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  • Join the conversation about #TEDTalksEd

    Rita-Pierson-at-TED-Talks-Education

    Want to talk about education? Inspired by TED Talks Education, our one-hour TV special that aired on PBS night, and this morning’s batch of TED Talks, here’s a roundup of some great TED Conversations you can join:

    High school freshman Colin Petre asks: Is college really as important as our society today has made it out to be? Share your perspective with Colin »

    Mary M asks: In honor of Teacher Appreciation Week: Who was your favorite teacher? »

    David Newton proposes this idea: Rate educators based on their empathy alone. What do you think of that? »

    Ann Ecker asks: What is your Six Word Story as a result of watching this TED? Share your six words »

    (Here are a few:
    I laughed, cried, smiled, nodded. INSPIRING!
    I wish I had a Rita.
    We learn when we are happy!)

    If you want to talk about the TV special last night, join an open thread about TED Talks Education »

    Or start your own TED Conversation, with an idea, a debate or a question »

  • Designing for High Availability and System Failure

    This is the third article in a series on DCK Executive Guide to Data Center Designs.

    In the world of mission critical computing the term “data center” and its implied and projected level of “availability” has always referred to the physical facility and its power and cooling infrastructure. The advent of the “cloud” and what constitutes “availability” of a “data center” may be up for re-examination.

    Designing for failure and accepting equipment failure (facility or IT) as part of the operational scenario is imperative. As was discussed previously (see part 1, Build vs Buy), the ascending tier levels of power and cooling equipment redundancies can mitigate the impact of a facility based hardware failure. However, the IT architects are responsible for mitigating the overall availability of the IT resources, by means of redundant servers, storage and networks, as well as the software to monitor, manage and re-allocate and re-direct applications and processes to other resources in the event of an IT systems failure.

    Traditionally there have been very little discussions or interactions between the IT architects and the data center facility designers regarding the ability IT systems to handle failover. As more enterprise organizations begin to visualize and utilize public and private cloud resources it may change the need for the amount of redundant IT resources located within any one single physical data center and create a logical redundancy shared among two or more sites. The ability to shift live computing loads across hardware and sites is not new and has been done many times in the past. Server clustering technology, coupled with redundant replicated data storage arrays has been available and successfully used for over 20 years. While not every application may failover perfectly or seamlessly yet, we cannot underestimate the long term importance of rethinking and including the ability of the IT systems to be part of our overall goal of availability, when making decisions about required redundancy levels of facility based infrastructure, required to meet the desired level of overall system availability.

    The holistic approach to include an evaluation of the resiliency of the IT architecture in the “availability” design and calculations should be part and parcel of the overall business requirements when making decisions on regarding the facility tier level, number of physical data centers, as well as their geographic locations. This can potentially reduce costs and greatly increase overall “availability”, as well as business continuity and survivability during a crisis. Even basic decisions, such as how much fuel should be stored locally (i.e. 24 hours, 3 days a week for generator back-up), needs to be re-evaluated in light of recent events such as Super Storm Sandy which devastated the general infrastructure in New York City and the surrounding areas (see part 4, Global Strategies).

    Ideally, the realistic re-assessment and analysis should be a catalyst for a sense of shared responsibility by both the IT and Facilities departments, as well as a catalyst for the re-evaluation of how data center “availability” is ultimately architected, defined and measured, in the age of virtualization and cloud based computing. These type of conversations and decisions must be motivated and made by the higher execute level of management.

    Designing for an enterprise type of user owner data center is different than for a co-lo, hosting or cloud data center. Also the level of system redundancy does not have to exactly match the tier structure. Many sites have been designed with a higher level of electrical redundancy (i.e. 2N) while using an N+1 scheme for cooling systems. This is particularly true for sites that use individual CRAC units (which are autonomous), rather than a central chilled water plant.

    Site Selection and Sustainable Energy Availability and Cost
    The design and site selection process need to be intertwined. Many issues go into site section, such as geographic stability, power availability as well as climatic conditions, which will directly impact the type and design of the cooling system. (see part 2 – Total Cost of Ownership). Generally, the availability of sufficient power is near the top the first critical check list of site evaluation questions, as well as the cost of energy. However, in our present era of social consciousness of sustainability issues, as well as watchdog organizations such as Greenpeace, the source of the power is also an issue that has become a factor, based on the type of fuel used to generate the power, even if the data center itself is extremely energy efficient. Previously, those decisions were typically driven by the low¬est cost of power. Some organizations have picked locations based on the ability to purchase commercial power that has some percentage generation from a sustainable source. The Green Grid has defined the Green Energy Coefficient (GEC), which is a metric that quantifies the portion of a facility’s energy that comes from green sources.

    In other cases, some high profile organizations have built new leading edge data centers with on-site generation capacity such as fuel cell, solar and wind, to partially offset or minimize their use of less sustainable local utility generation fuel sources, such as coal. While this would impact the TCO economics, since it requires a larger upfront capital investment, however there may be some local and government tax or financial incentives available to offset the upfront costs. Nonetheless, while this option may not be practical for every data center, green energy awareness is increasing and should not be ignored.

    The complete Data Center Knowledge Executive Guide on Data Center Design is available in PDF complements of Digital Realty. Click here to download.

  • Morgan Stanley: Apple will start building multiple iPhone models in June

    Apple iPhone 5S, Lower Cost iPhone
    The rumors that Apple is preparing several different new iPhone models for release this fall gained more steam on Wednesday. Morgan Stanley analyst Katy Huberty said in a research note that Apple suppliers are planning to start building the new models in June and July. Per AppleInsider, Huberty reports that after meeting with multiple Apple component suppliers in Asia, she believes Apple will start manufacturing both a low-cost iPhone and the iPhone 5S over the summer for a likely release date in September. Huberty also says that carriers expect Apple to increase its iPhone shipments over the long haul not only with a low-cost iPhone in the fall but eventually also with a larger 5-inch model that would pit Apple against such noted phablet vendors as Samsung and LG.

  • Darby Backs Alta Rail Technology

    Darby Private Equity, the private equity arm of Franklin Templeton Investments, has put $15 million into Alta Rail Technology, a supplier of technology products and services to railroads. The firm invested out of Darby Latin American Mezzanine Fund II, L.P. Other terms of the deal were not disclosed.

    PRESS RELEASE
    Darby Private Equity (“Darby”), the private equity arm of Franklin Templeton Investments, announced that Darby Latin American Mezzanine Fund II, L.P. (“DLAMF II”) completed an investment of US$15 million in Alta Rail Technology (“ART”), a leading supplier of technology products and services to railroads worldwide. Transaction details were not disclosed.

    ART combines the business of three Brazilian rail technology providers: ALL Rail Technology, previously belonging to publicly traded Brazilian railroad ALL – América Latina Logística, Daiken Ferroviária and Engesis Engenharia e Sistemas. ART is a leading global provider of rail technology services, with 100 employees and one of the broadest product suites in the industry, with offices in Curitiba and Vitória in Brazil and Johannesburg in South Africa. Its clients include large railroads in the Americas, Africa, Asia and Oceania.

    Richard Frank, Jr., Darby’s Managing Director responsible for DLAMF II, commented, “We are very pleased to have concluded this investment in ART as it reinforces Darby’s longstanding commitment to investing in the region and specifically in Brazil. We are attracted to ART because of its strong industry leadership in emerging markets, its successful track record of developing innovative solutions for its clients in Brazil and abroad, as well as the favorable outlook for the rail sector worldwide.”

    Carlos Henrique Correa, ART’s Chairman and CEO who led the formation of the new company, commented, “Darby’s investment allowed us to consolidate ART as an integrated rail technology provider with a global client base. The capital we received will be used to develop new technologies for our clients and expand our product offering to new markets.”

    The investment in ART adds to Darby’s long history of successful investments in Latin America and follows the success of the Darby Latin American Mezzanine Fund I with 12 investments, all of which have been realized. Darby has played a pioneering role in bringing private equity and mezzanine—a hybrid of both debt and equity—to emerging market regions, initially Latin America, then to Asia and most recently to Central and Southeastern Europe.

    Darby Overseas Investments, Ltd. was founded in 1994 by The Honorable Nicholas F. Brady, who served as U.S. Secretary of the Treasury between 1988 and 1993. Richard Frank joined the firm as CEO in 1997 after his career at the International Finance Corporation (IFC)/World Bank. In 2003, Darby became a fully owned subsidiary of Franklin Resources, Inc. [NYSE:BEN], a global investment management organization operating as Franklin Templeton Investments. For more information please visit darbyoverseas.com.

    Franklin Templeton Investments provides global and domestic investment management solutions managed by its Franklin, Templeton, Mutual Series, Bissett, Fiduciary Trust, Darby, Balanced Equity Management and K2 investment teams. The San Mateo, CA-based company has more than 65 years of investment experience and over US$823 billion in assets under management as of March 31, 2013.

    The post Darby Backs Alta Rail Technology appeared first on peHUB.

  • Get your cat on: BuzzFeed creates new section where readers can publish

    Viral site BuzzFeed launched a new content vertical on Wednesday called “Community” that consists entirely of user-submitted content.

    While BuzzFeed has relied on reader content for years, the new vertical will increase the visibility of such contributions. It will also increase the chances of a viral pay-off from the site’s high-tech publishing tools. The new “Community” section includes a formal submission process that permits users to submit one post per day until their (what else) “Cat Power” increases, which will allow more frequent submissions.

    “Community has always been a huge part of our site — some of our best posts have come from community submissions — and now we want to reinvent community for the social web,” editorial director Scott Lamb said in an email statement.

    BuzzFeed’s decision to expand the scope of user-generated offerings comes at a time when media outlets are increasingly looking to commenters as a source of talent and future hires. My colleague Mathew Ingram explained the phenomenon well earlier this week in “Want a job at Gawker Media? You can get a head  start by being a regular commenter.”

    The new section is consistent with BuzzFeed’s improbable quest to become more serious and more inane at the same time. In recent weeks, the site has been at forefront of major news stories like the Boston bombings while also churning out its regular fare like “14 cats who think they’re sushi.”

    Related research and analysis from GigaOM Pro:
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    • Sharp unveils AQUOS Phone Xx SoftBank 206SH with 5-inch 1080p CG-Silicon display and two-days of battery life

      Sharp_Aquos_Phone_Xx_SoftBank_206SH

      We have another 5-inch phone to tell you about, but this one has a feature that everyone can appreciate. The Sharp AQUOS Phone Xx  SoftBank 206SH can hold up for two full days on it’s 3,080mAh battery. Other than the sheer size of the battery, some of the power consumption improvements come from the continuous grain (CG) silicon display as opposed to amorphous silicon found on traditional LCD TFT panels. This not only allows for a thinner display and better graphics, but also reduced power consumption.

      It also includes a 1.7GHz Snapdragon S4 Pro CPU, a 13.1MP camera with f/1.9 optics, 1-Seg digital TV, IR blaster, LTE, and Android 4.2. It’s also waterproof. No word on pricing, but expect to see this bad boy in late June.

      source: Sharp

      Come comment on this article: Sharp unveils AQUOS Phone Xx SoftBank 206SH with 5-inch 1080p CG-Silicon display and two-days of battery life

    • Why Are These News Anchors Holding A Satellite Interview In The Same Parking Lot?

      CNN has become somewhat of an Internet joke the past few weeks with its botched coverage of the Boston bombings and subsequent manhunt. That story is mostly behind us, though, and CNN can now work on delivering news without something silly happening, right?

      The Atlantic Wire has the absolutely bizarre tale of two anchors – Ashleigh Banfield of CNN and Nancy Grace of Headline News – holding an interview in the same parking lot. Now this wouldn’t be so strange if both women were in the same shot talking to each other. Instead, CNN has a split-screen set up indicating that both women are far away from each other. The background, however, tells a different story (gifs courtesy of The Atlantic Wire).

      CNN Silliness

      CNN Silliness

      It’s painfully obvious that this interview is being held in the same parking lot. What makes it so sad is that these two anchors are not even that far away from each other. By watching the background car movements, you can tell that they are no more than 50 feet away from each other.

      Some are taking this as a sign of wholesale deception, but that’s a little extreme. It’s probably just CNN being the sad kind of silly yet again. Either way, we’ll hopefully get another hilarious Jon Stewart spoof out of it.

    • Charles Ramsey Turned Into Superman In This Video

      As previously suggested, it was only a matter of time before Charles Ramsey became a meme. Who better to help this along than Taiwanese animation studio Next Media Animation?

      Ramsey is the neighbor of the three brothers arrested for the kidnapping of three women in Cleveland a decade ago. The women, as you have no doubt heard, have been rescued, and though police have deemed Amand Berry the real hero here, Ramsey has received some credit and spotlight as well.

      Ramsey heard screams, and helped Berry open the door after she told him she’d been kidnapped. Here’s a new famous interview Ramsey did with a local FOX affiliate:

      And with that, we get NMA’s take:

      Enjoy more of NMA’s work here.

    • Leonard Nimoy Races, Sings in New Audi Ad

      How do we know that the summer movie blockbuster season has begun? The product tie-in ads are beginning to take over television.

      This week a new Audi ad pitted Leonard Nimoy against Zachary Quinto. For those not well-versed in popular culture, Nimoy played the character Spock in the original Star Trek series and movies. Quinto now plays Spock in the re-booted J.J. Abrams Star Trek movie franchise.

      Though the ad is not explicitly affiliated or branded with Star Trek, there are numerous references to the show during the nearly 3-minute ad. For example, the actors start out playing a virtual version of three-dimensional chess, and at one point Nimoy recreates his famous death scene from Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan. The music and camera angels employed to show off Quinto’s Audi vehicle are reminiscent of those often used to show off Enterprise ships in Star Trek movies. The ad also perfectly demonstrates why you should never challenge someone who can correctly employ a Vulcan nerve pinch.

      Oh, and if you were wondering what bizarre song Nimoy is singing along with during his drive, it’s actually a song Nimoy performed himself in the 60s called “The Ballad of Bilbo Baggins.” The music video for the song is one of the best things to come out of the 60s:

    • Dennis Rodman Asks Bestie Kim Jong Un For A Solid

      Dennis Rodman is trying to use his pull with new buddy Kim Jong Un to get a Korean-American man released from his sentence of hard labor in North Korea.

      Rodman, who was recently introduced at a fundraiser as the U.S. Ambassador for North Korea, has called Jong-Un “awesome” and has made plans to return for a hang-out session with his new buddy in August. His new mission, according to Twitter, is to get the controversial leader to pardon Kenneth Bae, who was arrested in November for unspecified “hostile acts” against the state. Bae, who is from Washington state, allegedly entered the country under an assumed identity.

      Some are saying that North Korea may be using Bae as an excuse to get the U.S. to negotiate regarding their nuclear arms program, and interestingly, Rodman commented on the leader’s reported tactics.

      “I’m not a total idiot. I know what Kim Jong-un is threatening to do regarding his military muscle. I hope it doesn’t happen because America will take whatever actions to protect America and our allies,” he said.

    • Teradata gets into the in-memory biz to take on SAP’s HANA

      Data analytics veteran Teradata will not let the new era of data-analysis architectures pass it by without a fight. It has already built products to address massive data volumes and Hadoop, and on Wednesday it announced an in-memory database technology to answer the industry’s latest call.

      Speed is the driving factory behind the in-memory analytics push that spans everyone from classic Teradata rivals like SAP and Oracle to startups such as MemSQL. Estimates vary as to the exact speed difference between data access in RAM versus hard disk, but Teradata is claiming RAM is 3,000 times faster. The speed difference between RAM and solid-state drives or flash memory is smaller, although still significant.

      Of course, cost also comes into play, as the speed and cost tend to go hand in hand when it comes to storage media. That’s one reason Teradata says its new technology, called Intelligent Memory, doesn’t operate fully in-memory like some competitive offerings do. Rather, it places only the “hottest” data in memory for super-fast analysis and spreads the rest between solid-state drives and disk within a Teradata environment.

      tdc2

      This concept of intelligent data placement has been around a while in the storage space (it’s part of EMC’s new ViPR software-defined storage platform, too), but the advent of big data and abundant flash has given it some new life. Many companies desire a tiered system in which they can pay more for fast access to their important or hot data, while saving some cash on lower-performance for their older and less-accessed data. Facebook is really pushing the envelope here with its cold storage initiative — something VP of Engineering Jay Parikh will likely discuss at our Structure conference June 19 and 20 in San Francisco.

      In analytics, though, RAM, not flash, is the fastest medium out there. Whether someone goes all-RAM or a tiered approach like Teradata pushing probably depends on how much performance they need across how much data, as well as how much they’re willing to pay. But if you’re doing interactive analytics in the next decade, they’re almost certain to be in-memory to some degree.

      Feature image courtesy of Shutterstock user Hellen Sergeyeva.

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    • Prepaid boosted T-Mobile customers last quarter, but 500K iPhones sold speaks to the future

      T-Mobile added 202,000 prepaid customers last quarter, helping to offset the 199,000 subscribers it lost. Sales of 500,000 Apple iPhones, however, speaks volumes towards the carrier’s future, which is looking a little brighter after its recent marriage to MetroPCSThe company announced subscriber numbers on Wednesday, in conjunction with its quarterly earnings. For the quarter, total revenues topped $4.67 billion, down 7.1 percent from the year ago quarter.

      Although the branded net customer additions numbered only 3,000, it was the first time that figure was positive since the first quarter of 2009. Customers on the network only tell half of the story though: Measuring monetization of customers through ARPU, or average revenue per user, is just as important.

      ARPU fell by 6.3 percent year-over-year to $54.07 for postpaid subscribers as the company says 36 percent of the customer base has switched to either a Value or Simple Choice plan. Once again, however, prepaid customers came to T-Mobile’s rescue: ARPU for this group rose 11.3 percent to $28.25.

      In March, T-Mobile introduced the Simple Choice offerings when it decoupled service plans from the price of hardware. As the company gains new customers — or has existing ones switch to newer phones — it will have an even greater number of people on the Simple Choice plans, which range from $50 to $70 per month.

      The company highlighted its $1.1 billion capital expenditures for the quarter, investing large sums in network modernization. T-Mobile began to move some services to different frequencies last year on its network in order to pave the way for LTE services. This also allows T-Mobile to carry a standard GSM iPhone, which will likely bring new customers. By the end of 2013, T-Mobile expects to cover up to 200 million people with its new LTE network.

      Related research and analysis from GigaOM Pro:
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    • DeskIntegrator puts you in control of the right-click menu

      Your PC is packed with applications, and you need to be able to launch them at speed. So of course you might start by creating a few shortcuts, and either dropping them on your desktop, and pinning them to the taskbar. It’s simple, and straightforward – but of course it can also quickly become very messy.

      If you’d prefer a clean desktop, then, you might be interested in DeskIntegrator’s approach. This compact free tool adds applications to the desktop context menu, and launching them becomes as easy as right-clicking the desktop, and choosing whatever you need from the list.

      The program is convenient to use. It’s portable, so there’s no installation: just download, unzip and launch it (as an Administrator), and you’re ready to go. The core process is very similar to creating a shortcut. You’ll enter a title (the name that will appear in the menu), a path (browse to its executable), optionally provide a custom icon. You can choose approximately where your entry will appear in the menu, too — the top, middle or bottom — which could be useful if you want to group similar applications together.

      When you’re ready, click “Add/Modify” to insert your chosen program. You can then enter the details of another program, or just right-click the desktop to see how your custom context menu is looking.

      And if you discover you’ve made a mistake, no problem — clicking the “Remove Menu” tab displays a list of all your menu customisations (as well as the standard Windows options, and anything added by third-party tools), and allows you to delete whatever you like. This is useful, but you do need to be careful here: there’s no “Are you sure?” prompt after you’ve clicked “Remove”, and if you accidentally delete the standard Windows “Screen resolution” entry, say, there’s no way to bring it back.

      DeskIntegrator does have one notable problem. The program absolutely must have administrative rights, and if that doesn’t happen, it handles the situation very poorly. On our PC it displayed a misleading alert about “Registry permissions” before crashing with a .NET error message; not too impressive.

      Still, while this is sloppy, it’s easy to avoid: just manually run the program as an administrator when necessary (right-click, select “Run as Administrator”), or configure it to run this way all the time (right-click DeskIntegrator.exe, select Properties > Compatibility and check “Run this program as an Administrator”).

      With the rights issue out of the way, though, DeskIntegrator works very well. We’d still try to keep its use to a minimum, just to avoid cluttering the desktop context menu and making it harder to access other entries. But, if you prefer your desktop to have the minimum of visible and pinned shortcuts, then DeskIntegrator just might be able to help.

      Photo Credit: ARENA Creative/Shutterstock

    • Case Study: How to Integrate an Acquired Brand

      Henry Beyer walked up to a Mini Cooper in the city parking lot across the street from his office in downtown Houston. He waved his brand-new VillageCar card near the door handle and got in.

      “It looks like someone left something behind,” his colleague Tony Cummins said, reaching into the back and picking up a pair of socks. He laughed; Henry grimaced.

      The two were executives of Beacon Car Rental, one of the industry’s most established and respected brands. Henry was the senior vice president of operations. Tony, the chief marketing officer, had suggested taking a drive so that they could talk about the integration of Beacon’s latest acquisition, VillageCar. He knew Henry would be making the call on how to bring in the car-sharing company, and he wanted to bend his ear about it.

      (Editor’s Note: This fictionalized case study will appear in a forthcoming issue of Harvard Business Review, along with commentary from experts and readers. If you’d like your comment to be considered for publication, please be sure to include your full name, company or university affiliation, and email address.)

      “Have you ever been in one of these things? We barely fit,” Henry said, looking at the roof just an inch or two above his head. Both men were more than six feet tall.

      Tony admitted that the car was a strange place to meet. “But I wanted to talk with you,” he explained. For the past five years, Henry had led the integration of all Beacon’s acquisitions, and he had the process down to a science. BusinessWeek had featured the firm in an article about companies that take speedy approaches to M&A while remaining sensitive to the human costs.

      “This one is going to take a little more time than usual,” Henry said, “but I assured Mark this morning that we’d get it done, like we always have.” Mark Lewis was the CEO.

      “Still, I don’t want us to lose sight of what a game changer this acquisition is,” Tony said. Henry rolled his eyes.

      “Let’s not overstate it,” he replied. They’d been having the same conversation for months.

      “It can’t be overstated,” Tony said. “Think about it: We’re not in a rental car, we’re in a shared car.”

      “Rental, shared. Same difference.” As they turned onto Fannin Street, just a few blocks from their office, Henry pointed out another VillageCar, and then another. Instead of sitting in rental car lots, they were parked in dedicated spots in public areas, for easy access. One was a Prius, the other a Nissan pick-up truck.

      “We’ll be able to tap into a big demographic that dreads being seen in a Crown Victoria from Beacon — or in anything from Beacon. These are people who get dewy-eyed about sharing,” Tony said. “When they get a VillageCar, they’re making a statement that they want to access things, not buy them. It’s anti-consumerism, pro-environment, pro-community — everything Gen Y loves.”

      “I know I’m an ops guy and you’re the marketing guru, but I don’t buy it,” Henry said. “The experience just doesn’t feel special to me. Apart from the empty gas tank and the socks, which are hardly a plus, this seems exactly like a rental. Why should the VillageCar deal be any different from Starr?” Last year Beacon had acquired a smaller rental car chain that had hundreds of locations in the Southwest.

      Tony shook his head. “You know I think we mishandled Starr. It was clear the brand had cachet in the region, which we could’ve leveraged. But we ended up integrating it to death. If we treat VillageCar the same way, we’re going to lose all the potential benefits, which are even greater in this case.”

      “We’ve gone over this already,” Henry said. “The goal should be to use our scale, capabilities, resources — everything we’ve got — to bring VillageCar in and make it more profitable. It’s going to benefit from our fleet purchasing power. And its in-town spaces will help us build our presence in urban areas, not to mention giving us access to a younger customer base.”

      “But this is our opportunity to get in on a trend,” Tony said, rapping gently on the dashboard. “More and more people are opting out of owning; they’re willing to pay to temporarily access something. It’s not just car sharing. It’s music sharing, bike sharing, apartment sharing, designer clothing sharing, dog sharing. Even dogs, Henry! That Forbes cover story estimated that the share economy will be a $3.5 billion category this year. I’ve said it before, and I’ll say it again: The best path forward is to keep VillageCar separate — the operations, the branding, everything.”

      “Come on; we both know the costs of that,” Henry said. “Mark would balk at the inefficiencies.” The CEO was known for running a tight ship. “And we haven’t seen any evidence that VillageCar’s model is a radical departure from ours or that its customers behave differently. Sure, there are things about the model we should adopt — shorter rentals, more-convenient locations. Fine. But when it comes to cars, ‘sharing’ is just a fancy word for ‘rental’. The only thing customers are sharing is the crap they leave in the back seat.”

      A Third Opinion
      Later that afternoon Annabel Howard, Beacon’s CFO and Henry’s boss, leaned back in her chair. “I’m hardly ever the tiebreaker,” she said.

      “We don’t want you to settle anything. We just need another opinion,” Henry told her. He and Tony replayed their debate.

      “What’s the big deal? Clearly a full integration is the most cost-effective approach. We’ll get rid of the overlaps, maximize the complements, and be done with it,” Annabel said. “I have no interest in creating an unwieldy bureaucracy. Managing multiple brands, running separate IT systems, setting different price structures — it would be a mess.”

      Henry smiled at Tony, gloating a little.

      “But this is different,” Tony countered. “VillageCar isn’t like Starr or any of the others. Starr was a straight-up rental car company, same business model as ours. It gave us access to a new market. I thought there was some marketing benefit to retaining the brand, but you all disagreed, and I lived with it. This is a much bigger opportunity.”

      He leaned across the desk. “Think about it from a risk management perspective, Annabel. This may be just what we need.” Their industry was struggling. The basic business model hadn’t changed in 30 years, and Beacon, like all the other major players, was forced to compete on price alone. Annabel had been saying that this was a major risk and would eventually turn car rentals into a commodity, with no way to win.

      “Hmm — hadn’t quite thought about it that way,” she said.

      Now that he had her attention, Tony kept going: “Maybe we need to go out with VillageCar in front. We don’t want to miss the boat, like Kodak did with digital photography. Maybe it’s time to shake things up.” He told her he’d been at the VillageCar headquarters the previous week with Mark. “The energy there is great. We need some of that: the start-up feeling that anything’s possible, that we can change the world. I worry that if we gobble the company up and treat it like a business unit, we won’t innovate on our existing model.”

      The three of them were silent for a moment. Then Henry spoke: “We’d be adding costs instead of taking them out.”

      “That’s true,” Annabel said. “But maybe the costs of not doing it would be even bigger.”

      Customer Research
      A week later Henry hurried down the hall to Tony’s office. He knocked but then quickly opened the door without waiting for a response.

      Tony swung around in his chair. “What’s the emergency?”

      “Remember what I said about sharing being hype?” He set a research paper down on Tony’s desk.

      Tony stared at the title and abstract, trying to decipher the academic language.

      “Bottom line,” Henry said, “This is a study of car-sharing customers. Of all the things they value about their experience, the biggest one is access. The environment and community aren’t even on their radar. They care about affordability and convenience, just like Beacon’s customers do.”

      Tony up picked the paper and stared again at the abstract, and then shrugged.

      “Take my word for it,” Henry said impatiently. “I’ve been studying this for the past hour. And it’s pretty clear: We need a clean, straightforward integration, like I said. We get VillageCar’s customers, we can adopt its shorter rental model, we take over its locations, but ultimately we give those customers what they want: good prices and convenience. And no socks in the back seat.”

      “And the name? We’re going to kill ‘VillageCar’?” Tony asked. “No one over there is going to like that. They agreed to the acquisition assuming we’d keep their brand intact.”

      “But we didn’t make any promises. I say no separate brands.” Henry argued that two brands would be too complicated for customers; they wouldn’t know which company they were dealing with.

      “That’s not necessarily true,” Tony said. “Look at Toyota and Lexus: two different brands, two entirely separate consumer groups. Yet everyone knows they’re the same company. Besides, if we merge the brands, we alienate the VillageCar customer base. It’s growing every day, and we don’t want to lose those people. Their loyalty is fanatical. They’ll revolt, and VillageCar’s employees might join them. They don’t call themselves ‘villagers’ for nothing.”

      “‘Villagers’ — hah,” Henry said. “Maybe that’s what VillageCar’s marketers call them, but I doubt customers call themselves that. This study shows that the emotional connection is a sham. VillageCar’s not about community. It’s about finding the most convenient, economical way of getting from point A to point B.”

      “If that’s true, why are our customer bases so different?” Tony asked. “Why is everyone in the world talking about the share economy? Why is that market ballooning?”

      Nice Wheels
      The next afternoon Henry had already ordered when his son Kyle showed up at Jasper’s restaurant.

      “Sorry I’m late,” Kyle said. “My marketing professor wouldn’t stop talking.” He was studying business at the University of Houston. They tried to meet for lunch once a week. This was their favorite spot, because it had outside tables and an amazing burger.

      Henry asked Kyle if he was liking the class. “Yeah, it’s interesting stuff — how to make people want things they shouldn’t,” Kyle replied.

      Henry laughed. “Is that what you’re taking away from it?”

      “More or less. Wait, that isn’t your car, is it?” Kyle asked, pointing to the Audi A3 parked in the spot right out front that Henry always took.

      “It is today.”

      “Nice wheels,” his son said. “Did Mom really let you buy that?”

      “No way. I’m renting it. Or accessing it — I’m not sure what to call it. It’s from this company we just acquired,” Henry said.

      “You told me about that last time. VillageCar, right? I’ve seen a few of those on campus.”

      Henry explained that he was on the hook to decide about the integration. “Everyone’s talking about how your generation is different, how sharing is the wave of the future. But it seems like just a fad to me.”

      “Well, I’m not sure how to integrate companies. But I do know something about my generation, and we’re definitely not like you,” Kyle said. Henry rolled his eyes at the familiar refrain. “I’m not being a pain, Dad. I’m trying to help. Listen, I’m not into buying things. I just want to use things when I need them. I remember you told me how proud you were when you and Mom bought your first car–that Subaru–right after you got married. You remember everything about it–the smell, the salesman’s name, where you drove first. But I don’t really care about stuff like that. I don’t want to own lots of things. You’ve got a wall of CDs; I have this,” he said, holding up his iPhone.

      Henry listened intently. Kyle had a point. If Beacon took its typical approach, it risked losing a whole generation of consumers like Kyle.

      “Owning things weighs you down,” Kyle continued. “Forces you to commit. Look, today you have an Audi. Tomorrow you can have a van and go to Home Depot. You can try different things out.”

      Henry watched his son take a bite of his burger. He was amazed that his kid — he still thought of him as a little boy — was starting to sway him.

      “It’s a marketers dream, isn’t it?” Henry said grudgingly. “Telling customers that your product lets them change their identity by the hour.” It was an appealing prospect now that Henry looked at it from this angle. Going out to customers with a message like that could transform the problems that had been plaguing rentals for years. But he knew his decision couldn’t be all about marketing. He had to consider the efficiencies, too.

      “I don’t know much about marketing yet,” Kyle said. “But help me sound smart in class. What are you going to tell the CEO?”

      Question: Should Henry recommend that Beacon handle VillageCar as a typical acquisition?

      Please remember to include your full name, company or university affiliation, and email address.

    • Riverbed Introduces Application Delivery as a Service

      Riverbed (RVBD) announced a new platform enabling any customer to deliver application delivery controller-as-a-service (ADCaaS) with the Stingray Services Controller. This new product will automate the deployment of application delivery services for any network architecture including software defined networking (SDN).

      With the evolving application and data center architectures, workflows, and operations models, an “ADC per application” deployment model is made possible through the Stingray Services Controller. Riverbed’s ADCaaS enabling technology now gives cloud providers and enterprises deploying in the private cloud the ability to automatically provision, deploy, license, meter, and manage their ADC inventory in an as-a-service model.

      Stingray Traffic Manager (STM) “micro” instances provide a consumption model for customers deploying ADC services. This eliminates the traditional throughput-based ADC sizing model that forces customers to guess their traffic load and pre-procure ADC capabilities in advance. With the STM “micro” instance, ADC services can now be elastically scaled on demand and right-sized to suit each application in the data center, offering high density, full isolation, and multi-tenancy scaling.

      “With the emergence of the virtualized data center, legacy ADCs can be a bottleneck and were starting to be excluded from virtualization strategies and cloud deployments,” said Jeff Pancottine, senior vice president and general manager of the Riverbed Stingray application delivery business unit. “With Stingray Services Controller, customers will have a hyper-elastic ADC platform that can adapt to workload changes. This is a game changer – today we are introducing a software-defined application delivery fabric that enables Layer 7 services on top of any data center architecture.”

      “Riverbed’s Stingray Services Controller and the Joyent high-performance cloud will enable our customers to provision, license, and scale ADC services in a very easy, agile, and cost effective way,” said Jason Hoffman, founder and chief technology officer, Joyent. “This ground-breaking, high-performance approach maps to our DNA and will enable us to deploy and manage ADCs in a truly elastic cloud delivery model.”

    • New color of the DROID RAZR M and DROID RAZR HD on the way to Verizon stores

      verizon-motorola-razr-hd-blue-TN

       

      Looks like we have some new exclusive colors coming to the Verizon DROID RAZR HD and DROID RAZR M smartphones. As seen in the above image courtesy of serial leaker evleaks, a metallic sky blue-ish color of the the DROID RAZR HD is on the way, as well as the same color variant of the DROID RAZR M, according to sources. Specs-wise, each device will feature the same internals as the original—- so it just looks like Verizon is just going probably unleash the new color of the smartphones as a limited-edition model.

      No word yet on when we’ll see each model, but we suspect it will be soon… very soon.

      source: evleaks Twitter

      Come comment on this article: New color of the DROID RAZR M and DROID RAZR HD on the way to Verizon stores

    • Fortune: When it comes to the Apple-Samsung patent war, WSJ misses the point

      Apple Samsung Patent War
      According to Fortune’s Apple 2.0 blog, The Wall Street Journal’s recent report suggesting that the smartphone patent wars have been a big bust for all involved misses the point. Fortune’s Philip Elmer-DeWitt writes that while much of the Journal’s argument makes sense, the paper fails to differentiate between standards-essential patents (SEPs) and non-essential patents, and therefore fails to distinguish between claims made by Apple from claims made by the likes of Samsung.

      Continue reading…

    • ImaGination Begins begins on May 30 at LG event

      LG-Save-the-Date-May-30_Macau

      LG has an event scheduled for May 30 in Macau, and although fans might be hoping for the Optimus G2, it probably won’t be the featured star. There really isn’t much to go on from the invitation other than the prominent ”G”, which could bring you to the conclusion that it will be the G2, but it is still too soon for the G2 to be unveiled. I expect the recently leaked Optimus GK to be the star of this one. It’s a smaller version of the Optimus G Pro and it features a 5-inch Full HD IPS display, a 1.7GHz quad-core Qualcomm Snapdragon 600 CPU, 3GB of RAM, 16GB of internal storage, microSD for expanded storage, 13MP camera, 2MP front camera, and 3,100mAh battery.

      Who knows, it could be something completely different as well. What do you guys think?

      Come comment on this article: ImaGination Begins begins on May 30 at LG event

    • Smartphones hold the key to appiness

      How are you feeling? If you don’t have time to lie on the couch and work through your issues you can now turn to your Android phone to measure your emotional state. Cambridge University researchers have developed an app that combines smartphone data with user perceptions in order to track happiness.

      The EmotionSense app collects sensor information from the phone about where you are, how noisy the environment is, and who you’re communicating with. It then combines this data with your answers to questions about how you’re feeling in order to work out your emotional state.

      There are other mood tracking apps of course, but the Cambridge team believe this is the first time that user input has been combined with phone information. The app was developed as part of a project to use mobile phones as a means of improving health and wellbeing. It takes about eight weeks to unlock all the sensors and build up a full picture of what influences your moods.

      “Behind the scenes, smartphones are constantly collecting data that can turn them into a key medical and psychological tool”, Neal Lathia, lead researcher on the project team, explains. “Any smartphone now comes with numerous sensors that can tell you about aspects of your life, like how active you are, or how sociable you have been in the past 24 hours. In the long term, we hope to be able to extract that data so that, for example, it can be used for therapeutic purposes”.

      The team aims to collect a record of what drives people’s emotions and be able to work out when they’re likely to be at their most stressed. In the future this could lead to phones being used by doctors to routinely monitor patients. Dr Lathia explains: “Most people who see a therapist only have an appointment once every fortnight. Many, however, keep their phones with them most of the time. In terms of sheer presence, mobiles can provide an ongoing link with a person”.

      The app is available now to download free from the Play Store but to use it you must consent to your data being passed to the researchers. The team is working on versions for other smartphone platforms.

      Photo Credit: kaczor58/Shutterstock

    • Google Translate Adds Bosnian, Cebuano, Hmong, Javanese & Marathi

      Google announced that it has added support for five new languages to Google Translate, which brings the total to over 70 languages supported.

      The new languages are: Bosnian, Cebuano, Hmong, Javanese and Marathi. All of them except for Bosnian are considered to be in alpha status, so they still have a lot of work to do, but the company says it will continue to test and improve them in time.

      “If you took a quick snapshot of content available on the web, you might think that everyone around the world spoke English, Chinese, French or Spanish,” says Google Translate program manager Sveta Kelman. “But in fact, millions of people around the world speak an incredible array of languages that currently have a small presence across the web.”

      “Google Translate helps bridge the divide between the content available online and people’s ability to access that information,” says Kelman.

      According to Google, the five new languages are spoken by a combined 183 million people.

      You can access the new languages at translate.google.com or via the Android or iOS apps.