for Emerging Technologies, 2013.” Gartner has chosen to feature the relationship between humans and machines due to the increased hype around smart machines, cognitive computing and the Internet of Things. Analysts believe that the relationship is being redefined through emerging technologies, narrowing the divide between humans and machines.  Read more of this post

At Apple, Tim Cook leads a quiet cultural revolution

At Apple, Tim Cook leads a quiet cultural revolution

3:08am EDT

By Poornima Gupta and Peter Henderson

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) – Shortly after signing on as chief operating officer at Facebook, Sheryl Sandberg was looking to connect with people in a similar role – No. 2 to a brilliant and passionate young founder. She called Tim Cook. “He basically explained nicely that my job was to do the things that Mark (Zuckerberg) did not want to focus on as much,” Sandberg said of the 2007 meeting that lasted several hours with the chief operating officer of Apple Inc. “That was his job with Steve (Jobs). And he explained that the job would change over time and I should be prepared for that.” While Sandberg has enjoyed a steady run at Facebook, it is Cook’s job that has changed radically since then. Now, the man who was handed one of the more daunting tasks in business – filling the shoes of the late Steve Jobs and keeping Apple on top – may himself need a spot of advice. Two years into Cook’s tenure, Apple is expected to unveil a redesigned iPhone next month. It will be a key moment for Cook. The company he inherited has become a very different creature: a mature corporate behemoth rather than a scrappy industry pioneer, with its share price down 5 percent this year, despite a recent rally. The S&P 500 is up about 15 percent this year. Read more of this post

When it comes to apps, consumers have shorter attention spans

When it comes to apps, consumers have shorter attention spans

Tue, Aug 20 2013

By Natasha Baker

TORONTO (Reuters) – Consumers are using apps for shorter bursts of time and opting to “snack” on content more frequently, according to newly released data. A record 70 billion smartphone and tablet apps are expected to be downloaded globally this year, according to market research firm ABI Research. But consumers’ attention spans for apps are dropping.

Read more of this post

Baidu is expanding with mobile applications that don’t need to be downloaded; Mobile users can access so called “lite apps” for transportation, travel and entertainment information through Baidu’s search program on smartphones

Baidu Expands Mobile Search With Apps That Aren’t Downloaded

Baidu Inc. (BIDU), owner of China’s largest search engine, is expanding with mobile applications that don’t need to be downloaded as it competes with Tencent Holdings Ltd. (700) for users in the world’s biggest smartphone market.

Mobile users can access so called “lite apps” for transportation, travel and entertainment information through Baidu’s search program on smartphones, Li Mingyuan, a vice president, said today in Beijing. Baidu is also offering mobile payment services for developers to commercialize their applications, he said. Read more of this post

Golden Calls: Will China embrace a champagne iPhone? “I’ll look stupid if I carry a gold-colored phone. A phone should be simple and sober. “

Golden Calls: Will China embrace a champagne iPhone?

Wed, Aug 21 2013

BEIJING (Reuters) – If Apple hopes to woo more Chinese by adding a glitzy coating – some call it champagne, some gold – to its next iPhone, it may be in for a surprise.

While gold is hugely popular as a safe haven and a status symbol – China is set to overtake India as the world’s biggest gold consumer this year – shoppers at an Apple store in Beijing weren’t all convinced it should be coupled with that pinnacle of mobile gadgetry. Read more of this post

Water + Sunshine = Fuel as Lab in California Chases Dream: Cars

Water + Sunshine = Fuel as Lab in California Chases Dream: Cars

It sounds like magic, far-out fiction, a California dream. Yet earnest scientists are hard at work on a new alchemy: brewing fuel for cars — synthetic gasoline — from little more than water and sunshine.

Mimicking the way plants turn sunlight and carbon dioxide in the air into energy and oxygen, the Joint Center for Artificial Photosynthesis at the California Institute of Technology is in a race to trump nature and slow global warming. Nate Lewis, a Caltech professor and solar energy research star, has a plan to remake fuel as we know it. Read more of this post

Why Texas Bans the Sale of Tesla Cars; Elon Musk is selling his product directly to consumers. No car dealers doing hard sell. No commission for employees. And uniform prices at every store

Why Texas Bans the Sale of Tesla Cars

ABC News Nightline 1 hour ago

When you’re about to compete in your first electric car race, brace yourself for the sound … of silence. But don’t let those quiet engines fool you because these days, quiet means fast.

With every major car company looking for a share of the booming electric car market, the competition to go faster and further for cheaper has become an all-out war. Detroit, Japan and Germany are all represented, but right now, an unlikely newcomer is getting top honors: the Tesla Model S. Read more of this post

Finally, A Robot That Will Talk To Your Children So You Don’t Have To When You Are Tired

Finally, A Robot That Will Talk To Your Children So You Don’t Have To

NICHOLAS CARLSON AUG. 21, 2013, 8:50 AM 3,856 17

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You work really hard all day, so when you’re finally back at home, all you want to do is kick back with your iPad and play with some apps. A little Candy Crush and scotch to ease the pain, am I right? But no. First some 8-year-old wants you to talk to them. Then some 3-year-old is trying to give you a hug. Ugh. Fortunately, for you, modern parent, there’s a new Silicon Valley startup called WittyWorX. WittyWorX makes a green robot owl called “IXI-Play” that is programmed with a “rich set of sensors and expression capabilities to support the playful interaction” with your children. “With its lifelike body movement and posture, animated eyes and sounds, IXI-Play is very well suited to express its emotions during game play. Children recognize and enjoy this interaction, making IXI-Play feel like a real buddy for playful interaction.” Translation: make sure there’s water in your ice cube trays and your iPad Mini is charged, because you’ve finally got some quality time ahead of you in your evenings, modern mom or dad. WittyWorX showed off IXI-Play yesterday, at a very important conference for startups in Silicon Valley called YCombinator Demo Day. All the top venture capitalists attend the event to see what kind of life-improving innovations are coming next. IXI-Play was a favorite. Here are some of IXI-Play’s expressions. Note the one in the second row from the top, second column to the left. This robot will handle the tough love for you. Here’s a video demonstration of IXI-Play.  When the dad sits in the easy chair at 41 seconds in, remember to imagine that’s you.

How Roberta Benteler went from wanting a job in fashion to owning an online retailer to challenge Net a Porter

How Roberta Benteler went from wanting a job in fashion to owning an online retailer

Roberta Benteler runs Avenue 32, an online retailer to challenge Net a Porter. She talks to Emma Sinclair about how she grew her business from scratch, her biggest inspiration and whether the fashion world really is like The Devil Wears Prada.

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Roberta Benteler founded Avenue 32 to challenge the likes of Net a Porter

By Emma Sinclair

1:30PM BST 19 Aug 2013

In April 2011, Roberta Benteler founded Avenue 32, an online retailer to challenge the likes of Net a Porter. The site has already made its mark: its largest single order to date is an unbelievable £51,000 (I’d love to know who that client was!). If Net a Porter is something of a department store, Avenue 32 is more a series of independent boutiques all under one roof with well-known designers on their pages. A firm advocate of new and young brands, it provides an online platform for young designers who otherwise might not have much of a presence on the internet. Additionally, the site looks after distribution, logistics and photography; often the most challenging elements of an online business for young designers. Read more of this post

Is Moko Australia’s own next Facebook?

Is Moko Australia’s own next Facebook?

August 22, 2013 – 12:54PM

Nate Cochrane

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Ian Rodwell, founder and CEO of ASX-listed mobile advertising company, Moko, says the business is on track to being a $1 billion company listed on the US Nasdaq exchange. Photo: Nate Cochrane

Its origins go back to a five-person operation above a hairdresser in Perth. Now reincarnated social network company Moko is gearing up to crack the US college scene and a $US1 billion capitalisation on the world’s biggest technology stock exchange. Next month, the Western Australia company will launch a service to connect advertisers with 5 million American college students. Read more of this post

Patrick Grove: why the services is the next online wave in Asia

Patrick Grove: why the services is the next online wave in Asia

Published 21 August 2013 11:48, Updated 22 August 2013 00:46

Patrick Grove

As group chief executive of Catcha Group, I’ve been in the online industry for almost 15 years and I’ve rolled up my sleeves and got dirty plenty of times. It’s this hands-on experience that has helped me identify the hallmarks of a successful online business: the next wave of successes is likely to be services businesses.

Consumers are already going online to hunt down services and products, but they are often faced with the task of sifting through a lot of poor-quality information. This results in a real need to organise data into something useful and online aggregators are great at this – the success of online aggregators of travel sales and discounts bears testament to this. Aggregators of financial products are the next step for Asia. Read more of this post