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  • Family Awarded $90 Million Over Bus Stop Death

    A Maryland family this week won their lawsuit against the Prince George’s County Board of Education and were awarded $90 million.

    According to a Washington Post report on the case, 13-year-old Ashley Davis died in 2009 while crossing the street to reach a school bus stop. A car traveling down the road hit her, a minivan, and a 17-year-old boy on Brinkley Road in Temple Hills, Maryland. Davis died from her injuries weeks later.

    The six-member jury handed down the $90 million wrongful-death verdict after determining that the school board did not provide a safe bus stop for Davis. Davis’ family had accused her bus driver of not stopping at his designated stop, forcing Davis and other children to catch another school bus further down the road, where they would have to cross the street. According to the Post report, complaints of late school buses and “unsafe” routes to bus stops are nothing new for parents in the area.

    The school board is expected to appeal the decision.

  • Guggenheim Advises on Hulu Sale, May Also Bid – Sources

    Hulu has hired Guggenheim Partners to advise on a sale of the company, even as the financial services firm is considering making its own bid for the video streaming service, three sources with knowledge of the matter told Reuters.

    (Reuters) – Hulu has hired Guggenheim Partners to advise on a sale of the company, even as the financial services firm is considering making its own bid for the video streaming service, three sources with knowledge of the matter told Reuters.

    Guggenheim Executive Chairman Alan Schwartz was first hired by Hulu in 2011 to advise on a sale, but its owners were unable to find a buyer willing to pay the $2 billion that the company’s owners wanted.

    Hulu, jointly controlled by Disney and News Corp, has re-engaged Guggenheim to handle another sale attempt, according to the sources, who spoke on condition of anonymity because the ongoing auction process is private.

    Guggenheim is a New York-based investment firm with a fast-growing media business. A spokesman for the firm, Terry Fahn, declined to comment, as did Hulu spokeswoman Elisa Schreiber, News Corp spokesman Dan Berger and Disney spokeswoman Zenia Mucha.

    Securities experts say financial services firms are increasingly both advising on and participating in deals as they become larger and expand into more areas. While permitted under securities regulations, some corporate governance experts have raised questions about conflicts of interest.

    Guggenheim has established “a Chinese wall” between its investment banking and asset management businesses, said one of the sources.

    Another source said Guggenheim has taken steps to keep the situation “transparent” and it is up to Hulu to decide whether to retain the financial services firm if it makes an offer for the company.

    “It’s a definite conflict of interest,” said Ehud Kamar, a professor at USC’s Gould School of Law who specializes in securities law and is an expert on mergers and acquisitions.

    “As financial firms get bigger and bigger, there is a greater likelihood that this will happen,” he said.

    Other banks that have been on both sides of a deal include Goldman Sachs & Co, which was not paid a $20 million fee it billed for advising El Paso Corp on its sale to Kinder Morgan Inc. El Paso shareholders had sued Kinder Morgan, alleging that the sale was tainted by Goldman’s stake in the acquirer.

    Kinder Morgan settled the suit for $110 million. The judge, Delaware Chancery Court Judge Leo Strine, described Goldman Sachs’ behavior as “furtive” and “troubling” though he also told lawyers for the El Paso shareholders that they may have a tough time holding the bank liable for its actions. Goldman has declined to comment on the matter.

    POSSIBLE BIDDER

    Guggenheim, which says on its website that it manages more than $170 billion in assets, created a separate Guggenheim Digital Media unit in January and put former Yahoo Inc and News Corp executive Ross Levinsohn in charge.

    Levinsohn has been studying a bid for Hulu, according to the three sources.

    Reuters previously reported that Hulu had reached out to potential buyers in March after initially contemplating a deal in which Disney and News Corp might buy the other out. It is not clear whether that transaction is still being considered. A third investor in Hulu, Comcast Corp, has given up control as a condition of buying NBC Universal.

    Former News Corp President Peter Chernin, a one-time Hulu board member and one of its architects, has bid around $500 million for Hulu and offered to assume its $330 million in debt, sources told Reuters in April. A spokesman for Chernin had no comment on Guggenheim’s role.

    Hulu says on its website that it has more than 3 million subscribers paying $7.99 a month for its premium service, and that it generated revenues of around $700 million last year. It sells advertising for its free service.

    Guggenheim recently headed a group that spent $2.15 billion last year to buy the Los Angeles Dodgers baseball team. Its media investments include Billboard, Adweek, The Hollywood Reporter and Dick Clark Productions.

    (Editing by Edwin Chan, Alden Bentley and Tiffany Wu)

    (The story corrects names of Hulu owners in third paragraph to Disney and News Corp, instead of Disney’s ABC and News Corp’s Fox network. Also corrects title of Dan Berger in fourth paragraph to News Corp spokesman, instead of Fox spokesman.)

    The post Guggenheim Advises on Hulu Sale, May Also Bid – Sources appeared first on peHUB.

  • Mitch McConnell Celebrates Gun Control Defeat with Flippant Facebook ‘Meme’

    As you’ve probably heard by now, gun control legislation that would ban certain types of military-style assault rifles, limit magazine sizes, and enact more far-reaching background checks for buyers failed in the Senate on Wednesday. We already knew what was going to happen with most of the proposals, but the latter one concerning expanded background checks was up in the air until yesterday.

    Although polls show a substantial (90% according to some) support for this measure among Americans, the Senate was unable to pass it through.

    President Obama called it a “pretty shameful day for Washington.” You know all of that. Ok.

    Well, it appears that Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) is basking in his victory with Facebook memes.

    Here’s what was posted to the official Mitch McConnell Facebook page in the aftermath of the vote. It shows Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) asking for some “gun control,” being denied by McConnell, and in the end hanging his head in defeat.

    “We love the memes you send us! Keep them coming!” reads the post. So it looks like a supporter created the 5-panel graphic and Team McConnell decided to share it with their 32,000+ followers.

    “Shame on you! You have sold out on the children of Newtown,” says one commenter.

    “Shame on every senator who voted against background checks–supported by 90% of Americans. Do you represent us or the NRA?” says another.

    The post is generating a lot of buzz with over 3,000 shares and over 5.600 comments. Team McConnell has a history of using the Facebook page to generate support with memes (just take a look at their past activity), but it seems they may have stepped in it here by posting such a flippant gloat over an issue which many Americans would consider of grave importance.

  • Nexus 10 sales estimated to be even lower than Surface sales

    Nexus 10 deemed a Chromebook-style dud, sales estimated to be less than the Surface
    Although Google’s Android platform has been wildly successful, the company’s efforts to make its own consumer electronics have often faltered. While we’ve heard a lot about anemic Chromebook sales recently, Enders Analysis strategy consultant Benedict Evans has done some detective work and found that sales of Google’s Nexus 10 tablet likely aren’t doing that much better. Essentially, Evans has extrapolated traffic data from the Google Play store to produce a rough estimate that there are currently just 680,000 Nexus 10 tablets in use, versus around 6.8 million Nexus 7 tablets currently in use. As Evans notes, this estimate means that Nexus 10 sales were bested by Microsoft’s Surface tablet, which has almost universally been regarded as a flop.

  • Watch Batman And Superman Battle To The Death

    Batman and Superman usually have a healthy respect for one another, but they do occasionally fight. Superman would obviously win in terms of pure brute force, but Batman does sometimes scrape out a win with his superior intellect and tactics.

    Batman’s superior tactics win out once again in the final round of the Injustice: Gods Among Us battle arena. After a month of fights, it came down to the two most iconic characters in the DC Comics universe. The victor was decided by votes, but it was pretty obvious that Batman was going to win anyway.

    Injustice: Gods Among Us has been available since Tuesday, and early reviews are overwhelmingly positive. There seems to be some issues with balance, but that shouldn’t bother hardcore DC fans looking to live out their fantasy of Aquaman becoming the most powerful DC hero.

  • ‘Bitter Brew’ Author William Knoedelseder Talks At Google

    Google regularly hosts authors for “At Google Talks”. Earlier this month, William Knoedelseder, author of “Bitter Brew: The Rise and Fall of Anheuser Busch and America’s Kings of Beer” visited Google LA to talk about the book.

    Google has now made the video public for all to enjoy.

    More recent At Google Talks here.

  • ARCHOS launches 4 new devices for European markets

    archos-phone-f-improf-600x478

     

    Widely known as an up-and-coming tablet maker, ARCHOS is officially dabbling in the smartphone game by introducing a quartet of new handsets that will be headed for Europe in the near-future. The devices— the Carbon 35, Titanium 4, Titanium 52 and Platinum 48— all range from modest budget-level devices to premium flagships. Additionally, each device will feature an IPS display, dual-SIM capabilities and at least Ice Cream Sandwich on board (the Platinum 48 will arrive with Jelly Bean).

    Expect each device to arrive sometime soon with an affordable price tag off-contract.

    source: Phone Arena 

    Come comment on this article: ARCHOS launches 4 new devices for European markets

  • Finding Your Place in the Competitive Jungle

    It’s a jungle out there.

    While this simple phrase has been used time and time again to discuss the many obstacles people and companies face, an animal metaphor does describe required innovation actions rather effectively.

    Imagine a 2×2 matrix with size on the y-axis and speed on the x-axis. Size can be represented as market share, revenue, or units sold, depending on the context. Speed is the speed of innovation of a company relative to the industry. When a company, product, or service is ahead of the competition, speed is high. When it is lagging behind the competition, speed is low.

    But why is relative speed so important? Consider a story where two hunters encounter a lion with no ammunition left in their guns. When one starts to run, the other claims the lion will eat him either way. The first replies, “Not as long as I can run faster than you!”

    Just like in the jungle, if you are not faster than the competition, you can get eaten up. The key question is, “What actions can be taken to get ahead of the pack?” — to become a jaguar or to stay a jaguar, as you see in the matrix below.

    Staying Ahead of the Pack

    As a tortoise, breakthrough innovation is critical. An all-out effort at breakthrough innovation should be the primary focus. There are no other options available for companies in this quadrant.

    As a rabbit, speed of innovation is high, but it is not translating into size, and it is time to reevaluate. Why is the speed of innovation not translating to size? Do we really understand customer value? Is the breakthrough innovation providing a way to leapfrog in cost or performance? If not, why not? Is usability constraining growth? Is the message not reaching across? Is it too complicated? Or are we so far out that customers are having difficulty embracing the idea? If so, what can be toned down without sacrificing value? Or is there need for more education?

    An elephant is the most difficult spot to be in. The size has lulled the organization into overconfidence, complacence, and at times, arrogance. This has to be shaken up to re-instill the spirits that brought on the size in the first place. While protecting today, resources must be channeled to bridge the gap and regain the lead. It is time to step up the game.

    And while every company, product, or service strives to be a jaguar, even a jaguar has some steps to take. A jaguar has to be alert — very alert. Otherwise, it can easily become tomorrow’s elephant and the day-after-tomorrow’s tortoise. In fast-changing industries, these moves can be extremely swift. Consider the competitive world of smartphones.

    Apple’s iPhone was a jaguar. Big, and years ahead of the competition. It got there through a series of breakthrough innovations: the touchscreen, an integrated smartphone, pricing where the end customer pays $199, and the app store. It was moving fast, but the competition was moving faster. It slipped from jaguar to elephant rather swiftly, and Samsung took over that spot with its Galaxy.

    Over a four-year period, the Galaxy caught up with all that Apple had to offer and added several innovations, the key ones being a bigger screen, better GPS functionality, a range of phones to cover all segments from low-end to high-end, better rendering of websites with flash players, and better working relationships with partners — operating system partners like Google and Android, carriers like Verizon, and retailers like Best Buy. It didn’t help that, in addition to complacence, Apple was also arrogant and failed to listen to customer needs. Wall Street recognized this shift early and has punished Apple stock in spite of great quarterly financial performance.

    But there have been others. RIM and Nokia were jaguars only a few years ago. They were the leaders in the world of smartphones. The inability to keep pace with innovation got them to the tortoise quadrant rather rapidly. They did not anticipate the pace of change. RIM stuck with its physical keyboard for far too long. Nokia stuck with a dated operating system and bet on a Windows-based platform that took far longer to mature. As a result, both have been reduced to tortoises, and leadership that was built over decades was decimated in just a few years. Their only option now is breakthrough innovation. Unfortunately, they are still attempting to imitate the competition rather than trying breakthrough innovation. They may eke out a living this way but will remain at the mercy of the industry unless they break out of it.

    Meanwhile, Microsoft has remained a tortoise in the world of smartphones. While it was successful in getting into a market after others had proven its size and viability many times before, in this case Microsoft has not been able to replicate that, primarily because its previous successes revolved around leveraging the desktop-based Windows franchise. In the case of smartphones, that was not something it could leverage. Its partnership with Nokia was too little too late. HTC is attempting an interesting breakthrough experiment where Facebook becomes more like an ecosystem, rather than an app; it becomes the home screen of the phone. If there are enough Facebook fans that would see extreme value in this, this may give HTC the growth it needs. However, there is no guarantee that this will be a hit. It needs to treat this like a disciplined experiment and fine tune the parameters actively as it gets market feedback. At the same time, HTC needs to sow more seeds of breakthrough innovation, have disciplined experiments, and discover a new value curve that translates to size.

    Clearly, every organization must have some seeds of breakthrough innovation and must cultivate its patch in order to ensure a good harvest tomorrow. However, some organizations have a stronger sense of urgency than others, a bigger need to pick up the pace, and the need to move faster. This jungle framework helps put this in perspective.

    For a diversified company, this framework can also help it to visually see its portfolio of companies and decide where it should emphasize breakthrough innovation; reevaluate whether something is working or not; shake up overconfidence, complacence, and arrogance; and stay alert and ensure that it continuously strengthens its moat.

    Companies face increasing pressure on two fronts — ever-shortening product life cycles that can either grow the top line if they are ahead of the innovation curve or shrink the top line dramatically if they are not, and an increasing array of technologies that can alter the fundamental cost structures and business models. Under such conditions, it is critical for companies to manage their innovation portfolios proactively.

  • Wingsuit Cave Flight Is Certifiably Insane [VIDEO]

    Want to see something absolutely nuts? Ok, follow me.

    “Alexander Polli does the never before done – a tactical flight through a narrow cave on a rugged mountainside. The flight starts with a jump from a hovering helicopter, Alexander reaches speeds of 250 km/h (155 mph) while following a precise trajectory leading to the cave opening, he then fully commits and flies directly through the narrow opening of the ‘Batman Cave!’”

    Or, in other words: Good lord no no no no no…HOLY Faaaa…

    Check it out below for 2 minutes of sweaty palms.

    [EpicTVadventure]

  • Amazon S3 goes exponential, now stores 2 trillion objects

    It took six years for Amazon Web Services’ Simple Storage Service, or S3, to grow to storing 1 trillion objects in June 2012. In a blog post on Thursday, however — less than a year later — the company announced the service is now housing more than 2 trillion objects.

    I’m not certain what this exponential growth means. It probably means a lot of people are using Amazon Web Services. It probably means they’re building a lot of next-generation applications storing a whole lot of photos and other things (I’m thinking of PinterestInstagram, Dropbox, you name it). It probably also means big data is for real in the cloud, as Amazon S3 is the default storage system for AWS’s Elastic MapReduce Hadoop service.

    Whatever it means, though, 2 trillion is a lot of anything and probably means Jeff Bezos was right to spend so much time talking AWS in discussing the company’s annual report. At an estimated $2 billion or so in revenue and storing probably a not insignificant amount of data for so many fast-growing web services, AWS looks to be around for the long haul.


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  • ‘iPad 5′ details emerge from most solid source yet

    'iPad 5' details emerge from most solid source yet
    We’ve heard plenty of rumblings regarding Apple’s fifth-generation iPad, which was expected to be unveiled in the coming months. Reports have varied, but now a source with a solid track record when it comes to unannounced Apple products has thrown his hat into the ring. KGI Securities analyst Ming-Chi Kuo on Thursday told clients that the upcoming “iPad 5” will not launch until this coming fall, contradicting earlier reports that pointed to an announcement as soon as this month. Ming-Chi also wrote that the new iPad will be 25% lighter and 15% thinner than the current full-size iPad, again supporting an earlier leak that pictured a completely redesigned iPad shell that adopts the iPad mini’s design identity.

    Continue reading…

  • Adam Scott: Girlfriend Confirmed

    As Tiger Woods is well aware, the love life of professional golfers can sometimes be excellent tabloid fodder. Now, Australian golfer Adam Scott is learning that lesson.

    Scott won the 2013 Masters Tournament this week in an exciting sudden-death playoff with Argentine golfer Ángel Cabrera. As part of his victory media tour, the first Australian to win the Masters sat down on CBS this Morning to discuss the win.

    Though the conversation started out about golf, host Gayle King soon shifted the topic to Scott’s good looks, saying, “You are very hot Adam Scott.” The golfer blushed as King went on to ask him about his “availability.”

    An embarrassed Scott revealed on the program that he is “not single at all.” He stated that he is “very much in a relationship and very happy at the moment,” with a girl named Marie.

  • This Is What The Cheap iPhone Looks Like [Rumor]

    Apple is either going to release the iPhone 5S or iPhone 6 later this year. Alongside that device, Apple is also rumored to be releasing a cheaper iPhone for the Chinese market. We’ve heard some rumors on what it would look like, but a recent leak may have finally unveiled the cheaper iPhone’s rear shell.

    Tactus, a site that recently revealed the iPad 5 mold, has just unveiled its latest leak – the rear shell of the cheap iPhone that Apple says doesn’t exist.

    Is This The Rumored Cheap iPhone?

    As you can tell, the rear shell is made out of plastic instead of the aluminum that’s now standard in the current iPhone. It fits with previous rumors that said the cheap iPhone would be made out of plastic to cut costs. It also appears to jibe with rumors that the cheap iPhone would look like a combination of the iPod Touch and iPod Classic.

    As for hardware, it’s said that it will be powered by the A5 processor. Interestingly enough, it’s said that the A5 in the cheap iPhone will be the same A5 that powers the iPad 2 and iPad Mini. That would give the cheaper iPhone a small jump in performance over the A5 that was in the iPhone 4S.

    The cheaper iPhone is also rumored to sport a 3.5-inch display instead of the 4-inch display that’s been rumored for the past few months.

    On a final note, it appears that Apple will be treating the cheaper iPhone the same way it treats its iPod line. The device will be available in multiple colors, including blue, red and yellow on top of the usual black and white.

    [h/t: Engadget]

  • Equinix Powers Low-Latency Video Ad Exchange

    Here’s our review of some of this week’s noteworthy links for the data center industry:

    Equinix and Brightroll partner. Equinix (EQIX) and video advertising platform company Brightroll announced they are bringing to market VideoRTB+, an ultra-low-latency video advertising real-time bidding (RTB) solution, which is only available inside Equinix data centers. Additionally, the two comapnies will work together to promote and build Equinix’s Ad-IX ecosystem, which connects ad exchanges with ad markets for efficient and timely delivery of digital advertising. The initial BrightRoll deployment is available in Equinix’s Silicon Valley and Ashburn data centers, with plans for international expansion across Platform Equinix. “The video advertising market is primed for dramatic growth in the coming years, and Equinix’s Ad-IX ecosystem helps key players in the real-time bidding industry locate their infrastructure in close proximity to achieve more effective bids on the right type of inventory. Together with BrightRoll, our goal is to optimize online ad transactions by centralizing this community in key data hubs around the world.”

    Sprint selects Interxion in Spain.  Interxion (INXN) announced that Sprint, a global provider of wireless and wireline communications services, has extended its wireline network with Interxion to include a Point of Presence (PoP) in Interxion’s Madrid campus. Sprint is expanding the reach of its international Ethernet access services to provide its U.S.-based customers with close proximity and optimal connectivity to Interxion’s clients and partners in Spain. Sprint selected Interxion to access its unique community of carriers and ISPs, and create new business opportunities for multi-national customers looking to expand further into Europe and Spain. “Sprint continues to invest in its network capabilities within Europe,” said Michael Rolff, Director EMEA Network Services at Sprint. ”Through having a presence in Interxion’s Madrid data centre, Sprint remains focused on ensuring its customers continue to have direct access to facilities with the highest levels of connectivity, reliability and scalability they require, in supporting mission critical applications around the world.”

    Latisys selected by CMAC.  Latisys announced a managed hosting services agreement with CMAC Transportation.With the Latisys managed hosting service CMAC will deliver its integrated Platform-as-a-Service (PaaS) solution—a unique combination of CMAC’s compute platform and solution stack that makes the management and delivery of CMAC systems and services easier. Latisys’ Chicago Data Center serves as the central hub of Latisys’ national IaaS platform.  Latisys announced a 10,000 square foot expansion to the Oak Brook, Illinois facility late last year. “As a rapidly growing company we need a world class service provider willing to collaborate with us on a solution optimized for our business needs—not just for today, but also for tomorrow,” said Mike Christie, Partner, CMAC. “By hosting CMAC’s solution stack on Latisys’ enterprise platform we facilitate deployment of applications without the cost and complexity of buying, provisioning and managing underlying hardware and software.”

    Phoenix NAP selected by Mammoth Networks. Phoenix NAP announced today that Mammoth Networks, a facilities-based aggregator of wholesale data services, has established a point-of-presence within Phoenix NAP. Mammoth Networks offers an Ethernet Aggregation platform to Phoenix NAP clients, Layer 2 network services, MPLS and a disaster recovery location out of Phoenix NAP to augment its coverage throughout Arizona. “As a company similar to Phoenix NAP that offers a full suite of services, we couldn’t be more excited to welcome Mammoth Networks to Phoenix NAP,” said Ian McClarty, president of Phoenix NAP. “The company’s product line along with its multi-location enterprise businesses combined with Phoenix NAP’s highly responsive and approachable philosophies pare perfect together and we look forward to continuing to grow and expand our relationship with them.”

  • Yahoo Launches New Weather App For iPhone

    In addition to its new Mail app for iPad and Android, Yahoo has unveiled a new Weather app for the iPhone and iPod Touch.

    The app utilizes images from Flickr to show current local conditions.

    Yahoo Director of Mobile and Emerging Products, Marco Wirasinghe, says, “Inside you’ll find stunning snapshots of weather around the world. With a tilt of your phone, get lost scrolling through photos reflecting the current weather in places that matter to you. We like to think of it as flipping through a stack of postcards from your travels. It’s easy to get the details. Tap the temperature for a quick view of the forecast or scroll down for precipitation, wind and pressure, a radar map, and more.”

    “Our goal is to have amazing photos for every weather condition that cover the globe — morning, afternoon, and night — across every city in the world, and we want your help,” Wirasinghe adds. “Whether you’re simply a daydreamer or an avid photographer, submit photos of your favorite places to our Flickr Group and your image can be seen by tens of millions in Yahoo! Weather for iPhone.”

    The app is available in 30 languages, and can be found in the App Store.

    More on the Flickr blog.

    Flickr weather app

  • An Open, Integrated Platform for Cloud Services

    There has been a shift in technology where cloud computing and the emphasis around WAN technologies has skyrocketed. There are more users, more devices and a lot more data for organization to utilize and try to manage. Now, many companies are moving towards some type of cloud computing model to help them achieve their business goals. Why is this important? According to HP’s whitepaper on the CloudSystem, cloud computing is a key component of an organization’s ability to gain unencumbered access to information technology—to access “Infrastructure Anywhere, Applications Anywhere, Information Anywhere, or better said: Services Anywhere.”

    hpconvergedcloud

    [Image source: HP CloudSystem]

    In order to deliver on the “Services Anywhere” promise, organizations will have to think differently about IT and how cloud computing plays a direct role. The key will be understanding the unique requirements of each service, such as availability, cost, performance, and regulatory needs, then address them in the most efficient and cost-effective way.

    When designing a cloud environment, building around adaptability and expansion are key concerns. As HP outlines in this whitepaper, CloudSystem is an integrated system that unifies the control and delivery of cloud services, whether their provenance is your data center, or an external source such as HP Cloud Services or Amazon Web Services. With HP CloudSystem, you get a secure, scalable cloud solution that includes:

    • A complete, integrated system to build and manage cloud services
    • Single services view across private, public, and hybrid cloud
    • Multi-hypervisor, multi-OS, heterogeneous infrastructure
    • Intelligent automation and lifecycle management; infrastructure-to-application
    • Broker service delivery across multiple clouds from a single, integrated point of control
    • Scalability and elasticity
    • Prepackaged service design tools

    In this white paper you will learn that, as a part of the HP Converged Cloud architecture, clients have a simplified, integrated platform that is easier to manage and provides flexibility and portability between private, public, and managed clouds. Download this white paper to see how HP’s Cloud system and Converged Infrastructure can help you deliver a more power cloud computing environment.

  • Next Broadband Task Force Meeting April 23

    I plan to attend and to take notes. Here’s the logistics and agenda…

    Governor’s Task Force on Broadband

    April 23, 2013

    Room 107, University of Minnesota Urban Research and Outreach-Engagement Center
    2001 Plymouth Avenue North,
    Minneapolis, MN 55411

    10:00 a.m. – 2:00 p.m.

    • 10:00-10:15 Welcome/Introductions/Public Comments/Approve minutes from February 19, 2013 meeting
    • 10:15-11:00 Comcast Internet Essentials: Martin Ludden
      • CenturyLink Internet Basics: Joanna Hjelmeland
      • C2C : Dick Sjoberg
      • Overview, take rates, lessons learned
    • 11:00-11:30 Broadband Access Project—James DeSota
      • Overview and lessons learned
    • 11:30-11:50 Hmong American Partnership
      • Broadband Adoption – Issues and Challenges
    • 11:50-12:05 EMERGE—Mike Wynne, President and CEO
      • Overview
    • 12:05-12:30 Lunch/Small group legislative discussion
    • 12:30-1:00 Subgroups “Best Practices/Incentives” and “Broadband Adoption” meet
    • 1:00-1:30 Subgroups “Mobile/Wireless” and “Coordination Across Govt./Monitor FCC & PUC Decisions/Cost of Broadband”
    • 1:30-1:45 Legislative and upcoming events update
    • 1:45-2:00 Next meeting location (metro) and topics/Wrap-up
    • 2:00 Adjourn

  • Microsoft partners say Windows 8 caused ‘millions of customers’ to switch to Apple

    Microsoft partners say Windows 8 caused 'millions of customers' to switch to Apple
    With PC sales crashing and burning, it’s not surprising that several PC OEMs are still fuming about Windows 8, the operating system that has so far failed to reignite the PC industry. And now two unnamed OEM sources have told ZDNet that Microsoft and Windows 8 are primarily to blame for the accelerated decline in PC sales, with one source claiming that Windows 8 is “destroying” the PC industry and another claiming that the new operating system has “handed over millions of customers to Apple.” These criticisms of Windows 8 from OEMs are nothing new, of course, as a Samsung executive earlier this year called the new operating system “no better than Vista” while the CFO of Asus said that “demand for Windows 8 is not that good right now.” And unless PC sales start turning around later this year, Microsoft should expect to hear a lot more of this sort of criticism from its manufacturing partners.

  • Yahoo outs new Weather, Mail apps for iOS, Android. And they’re nice!

    Like most of you probably did this morning, I checked the weather on a smartphone. Unlike most of you, however, I got my weather from a Yahoo app. Yes, you read that right: Yahoo. The company surprised with two new mobile applications on Thursday: a new Weather app for iPhone and iPod touch devices, as well as a Yahoo email client for iPad and Android tablets.

    Here’s the funny thing: these are really slick mobile apps. From Yahoo. (I know, right?)

    If you had shown me the new Weather app, for example, I would have said that either Apple or a small design-focused start-up developed it. The background pictures are from around the world via Flickr’s Project Weather Group and beautiful to look at. They’re also representative of the current weather in their respective cities. Every icon provides data at a glance and it’s easy to navigate quickly for more detailed information.

    Yahoo Weather for iOS

    I haven’t taken the new Yahoo Mail client for a spin yet but it looks like a nice visual update, meant to take advantage of the larger screens of tablets. Here’s how Yahoo describes it, along with a short video demo:

    “With amazing displays, vibrant colors and lifelike images, tablets have changed the way we experience books, photos, movies and more. Yet email, something we do every day, has remained pretty much the same. We’ve been boxed in.

    Today, we’re excited to introduce the Yahoo! Mail Apps for iPad and Android tablets – a full-screen experience that gets rid of the noise. There are no folders, no buttons, no tabs – just you and your mail – and you can easily flip through it like a magazine. We’ve designed Yahoo! Mail to take full advantage of the tablet making reading your email faster, easier and just a little bit more fun.”

    I’m generally happy with the native email clients on my iPad mini and Android tablets, so even though I’ll kick the tires of Yahoo’s new mail app, it would have to really wow me. Regardless, both of these new applications look surprisingly fresh from a company that has been generally found itself lost in the growing forest of mobility.

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  • iOS Still Top Platform For Monetising Mobile Ads, Opera’s Q1 Study Finds, iPhone Also Beating Android For Generating Ad Traffic

    Faceboook iPhone mobile app ads

    Opera has just put out its latest State of Mobile Advertising report for Q1 2013 and its findings put the iPhone back on top for “impression volume” (i.e. generating the most traffic to mobile ads), regaining its lead over Android. iOS also maintains its top position for monetisation compared to the other mobile platforms.

    Opera draws its data from its mobile advertising platform business, which consists of AdMarvel, Mobile Theory, 4th Screen Advertising and Opera Mediaworks Performance. The platform serves 50+ billion ad impressions per month via 12,000 mobile sites and apps.

    Mobile ad campaigns running on Apple devices “consistently achieve the highest average eCPMs”, according to Opera’s findings, and account for nearly half (49.23%) of all revenue delivered to mobile publishers.

    In addition, Opera’s data shows that the iPhone edged out Android phones in ad impression volume in Q1, having temporarily lost the number one position at the end of 2012. Add in ad impressions and clicks on the iPad and iOS has a clear lead over Android, with 44.53% of the ad traffic and 49.23% of the revenue vs 31.26% of the ad traffic and 26.72% of the revenue.

    Here’s Opera’s full breakdown of ad traffic and revenue share by mobile OS:

    Across all of its ad platforms, Opera said the U.S. continues to drive the majority of ad requests but notes that this lead is shrinking as other regions see faster rates of growth. The U.S. still generates the most revenue (75.4%) across Opera’s platform, even with diminished impression volume (50.7% vs. 60% last quarter).

    Opera’s report flags up especially accelerated ad request growth in Europe, with the European market now generating more than 21% of ad requests, up from 14.61% in the previous quarter.

    It said the majority (65%) of European ad traffic originates in five key markets: the U.K., Italy, Germany, France and Spain.