Category: News

  • 6 technologies that could shape the future of energy

    Whether it’s the energy used to light up and warm our homes, or the energy consumed in our gas tanks as we drive down the highway, the vast majority of the world’s energy sources come from fossil fuels. But a new generation of technologies is looking to replace coal and oil with cleaner and more efficient sources, like algae fuel, geothermal power and solar panels. New technology is also making it easier to store energy in next-gen battery technologies, and easier to move around on a better power grid. Here’s a round up of stories we covered this month that demonstrate 6 technologies that could shape the future of energy:

  • Details of the Nike+ Accelerator Powered by TechStars NYC

    I recently attended the recruiting tour for the Nike+ Accelerator powered by TechStars NYC and I thought it might be beneficial to write up some info and thoughts for those interested in the program. For those who don’t know, Nike has launched a startup accelerator in partnership with TechStars NYC to find startups that can leverage access to the Nike+ Fuel data to build a startup or complement a startups data. The goal is to get some initial seed money, go through the TechStars program and build a business that may be acquired by Nike or simply exist as its own business. Read on for more details.


    Jason Calcanis did an interview with David Cohen, Founder and CEO of TechStars about the Nike+ Accelerator as well as a host of other topics. It’s an excellent resource for learning more about the program and a little behind the scenes stuff.Use this YouTube link for mobile viewing.

    After a couple demos from some people in the personal health and analytics space, Nike came out to present. The company did a great job of explaining Nike’s mission which is to inspire athletes*. The term “athletes” at Nike always comes with an asterix because the company defines an athlete as every human. To drive this point home, they showed a series of videos from the Nike Fuel and “Find Your Greatness” campaigns. Check out the videos:


    Nike: Find Your Greatness. Click this link for mobile viewing.


    Nike: Find Your Greatness. — Jogger. Click this link for mobile viewing.


    Nike+ FuelBand Presents: Counts. Click this link for mobile viewing.

    After some inspirational videos from Nike, TechStars came out to talk a little about what they bring to the table and some of the finer details of the program. According to Dave Drach, VP of Business Development at TechStars, the deal is that Nike provides unique access to the Nike+ data and TechStars is in it for $20K and 6% on the cap table. It’s Nike’s money so it’s an amazing deal for TechStars. In order to get accepted to the program, you go through the same process of applying to the Nike+ Accelerator as you would for TechStars. So it’s a pretty competitive process. If you’re accepted to the program, you’ll be working out of Portland, Oregon, a short drive from the Nike World Headquarters.

    Overall, it looks like a great program for any startups looking to work closely with Nike on a health industry startup. TechStars brings their network to the table and Nike brings the API. All you have to do is figure out how to build a billion dollar business from there. Easy peasy lemon squeezy.

    Read more about the Nike+ Accelerator from the TechStars site.

    Here are the official details about the accelerator from Nike on their site.


  • Don’t Make Assumptions About the Next Generation; Invest in It

    Depending on where you draw the line, I’m either a very young baby boomer or a very old member of Generation X. These generations hold the majority of executive leadership positions across sectors. In other words, we’re in charge.

    Enter the millennials. This younger set hasn’t always seen eye-to-eye with their baby boomer or Gen X colleagues and managers in the workplace. Negative chatter often hums around them, mostly centering on the assertion that they are entitled or narcissistic. This has led to a feeling that millennials are not ready to join the real world and work hard.

    So it’s the millennials who need to get in line — right?

    Not so fast. I believe it’s the leaders, not the millennials, who should be trying harder to bridge the generational gap. As we approach the inevitable crossroads of old and new leadership, it’s our job to develop the people we expect to carry the torch forward.

    In the years I spent at West Point as the military leadership course director, I got to know some millennials pretty well. I came to appreciate them as ready to work just as hard as previous generations, perhaps even harder. West Point graduates from the millennial generation have selected the most dangerous initial assignments for their Army service at rates higher than previous generations. They aren’t looking for military jobs that will just set them up for good business careers later. They’re demonstrating with their very lives that they’re ready to join the real world.

    It seems our differing generations suffer from two key stumbling blocks: communication gaps and preconceived notions. Communication has changed rapidly in the last ten years and not all of us have kept the pace. And both older and younger generations can fall victim to surrendering to negative chatter or stereotypes, instead of looking for common ground and goals.

    So as leaders, you have a choice: You can make assumptions about the next generation or you can invest in them the way that others have invested in you.

    The central position to what I’m suggesting is that we lead millennials forward and not drag them back to what we believe to be the “good old ways” of developing people. Seasoned leaders don’t need to turn their backs on decades of experience, but they also don’t need to subject emerging generations to the same techniques of learning and development that made sense 10 or 20 years ago.

    To begin a paradigm shift in how we lead others, we need to first understand how they develop and learn. Recent advances in the behavioral sciences (here’s an example from military leadership) provide a richer and deeper understanding that people develop at different rates in different areas and at different times in their lives. For example, I learn creative requirements — such as motivating and leading others — in an ambiguous environment and perform those skills much differently than I learn and execute basic skills — such as marksmanship — that I master over time and through practice.

    After being selected in the first round of the 2012 NFL draft, a nationally renowned collegiate football player said something defiant when asked about his low score on a cognitive ability test: “This test has nothing to do with football, so I blew it off.” New developmental approaches could have helped avoid this. Innovations in technology, like tablet devices or cloud computing, will allow for a more dynamic, relevant and valid assessment of individual learning and developmental styles. These updated techniques will move us from labeling someone as simply a “type” of learner, to creating a clearer understanding of how each person learns across different environments. And these improved assessment tools help remove the potential for responses based on how people want to be viewed by others versus how they really learn. This, in turn, impacts how we guide and train the younger generation for leadership roles.

    I’m not suggesting millennials should get new rules simply to suit them, or even that they be allowed to pick and choose which requirements they complete. I’m saying it is incumbent upon us as leaders to ensure that what we ask them to do is relevant, meaningful and valid. Whether we manage a sales force, coach athletes, teach students, or carry the title of commander in combat, we are leading and developing future leaders.

    This type of thinking requires leaders to consider more closely how their followers learn. It’s a less leader-centric view of leadership. To truly guide and develop the younger generation, we need to practice transformational and authentic leadership.

    U.S. Gen. Eric Shinseki offered great advice to old-school military leaders as he sought to introduce paradigm-shifting change across the U.S. Army. “If you don’t like change, you’re going to like irrelevance even less,” he said.

    Let’s become relevant to more than just ourselves.

    Disclaimer: The views expressed in this post are those of the author and do not reflect the official policy or position of the Department of the Army, Department of Defense or the U.S. Government.

  • Melanomas Often Mutate in Two Specific Ways, Shows Study

    A new study has shown that 71% of melanoma tumors have two specific mutations. The mutations were found in an area of the cancer genome where cancer-related mutations have not been found previously.

    “This new finding represents an initial foray into the ‘dark matter’ of the cancer genome,” said Dr. Levi Garraway, senior author of the study and an assistant professor of medicine at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute. “In addition, this represents the discovery of two of the most prevalent melanoma gene mutations. Considered as a whole, these two TERT promoter mutations are even more common than BRAF mutations in melanoma. Altogether, this discovery could cause us to think more creatively about the possible benefits of targeting TERT in cancer treatment or prevention.”

    The study, published this week in the journal Science Express, shows that the two mutations take place in regions of non-coding DNA. Non-coding DNA refers to the large regions of DNA that do not contain genetic instructions for making proteins. Though non-coding DNA makes up 99% of a cell’s genome, the information was previously dismissed as meaningless.

    The researchers found that the mutations affect affect a promoter region adjacent to the TERT gene, which contains a “recipe” for creating telomerase reverse transcriptase – an enzyme that can make cells “virtually immortal.” Promoter regions in DNA control the rate of a gene’s transcription. It is presumed that the mutations can kick the TERT gene “into overdrive” and contribute to the development of melanoma.

    “We think these mutations in the promoter region are potentially one way the TERT gene can be activated,” said Dr. Franklin Huang, co-author of the study.

    The mutations were found by analyzing whole-genome data. Huang and his colleagues also found that the same mutations are present in other cancers, and could be common in bladder and liver cancers.

  • After stock slide, Apple no longer world’s most valuable public company

    As investors continue to punish Apple stock — even after the company posted its best revenues and profits ever on Wednesday — Apple’s run as the world’s most valuable publicly held company has come to an end. Exxon Mobil’s market cap hit $416.1 billion Friday morning, as Apple’s slipped to $414.7 billion. It’s not a surprise to those watching Apple’s stock the last few days. The symbolism, however, is bigger than Apple: it’s significant that a tech company is no longer perched atop the business world.

    This is the first time Apple and Exxon have switched places since last January, when Apple overtook the oil company in market capitalization.

    But Apple shares have been on a rollercoaster since September when they hit their peak at $702.10. This week Apple’s stock has dropped precipitously after posting its highest-ever revenues ($54 billion) and profits ($13 billion) and all-time best iPhone and iPad sales of 48 million and 22 million, respectively, during its fiscal first quarter of 2013. Shares are currently valued below $440, after being priced above $510 going into earnings on Wednesday.

    Investors are deeply worried that Apple’s profits are no longer growing as fast as they once were and fear Apple is losing ground too fast to competitors like Samsung in both smartphones and tablets. Apple CEO Tim Cook used his time on the company’s earnings call this week to try to instill confidence into analysts that the company’s future is bright and that Apple knows what it’s doing when it comes to making products people will buy and pricing them appropriately and that it has a product pipeline that is “chock-full” of innovative ideas. Thus far, however, his speech does not appear to have had the calming effect he intended.

  • Friday Funny: Up, Up and Away!

    Happy Friday! Since it’s Friday, that means it’s time for our caption contest, with cartoons drawn by Diane Alber, our favorite data center cartoonist! Please visit Diane’s website Kip and Gary for more of her data center humor.

    This time, Kip is getting airborne. Diane writes: “I love the movie ‘Up’ and the constant use of the word ‘cloud’ inspired this next comic. Kip finally wanted to see what this whole ‘cloud’ thing was about. ”

    balloon-470

    Click link for larger image!

    The caption contest works like this: We provide the cartoon and you, our readers, submit the captions. We then choose finalists and the readers vote for their favorite funniest suggestion. Scroll down and add your suggestion in the comments below.

    Hearty congratulations are extended to Carlos Cebrian for the winning caption – “Are you sure this is what Green Data Center means?” – for “Hitting the Links.”

    For the previous cartoons on DCK, see our Humor Channel.

    Share your captions in the comment section below!

  • Give Your Smartphone The Iron Throne Its Always Deserved

    Are you sick of your iPhone 5 not having a dock to sit comfortably in? Are you a huge Game of Thrones fan? If you answered yes to both, this latest 3D printed creation may be just for you.

    Instructables user mstyle183 has recreated a miniature Iron Throne that will comfortably seat an iPhone 5 or other mobile devices. The beauty of 3D printing is that the creator can adjust the size of the dock on the fly for any type of phone without changing the overall design.

    Check out a few pictures of the dock complete with iPhone 5:

    Iron Throne Smartphone

    Iron Throne Smartphone

    You can download the dock’s design from its Instructables page. If you don’t have a 3D printer, you can purchase it from the creator’s Web site for $49.99.

    [h/t: 3ders]

  • Kickstarter Unveils New #Tags to Track Project Trends

    Kickstarter wants to make it easier for potential backers to find specific types of projects and browse projects pertaining to certain themes. They also want to be able to display which types of projects are trending on the site at any given time.

    That’s why they’ve just introduced hashtags on their discover page.

    “Over time, we’ve noticed certain themes and trends running through the projects on Kickstarter — some for a week, some for years. Tags give us a new way to share these patterns with everyone.

    Tags aren’t tethered to a specific category. Instead they reflect a common philosophy (#Civic), shared subject matter (#Science), themes (#Zombies), accolades (#Sundance), and a bunch of other stuff too. We’ll be adding and rotating tags constantly as new trends pop up throughout the site. These will be listed in the sidebar of the Discover page,” says Kickstarter.

    So these tags are different, and in a way much more specific than categories like “music” “film” or “games.”

    You can check out the trending #tags on the Kickstarter Discover page. People looking to browse projects can now do so by location, category, tag, and other groupings like “recently launched” and “most funded.”

    Kickstarter says that you can help make the #tags better. If you see a type of project that’s trending or want your project that you just launched to be tagged, just send them a tweet.

  • New From NAP 2013-01-25 12:39:59

    Final Book Now Available

    The central goal of the In the Light of Evolution (ILE) series is to promote the evolutionary sciences through state-of-the-art colloquia–in the series of Arthur M. Sackler colloquia sponsored by the National Academy of Sciences–and their published proceedings. Each installment explores evolutionary perspectives on a particular biological topic that is scientifically intriguing but also has special relevance to contemporary societal issues or challenges.

    This book is the outgrowth of the Arthur M. Sackler Colloquium “Brain and Behavior,” which was sponsored by the National Academy of Sciences on January 20-21, 2012, at the Academy’s Arnold and Mabel Beckman Center in Irvine, CA. It is the sixth in a series of Colloquia under the general title “In the Light of Evolution.” Specifically, In Light of Evolution: Brain and Behavior focuses on the field of evolutionary neuroscience that now includes a vast array of different approaches, data types, and species.

    This volume is also available for purchase with the In the Light of Evolution six-volume set.

    [Read the full report]

    Topics: Biology and Life Sciences | Health and Medicine

  • You’re Doing it Wrong: Ford Raptor Fail

    Raptor Jump

    Have you ever partaken in an event only to realize that in hindsight it may not have been a great idea? Sadly I’ve been in a few of these situations and thankfully I’ve always come away unscathed. There are those however who haven’t been so lucky and to them I can only say, shit happens. Now the video you’re about to see contains so much “wrong” that it’s painful, yet the participates, like me, dodged a bullet. Watch for yourself and see if you think this was a good idea.

    Source: Jalopnik.com

  • Has central Europe done enough to woo investors?

    By Dasha Afanasieva

    Central European markets have studied hard to impress investors, says Angela Merkel, but have they passed the test?

    In Davos on Thursday, the German chancellor urged business leaders to head for the region:

    I’m saying this to investors who are pondering investment in Europe: Central and Eastern Europe has done, almost flying below the radar, a lot of reforms… Look at the investment climate in Europe; it has changed for the better.

    But the region did not look so rosy to investors this week.

    The Polish stock index was down more than 1.2 percent. Data out on Thursday showing the biggest drop in retail sales in almost eight years prompted more calls to cut the interest rate again, and sent the zloty lower on the day.

    Hungarian shopaholics too stayed on the wagon at the end of last year.  Retail sales there fell 4.1 percent in November year-on-year, according to fresh data which pushed the forint to a new seven-month low as investors expected further rate cuts.  Hungarian markets also have to contend with uncertainty over central bank policy in anticipation of a leadership change at its central bank in March.

    Meanwhile, Romania asked the IMF for an extension of its aid deal.

    For Poland, Hungary, Romania and the Czech Republic, the last recorded quarterly growth was flat, at best.
    All four saw their unemployment rate rise in December, with Central Europe’s biggest economy, Poland, registered a worse than expected jobless rate of 13.4 percent.

    Luis Costa, head of CEEMEA FX and fixed income strategy at Citi said:

    If you look into central Europe you see a lot of weakness. Polish numbers – the industrial output, the retail sales numbers are pretty bad and in Hungary we again had a batch of horrible numbers so with the exceptions of a few credits such as Turkey the picture is still very depressed.

  • 5 brave personal stories of domestic abuse

    Leslie Morgan Steiner thought that she’d found true love in her early 20s. Instead, she found herself married to a man who repeatedly pointed a gun at her head and threatened to kill her.

    In today’s brave talk, given at TEDxRainier, Steiner tells the story of how she — a Harvard-educated magazine editor turned businesswoman — fell into an abusive relationship. She seeks to answer the question people always ask about women who are being abused: Why does she stay?

    Steiner calls the phenomenon “crazy love.” Like many other women and men experience each year, her relationship started with adoration, moved on to isolation, and culminated in extreme manipulation — and violence.

    “As it turns out, I’m a very typical domestic abuse victim … Domestic violence happens to everyone. All races, all religions, all income and education levels,” says Steiner. “Why did I stay? The answer is easy. I didn’t know he was abusing me. Even though he held those loaded guns to my head, pushed me downstairs, threatened to kill our dog, pulled the key out of the car ignition as I drove down the highway, poured coffee grinds on my head as I dressed for a job interview, I never once thought of myself as a battered wife. Instead, I was a very strong woman in love with a deeply troubled man and I was the only person on earth who could help him face his demons.”

    To hear Steiner’s terrifying story — and how she finally got out by going public and talking to everyone she could about what was happening behind closed doors — listen to this powerful talk. And below, four more speakers brave enough to share their similar personal experiences and let others know they are not alone.

    Theresa Flores: Find a voice with soap
    Theresa Flores was your average girl from the Michigan suburbs. And through a simple crush on a classmate, was manipulated into something very dark — human trafficking. In this talk from TEDxColumbus 2011, she recalls how she became stuck in a cycle of abuse by men much older than her. And she shares how, years late, when returning to a motel where she had been abused, she had an idea — putting an 800 number for the National Human Trafficking Hotline on the bars of soap in the bathroom. She now gives this soap to motels for free in areas where trafficking is common, in hopes that girls like her will find it in the bathroom and call.

    Javier Espinoza: Turning pain into power
    Javier Espinoza parents expressed nothing but tenderness and love to him. But in their dealings with each other, they fought terribly — and his father often beat his mother. In this talk from TEDxOrangeCoastWomen, Espinoza shares just how angry he felt at his father. And how, eventually, he found a way to channel his emotions into a program called “In a Box,” which provides women and kids in domestic violence shelters with the little things that they need.

    Pamela Taylor: Creating a safe space for the empowerment of women
    Pamela Taylor is known as the co-founder of Dress for Success, the nonprofit which helps disadvantaged women build the skills they need to get jobs. In this talk, she shares why this is her passion — because she was abused for years herself. In this talk from TEDxSanAntonio, she shares how she was attacked by her husband, often in public, and felt so disheartened that no one came to her aid.

    Tony Porter: A call to men
    Growing up, Tony Porter says that he got message loud and clear: that men are in charge — women are not — and that anger is the only emotion it’s okay to express. At TEDWomen, Porter calls this “twisted,” because how could it not lead to the disrespect, mistreatment and abuse of women? In this talk, Porter asks men to get out of this “man box” and boldly act in ways counter to what they’ve been taught.

  • General Electric pushes its case as a high-tech leader

    It sure looks like General Electric — the conglomerate that builds stuff ranging from appliances to jet engines — is spending a ton of time and resources to boost its profile in high (as opposed to “low”) tech. In fact it looks like it’s waging a massive PR campaign to show that it is not some grimy industrial relic but a force at the cutting edge of big data and “the internet of things.” If you don’t believe it, just download its November report on the industrial internet, which we covered here.

    The latest evidence of this push? An interview with William Ruh, VP of software for GE Research, in ComputerWeekly.com. In the piece, Ruh appeared to take a veiled swipe IBM — which loves to portray itself as the thought leader in bleeding-edge tech and the kingpin in tech patents. (For the record, in 2012 GE came in ninth in patents with a total of 1,652 compared to IBM’s 6,478 — but who’s counting?)

    GE CEO Jeff Immelt

    Ruh said the airline industry has gathered tons of data about how jet engines have performed over the past two decades and that historical data should help guide predictive maintenance going forward. Ruh told ComputerWeekly:

    “In emerging markets, we are seeing dirt and sandy environments … How are these affecting aero engines? [Business intelligence] cannot answer this. Nor can a supercomputer … Watson cannot tell me when this machine part will break.”

    Watson is IBM’s much-hyped computer that boasts human-like thought processes and beat the human champion in Jeopardy a few years back.

    GE is banking on the growing acknowledgement that machine data — information generated and collected by the types of industrial gear it makes — gives it an entry into the booming world of big data. That’s probably why GE CEO Jeff Immelt has been cropping up in a lot of interesting venues, including in an interview with Om Malik last month. And why GE came to San Francisco to announce its “Industrial Internet Quests” and tap into the wealth of software and data expertise there. As my colleague Katie Fehrenbacher put it at the time, the quest “calls on developers, data scientists and designers to make algorithms and applications that can increase productivity for the health and aviation sectors” — all sectors where GE plays.

    It may be easy for folks in the valley to forget that GE has thousands of its own software developers on staff and builds sophisticated medical imaging and other high-tech gear: it does have credibility. And, at a time when the emphasis on making and building actual products is more valued, GE has lessons to teach.

    The conglomerate obviously wants to be seen as a leader in this realm and won’t be content to let the likes of IBM hog all the glory in the internet of things era. After all, it builds an awful lot of those “things.”

    Swept blade photo courtesy of Flickr user Bleucho

  • Inaugural Poet Richard Blanco Talks About His Inspiration

    Most of America was introduced to Richard Blanco on Monday when he stepped to the podium at the U.S. Capitol to read "One Today," the poem he had written to celebrate the second inauguration of President Barack Obama. Blanco, the gay son of Cuban exiles, is the fifth person to be chosen to write an inaugural poem, and the youngest person to be given that honor. (Previous inaugural poets include Robert Frost and Maya Angelou.) In the video below, Blanco talks about his desire to create a poem of unity and love, as he believes the occasion demanded.

    read more

  • Welfare Lottery Ban: Proposal Not Going Over Well

    Some North Carolina residents are upset over a new measure to ban welfare recipients from buying Lottery tickets. The legislation is currently being drafted and would see all lottery ticket merchants refusing to sell to individuals who receive government assistance or who are going through bankruptcy.

    Representative Paul Stam, who is helping to draft the proposal, says the measure would ensure that government money is not being misdirected.

    “We’re giving them welfare to help them live, and yet by selling them a ticket, we’re taking away their money that is there to provide them the barest of necessities,” Stam said.

    But many think the local government is missing the bigger picture, and should be focusing on eliminating the need for welfare in the first place before cracking down on something which may or may not be enforceable.

    “The NAACP, we didn’t agree with the lottery to start with. Rather than Mr. Stam having a side argument, ask him to stop blocking labor rights for poor people and working people. Ask him to have a real conversation about real wage,” NAACP President Rev. William Barber said.

  • Microsoft Blames PC Makers For Slow Windows 8 Sales [Report]

    Microsoft released its quarterly earnings report yesterday, and there was a bit of good news for the company’s Windows business. The company announced that it had sold 60 million Windows 8 licenses and that it was making more money off of the operating system than last year. Windows 8 is performing worse than Windows 7 and Vista, however, and Microsoft is putting the blame on its hardware partners.

    In a report from The Register, a source close to Microsoft say that the company is blaming PC makers for the lackluster Windows 8 sales that the company has seen thus far. Microsoft says its hardware partners are not following the “clear and specific guidance” it gave on how Windows 8 hardware should look and operate, specifically the touchscreen input that it wanted in every machine.

    PC makers are reportedly objecting to Microsoft’s accusations saying that its “guidance” would have led to expensive PCs that nobody would understand or want. It would have led them to the situation that Microsoft is in now with its Surface RT tablet – a lot of expensive product rotting on shelves. The manufacturers also blame the rise of cheap alternatives, like Android tablets, and a marketing campaign that didn’t properly explain Windows RT. In fact, the latter is the very reason that Samsung won’t be bringing its Windows RT tablet to the U.S.

    All of this reeks a little of deja vu as Microsoft has occasionally been at odds with its hardware partners over the decisions it makes. The most recent was its secret development of the Surface tablet that was a complete surprise to hardware partners.

    It’s not like any of this is going to suddenly destroy the long standing relationship between Microsoft and OEMs though. Both realize that they need the other to survive. The PC is still a popular piece of hardware even if global shipments are falling. Maybe what’s best is that both parties temper their expectations and aggressively market to its strongest allies – the power user, enterprise and education.

    So, what is Microsoft going to do in response to sluggish Windows 8 sales? The Register’s source says the company will be rebooting the launch of Windows 8 alongside the launch of the Surface Pro tablet on February 9. It’s not known what form this “reboot” will take, but it could very well tie into the rumored Windows Blue launch scheduled for 2013.

    It will be interesting to see how much of this pans out in the coming year. A reboot of Windows 8 this soon after the launch might be seen as a sign of Microsoft’s admittance that Windows 8 was a “disaster,” but it could also be the best thing to happen to the struggling operating system.

  • Hyve Brings Facebook’s Servers to Your Racks

    Hyve-Model-1500

    Here’s a look at Hyve Solutions’ model 1500 server, which adopts the Open Compute 2.0 “Windmill” two-wide server design to a 19-inch rack (Photo: Colleen Miller)

    You’ve probably heard of Facebook’s custom server designs, which were unveiled when the company opened its first data center and launched the Open Compute project in 2011. You may be less familiar with Hyve Solutions, but the Fremont, Calif. company has been a significant player in building server hardware for Facebook. Hyve is a business unit of Synnex Corporation, which does contract assembly work for OEMs and large end users, and is part of a growing ecosystem of original design manufacturers and custom server specialists that have supported Facebook. Hyve has taken the lead in developing products based on Open Compute designs, so that other companies can begin to take advantage of some of the latest innovations in open hardware. At the recent Open Compute Summit in Santa Clara, Steve Ichinaga and Howard Cohen from the Hyve team gave Data Center Knowledge a look at hardware optimized for existing 19-inch racks, as well as the 21-inch wide Open Rack standard.

    For additional video on data centers, check out our DCK video archive and the Data Center Videos channel on YouTube.

  • Verizon Wireless Sells Spectrum to AT&T For $1.9 billion

    According to a regulatory filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, AT&T has agreed to acquire spectrum licenses from Verizon Wireless for $1.9 billion. The 700 MHz Block B licenses will cover 42 million people in California, Colorado, Florida, Idaho, Illinois, Louisiana, Montana, New Mexico, New York, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Virginia, Washington and Wyoming.

    The deal also includes AT&T handing over to Verizon Advanced Wireless Services (AWS) spectrum licenses in markets such as Phoenix, Los Angeles, Fresno, and Portland, Oregon.

    The transaction is subject to regulatory approval by the U.S. Federal Communications Commission (FCC) and the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), but AT&T expects the transaction to be completed sometime in the second half of 2013.

    The transaction is part of a 700 MHz spectrum sale that Verizon announced last year. The sale is part of an agreement made with U.S. regulators so that Verizon could acquire spectrum from cable companies such as Comcast and Time Warner.

    This spectrum acquisition comes just after AT&T announced this week that it will buy Alltel for $780 million. Alltel is a smaller wireless carrier that serves around 585,000 subscribers in the rural areas of Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Illinois, Ohio, and Idaho. AT&T announced last year that its goal is to provide 300 million Americans with access to its 4G LTE network by 2014.

  • China’s Smaller Cities Are Home to Growing Middle Class

    Last week Chen Demin, China’s commerce minister, offered an upbeat outlook for China’s overall 2013 economy, forecasting steady improvement in domestic consumption and investment, and predicting that foreign direct investment over the coming year would also remain stable. In his remarks, Chen emphasized that foreign investors should look favorably upon the opportunities in China, notably those connected to China’s construction of many new small and medium-sized cities and towns.

    We agree. Robust new construction in China and a soaring rate of urbanization promise unprecedented levels of consumption and overall GDP growth that should only invite greater confidence among foreign investors.

    As we stress in The $10 Trillion Dollar Prize, urbanization is one of the most powerful transformative economic forces in China today. According to the National Bureau of Statistics of China, 51 per cent of China’s population, or 691 million people, are currently living in urban areas. Research suggests that by 2020, some 824 million people will be living in cities, an increase of 188 million. That’s one and a half million new urban residents every month for the rest of this decade. By 2030, according to our analysis, there will be around 270 million more new urban residents in China.

    But the distribution of China’s urban population is vastly different from that of many other nations, with the majority of that population located in midsize cities ranging between 500,000 and 5 million people.

    Typically, and perhaps not surprisingly, U.S. and European companies entering China have focused on the cities of Beijing, Shanghai, and Guangzhou. But we tell them that this is a mistake. There are pockets of wealth all across the country, and the wealth is spreading deep into the country’s western provinces.

    By our calculations, a company had to be in 60 cities to reach 80 percent of the country’s middle class in 2005. Today, they have to be in 340 of them. And by 2020, they will need to be in 550 urban locations to reach that same percentage of the middle class population.

    We regroup the cities of China into a series of four categories, including megacities, cluster capitals, specialist hubs, and horizon towns, as follows:

    • Megacities. China boasts two megacities — Beijing and Shanghai — each with more than 10 million residents. There are also eight cities with more than 10 million people, and another 93 cities with more than 5 million people. To put this into context, the U.S. has only one city with more than 5 million people — New York.
    • Cluster Capitals. These include Changshu, Daqing, Dongguan, Fuzhou, Tianjin, Wuxi, and Zhengzhou. These are trade hubs surrounded by smaller “satellite” cities. Wuxi, for example, is the capital of a group of six cities within a 30-mile radius in Jiangsu province: Jingjiang, Zhangjiangang, Changshu, Jiangyin, Changzhou, and Suzhou. On its own, Wuxi has a population of 2.3 million people, including 572,000 middle class consumers. Treated as part of a cluster, however, it becomes the center of a market with 6.9 million people and 1.5 million middle class consumers.
    • Specialist hubs. These are cities whose growth is often closely linked to the development of local natural resources or industrial hubs. These include Anyang, Bozhou, Chengdu, Lu’an, Suizhou, Xinxiang, and Yongzhou.
    • Horizon towns. Finally, there are also hundreds of small, geographically dispersed emerging-market cities. Although hard to reach, they offer ripe market opportunities — consumers in these towns usually have more basic needs than those of their counterparts in the bigger cities, but they also have a strong willingness selectively to “trade up” to pricier luxury goods.

    And take note of one other very promising related trend: as reported by The Wall Street Journal last month, China’s droves of migrant workers (reportedly 252 million strong in 2011) who journey from the country’s remote rural areas into cities to offer their labor to construction and manufacturing firms are increasingly remaining in those cities for longer periods of time. If this phenomenon continues — and especially if China’s new government relaxes the household registration policy (known as “hukou“) that for years has forbidden workers from taking advantage of local benefits (including schools for their children) — these workers will constitute an ever more powerful new urban work force, and a formidable contingent of newly affluent consumers. As they are permitted to participate in the local social welfare system of the cities where they’ve relocated, these workers will feel less pressured to save every yuan they earn. They will feel newly emboldened to spend their income on a broad range of products and services, contributing to what we believe will amount to some $6.2 trillion in annual consumer spending in China by 2020. And that’s a potential milestone that few foreign investors should ignore.

  • This iPhone/Cup Holder Is the Ultimate First World Problem Solver

    A new solution to a first world problem wants your money.

    How often do you find yourself unable to properly text, Facebook, or play Temple Run because you’re forced to use one of your free hands holding a cup of coffee. If this scenario hits home, help may be on the way.

    It’s called the UpperCup, and it’s the iPhone/cup holder that you never knew you wanted.

    “No more one handed typing. No more spilling coffee. Have your hands free for your optimal texting, gaming and social networking pleasure,” says Dutch marketing agency Natwerk.

    Awesome! You want one, right?

    Well, you can’t have one – yet. Natwerk is currently crowdfunding the project on indiegogo. They’ve set a goal of $25,000 to get the UpperCup into production and say that if/when it hits the shelves, it will do so with a $35 price tag. As of now, the’ve only managed to collect a little under $800 with 36 days left in the campaign.

    This is admittedly a little ridiculous. But I can totally see it selling.

    [via BuzzFeed]