Category: News

  • Quora Optimizes Android App For Tablets

    Quora announced today that it has optimized its Android app for the tablet experience.

    “More and more, people read and write on Quora while on-the-go. Many people also love using tablets, making a unique Quora experience for tablets one of our most popular requests,” the company says in a blog post.

    The design makes use of a split panel to take advantage of landscape view:

    Quora for Android tablets

    Quora for Tablets

    Quora for tablets

    The app also comes with improves search functionality, and makes use of the service’s new blogs feature. The feature debuted with support for iOS. They didn’t waste too much time getting it out to the important Android market as well.

    The updated Android app also comes with some speed and performance enhancements.

    You can find it in Google Play here.

  • Firefox Flicks Challenges Filmmakers To Get Mobilized In 2013

    Are you a filmmaker that happens to be a fan of Firefox? Do you want a chance to win a few thousand dollars? If so, you’ll definitely want to submit a film for the Firefox Flicks competition this year.

    Mozilla announced that this year’s Firefox Flicks competition will be open for entries on February 13. The competition challenges filmmakers to create a 60 second or less video “that help tell the Firefox story.” This year’s theme is “Get Mobilized.” Here’s how Mozilla describes it:

    It’s about enabling more people to take advantage of the full power of the Web and giving them better access to easily discover, enjoy and share content that can change their lives. Through Firefox Flicks we are creating energy for our upcoming mobile OS that will deliver on this promise.

    Firefox Flicks 2013 from firefoxflicks on Vimeo.

    Those who decide to make a film have a shot at winning prizes in three categories:

  • Early Entry Awards – There will be multiple chances to win $1,000 for submitting a flick early. The top three early entry submission Flicks will be included in the final round.
  • Regional Winners – One winner from each contest region (North America, Latin America, Europe, Asia) will win a $5,000 cash prize and one runner up from each contest region will win a $2,500 cash prize.
  • People’s Choice Award – People will be able to vote for their favorite Flick during the People’s Choice Award voting period August 1 – August 31. The three winning Flicks will receive a Firefox Flicks swag bag.
  • If you find yourself interested in the idea of being featured in one of Mozilla’s marketing campaigns, or just winning a cash prize; you’ll want to check out the filmmaker’s creative brief for all the details on the competition. If you find yourself lacking inspiration, you can check out the winners of last year’s competition at the bottom of Mozilla’s blog post.

    The Firefox Flicks 2013 competition will start on February 13 and run through July 31.

  • Rethinking "One Share, One Vote"

    “One-share, one-vote,” a bedrock principle of Anglo-Saxon corporate governance, is back in the spotlight. Except this time the aim is to diminish its application rather than to extend its global footprint. Rising short-termism among investors — which threatens to destabilize both companies and the wider economy — is prompting a reconsideration of the principle that all shareholders should have equal say.

    Prominent commentators such as former U.S. Vice President Al Gore, McKinsey Managing Director Dominic Barton (see his HBR article and blog), and Vanguard Group founder John Bogle have advocated bolstering the voting rights of long-term shareholders or, conversely, withholding them from short-term investors. Significantly, the Financial Times reported last week that the European Commission was preparing a proposal to give “loyal” shareholders extra voting influence.

    Seeking insulation from near-term pressures, Facebook, LinkedIn, Groupon, and other Silicon Valley outfits went public in recent years with dual-class shares that gave their founders — believed to be the most committed to their long-term success — voting power of up to 150 times greater than those accorded outside investors. Google, which adopted a similar share structure at the time of its initial public offering in 2004, has gone further with its decision last spring to issue non-voting stock.

    That respected commentators and policymakers are proposing apportioning voting rights unequally among ordinary shareholders — and high-profile companies have, in practice, been doing it — is remarkable. Since the early 1990s, when corporate governance began its rise to prominence, one share, one vote has been perceived as the gold standard. Even countries where dual-class shares are prevalent have sought to narrow the “power distance” created by such structures. Sweden, for instance, amended its company law in 2004 to reduce the permitted disparity of voting rights from 1,000 to one to a maximum of 10 to one.

    Furthermore, academic studies have found that allowing shareholders to accumulate voting power that is disproportionate to their economic stake can lead to abuse, particularly in countries where the protections for minority shareholders are weak.

    To what extent should discrimination among shareholders be countenanced? Here are five suggestions:

    1. For reasons of fairness and to avoid entrenching control, “enhanced voting rights” — which may take the form of additional votes, bonus shares, a separate share class with superior voting rights, and related instruments — should not be distributed only to company founders and other insiders.

    Rather, all investors should be eligible to receive them if they meet the qualifying conditions, whether defined by holding period or other criteria. For example, French companies offering double voting rights make them available to all investors that have held their shares for the minimum duration, typically two years.

    In this regard, Silicon Valley-style dual-class share arrangements are clearly problematic. Groupon, however, ameliorates the risk of entrenching its founders by limiting the lifespan of the superior shares to five years. At that time the superior and ordinary shares will merge into a single class. In the absence of a “sunset” provision, another way to maintain accountability is to require superior shares to be renewed by holders of the ordinary shares every five to 10 years.

    2. To ensure that enhanced voting rights would not enable a large shareholder to take decisions unilaterally, it may be prudent to cap the number of additional votes qualifying shareholders can receive.

    One possibility is to grant extra votes only up to a specified ceiling — until the combined ordinary and enhanced voting rights of a shareholder reaches, say, 30% of the total available votes.

    3. Consider the types of investors likely to make use of enhanced voting rights.

    For example, if the overall aim is to bolster “stewardship” behavior as much as to encourage long-term ownership, it is worth debating whether qualifying “passive” (or index) investors should be treated the same as eligible “active” shareholders. Similarly, one should explore whether enhanced voting rights would be especially beneficial in certain sectors. It could be argued, for instance, that the soundness of the financial system would be strengthened if banks have a greater proportion of committed, long-term shareholders.

    4. Irrespective of how enhanced voting rights are structured, all shareholders should be accorded some “voice.”

    This means that shares with diminished voting rights are preferable to those with no votes. Giving all shareholders a voice through voting provides a vital channel for them to express their views and concerns. Moreover, the possibility — however remote — of losing effective control (for example, through large stock-based acquisitions) may prompt dominant shareholders to be more careful when making strategic decisions.

    5. Care should be taken when setting the qualifying criteria and related administrative requirements.

    To illustrate, a minimum holding period of greater than five to seven years would likely benefit only a firm’s founders and “controlling” owners rather than institutional and other outside investors. In France, complaints abound about the burdensome procedural requirements to claim double voting rights.

    Paying attention to these issues can help ensure that departing from one-share, one-vote with the view to encouraging long-term ownership will bring the intended benefits without accompanying adverse or other unintended outcomes.

  • Because You Believed – Our Journey to BlackBerry 10

    Our journey to BlackBerry 10

    As I sit here in New York City preparing for and anticipating the BlackBerry 10 launch tomorrow, I just wanted to take some time to reflect and thank Team BlackBerry. It has been a roller coaster year for all of us, yet your dedication and belief in us did not waiver. BlackBerry 10 is built just for you, and it’s literally right around the corner.

    The messages and notes of encouragement that we receive from the millions of you who follow us on Twitter, like us on Facebook, and read the Inside BlackBerry Blog daily, do not fall on deaf ears. We hear you loud and clear, and your words are shared with employees across the company and around the globe – all the way up to Thorsten Heins himself. Simply put, you are the fuel behind BlackBerry 10, giving all of us that extra boost of energy when we need it most.

    Seriously…what reason could you have to not love @BlackBerry #BB10? Fast, functional, flowing…FANTASTIC! #BB10Believe #TeamBlackBerry@ChazBerryJam
    A phone is not a phone anymore; it’s a portal to social networks, media and work. That is the future of #mobilecomputing. @BlackBerry #BB10@lombaki
    @UK_BlackBerry January 30 is not marked on my calendar. It is etched into my brain. #BlackBerry10 #BeHere@BB10VW

    You’ve been on this journey with us – from the first previews at BlackBerry World 2012, to every stop of the epic (and I don’t use that term lightly) BlackBerry Jam World Tour. We’ve teased, previewed, showcased, and sneak-peeked a lot. And although we had fun dropping hints, tomorrow is the day you get to finally experience BlackBerry 10.

    It wasn’t too long ago when you stood up and declared, “I’m Proud to Be #TeamBlackBerry”. We are honored to have such a dedicated group of fans in our corner. That fighting spirit I wrote about just months ago has brought us here. We will (try to) go to sleep tonight, and tomorrow the sun will rise on a new day for the company and BlackBerry fans alike. We’ve re-designed, re-engineered and re-invented our products with BlackBerry 10 – and we can’t wait to share it all with you tomorrow.

  • Comet-Like Ionosphere Seen on Venus

    New observations of Venus have shown that the planet’s ionosphere on its night side resembles a comet’s tail. The observations were made by the European Space Agency’s (ESA) Venus Express satellite.

    The ionosphere is the region of electrically charged gas high in a planet’s atmosphere. The shape and density of an ionosphere are determined, in part, by the internal magnetic field of its planet. Earth has a strong internal magnetic field, which makes its ionosphere stable. Venus, on the other hand, does not have an internal magnetic field. Its ionosphere has now been found to be shaped by interactions with solar wind.

    The new data was obtained in August 2010, when solar wind density dropped to only 0.1 particles per cubic centimeter for around 18 hours. Researchers were able to use this window to observe Venus’ ionosphere balloon out towards its nightside.

    “The teardrop-shaped ionosphere began forming within 30–60 minutes after the normal high pressure solar wind diminished. Over two Earth days, it had stretched to at least two Venus radii into space,” said Yong Wei, lead author of a paper on the new research and a scientist at the Max Planck Institute for Solar System Research.

    Before now, researchers had debated how solar wind could affect the way ionospheric plasma moves from one side of Venus to the other. The plasma normally flows from the dayside to the nightside of Venus in a thin channel in the ionosphere. Until now, it was unknown whether in low solar wind conditions the flow would increase due to reduced pressure or decrease due to reduced force pushing plasma through the channel.

    “We now finally know that the first effect outweighs the second, and that the ionosphere expands significantly during low solar wind density conditions,” said Markus Fraenz, co-author of the paper.

    (Image courtesy ESA)

  • Google Shopping For Suppliers Is A B2B Google Shopping

    Update: Google did return a comment, though not much in the way of additional details:

    Google Shopping for Suppliers is a beta that helps users searching for B2B products to quickly find what they’re looking for, evaluate options and connect with suppliers to make their purchases.

    Google has launched a product called Google Shopping For Suppliers in beta. It requires listings to be in US dollars by default (though a few European sites have already picked up on the launch), and adheres to the same policies as Google Shopping, but with a handful of exceptions.

    For example, most Pricing and Payments policies for Google Shopping don’t apply, because, as Google notes in a help center article, suppliers and buyers frequently negotiate their price based on item quantity. The same goes for shipping policies.

    “Given that tax requirements vary by buyer’s country and buyers may come from any location, tax practices are not governed by Google policy,” Google also notes. “Suppliers and buyers are expected to abide by local law.”

    Additionally, Google doesn’t require suppliers to post return/refund policies on their sites, which is a departure from Google Shopping’s terms, though it does maintain a requirement that suppliers “conspicuously” post terms for returns/refunds in their Google Shopping for Suppliers listings.

    Finally, Google Shopping For Suppliers doesn’t rely on Google Merchant Center technology.

    The full policies for Google Shopping For Suppliers can be found here.

    So far, the product only returns results for electrical and electronic products, but Google says to check back soon for more product types. It’s easy to imagine a large pool of B2B products populating the results in time.

    It looks like all the merchants that are listed come with the “Google Verified Supplier” label.

    Google Suppliers

    Andrew Davis makes a few additional observations:

    – $1000 yearly verification fee required for American suppliers, Chinese suppliers need to pay ¥6000 (plus 6% VAT) / year, Hong Kong suppliers need to pay $7500 / year.

    – It looks like Google has not made this a CPC engine yet and after you submit your verification fee you should be able to sell your products in bulk.

    – It looks like the data feed requirements are very different than that for Google Shopping. Make sure you take a close look at them. Namely Price, Shipping, Tax, and Returns and Refunds policies have changed.

    Considering how well Google Shopping has been doing for Google, this could turn out to be an important product for the company in capturing B2B ad dollars.

    We’ve reached out to Google for more details.

    [Thanks to Andrew Davis for the tip]

  • Meet the translator: Laszlo Kereszturi, who brings you TED Talks in Hungarian and Romanian

    TED Talks are available in 94 languages, from Albanian to Vietnamese, thanks to the tireless work of our translators. So far, more than 8,500 volunteers have created the upwards of 33,500 translated talks. To celebrate this accomplishment, every week the TED Blog is bringing you a Q&A with one of our most prolific translators. Today, meet Laszlo Kereszturi, pictured above right, with his family.

    Where do you live? And what do you do by day?

    I live in Oradea, Romania, and I work as an information security professional at a telecommunication company. I translate in Hungarian and Romanian.

    What drew you to TED?

    Due to my job and my living place, I have feel a lot of negative emotions every day. Before 2006, I escaped in the realm of science-fiction — but watching TED Talks has proved to be a better way. TED Talks are about positive ideas, people with real great initiatives, happening now — not in the distant future. And since 2009, when TED OTP made it possible to translate TED Talks, I am truly happy that I can contribute.

    What was the first talk you translated and how did you pick it?

    Hans Rosling: Stats that reshape your worldviewHans Rosling: Stats that reshape your worldviewMy first talk was “Hans Rosling shows the best stats you’ve ever seen“. This talk just found me; I knew I had to translate it after watching the first five minutes. “Robert Lang: The math and magic of origami” was the second talk I translated. I knew about the art of origami before, but its implications in real life — from space exploration to medicine — were very worth sharing in my language.

    What have been your favorite talks to translate? Why?

    John Hodgman: Aliens, love — where are they?” because it is funny in a clever way.Ben Dunlap: The life-long learnerBen Dunlap: The life-long learner Its final part really moved me. I also enjoyed “Ben Dunlap: The life-long learner“, because it presents his personal experience with Hungarian people and is just a great story. And “Joseph Pine: What consumers want“, because this was the first TED Talk I ever saw and is about being authentic. I have dozens of favorite talks, but I’ll stop there for brevity’s sake.

    Which talk was the most difficult for you to translate and why?

    I’ve translated talks on a wide range of subjectsSteve Keil: A manifesto for play, for Bulgaria and beyondSteve Keil: A manifesto for play, for Bulgaria and beyond and have deliberately chosen many difficult ones. A good translation takes time — you can’t rush it. Difficult translation for me means that I have a very short deadline, or the process took too long.

    The most difficult translation was exactly the one I expected to do in a very short time, for a TEDx event: “Steve Keil: A manifesto for play, for Bulgaria and beyond“. It’s not a difficult talk and I had already translated it in Romanian, so it looked like an easy job. But it wasn’t, because I had to do it during the week, after work.

    Bruce Schneier: The security mirageBruce Schneier: The security mirage Another talk that was hard to translate was “Bruce Schneier: The security mirage“. It’s about information security, so shouldn’t have been hard for me. But my knowledge about the talk’s content made me very careful when choosing the words and the “diamond polishing” process took more time than usual.

    What’s a phrase in your language that you wish would catch on globally?

    We say in Hungarian: “A jó pap holtig tanul”. Meaning: “A good priest learns until his death”. This is very true today in the lifelong learning era.

  • Guy Builds Web Resume That Looks Like Amazon Product Page

    Well, this guy sure has an interesting resume – or CV or whatever you want to call it. Upon first glance, you probably wouldn’t even notice that this Amazon product page is actually a a giant advertisement for Philippe Dubost, and web product manager.

    Yet it is. Dubost has refashioned his website, phildub.com, to closely resemble an page on Amazon.com – product pictures, star ratings, dimensions, descriptions, and even a button to “add to cart.”

    According to Dubost, there’s only 1 left in stock and it ships directly from Paris, France. In the product details we find the the product is 186 cm and comes in English, French, and Spanish. The average customer review, of course, is five stars.

    Below that, Dubost has inserted a product description and “professional experience” disguised as product reviews.

    The links are functioning as well. If you click on the author name link, it takes you to his LinkedIn profile. If you click “add to cart” a contact form pops up. All of the links to his various places of education and employment go to the respective sites.

    The unique web CV is gaining a lot of attention right now, so I guess it worked. Let’s see if it gets him hired at Amazon or somewhere else that could use a clever web product manager.

    [via Business Insider]

  • Mindy McCready Denies Shooting Boyfriend To Death

    Mindy McCready, who was at one time a promising country music star, has battled so many demons in the past decade it’s hard to keep up with them all. In 2005, she suffered brutal abuse at the hands of her ex, who choked and punched her after a disagreement, inflicting serious damage to her face. In the subsequent years, she’s been arrested for prescription drug fraud, arrested for DUI, arrested for identity theft, and allegedly attempted suicide. She also suffered a serious dependence on drugs and was a cast member of “Celebrity Rehab With Dr. Drew” in 2009.

    The latest story to surface about the troubled star involves her boyfriend and father of her baby, 34-year old David Wilson, who allegedly shot and killed himself earlier this month. Now, investigators are looking at McCready as a possible suspect in his death, as Wilson reportedly didn’t die immediately after the shot was fired. The fact that McCready didn’t attend Wilson’s memorial service is also being looked at.

    McCready contends she had nothing to do with the shooting, although she was there when it happened.

    “Oh, my God, no. He was my life. We were each others’ life…I have never gone through anything this painful. He didn’t just touch my heart, he touched my soul. He was my soulmate,” she said.

    Rumors have already begun to fly that Wilson was having an affair, providing ample motive for the country singer to want revenge. Investigators are trying to determine conclusively whether Wilson died by suicide or at someone else’s hands, but it will take a few weeks for tests to come back.

  • Rdio Extends Free Music Streaming To 15 Countries

    Rdio announced today that it is expanding its free music streaming web service, which has been available in the U.S. since 2011, to 15 countries. The offering is now available in the following countries:

    • United States
    • United Kingdom
    • Australia
    • Belgium
    • Canada
    • Denmark
    • Estonia
    • Finland
    • France
    • Netherlands
    • New Zealand
    • Norway
    • Portugal
    • Spain
    • Sweden

    Users can listen to free music for up to six months, depending on how many songs they stream. It’s available through the web or via the company’s desktop apps for Mac and Windows.

    Last year Rdio launched a big revamp with drag and drop playlist creation, more personalization features, and the ability to create private playlists.

  • President Obama’s Four Part Plan for Comprehensive Immigration Reform

    Watch this video on YouTube

    Today, President Obama spoke from Las Vegas about creating a fair and effective immigration system that lives up to our heritage as a nation of laws and a nation of immigrants.

    "I’m here because most Americans agree that it’s time to fix a system that’s been broken for way too long." President Obama said. "I’m here because business leaders, faith leaders, labor leaders, law enforcement, and leaders from both parties are coming together to say now is the time to find a better way to welcome the striving, hopeful immigrants who still see America as the land of opportunity. Now is the time to do this so we can strengthen our economy and strengthen our country’s future."

    The good news, President Obama said, is that for the first time in many years, there is bipartisan support for comprehensive immigration reform. But action must follow. 

    "We can't allow immigration reform to get bogged down in an endless debate. We've been debating this a very long time," he explained. "As a consequence, to help move this process along, today I’m laying out my ideas for immigration reform."

    President Obama's proposal for immigration reform has four parts. First, continue to strengthen our borders. Second, crack down on companies that hire undocumented workers. Third, hold undocumented immigrants accountable before they can earn their citizenship; this means requiring undocumented workers to pay their taxes and a penalty, move to the back of the line, learn English, and pass background checks. Fourth, streamline the legal immigration system for families, workers, and employers.

    read more

  • Microsoft and I agree — Office 365 is the future

    This doesn’t happen every day. Microsoft, which serves as both my daily computing platform and bane of my existence, does something I completely agree with. It is not the first time — I am an unashamed Windows 8 lover. I also love Office, and the product has steadily improved and become easier to use with each iteration. But desktop software is quickly becoming old-school. I find myself using more and more web apps and storing more data in the cloud.

    Today, Microsoft officially launched Office 2013…sort of. Yes, the software suite is out there, available to everyone, as we knew it would be. What we didn’t realize was that the actual software suite would be downplayed. A lot.

    In fact the official announcement, and all of the subsequent stories on sites around the web, hardly mention Office 2013. Instead they focused on Office 365 Home Premium. That is the real product release today. Visiting the official Office site even displays a link to Office 365 and calls it “recommended”.

    Microsoft wants Office to be a service and not a software suite. To that end, the pricing has been set to show customers the direction in which they should head. If you want that 2013 version then you can expect to pay between $139.99 and $399.99 — for one PC.

    However, if you prefer to go the 365 route then you get that $399.99 equivalent suite for $99 per year or $9.99 per month. Sound like a lot? The next Office will probably be coming in three years, which means less cost in the long run. But the cost was known and I am telling you nothing new. My colleague Joe Wilcox has already outlined this.

    Here is the real meat of the matter. The new Office 365 Home Premium comes with a license for five computers, 20GB of SkyDrive storage and 60 minutes of Skype credit. That is where the real value here is at. Most of us use Skype and cloud storage. Getting extra storage and the ability to make PC to cell or landline calls, plus the endless updates — no more Office installations needed. That is the silver lining in what many are calling a cloud.

    Those points may not sound like much, but fast-forward a few years. This is your future and you will be taken there, kicking and screaming in necessary.

    This certainly is not for everyone, but for a family the subscription service is a better bargain than any previous version desktop suite. I will install Office 365 Home Premium on three computers, and I would have previously needed that $399.99 Professional version because my wife uses Publisher. Publisher, along with the rest of “Pro”, is part of 365.

    It is a big change and I fully expect to hear grumbling, but here is my personal opinion — finally Microsoft gets Office just right. Of course it is just a part of a sea of changes underway — I don’t expect the desktop to be anywhere in “Windows 9”. I also do not expect the next Office to be available as a desktop app. Change happens, and sometimes it is actually good.

    Sorry, folks, but this is where Microsoft is headed. The train is leaving the station so it is best to climb on board.

    Photo Credit: Dudarev Mikhail/Shutterstock

  • Nexus 4 is back in stock, but for how LONG?

    In the United States, Google Play has both Nexus 4 models available for sale — after nearly two months stocked out. The bumper is available, too. If you’re one of the gadget geeks looking for this smartphone, get it while you can, and that might not be for long.

    Google launched Nexus 4 on November 13, but sold out in just hours. The phone reappeared on November 27. A day later, Google Play redefined “sold out” by listing shipment date as 8-9 weeks. From a retail distribution perspective, Nexus 4 is pure disaster. It’s anyone’s guess how many could have sold over the holidays, but greedy gadget geeks couldn’t get the phone short of paying extortion-like prices.

    But for those who waited, sales resumed today. The 8GB model is $299 and the 16 gigger $349. That’s unlocked, which is timely considering that unlocking is now illegal in the United States.

    T-Mobile is another option: $200 with two-year contract. On the carrier’s no-contract plan, Nexus 4 is $150 down payment plus 20 bucks per month thereafter for total $500. Obviously, Google Play is a bargain by comparison.

    Nexus 4 specs: 4.7-inch display, 1280 x 768 pixel resolution, 320 pixels per inch; Qualcomm Snapdragon S4 Pro processor; 2GB RAM; 8GB or 16GB storage (depending on model); 8-megapixel rear-facing and 1.3MP front-facing cameras; GSM/EDGE/GPRS (850, 900, 1800, 1900 MHz), 3G (850, 900, 1700, 1900, 2100 MHz), HSPA+ 21; WiFi N; wireless charging; Bluetooth; NFC; SlimPort HDMI; accelerometer; ambient-light sensor; barometer; compass; GPS; Gyroscope; microphone; 2100 mAh battery; unlocked; Android 4.2. Measures 133.9 x 68.7 x 9.1 mm and weighs 139 grams. Sorry there is no LTE.

    As I write, Google Play lists the phone as “ships soon”, which isn’t exactly the same as “in stock”, but as close as you’re going to get considering availability so far. Device “ships in 1-2 weeks”.

    I ordered one for my wife. She takes lots of photos, and after months of use must say the N4 camera is better than Galaxy Nexus, which she has. I’ll Craigslist her phone, soon as the other arrives. I hope that with Galaxy Nexus in excellent condition, spare battery, charger and extra back cover that selling price will cover most of the cost buying her Nexus 4.

    Nexus 4 isn’t my favorite Google phone, but it has grown on me since my first-impressions review. I’ll do a follow-up sometime soon.

    I got to ask: Will you buy Nexus 4?

    Photo Credit: Joe Wilcox

  • To Serve the Poorest Clients, Earned Income Isn’t Enough

    The recent explosion of interest in impact investing has generated much talk about breaking the shackles of the traditional philanthropic model. The concept seems appealing — incremental investment enters the “social impact” market in the form of below-market loans or equity, incenting mission-driven organizations to become self-sustaining. But is that realistic when you’re serving the poorest of the poor?

    One Acre Fund (a nonprofit where Matthew is on the board and Stephanie on the staff) serves 135,000 of the poorest smallholder farmers in East Africa, on average doubling the profits they generate from farming. We care deeply about the bottom line, and earned income from our farmers is our primary funding source. At the same time, grant support enables us to innovate, grow faster, and stay focused on the bottom of the pyramid. Both are critical.

    Why do we care so deeply about the bottom line? Simply put — because it is part of our mission. We aim to serve as many smallholder farmers as possible, and to help them become more prosperous. So we offer farmers what we call a “market bundle”: seed and fertilizer on credit, training, and market facilitation. We charge a fee to our farmers because it makes us more efficient and, given limited resources, enables us to reach more people. It also puts our farmers in the driver’s seat — if we offer poor customer service in an area, our customers always stop paying until we correct the problem.

    After seven years of operations, we are covering 85 percent of our field operating costs through farmer loan revenue. When we started, that number was 10 percent. Only through many small operational innovations have we been able to get to 85 percent. For instance, our field officers, who work directly with farmers to offer trainings and collect loan repayment, used to work with less than 50 farmers each. Now, each field officer serves about 200 farmers, but still maintains a measurably high level of customer service.

    The road to 85 percent coverage of our field operating costs has not been easy, but getting from there to 100 percent will be even more difficult. And while we are committed to that goal through continued revenue enhancements and cost efficiencies, donations can help us achieve our mission faster and serve more farmers.

    We use donor grants for some very important purposes. For example, new region launches are expensive — but small donor subsidies have enabled us to expand to new regions and rapidly scale from 30,000 farmers two years ago to 135,000 farmers today. As another example, last year we invested a donor grant in an R&D project that enabled us to totally eliminate cash in our Kenya operation by using mobile banking — which will rapidly accelerate our growth in the future. We also used donor funding to pilot, measure, and scale-up a new tree-planting product that is now sold to our farmers, further increasing their incomes (and benefitting the environment).

    As Kevin Starr, head of the Mulago Foundation, puts it, “Overcoming market failure requires subsidy.” We wholeheartedly agree. One Acre Fund serves the hardest-working individuals in the world — farmers with only one acre of land, a simple hand hoe, and outdated farming techniques, trying to feed a family of six. The “market” simply does not work for these farmers, who are stuck in a cycle of poor yields, impeding their access to the right farm inputs and trainings, and therefore producing poor yields again the next season. The results can be horrific: one in ten of these farmers’ kids do not survive to age one, and 40% of those who do suffer physical and mental stunting from a lifetime of not eating enough.

    Depriving organizations like ours of grant funding, and pushing them to take on debt instead, could have the immediate consequence of forcing nonprofits to “go upmarket.” There’s nothing wrong with providing services to a farmer with 10 acres of land and a herd of livestock. It’s certainly easier than serving the hardest-to-reach farmers. But the greatest potential for social impact lies with those hard-working farmers at the bottom of the pyramid, where One Acre Fund’s model produces enough income for farmers to eliminate meal-skipping and invest in education, housing, and other productive assets.

    Are social impact and focus on a bottom line at odds? Yes, when impact investors push mission-driven organizations to focus too much on financial return. But no, if we acknowledge that the optimal capital structure for organizations serving the poorest individuals may be a mix of earned income and donations.

    Follow the Scaling Social Impact insight center on Twitter @ScalingSocial and register to stay informed and give us feedback.

  • Who’s driving the equity rally?

    Does the money match the story?

    Perhaps the biggest investment theme of the year so far has been the extent to which long-term investors may now slowly migrate back to under-owned and under-priced equities from super-expensive safe haven bunkers such as ‘core’ government bonds, yen, Swiss francs etc to which they herded at each new gale of the 5-year-old credit storm.

    Indeed, some go further and say asset allocation mixes of the big institutional pension and insurance funds are – for a variety of regulatory and demographic reasons – now at such historical extremes in favour of bonds that they may now need rethinking in what some dub The Great Rotation.

    All this has played into a new year whoosh in equity and other risk markets, as ebbing tail risks from the euro zone, US budget and China combine with signs of a decent cyclical turn in the world economy into 2013. Wall St’s S&P500, for example, has climbed 5.5% in January so far and closed above 1500 for the first time in more than five years last week following its longest winning streak (8-days) in eight years.

    But what sort of money is behind this price move? Well, new cash flowing into equity funds so far this year has been the highest on record at some $55 billion. Retail investors have certainly been big participants, with Lipper data showing new-year retail inflows to U.S.-based stock funds at their highest since 2001. HSBC points out that 9 consecutive weeks of net retail buying of equities is “longer and larger” that any of the sporadic bursts seen over the past two years and emerging market equity appears to be a clear favourite.

    But what of the bigger behemoths?

    An HSBC analysis on global fund holdings (based on data provided by fund tracker EPFR) reckons big international funds are far less pessimistic than they were six months but are still broadly neutral on equity overall. “We measure this by tracking the holdings of high and low beta sectors and it is now only marginally in favour of low beta sectors”

    And despite a big recovery in European bank stocks in tandem with an easing of the euro crisis, it reckoned international institutional funds remained underweight the sector. HSBC added:

    By being underweight an outperforming sector they have to buy to stand still. This explains why the underweight remains large even though there has been plenty of buying.

    The report goes on to show that institutional investors are positioned very cautiously in the US, with the biggest overweight in the underpeforming healthcare sector.

    There remains potential “fuel” for further upgrading relative to benchmarks at least.

    Yet what of the more conservative defined-benefit pension funds or insurance funds  being pressured by liability-matching pressures and stricter mandates or guidelines? Regardless a possible Great Rotation over the next decade or so, how are these funds likely to behave shorter term?

    Credit Suisse points out some market speculation that funds traditionally balanced evenly between equity and bonds may tend to rebalance portfolios at fixed intervals and so may be forced to return funds to neutral by selling equity at the end of a month that saw a big outperformance of stocks over bonds.

    The potential size of this shift in the United States is eye-opening — at some $92 billion worth, according to CS.

    Yet it downplayed the fear of some mass mechanical movement, highlighting three broad categories of behaviour among such fund managers — those who rebalance daily and will already have smoothed out positioned; those who do so at fixed periods such as month-end or quarter-end; and those who have significant discretion on timing and positioning within a broad remit.

    We estimate that Private Defined Benefit Pension plans would need to reallocate about $34 billion, State and Local Pension Plans about $44 billion, and “Hybrid” mutual funds about $14 billion, for a total of about $92 billion – which we know is much higher than what is likely to be seen given the number of managers who rebalance more frequently or have discretion.

    Month-end price histories over the past four years also show this to have had only a limited market impact, CS said. That said, it does tally somewhat with the early month surge turning flatter into this week.

    But this is mechanistic behaviour should be fleeting by definition. Changes in how fund mandates and remits change over time is a far bigger issue and that will likely also take much longer to parse on aggregate.

     

     

     

  • 10tons Announces 10 Launch Games for BlackBerry 10

    Finnish game developer 10tons has been busy preparing a full lineup of games for RIM’s next generation mobile platform: BlackBerry 10. The games will be ready for the big launch on January 30th and features lots of puzzle games as well as a few other genres.

    10tons has been cutting their teeth on BlackBerry 10 by releasing “tons” of BlackBerry Playbook games over the last year.

    Here’s a list of their launch titles:

    Azkend: 10tons’ polished puzzle franchise for $2.99

    Azkend 2-The World Beneath: 2nd installment of this match-3 puzzle game for $5.99

    Sparkle: A match 3 puzzle game. A hit on the PC and MC, just $2.99

    Boom Brigade 2: An alien-blasting action-strategy game for $2.99

    Heroes of Kalevala: A puzzle game with a mythical story for $2.99

    Joining Hands: A charming puzzle game with the goal of joining everyone’s hands on-screen. Cute game for just $1.99

    Ironworm: a physics-based puzzle game. Defeat the bugs to win. $1.99

    Puzkend: a matching puzzle game that will please any pro puzzle gamer. No new pieces are generated when they are clear making the strategy all the sweeter: $1.99

    King Oddball: A physics-based destruction game with really enjoyable, stress-relieving gameplay. $2.99

    Dragon Portals: A match-3 puzzle game with great style and innovative gameplay.

    RIM’s solid platform strategy has led to an overwhelming amount of launch apps and games for yet to be released device.

  • New Special Interest Group Pushes To Stop Natural Gas Exports

    One of the outgrowths of increasing federal regulatory powers is the tendency of some large companies to use the government to restrict competition and make themselves better off at the expense of other Americans.  The latest companies working to use the government to restrict competition and enrich themselves are Alcoa, Celanese Corporation, Dow Chemical, Eastman Chemical, Huntsman Corp., and Nucor Steel.

    These companies, along with American Public Gas Association, have created a new organization called America’s Energy Advantage. The purpose of America’s Energy Advantage is to limit U.S. exports of natural gas. As America’s Energy Advantage’s website explains it, they believe in “[c]arefully considering the economic consequences before allowing unfettered natural gas exports.” They also want the federal government “to move cautiously on permitting natural gas exports.”

    These groups want to limit free trade, but they do not want to appear to be anti-free trade. Instead they claim they want “[r]ules-based free trade and living up to trade commitments made under the World Trade Organization.” The reality is that they only bring up free trade to distract from the fact that limiting free trade is their goal.

    Free trade in natural gas may lead to slightly higher natural gas prices, but the reality is that the U.S. is currently enjoyed historically-low natural gas prices as a result of a boom in production caused by hydraulic fracturing. In 2012, the average spot price of natural gas was less than $3 per MMBtu compared to over $6 per MMBtu a few years ago, with spikes over $10 per MMBtu.

    There is nothing wrong with these companies wanting low-cost inputs, but what is terribly wrong is their desire to keep the price of natural gas artificially low through government actions to restrict trade by limiting customers for the natural gas. By doing so, the companies that make up America’s Energy Advantage would have lower costs but would benefit at the expense of those whose business it is to produce natural gas. Moreover, by advocating for government policies that limit consumption by competitors, they may in fact be producing higher natural gas prices for themselves and all consumers in the future.  In their pursuit of policies they think might keep gas prices low, they may succeed in destroying their own businesses and investments by causing gas prices to skyrocket.

    The reason that restricting exports might lead to higher domestic prices is quite simple: companies that search for and produce oil and gas use the same personnel, equipment and investment to produce oil or to produce natural gas.  A company decides to target oil or natural gas depending on prices, since costs for producing either are closely proximate. At today’s natural gas and oil at prices, a company can choose whether to receive just under $20 for natural gas equal in energy to a barrel of oil selling for $95.  This is not a difficult decision to make, and they are making it accordingly.  For example, about 75% of the oil and gas rigs are now searching for oil in the United States, which explains the phenomenal growth in investment in places like the Bakken in North Dakota and Eagle Ford in Texas—both are oil rich.  This is in stark contrast to the numbers just several years ago, when 80% of the wells were searching for natural gas, with 20% targeting oil.  That is precisely what led to the huge growth in supply of natural gas that drove prices down.

    This disparity between oil and gas prices ought to be evident to the companies pursuing government protection of their temporarily low prices for natural gas by limiting competition for the product.  Obviously, if a company could sell its chemicals for 4.5 times as much to one customer as they could to another, the company would not be confused about the choice.  Yet somehow, the companies and politicians who are behind efforts to restrict exports have not seen this parallel, or prefer to ignore it.

    Alcoa, Dow and the rest want to limit natural gas exports, but they show no desire to limit exports of their own products. If these companies believe in restricting exports to preserve America’s “advantage,” shouldn’t they also want to limit the export of their own products? If limiting natural gas exports helps keep natural gas prices low, then limiting the export of chemicals would keep chemical prices low in the United States, as would limiting the export of corn and other grains, or any agricultural products for that matter.  This would further help Americans and other industries, according to their logic. But an honest reader knows this isn’t true.

    One more  thing that should be noted is that Dow Chemical has a financial interest in the Freeport LNG facility. Dow’s ownership matters because this is the first export LNG facility application DOE will consider. Dow says they will not own part of the import facility, according to Politico, but the import facility will use some of the components of the export facility that Dow co-owns and Dow may receive user fees.  Their initial investment, they say, was in the facility meant to import LNG.  That is, until natural gas was made so abundant by hydraulic fracturing and horizontal drilling so that it is now poised to become an export facility.  This change of fortunes happened because the government was not involved.

    The fact that these companies have expressed no interest in limiting their exports to keep chemical or steel prices low in the United States shows that they understand how such limits would affect their own balance sheets, but doesn’t explain how they think other businesses will not be affected by supply, demand or price.  Sadly, in President Obama’s America, all-too frequently big business is turning to working to use government to advance their own self-interest at expense of the rest of America. We saw it in the Wall Street bailout, and we saw it with the federal government handing out billions of taxpayer dollars to failing “green” companies with political connections. This is not the limited government that our Founders sought in order to protect individuals in their pursuit of happiness.  This “beggar they neighbor” approach, which will weaken the U.S. and, in fact, promises to weaken their own businesses over the long run.

    The answer—as it so often is—lies in more supply and in government policies which more accurately reflect the limits placed on Big Government by the Founders.  Rather than using government to prohibit others from using natural gas, it would make much more sense for the companies to pursue policies to expand natural gas development. As an example, the companies could pursue policies that would get the Administration to lift its continuation of the moratorium on exploration on 85 percent of the offshore areas of the lower 48 through 2017.  They could demand that the Secretary of Interior explain why it takes 307 days to permit a natural gas well on federal lands while in North Dakota it takes a mere 10 days.  They could ask the President and Congress to demand from the Department of Interior that they reverse the decline in production of natural gas from offshore that has been underway for years. Or they could call on the Administration to sanction EPA for banning the use of coal to generate electricity, which is artificially hiking demand for natural gas when the U.S. has the largest coal supplies in the world.  They could also ask the Administration to stop trying to seize more powers over hydraulic fracturing that more appropriately reside with the states.  After all, without hydraulic fracturing, and without the states’ prudent regulatory decisions, none of the new supplies would exist.

    All of these policy initiatives require less government interference in our economy, and would allow the private sector to keep generating both energy and jobs, with the side benefit of increased revenues and energy security.  This is an approach more in line with American principles and our Founders.

  • House Committee Demands Answers From Justice Department Over The Prosecution Of Aaron Swartz

    It’s been a few weeks now since noted activist Aaron Swartz committed suicide. Since then, there has been a lot of discussion in regards to our justice system and how it handles prosecution. The House promised to look into it, and now the Oversight and Government Reform Committee will be doing just that.

    Darrell Issa, House Oversight and Government Reform Committee Chairman, and Elijah Cummings, sent a letter to Attorney General Eric Holder demanding a briefing from the Justice Department on the prosecution of Aaron Swartz. Most of the letter recounts the history of Swartz’ case, but the end dives into what the Committee wants out of the briefing:

    Many questions have been raised about the appropriate level of punishment sought by prosecutors for Mr. Swartz’s alleged offenses, and how the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act, cited in 11 of 13 counts against Mr. Swartz, should apply under similar circumstances. For example, according to Marc Zwillinger, a former federal prosecutor familiar with cybercrime investigations, “[t]he question in any given case is whether the prosecutor asked for too much, and properly balanced the harm caused in a particular case with the defendant’s true culpability.”

    From there, the letter demands that the Justice Department answer the following questions at a briefing:

  • What factors influenced the decision to prosecute Mr. Swartz for the crimes alleged in the indictment, including the decisions regarding what crimes to charge and the filing of the superseded indictment?
  • What Mr. Swartz’s opposition to SOPA or his association with any advocacy groups among the factors considered?
  • What specific plea offers were made to Mr. Swartz, and what factors influenced the decisions by prosecutors regarding plea offers made to Mr. Swartz?
  • How did the criminal charges, penalties sought, and plea offers in this case compare to those of other cases that have been prosecuted or considered for prosecution under the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act?
  • Did the federal investigation of Mr. Swartz reveal evidence that he had committed other hacking violations?
  • What factors influenced the Department’s decision regarding sentencing proposals?
  • Why was a superseding indictment necessary?
  • It’s kind of a long shot, but the DoJ might just humor the House Committee and actually show up. The Department will have to schedule the briefing for a day before February 4. We’ll let you know if the DoJ responds, or it it schedules a briefing. If it does show up, it might yield some interesting results as Issa has proven to be pretty tough on these matters.

    [h/t: The Hill]

  • New iOS 6.1 Adds Fandango Movie Purchasing To Siri’s Capabilities

    Back in November, developers who were beta testing Apple’s iOS 6.1 indicated that in the then upcoming version of Apple’s operating system, Siri would let users purchase movie tickets through Fandango. Now, Apple has released the iOS update to all users. Sure enough, Fandango has announced the functionality.

    Here’s a bit from Fandango’s announcement:

    iOS 6.1 makes it convenient to purchase tickets through Fandango’s award-winning mobile app. Using iOS devices, moviegoers simply ask Siri to find a specific movie, nearby theaters or desired showtimes. Siri then offers the option to “Buy Tickets” and launches the Fandango app for customers to complete their ticket purchase. For added convenience, moviegoers can add their Paperless Mobile Tickets to Passbook, which lets them scan their iPhone or iPod touch to get into the movie at select theaters.

    “Fandango is committed to innovating across all platforms and helping shape the future of moviegoing,” said Paul Yanover , President of Fandango. “With this new Siri feature, movie fans can quickly and easily discover the nearest theaters, find the most convenient showtimes, and buy tickets through Fandango to help make movie night perfect.”

    Siri movie ticket purchases

    The feature can be used on iPhone, iPad and iPod Touch devices (though we may see Siri make her way to Macs at some point).

    image via 9to5Mac

  • The Real Reason Organizations Resist Analytics

    While discussing a Harvard colleague’s world-class work on how big data and analytics transform public sector effectiveness, I couldn’t help but ask: How many public school systems had reached out to him for advice?

    His answer surprised. “I can’t think of any,” he said. “I guess some organizations are more interested in accountability than others.”

    Exactly. Enterprise politics and culture suggest analytics’ impact is less about measuring existing performance than creating new accountability. Managements may want to dramatically improve productivity but they’re decidedly mixed about comparably increasing their accountability. Accountability is often the unhappy byproduct rather than desirable outcome of innovative analytics. Greater accountability makes people nervous.

    That’s not unreasonable. Look at the vicious politics and debate in New York and other cities over analytics’ role in assessing public school teacher performance. The teachers’ union argues the metrics are an unfair and pseudo-scientific tool to justify firings. Analytics’ champions insist that the transparency and insight these metrics provide are essential for determining classroom quality and outcomes. The arguments over numbers are really fights over accountability and its consequences.

    At one global technology services firm, salespeople grew furious with a CRM system whose new analytics effectively held them accountable for pricing and promotion practices they thought undermined their key account relationships. The sophisticated and near-real-time analytics created the worst of both worlds for them: greater accountability with less flexibility and influence.

    The evolving marriage of big data to analytics increasingly leads to a phenomenon I’d describe as “accountability creep” — the technocratic counterpart to military “mission creep.” The more data organizations gather from more sources and algorithmically analyze, the more individuals, managers and executives become accountable for any unpleasant surprises and/or inefficiencies that emerge.

    For example, an Asia-based supply chain manager can discover that the remarkably inexpensive subassembly he’s successfully procured typically leads to the most complex, time-consuming and expensive in-field repairs. Of course, engineering design and test should be held accountable, but more sophisticated data-driven analytics makes the cost-driven, compliance-oriented supply chain employee culpable, as well.

    This helps explain why, when working with organizations implementing big data initiatives and/or analytics, I’ve observed the most serious obstacles tend to have less to do with real quantitative or technical competence than perceived professional vulnerability. The more managements learn about what analytics might mean, the more they fear that the business benefits may be overshadowed by the risk of weakness, dysfunction and incompetence exposed.

    Culture matters enormously. Do better analytics lead managers to “improve” or “remove” the measurably underperforming? Are analytics internally marketed and perceived as diagnostics for helping people and processes perform “better”? Or do they identify the productivity pathogens that must quickly and cost-effectively be organizationally excised? What I’ve observed is that many organizations have invested more thought into acquiring analytic capabilities than confronting the accountability crises they may create.

    For at least a few organizations, that’s led to “accountability for thee but not for me” investment. Executives use analytics to impose greater accountability upon their subordinates. Analytics become a medium and mechanism for centralizing and consolidating power. Accountability flows up from the bottom; authority flows down from the top.

    That’s where resentment arises. The emerging cultural challenge for leadership is whether analytics-driven accountability cuts both ways. Are business unit leaders and top executives using analytics to make themselves more transparent and accountable? Should “accountability analytics” be internally branded as a something “shared” rather than “imposed?”

    Transforming the culture and practice of analytics inherently transforms your culture and practice of accountability. The mathematics and technologies of sophisticated analytics are increasingly well understood. The cultures and challenges of accountability are not. Going forward, which do you think will matter more?