Category: News

  • Our connected future: What to expect when elevators and toys start phoning home

    Your next elevator pitch might actually come from data derived from your elevator. That’s the case for an unnamed elevator manufacturing company that used Splunk’s machine data logging software to track how often its elevators were taking trips in its clients’ buildings. It noticed that the fewer trips people made, the more likely it was that the client would cancel the lucrative maintenance contracts the firm offered.

    So it took that data and tweaked its approach. Now when it sees a slowdown it reaches out to the client to try a new plan or just make sure the clients don’t cancel. In the future it may offer new pricing plans to adjust for slack usage.

    That’s just one way connected devices and the data they offer can be used for benefitting a business. But the value of constant connectivity to a firm goes far beyond that — and could change the way businesses operate. Even after a product goes out the door, the company responsible can still keep an eye on it. That has big repercussions for business and consumers — and not all of those repercussions may be welcome.

    Always be talking … to your device.

    For example, the constant contact can also help tweak a design or improve the function of a product — even out in the field. In a recent conversation, Splunk’s Tapan Bhatt walked me through a few examples such as the one above, where the company’s machine logging data helped businesses adjust. For example, the makers of the Nest thermostat use Splunk to analyze data uploaded from hundreds of thousands of homes, and tune their algorithms for energy performance.

    nest-thermostat-featured

    Medical device manufacturer iRhythm uploads remote monitor data to Splunk to make sure devices run as expected, as well as help ensure that patients can use the devices intuitively. In many ways this isn’t new. Jeremy Conrad at Lemnos Labs pointed out to me in a conversation last month that many manufactured devices are tweaked again and again after the first manufacturing run to smooth out perceived and real flaws in the design.

    The shift is that it can now happen constantly and that the changes might be implemented weeks or months after the product has been manufactured. Advertising firms and online publications have been using such data to refine their products for years. The Huffington Post’s love of A/B headline testing is well documented, while the use of eye tracking in web site design is a common practice. But more connectivity in devices means the fine-tuning and easy tracking that are common in digital products are now available in the real world.

    Want to tweak a feature? Send out some software

    Connected devices not only offer you the ability to get data from your goods (while software like Splunk’s helps you log and later analyse it), but it also allows you to change how they feel and function. For example, Orbotix, the company that makes the Sphero not only knows the moment someone activates one of the Bluetooth-controlled balls, but can give it new abilities with an over the air update.

    This connectivity and resulting data can also help with business goals, like improving manufacturing, anticipating demand and even holding reviewers accountable for their articles as was the case when The New York Times and Elon Musk, the CEO of Tesla got in a public battle over a poor review of the electric car.

    The board at the Orbotix HQ that tracks all the active Spheros in the wild.

    The board at the Orbotix HQ that tracks all the active Spheros in the wild.

    At Orbotix a billboard in the office tracks how many Sphero’s were activated that day, that month and even over longer periods of time. If you stand in front of it for a few moments the numbers will change. Paul Berberian, the CEO of Orbotix told me that during the holiday season the numbers were changing so fast it was hard to keep up. During the rest of the year evenings and weekends were popular times for seeing the numbers flip more rapidly.

    Just in time manufacturing gets a data infusion

    As this data accumulates he’s finding that he can better anticipate demand and plan inventory to meet it. Perhaps if he wanted to, he could implement a similar program to that elevator company, watch the data from individual Sphero’s and when interest seems to wane perhaps the company sends a notification to the user about a new app available for the ball.

    But it’s not always about the customer — this data can be used to monitor manufacturing partners or suppliers. For example, Electric Imp, which makes a tiny module that device makers can insert into their products to give it connectivity (it’s a radio with access to a cloud back end), connects its modules as they come off the line. One of the final steps in the packaging process is each module gets an ID laser-etched onto it.

    electricimp
    This process requires the module to “wake up,” connect to its virtual machine in the cloud to get its ID number, and then tell the laser etching machine (which has its own Imp module) what number to print on it. As part of this process Electric Imp’s management can track all of its modules off the manufacturing line and get key information about yields and even product theft.

    Of course the flip side of this constant connectivity is the disquieting sensation that even as you enjoy a product it’s not yours. It’s features might change at any point. Perhaps things you love about the product or even features you’ve purchased, might suddenly disappear. As a consumer, the idea of dynamic pricing can seem exciting if you don’t use something a lot, but it becomes a source of higher costs if you have a building with very active elevators, for example.

    And perhaps most unsettling is the realization that these products can act as a doorway into your home, sharing information that perhaps you’d rather it didn’t. Your car tracking your trips. A toy that knows if you’ve skipped school to play video games. It’s unsettling enough that this happens on the web and with our phones. As this capability hits more devices, we may find ourselves taking the stairs instead of a connected elevator or playing with an old-fashioned doll instead of a Bluetooth enabled ball.

    Related research and analysis from GigaOM Pro:
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  • News story: How to grow your business: live webchat with Lord Young

    The webchat coincides with the publication of Lord Young’s latest report Growing Your Business: a report which highlights help available to small and micro firms to develop their confidence and capability to grow.

    Webchat details

    Ask a question

    If you’d like to ask a question in advance, email it to [email protected] or on Twitter tweet with #AskLordYoung

    Lord Young will be joined by Simon Finch of Finch Installations, who recently secured a £9,000 Start-up Loan, and Anthony Lau, founder of Cyclehoop and 2009 winner of The Pitch, to discuss how business owners can grow a successful company.

    Growing Your Business: A report on growing micro businesses

    The report includes:

    • an update on the government’s Start-Up Loans programme,
    • new developments to help growing small businesses such as the £30m Growth Voucher programme
    • an enhanced role for business schools in their engagement with local small firms
    • further steps to open up public procurement to small suppliers.

    A link to the report will appear here on the morning of Monday 13 May.

  • ICON Derelicts: A Romantic Marriage of Old and New

    ICON Derelicts

    The thing about trends is that you never know just how long they’re going to last. Case-in-point; heavily patina’d cars with modern conveniences and drive-trains. For most of us, the idea of driving around in a rusted hulk is downright repulsive. But what if they were done up, and done up right. This was the vision that Jonathan Ward, founder of ICON Derelicts, had when he embarked on an automotive adventure that he hoped a few discerning enthusiasts would follow.

    Source: CarAndDriver.com

  • Gold Medalist Dead After Boat Capsizes

    “Gold medalist dead” is something you don’t want to hear before the weekend starts, but it’s the unfortunate truth.

    The Atlantic Wire reports that British Olympic gold medalist Andrew “Bart” Simpson, 36, died in a boat accident on Thursday after his catamaran capsized with him on it. He was underwater for 10 minutes as rescuers tried to get him out. After being pulled from the boat, he was brought ashore and pronounced dead at the scene.

    Simpson was reportedly training for the America’s Cup in the San Francisco Bay at the time of the accident. The boat race has a reputation for being dangerous, and it has become even more so in recent years as the races become faster and more fierce.

    Before the accident, Simpson had won a gold medal in the 2008 Beijing Olympics in Men’s Sailing. He won a silver at the 2012 London Olympics.

    The accident probably won’t change plans for 2013′s America’s Cup race. It’s still scheduled to take place in September of this year in San Francisco with the Golden Gate Yacht Club as the defender and the Kungliga Svenska Segelsällskapet as the Challenger of Record.

    Here’s some raw footage of the rescue operation:

    [Image: Team GB]

  • Nokia’s next Lumia could be crushed by upcoming Galaxy S4 Zoom

    Galaxy S4 Zoom Specs
    It looks like Nokia plans to make the camera the focal point of its upcoming new flagship Lumia 928 once again, but this time around it could be in even worse shape than before. Relatively slow sales of the Lumia 920 compared to other leading smartphones showed us that a fresh OS and a killer camera simply aren’t enough to entice users to switch away from Android and iOS. Nokia appears to be beating the same drum all over again with the upcoming Lumia 928 though, and what little appeal the handset’s camera features might have to consumers at large could be overshadowed almost immediately by Samsung’s upcoming Galaxy S4 Zoom.

    Continue reading…

  • Apple’s iPhone Security Measures Prompt Queue Of Unlock Requests From Law Enforcement

    Image (1) iphone-unlocked.jpg for post 379913

    Apple faces a whole lot of inbound requests to unlock iPhone devices from law enforcement officials, according to a new report from CNET. Seized iPhones with a passcode lock are apparently secure enough to frustrate a lot of police agencies in the U.S., resulting in a wait list that Apple has put in place to help it deal with unlock requests from the authorities.

    The waiting list was long enough that it resulted in a 7-week delay for a recent request by the ATF last summer, according to the CNET report. The good news for iPhone owners is that the ATF in that instance turned to Apple as a last resort, after trying to find a law enforcement body at either the local, state or federal level that had the capability to unlock the phone in-house for three months to no avail. The bad news is that an affidavit obtained by CNET, the decryptions seem to take place without necessarily requiring a customer’s knowledge, whereas with Google there’s a password reset involved that notifies a user via email of the unlock.

    Apple can reportedly bypass the security lock to get access to data on a phone, download it to an external device and hand that over to the authorities, according to an ATF affidavit, which means that ultimately, the information on an iOS device isn’t 100 percent secure. But overall, repeated reports peg Apple devices as particularly resistant to prying eyes operating in law enforcement.

    A previous report from CNET also identified iMessage as resilient in the face of outside surveillance attempts, especially compared to more common text communication methods like SMS. Combined, the reports suggest that Apple’s technology for its mobile devices is especially good at repelling unwanted advances, which is great for privacy buffs, though the policies around when and why Apple does share that information needs more fleshing out.

    We’ve reached out to Apple to see if they have any official comment on the unlock queue from law enforcement and how they proceed with requests, and will update if we hear more.

  • Britney Spears’ Bikini Cover: Too Much Airbrush?

    Britney Spears is, without a doubt, looking better these days than she has in a long time. After a painful split from Kevin Federline, having two kids, suffering a very public nervous breakdown, and seeing her career and money go into a conservatorship, she attempted a comeback in 2007 that left her with an embarrassing, lackluster MTV Video Music Awards performance and widespread criticism about her body, which had once been toned and taut.

    Spears got her act together after that and made another comeback, this time to positive reviews. Several years later, she’s tested the Hollywood waters by judging on “X-Factor”, made another successful album, gone on tour, and has even shown off her bikini body on the cover of Shape Magazine.

    The 31-year old singer says she doesn’t work out as much as she used to and admits that dieting is hard.

    “Dieting is tough … because my specialties are spaghetti, brownies and chocolate chip cookies,” she says. “I have had to work hard at getting it back to where it used to be. I used to be obsessed with working out. …[now], three days a week is cool, even two.”

    But though she looks good, some think the cover is way too airbrushed. In a world where celebrities are judged harshly for their appearance, how much airbrush is too much?

    britney bikini cover

  • Randy Jackson Leaving American Idol, Dog

    Randy Jackson, the last remaining original judge from the hugely popular American Idol is leaving the show. Contestants can prepare to hear a lot less “dogs,” (or “dawgs” if you prefer) in their judgments.

    Jackson broke the news to E! News, who quotes him as saying:

    “Yo! Yo! Yo! To put all of the speculation to the rest, after 12 years of judging on American Idol I have decided it is time to leave after this season,” he says. “I am very proud of how we forever changed television and the music industry. It’s been a life changing opportunity but I am looking forward to focusing on my company Dream Merchant 21 and other business ventures.”

    He also tweeted confirmation:

    It’s unclear whether this Ryan Seacrest tweet is related to the news:

    Here’s the Instagram pic that links to:

    Seacrest dogs

    Fox has yet to comment on Jackson’s departure, but E! says one of its sources says there has been more chaos with American Idol this year than ever, which likely contributed to the events that have unfolded. There had already been talk that Fox wanted to replace all four judges on the show next season anyway.

  • Comedian: 106 Pounds Lost Since Surgery

    Lisa Lampanelli is known as one of the most insulting of insult comics, but that doesn’t mean she was immune to the insults being thrown her way during her numerous roast appearances.

    One year ago, Lampanelli underwent weight loss surgery, getting a gastric sleeve implanted. Since that time the comedian has been shedding weight, but this week she got a little more specific about just how much.

    In Touch magazine this week published an interview with Lampanelli in which she tells the publication she has lost 106 pounds over the past year, saying, “I’m officially a skinny bitch!” Though the surgery certainly helped, Lampanelli credits her weight loss to exercise and eating less. She stated the surgery isn’t a miracle and that she had to figure out her “addiction issue” with overeating.

    Meanwhile, Lampanelli is continuing to use her Twitter feed to practice her insult comedy. One recent target of her ire was reality star Honey Boo Boo’s mother, who was recently married while wearing an untraditional dress:

  • Updated Nexus 7 specs revealed by analyst

    Nexus_7_Updated_Version_2013

    We are expecting to see an updated Nexus 7 next week at Google I/O, and although we already had a pretty good idea of the specs, KGI Securities analyst Ming-Chi Kuo revealed everything but the kitchen sink. Now before you start wondering if Ming-Chi Kuo is worthy, he ironically has a darn good track record when it comes to predicting Apple products. On the other hand, it’s not like he is revealing anything earth shattering.

    As expected, the display is going to be 7-inches and have a resolution of 1900 x 1200, which is a very nice upgrade. We already knew that Qualcomm was the chosen one for the CPU, but which one? Sadly it looks like the Snapdragon S4 Pro instead of the Snapdragon 600. This is a little disappointing to me, but this is a price tablet and the S4 Pro is more than enough for the average consumer. Another interesting spec is that it will sport a 5MP rear-facing camera which was absent in the original Nexus 7. Lastly the battery is 4,000mAh, which is actually smaller than the original Nexus 7 (4,325mAh). I was never all that thrilled with the battery life on the Nexus 7, so this is a little concerning. Nothing was mentioned on a 3G or 4G version, but with the Snapdragon in place, I am hopeful they will offer an LTE version at some point.

    Pricing is expected to be in the $200 range, and I am assuming that will be for a 16GB version, while the 32GB version will be $250. At these prices it’s expected that Google will be losing $5 to $10 per tablet, which isn’t surprising.

    Just like last year, it seems like the Nexus 7 could be the main attraction at Google I/O. Is anyone excited for another version?

    source: AppleInsider

    Come comment on this article: Updated Nexus 7 specs revealed by analyst

  • The Unexpected Antidote to Procrastination

    A recent early morning hike in Malibu, California, led me to a beach, where I sat on a rock and watched surfers. I marveled at these courageous men and women who woke before dawn, endured freezing water, paddled through barreling waves, and even risked shark attacks, all for the sake of, maybe, catching an epic ride.

    After about 15 minutes, it was easy to tell the surfers apart by their style of surfing, their handling of the board, their skill, and their playfulness.

    What really struck me though, was what they had in common. No matter how good, how experienced, how graceful they were on the wave, every surfer ended their ride in precisely the same way: By falling.

    Some had fun with their fall, while others tried desperately to avoid it. And not all falls were failures — some fell into the water only when their wave fizzled and their ride ended.

    But here’s what I found most interesting: The only difference between a failure and a fizzle was the element of surprise. In all cases, the surfer ends up in the water. There’s no other possible way to wrap up a ride.

    That got me thinking: What if we all lived life like a surfer on a wave?

    The answer that kept coming to me was that we would take more risks.

    That difficult conversation with your boss (or employee, or colleague, or partner, or spouse) that you’ve been avoiding? You’d initiate it.

    That proposal (or article, or book, or email) you’ve been putting off? You’d start it.

    That new business (or product, or sales strategy, or investment) you’ve been overanalyzing? You’d follow through.

    And when you fell — because if you take risks, you will fall — you’d get back on the board and paddle back into the surf. That’s what every single one of the surfers did.

    So why don’t we live life that way? Why don’t we accept falling — even if it’s a failure — as part of the ride?

    Because we’re afraid of feeling.

    Think about it: In all those situations, our greatest fear is that we will feel something unpleasant.

    What if you have that scary conversation you’ve been avoiding and it ends the relationship? It would hurt.

    What if you follow through on the business idea and lose money? It would feel terrible.

    What if you submitted the proposal and you were rejected? It would feel awful.

    Here’s the thing: More often than not, our fear doesn’t help us avoid the feelings; it simply subjects us to them for an agonizingly long time. We feel the suffering of procrastination, or the frustration of a stuck relationship. I know partnerships that drag along painfully for years because no one is willing to speak about the elephant in the room. Taking risks, and falling, is not something to avoid. It’s something to cultivate. But how?

    Practice.

    Which you get by taking risks, feeling whatever you end up feeling, recognizing that it didn’t kill you, and then getting on the board and paddling back into the surf.

    Have that difficult conversation. Listen without defensiveness when your colleague criticizes you. Name the elephant in the room. Get rejected.

    And feel it all. Feel the anticipation of the risk. Feel the pre-risk cringe. Then, during the risk, and after, take a deep breath and feel that too.

    You’ll become familiar with those feelings and, believe it or not, you’ll start to enjoy them. Even the ones you think of as unpleasant. Because feeling is what tells you you’re alive.

    You know that sensation you get after you’ve done or said something weird or awkward? How you turn around and kind of wince in embarrassment? Next time that happens, take a moment to really feel it.

    When you do, you’ll realize it’s not so bad. Maybe you’ll admit, “I don’t know why I just said that,” and apologize. Then maybe you’ll both laugh it off. Or maybe you’ll get into that conversation you’ve been avoiding for years but you know you need to have.

    Soon, you won’t fear feeling. You’ll pursue it like those courageous early morning surfers. You’ll wake up before dawn and dive into those scary conversations and difficult proposals. You’ll take the risks that once scared you. And you’ll fall; sometimes you’ll even fail.

    Then you’ll get up and do it again.

  • Microsoft Releases Windows Azure SDK 2.0 For .NET

    In its latest earnings report, Microsoft said Windows Azure and related products hit $1 billion in sales. It shows that Microsoft’s cloud platform is starting to really take off. In its efforts to get more developers to use Azure, Microsoft has released some new tools for its Azure SDK.

    Microsoft announced in early May that version 2.0 of its Windows Azure SDK for .NET was finally available to all. The SDK brings with it a number of new features that are sure to delight those who host .NET Web sites on the Azure platform.

  • Web Sites: Visual Studio Tooling updates for Publishing, Management, and for Diagnostics
  • Cloud Services: Support for new high memory VM sizes, Faster Cloud Service publishing & Visual Studio Tooling for configuring and viewing diagnostics data
  • Storage: Storage Client 2.0 is now included in new projects & Visual Studio Server Explorer now supports working with Storage Tables
  • Service Bus: Updated client library with message pump programming model support, support for browsing messages, and auto-deleting idle messaging entities
  • PowerShell Automation: Updated support for PowerShell 3.0, and lots of new PowerShell commands for automating Web Sites, Cloud Services, VMs and more.
  • You should check out the full blog post for more details as Microsoft’s Scott Guthrie explains all of the new features in full detail.

    As for availability, you can grab the Windows Azure SDK 2.0 for .NET over at the Windows Azure .NET Developer Center. It’s also open source so you can poke and prod your way through the code over at GitHub.

  • Sponsored post: Under the Radar 2013: not your typical startup event

    Under the Radar 2013 (May 22 and 23, in San Francisco) is a unique startup showcase that has a track record of identifying next-generation category leaders.

    Just how proven is UTR in identifying the “next big thing”?

    • Under the Radar was pivotal in getting companies like AdMob, BillFloat, Box, Flickr, GoodData, Jive, LinkedIn, Marketo, MobileIron, Pandora, TripIt and hundreds more off the ground.
    • $3.5 BILLION has been raised by UTR alumni startups since 2010.
    • About a third of UTR alumni companies are acquired. Dozens have IPO’d.

    This year 20 thoroughly vetted emerging B2B startups will present their vision — and business value — to distinguished VP and C-level execs. In turn, those execs discuss their business problems and how the presented solutions may help solve them.

    Some topics that will be explored this year include:

    • Big data analysis is becoming accessible to more companies, making it fast and easy for any developer — at any size organization — to build, deploy, scale and manage big data applications and also collect, analyze, visualize and share information externally.
    • The evolution of enterprise HR software is enabling companies to algorithmically discover high-quality candidates without recruiters, optimize the employee performance review process, and identify and manage expertise with business units in order to map the most qualified employees to problems they can solve.
    • Enterprise mobility has led to privacy concerns, security risk and costly data leakage, but new mobile startups are developing next-generation tools that enable enterprises to embrace mobility without the risk.

    Register at http://utrconf.com with discount code “GigaOM”

        

  • Twitter Mother’s Day Video Asks, “What The F*** Are You Doing?”

    Twitter has released a somewhat funny video for Mother’s Day.

    It starts out by giving you the impression that they want you to use Twitter for Mother’s Day, but then drops a dose of reality on you, asking, ‘What the f*** are you doing? Give your mom a call. #%!@, #$%!. Don’t look at me like that. You don’t need the Internet for everything.”


    In a blog post called, “Call Mom Maybe,” Twitter says, “Hopefully moms everywhere will enjoy breakfast in bed, a steady stream of thank-you’s and family fun. While moms are enjoying these and many other Mother’s Day traditions, it’s a safe bet they’ll also sneak a peek at Twitter. After all, moms (and moms-to-be) are doing everything from securing Twitter accounts for their babies to live-tweeting their C-sections to sharing funny motherhood experiences.”

    “But even as much as moms love Twitter, we know that mom loves you the most,” it adds.

    Yes, some moms will no doubt be tweeting on Mother’s Day, but I think the video makes a better point than the post. Give her a call. Or better yet, go see her.

  • Judge incredulous that Google finds it hard to search for its own documents

    Google Search Methods Court Order
    The owner of the world’s most widely used search engine won’t get away with claiming that it’s too difficult to explain how it searches for its own documents. Bloomberg Businessweek reports that U.S. Magistrate Judge Paul S. Grewal, who is overseeing yet another Apple-Samsung patent trial, has ordered Google to “reveal how it’s searching for internal documents related to its Android operating system” that are being sought by Apple. Google had previously tried arguing that searching for such information, which relates to Android’s source code, was too burdensome. Grewal sounded fairly incredulous in his order that Google reveal its search methods and noted “the irony that Google, a pioneer in searching the Internet, is arguing that it would be unduly burdened by producing a list of how it searched its own files.”

  • Twitter Plans Major Data Center Expansion

    twitter-construction

    Twitter has begun a major expansion of its data center infrastructure, adding space on both coasts in anticipation of huge growth for the microblogging service.

    Late last year, Twitter added about 100,000 square feet of space in a QTS (Quality Technology Services) facility in Atlanta, expanding a data center presence that it established in 2011.

    Now industry sources say Twitter is leasing a huge chunk of additional space in Sacramento, where it will expand its presence at the RagingWire data center campus. We’ve heard that Twitter has locked down more than 20 megawatts of space for a long-term expansion of its infrastructure in Sacramento, a transaction that may rank among the largest wholesale deals in industry history.

    The expansion builds upon Twitter’s existing presence in Sacramento, where it has hosted servers since 2010. The company will reportedly build out its space in incremental phases, allowing a long runway for future growth.

    A RagingWire spokesman said the company does not discuss its tenants. Twitter spokesperson Carolyn Penner said the company doesn’t comment on its data center locations. However, Twitter may have more to say about its data center operations Tuesday, when Director of Global Data Center Services Anoop Mavath will discuss Twitter’s infrastructure in a keynote presentation at The Uptime Symposium.

    Opting to Buy Rather Than Build

    Twitter’s expansion is the latest sign of traction for the wholesale model, in which companies lease data center space from a third party provider rather than building their own facility. Twitter has reached the scale where it could consider building its own data centers, a path pursued by Facebook, Apple and Google. Company-built facilities offer economies of scale and can be customized with efficient designs that offer savings on power bills, which has been a major focus for Facebook.

    Instead, Twitter has leased “plug-n-play” data center suites from wholesale providers. In the wholesale data center model, a tenant leases a dedicated, fully-built data center space. This approach offers faster deployment of new capacity, and the ability to manage capital spends in regions where it’s expensive to operate data centers.

    Apple, Facebook and Microsoft were among the largest consumers of turn-key “wholesale” data center space in 2012, according to a recent report from Avison Young. The trend is notable because all three companies have also been building massive data center facilities.

    Twitter’s decision to operate from leased data center space has boosted the fortunes of QTS and RagingWire, two providers that have built large footprints in strategic markets:

    • The 990,000 square foot QTS Metro Technology Center where Twitter houses its servers in Atlanta, is one of the world’s largest data centers. The huge Atlanta space offers plenty of room for expansion for growing tenants, which is a consideration for Twitter.
    • RagingWire has built a large campus in Sacramento, featuring more than 470,000 square feet of space across two buildings. For a closer look, check out this video tour of the campus, conducted by The WHIR. The Sacramento market has benefited from its proximity to major companies in San Francisco and Silicon Valley, while offering less risk from earthquakes.

    The expansion provides Twitter with the ability to manage steady growth in its server and storage requirements. Twitter has more than 200 million active users creating more than 400 million tweets per day. The company must also accommodate huge news-related traffic spikes, such as during the 2012 U.S. presidential election, when the social media site experienced a surge of 874,560 Tweets per minute, with a one-second peak of 15,107 tweets per second.

    Up until 2010, Twitter used managed hosting services from NTT America, housing its servers in NTT data centers in Silicon Valley and Ashburn, Virginia. In 2010, Twitter announced that it would shift to using colocation space, starting with a new facility in Salt Lake City. The company apparently continues to maintain colo space in Salt Lake City, but there are conflicting reports about its usage of its space at C7 Data Centers.

    The new data center space is part of a broader effort by Twitter to prepare for future growth. This week the company leased office space in Sunnyvale to house additional staff, and is also reportedly seeking an East Coast presence in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Last year Twitter opened a new headquarters in San Francisco.

  • LIPPER-Toil triumphs over talent for ‘star’ fund managers

    The tumult caused by Richard Buxton’s move from Schroders to Old Mutual in March highlighted the veneration of “star” fund managers, those select few who apparently rise above the crowd to shine their light upon adoring investors.

    We don’t need to dwell on Buxton’s track record (annualised return on his UK Alpha Plus fund of 13.7 percent over 10 years), but combined with Mark Lyttleton’s departure from BlackRock – his own star rather faded of late – I am drawn to ponder the funds industry’s views of, and hunger for, stellar talent.

    It is attractive, and reassuring even, to believe that the people running our money are blessed with some innate skill for playing the markets, but I recently had to re-consider my own views on natural talent when talking to Matthew Syed, now a journalist and author, but previously England’s number 1 table tennis player for a decade. A competitor at two Olympic Games and winner of three Commonwealth Gold medals, Syed has some experience of being praised for his apparent natural ability.

    He contends that some of our most cherished notions about natural talent are misplaced. Instead he argues persuasively that practice, opportunity and belief are far more important than genetics in determining success.
    In a nutshell, Syed asserts that “when you look at the science rather than our own implicit biases, you arrive at the conclusion that champions are not born, they are made.”

    Rather than going through these arguments in full, which Syed does best himself in his book ‘Bounce’, I will focus on a few aspects that have direct relevance for the funds industry and the cult of the star manager.

    FEEDBACK

    Exposure to the right opportunities is obviously vital for an Olympic athlete or a top fund manager to succeed, but Syed’s most consistent theme is a simple one: practice.

    Not hard work for building character, or for some other honourable good, but because purposeful practice is far more influential in determining an individual’s success than a reliance on genes. “Those who believe in talent tend to lose motivation. Why work hard if it is all about having the right genes?”

    Commodities guru Jim Rogers’ recent comments on his own experience are interesting here. “To the extent that I had any success, it was from homework,” he said. “I was willing and able to work harder than other people, but I was also willing and able to think differently from other people.”

    Of course Syed’s emphasis on practice over talent does not mean that he believes effort alone guarantees success. The right mentor – perhaps the right investment manager – to learn from is vital. Intertwined with hard work is the often discomforting task of learning from feedback.

    This has the potential to be a huge issue for star managers if the culture in their company is not conducive to giving (or receiving) constructive feedback, or to “think differently from other people,” in Rogers’ words. Not having your ideas challenged by colleagues, or believing your own billboard ads, is surely a slippery slope for a star fund manager.

    As Syed puts it, “For those who are already ahead of the pack, it is vital they are pushed. If they stay within their comfort zone, they will not learn.”

    The perils of lacking feedback, of not continuing to learn, can be seen in a striking example that Syed offers of research by Jeffrey Butterworth in 1960. This examined the ability of doctors to make diagnoses using heart sounds and murmurs over time. He found that while accuracy increases with experience as a person progresses from student to certified cardiologist, he also found that accuracy actually diminishes over time for doctors in general practice.

    The explanation for this apparently surprising finding? GPs encounter cardiac cases relatively infrequently, and they have relatively limited feedback on which to base their judgments and diagnoses. How to improve? Well, after short, targeted practice, “their diagnostic accuracy soared,” says Syed.

    This suggests a parallel with fund managers diagnosing, and dealing with, financial crises – even rarer than heart complaints, but also with devastating consequences. In turn it would be interesting to delve into the planning fund managers undertake for dealing with future crises of different shapes and sizes.

    There is some evidence that fund managers have already learned to use their experience effectively. Analysing mutual funds registered for sale in the UK in preparation for this year’s Lipper Fund Awards, we compared winning funds against their peers and found that the average tenure of the winning fund managers is longer than the rest. From this initial examination the evidence was pretty consistent, suggesting that the fund management community may actually be a good example of practice in action – and of seeing experience make its mark.

    BELIEF

    Building success over the long term brings us to another aspect to consider, and something someone like Jim Rogers has in abundance: belief. Any individual has to be motivated enough by their profession to persevere with the hard work needed to succeed.

    There are many extraordinary examples of the scale of hard work undertaken from an early age. Mozart had clocked up 3,500 hours of music practice before his sixth birthday, according to Michael Howe (‘Genius Explained’, 1999), while Geoff Colvin (‘Talent is Overrated’, 2008) estimates that Japanese ice skater Shizuka Arakawa fell over 20,000 times while practising her skating (starting at the age of five), but ultimately won an Olympic gold medal in 2006.

    As Syed puts it, “When you appreciate that it has taken many thousands of baby steps by world-class performers to get to the top, their skills do not seem quite so mystical after all.”

    This highlights the need for perseverance, underpinned by a real belief in what one is practising and trying to achieve. As the statistics above illustrate, the sheer volume of work involved in reaching the highest levels of performance is difficult for outsiders to comprehend.

    But this also hints at a classic conundrum for the fund management industry. Mutual funds are designed as long-term investments, but investors often buy and sell them far quicker if they do not think returns have been good enough over shorter periods. “Baby steps” can be too small or too slow for many investors.

    To a certain extent this simply underlines some of the pressures that asset managers have to deal with. But taking this aspect together with the others from Syed, one finds a well-rounded case for fund businesses to build structures which give opportunities to those willing to work hard, provide constructive feedback throughout the organisation, and create a company culture that really motivates people.

    Before ending, the number cruncher in me cannot help but ask Syed about those who practised hard but failed. Is there a survivorship bias in the statistical evidence?

    “I am glad to say that I found no evidence of this,” he says. “With deliberate and purposeful practice, we are all transformed with dramatic implications.”

    Encouragement then even for those less-than-starry fund managers currently languishing at the bottom of the league tables.

    ((This is the third in an occasional series of interviews offering alternative insights for the fund management industry, which have also looked at betting on horses and charitable donations. ))

  • 2007 Miami Dolphin Toyota Tundra – Featured Truck

    For most of us, we have a love affair with our truck. But, what about our favorite NFL team? Is a sticker in the back window enough. No way says this Miami Dolphin themed Toyota Tundra. Get a load of this custom truck!

    2007 Miami Dolphin Toyota Tundra - Featured Truck

    Truck and Miami Dolphin fan Willie Gaines has created a one-of-a-kind Toyota Tundra.

    This truck immediately grabbed our attention through the amazing amount of vision and attention to detail from owner Willie Gaines. He said he took his vision to the experts at many shops including Phaze 3 Kustoms located in Florence, SC (Paint & Body Work); Ultimate Audio located in Lexington, SC (Audio/Video & Lighting); Rags II Riches Upholstery located in Lexington, SC; and Freeman’s Car Stereo located in Rock Hill, SC (Electrical Wiring, Lighting, & Audio). In the end, all of this hard work and vision resulted in a work of art.

    Click here to view the embedded video.

    Gaines says the 2007 Toyota Tundra CrewMax Limited has:

    • Custom Painted Miami Dolphins Theme
    • Color Match Painted Interior parts
    • Vertical Front Doors (VDInc)
    • Color Matched Eyelids on headlights
    • T-Rex Blk Powdercoated Sport Grill
    • Slotted & Dented Rotors/Painted Calipers
    • 2” Front 5” Rear McGaughy Lowering Kit & Shocks
    • 26” Lexani LX-10 wheels with 305/30/26 tires (3-Tone)
    • Fully Customized Miami Dolphins Suede/Ostrich/Leather Interior
    • Custom Miami Dolphins Toddler Seat
    • Powdercoated/engraved radiator cover & Sill Protectors
    • Kenwood DNX 9960 eXcelon 2-DIN Nav System with Built-in Bluetooth/Backup Camera
    • Shaved antenna w/ interior antenna
    • Color Matched JL W6 10” Subs in Custom Leather Wrapped Fiberglass Enclosure
    • Rear Bench Seat converted to Bucket Seats
    • 1 Kenwood 4ch Amp on Highs
    • All Kenwood eXcelon Interior Speakers
    • (2) JL Splash 500/1 Amps & Stinger Battery
    • (2) 10.5 in TV monitors in Headrests
    • Viper Alarm w/ Remote Start/Windows
    • Custom Center Console
    • Billet Shifter
    • Functional Ram Air Hood
    • Paint Matched Engine Cover and Fuse Box Cover
    • K&N 77 Series Intake
    • 1 Optima Battery
    • 8000K HID’s (Low Beams and Fogs)
    • Amber Street Glow LED Underbody Kit w/ Custom Dash Toggle Switch
    • Thrush Custom Exhaust
    • Smoked Fogs, Tail, & 3rd Brake Lights
    • Color Matched Headlight Mod
    • Amber AAC Installed Halo’s w/ BHLM — FORSALE!!!(Uninstalled due 2 the horrible cust. service)
    • Custom Gaylord Bed Cover w/ Fabricated Wing
    • Color Matched Rear Bumper (It was Chrome)
    • Bed Rug Carpet for truck bed
    • Amber Vleds Throughout

    Dolphins fan or not, everybody can appreciate the time and talent that went into creating this one-of-a-kind truck.

    We want to give a special mention to the people over at Xpensive Habitz. Their fan club and website helped us immensely in producing this post.

    What do you think? Is this one special truck or what?

    The post 2007 Miami Dolphin Toyota Tundra – Featured Truck appeared first on Tundra Headquarters Blog.

  • Samsung Prepares A Phone For Every Feature As The Galaxy S4 Zoom Shows Up At Bluetooth SIG

    galaxy s4

    Samsung is in a unique position among Android smartphone manufacturers, which allows it to create devices like the Galaxy S4 Zoom, a rumored S4 variant that showed up for certification at the Bluetooth SIG this week (via UnwiredView) as the “SM-C101.” The S4 Zoom is reportedly going to resemble the unreleased S4 Mini, but boast a 16 megapixel rear camera with optical zoom.

    Optical zoom is really the one remaining advantage that point and shoot cameras have over smartphone shooters, at least from a hardware perspective. Other companies, including LG and Huawei have been working on building smartphone optical zoom tech, too, but if Samsung brings this one to market with its rumored 10x zoom, it’ll be the strongest one currently available, beating the Nokia 808 PureView’s measly 3X power.

    Samsung has the luxury of experimenting with different form factors, and using its flagship branding to offer a range of devices that potentially cut off competitors by giving users a complete device to match ever competitive advantage. Like the S4 but want a more manageably sized screen like on the iPhone 5? Get the S4 mini. Like the S4 but want something a little better able to withstand the environment and harsh conditions like the Xperia Z? Get the rumored rugged S4 variant. Want an S4 but with the best smartphone camera in the business, which exceeds even Nokia’s most ambitious efforts? Get the S4 Zoom.

    Samsung’s lineup variety strategy may be more about blocking the competition and casting a wide net than anything else, but a big zoom on a mobile camera will have a lasting effect on the industry if it goes over well and produces impressive results. More importantly, it could bring about even bigger changes for the dwindling standalone point-and-shoot camera market, which means other smartphone OEMs won’t be the only ones watching to see if and when the Galaxy S4 Zoom makes a splash, which could happen as early as June according to release date rumors.

  • Will the IRS take a bite out of Bitcoin?

    Bitcoin Taxes
    Bitcoin is a good way for people to conduct business off the grid, but the free ride may soon come to an end. Everyone’s favorite virtual currency has been on quite a wild ride over the past few weeks. The mainstream media finally caught wind of Bitcoin and curious parties sent it skyrocketing to $220 before watching it plummet below $70 a few short days later. It has been quite a roller coaster, but all this attention may have caught the IRS’s eye, too — Forbes contributor Robert Wood noted in a recent column that the Treasury’s FinCEN already has rules pertaining to Bitcoin, and soon the IRS might as well.

    Continue reading…