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  • Tulsa-based ICEdot Inks $1.03M

    Tulsa, Oklahoma-based ICEdot, maker of a crash sensor attached to the safety helmet of cyclists, skiers and other sports participants, recently closed on $1.03 million in Series A financing. A pair of investment funds managed by i2E Inc. led the round, which included co-investment from Oklahoma angels. i2E investment included $300,000 from its StartOK Accelerator Fund and $200,000 from its OK Angel Sidecar Fund.

    PRESS RELEASE
    A pair of investment funds managed by i2E, Inc., recently closed a $500,000 Series A investment round in Tulsa’s ICEdot. The i2E managed funds led an investment round of $1.03 million, which included co-investment from Oklahoma angels and out-of-state strategic investors. i2E investment included $300,000 from its StartOK Accelerator Fund and $200,000 from its OK Angel Sidecar Fund.

    ICEdot has created an innovative crash sensor attached to the safety helmet of cyclists, skiers, snow boarders, BMX bikers and other action sport participants. The ICEdot Crash Sensor detects forces consistent with head injury and notifies emergency contacts of the owners GPS coordinates via text message. With worldwide exclusive license to the sensor technology, ICEdot is the only service that combines health data, sensor-based detection and notification services.

    “With this funding we will be able to manufacture our highly anticipated Crash Sensors,” said Chris Zenthoefer, ICEdot’s chief executive officer. “Transitioning from prototypes to production is an exciting time, and we are eager to take our product to the market.

    The crash sensor is expected to commercially debut at this year’s edition of the Saint Francis Tulsa Tough, June 7-9.

    The StartOK Accelerator Fund and OKAngel Sidecar Fund are two of three Accelerate Oklahoma! investment vehicles created in 2011 by i2E through a partnership with the Oklahoma Department of Commerce and the U.S. Treasury State Small Business Credit Initiative.

    The StartOK Fund targets companies that are in the startup stage that have not yet completed a product launch. The OK Angel Sidecar Fund specifically targets opportunities to invest alongside Oklahoma angel investors.

    About ICEdot: ICEdot is an emergency ID and notification service innovating safety technology for athletes and outdoor enthusiasts. ICEdot syncs a secure online profile with products such as a band, snap, helmet stickers or its latest product, the crash sensor. In Case Of Emergency, ICEdot has the ability share predesignated health and geolocation information over sms/text. ICEdot is a company full of everyday athletes that create products they want to use in their own lives. For more information visit icedot.org or icedotathletes.com

    Management: Chris Zenthoefer, CEO
    Year started: 2004
    Location: Tulsa, OK
    About i2E, Inc.: With offices in Oklahoma City and Tulsa, OK, i2E’s nationally recognized services include business expertise and funding for Oklahoma’s emerging small businesses.

    The post Tulsa-based ICEdot Inks $1.03M appeared first on peHUB.

  • Reuters – AstraZeneca Buys AlphaCore Pharma

    AstraZeneca boosted its early-stage pipeline of experimental heart drugs on Wednesday by buying privately held U.S. biotechnology company AlphaCore Pharma, which is developing a new type of cholesterol medicine, Reuters reported. The deal shows AstraZeneca’s new Chief Executive Pascal Soriot taking on more scientific risks by betting on a new and still unproven approach to cardiovascular medicine. Financial details of the acquisition by the British drugmaker’s MedImmune unit were not disclosed but the amount paid will have been modest since AstraZeneca was not obliged to disclose it as a material investment.

    (Reuters) – AstraZeneca (AZN.L) boosted its early-stage pipeline of experimental heart drugs on Wednesday by buying privately held U.S. biotechnology company AlphaCore Pharma, which is developing a new type of cholesterol medicine.

    The deal shows AstraZeneca’s new Chief Executive Pascal Soriot taking on more scientific risks by betting on a new and still unproven approach to cardiovascular medicine.

    Financial details of the acquisition by the British drugmaker’s MedImmune unit were not disclosed but the amount paid will have been modest since AstraZeneca was not obliged to disclose it as a material investment.

    Last month it revealed it paid $240 million upfront to Moderna Therapeutics to access its know-how in manipulating RNA, or ribonucleic acid, which helps create proteins inside cells – another example of Soriot placing a bet on new science.

    Soriot has stated that he plans to build up the company’s sparse drug pipeline by striking more deals with outside partners as he tries to restock its product portfolio following a wave of patent expiries.

    Cardiovascular and metabolic disease – one of three core therapy areas for AstraZeneca, along with oncology and respiratory/inflammation – is a particular priority since the company has few experimental compounds for such conditions.

    AlphaCore will help plug the gap, although it will not deliver any marketable products for many years. Its leading drug candidate ACP-501, a genetically engineered liver-derived enzyme called LCAT, only completed Phase I clinical tests last year.

    Drugs need to go through three phases of lengthy tests before being approved for sale.

    The hope is that ACP-501 will help in the management of cholesterol to reduce the risk of heart attacks and strokes. It could also play a role in a rare, hereditary disorder called familial LCAT deficiency in which the LCAT enzyme is absent.

    MedImmune head Bahija Jallal said the end result could be new combination or standalone therapies for patients living with chronic and acute cardiovascular diseases.

    SMART RISKS

    In the past, AstraZeneca has been relatively cautious about exploring new drug approaches but Soriot, who joined from Roche (ROG.VX) last October, has signaled a change of direction.

    He complained last month that AstraZeneca had lost some of its scientific confidence. “Smart risk taking is part of how you run an innovation business. There is no innovation without risk,” he said.

    Soriot has embarked on a major restructuring of the group, which will cost $2.3 billion and involve shedding one in 10 jobs. At the end of the process, he aims to have a more focused drug research machine, better placed to tap into cutting-edge science.

    It promises to be a long haul but AstraZeneca believes it can double the number of drugs in late-stage development by 2016, from just six today.

    Industry analysts believe AstraZeneca could spend $20 billion on acquisitions and there has been speculation of a large deal, such as buying on Shire (SHP.L). Soriot, however, favors bolt-on deals and has previously said a major buy is possible but unlikely.

    The acquisition of Ann Arbor, Michigan-based AlphaCore and the recent deal with Moderna may be more typical of his style.

    (Editing by Tom Pfeiffer and Helen Massy-Beresford)

    The post Reuters – AstraZeneca Buys AlphaCore Pharma appeared first on peHUB.

  • Reuters – Dish Raises $2.3B in Debt for Spectrum Purchases

    Dish Network, controlled by billionaire chairman Charlie Ergen, has priced a debt offering of $2.3 billion, more than double the amount of debt than it said it would offer a day ago, Reuters reported. The company, which made a $2.3 billion bid to buy a minority stake in wireless service provider Clearwire Corp. in January, said the proceeds of the debt offering could be used for “wireless and spectrum-related strategic transactions.”

    (Reuters) – Dish Network, controlled by billionaire chairman Charlie Ergen, has priced a debt offering of $2.3 billion, more than double the amount of debt than it said it would offer a day ago.

    The company, which made a $2.3 billion bid to buy a minority stake in wireless service provider Clearwire Corp in January, said the proceeds of the debt offering could be used for “wireless and spectrum-related strategic transactions.”

    The offering is expected to close April 5, Dish said in a statement. A spokesman for Dish was not immediately available for further comment on Wednesday.

    On Tuesday, Dish had said it planned to raise $1 billion in senior notes. The larger offering announced on Wednesday signals that demand was strong for Dish’s debt.

    Dish has been competing with Sprint for a minority stake in Clearwire. Sprint, already the majority owner of Clearwire, struck a deal in December to buy out the rest of the wireless company. But many Clearwire shareholders said they were unhappy with the Sprint offer, which would need approval from the majority of Clearwire’s minority investors.

    Clearwire has said that it would continue talks with Dish but that it has not changed its recommendation in favor of its agreement with No. 3 U.S. mobile provider Sprint.

    Dish’s Ergen has bought billions of dollars worth of spectrum in the past few years as the satellite pioneer aims to diversify his company’s pay TV business, which competes in a mature market against cable, telecom and Internet video providers. Dish has more than 14 million satellite TV subscribers, making it one of the largest U.S. pay TV operators.

    (Reporting By Liana B. Baker; Editing by Nick Zieminski)

    The post Reuters – Dish Raises $2.3B in Debt for Spectrum Purchases appeared first on peHUB.

  • T-Mobile grows branded subscriber base for first time in four years in Q1

    T-Mobile Earnings Q1 2013
    T-Mobile on Thursday reported its subscriber figures for the first quarter of 2013, when it managed to grow its branded subscriber base for the first time in four years. The nation’s No.4 carrier added 579,000 net new customers in Q1, 3,000 of which were branded customers. In the same quarter last year, T-Mobile lost 349,000 net subscribers. The carrier’s postpaid subscriber count still dropped by 199,000 last quarter, though that figure represents a significant improvement compared to the 510,000 net postpaid customers T-Mobile shed in the first quarter last year. The carrier’s full press release follows below.

    Continue reading…

  • Weekly Radar: Q1 earnings test as the herd scatters

    US Q1 EARNINGS START/DUBLIN EURO GROUP MEETING/US T-SECRETARY LEW IN BERLIN-PARIS/US-FRANCE-ITALY GOVT BOND AUCTIONS/FRANCE NATL ASSEMBLY VOTES ON LABOUR REFORM/VENEZUELA ELECTIONS

    World markets have started the second quarter in an oddly indecisive mood given that Q1 turned out to be yet another bumper start to the year, looking to extend record stock market highs on Wall St but lacking the juice of new information to make a decisive break while Europe splutters and emerging markets and commodities head south. Two important pieces of the U.S. jigsaw will likely emerge over the coming week  with this Friday’s US employment report and the start of the Q1 corporate earnings season next week.

    But there’s clearly been a more general rethink further afield among global investors given the breakdown in cross-asset and cross-border correlations – meaning it’s no longer enough to just get Wall St right and adjust your global risk button accordingly. It looks much harder work to get regional or asset allocations and positioning right. As Wall St flirts with new highs and US and Japanese equity funds continue draw hefty inflows, there’s been a pullback from all things Europe surrounding the Cyprus saga and parallel growth disappointments across the region and EPFR data last week showed redemptions from euro stock, bond and money funds continued.

    Euro stocks, as a result, are now flat for the year after two consecutive months in negative territory wiped out all of frothy January. And while you’d have made a cool 10 percent in developed market equities collectively in the first quarter and almost 9 percent on Wall St alone, you’d be in the red in emerging markets and badly burnt in gold, metals and commodities at large. So while the headline equity story suggests a G7 global recovery is underway at last, as the OECD suggested last week,  that’s not the signal from commodities and the emerging world. Could it really be just be a domestic US recovery story all on its own?

    As a result it’s hard to find a binding theme so far in early April and market pricing this week reflects that somewhat, even though Easter-related holidays in many western markets contributed to the lack of direction. Apart from earnings season starting bell, next week has the euro group meeting in Dublin,  new US Treasury Secretary Jack Lew in Berlin and Paris and a hefty slate of data and debt auctions everywhere.

    GLOBAL DATA/EVENTS TO WATCH

    French govt bond auctions Mon

    German Feb industry output Mon

    US Q1 earnings Mon: Alcoa

    Bernanke speech Mon

    ILO regional meeting Mon/Tues

    China March inflation Tues

    US Treasury Secretary Jack Lew in Berlin/Paris Tues

    French national assembly votes on labour reform Tues

    Swiss March jobless/inflation/retail data Tues

    German/French Feb trade reports Tues

    UK Feb manufacturing/industry output/trade Tues

    US 3-yr Treasury auction Tues

    China March trade data Weds

    Japan March bank lending Weds

    France/Italy Feb industry output Weds

    OECD leading indicator Weds

    Poland rate decision Weds

    Obama meets Republican senators on 2nd term agenda Weds

    US 10-yr Treasury auction Weds

    SKorea/Indonesia rate decisions Thurs

    Japan Feb machinery orders Thurs

    Italy govt bond auction Thurs

    German/French March inflation Thurs

    US 30-yr Treasury auction Thurs

    Euro zone finance ministers meet in Dublin Fri

    Italy March inflation Fri

    EZ Feb industrial output Fri

    US Q1 earnings Fri: JPMorgan

    US March PPI/retail sales/April consumer confidence Fri

    Bernanke speech Fri

    ECOFIN in Dublin Fri

    Venezuela Presidential election Sun

      

  • Data Center Jobs: McKinstry Essention Inc

    At the Data Center Jobs Board, we have a new job listing from McKinstry Essention Inc, which is seeking an Project Manager in Salt Lake City, Utah.

    The Project Manager is responsible for leading projects from initiation to closeout, developing and managing budget, project plans, schedules and scopes of work, oversight, scheduling and coordination of internal and external resources for project completion, communicating with clients and project resources (subcontractors and vendors), documenting discussions, outcomes and decisions, supporting Request for Proposal (RFP)process, researching and evaluating new products and vendors, and processing, reviewing, logging and distributing submittals. To view full details and apply, see job listing details.


    Are you hiring for your data center? You can list your company’s job openings on the Data Center Jobs Board, and also track new openings via our jobs RSS feed.

  • TalkAndroid Daily Dose for April 3, 2013

    TalkAndroid_Daily_Dose

    With hectic schedules, it can be hard to keep track of everything in your news feed. That’s why we created the TalkAndroid Daily Dose. This is where we recap the day’s hottest stories so you can get yourself up to speed in quick fashion. Happy reading!!

    Guides

    What you need to know about the T-Mobile Simple Choice Plan

    Apps

    Google targeting all business users by making QuickOffice available for free for all Google Apps users

    Rovio’s social-based Angry Birds Friends game officially on the way to mobile devices

    Twitter Goes Holo in New Update

    Flipboard gets minor update to support hover actions

    Carriers

    AT&T Launches 4G LTE In 14 New Markets

    Google

    Sources speculate as to why Android’s Rubin is starting new chapter

    Phones

    First look at Facebook Home UI

    Mid-range Samsung Galaxy Win leaked courtesy of Vietnamese retailer

    Samsung working on new generation Galaxy Ace device

    Samsung announces the stylish and compact Galaxy Star and Galaxy Pocket Neo

    AT&T Clarifies Galaxy S 4 Pricing

    Tablets

    Updated Nexus 7 with Qualcomm Snapdragon and better display coming in July

    Updates

    LG Optimus G on AT&T beginning to receive Jelly Bean update

    ASUS Transformer Pad Infinity to receive Android 4.2 Jelly Bean update

    Miscellenous

    Man Behind HTC One Camera Talks More About The UltraPixel

    Samsung sets new goal: 500 million handsets in 2013

    Samsung And Mozilla Working On Browser Engine With Multi-Core Support

     

    Come comment on this article: TalkAndroid Daily Dose for April 3, 2013

  • What the internet of things can learn from Minecraft and Lemmings

    Once we have a home full of connected devices do we really want to individually manage all of them? Mike Kuniavsky, a principal in the Innovation Services Group at PARC, explains in this weeks podcast how we’re going to have to think differently about programming devices for the internet of things. Devices will need to know what they contain and how those elements might contribute to a certain scenario in the home.

    For example when you want to watch a movie, you shouldn’t have to program 6 different devices in your home to tell them what they should do when you toggle on your movie setting, your devices should have some sense of what they are capable of and how to enter a set mode. As he did in his chat in February at our San Francisco Internet of Things meetup, Kuniavsky, likened this device behavior to video games like Minecraft or Lemmings, where preset general behaviors determines how the game unfolded as opposed to rigid and specific actions. He explains all this and more in the podcast. Check it out.

    (download this episode)

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    Show notes:
    Host: Stacey Higginbotham

    • How many connected devices will we need and how do we choose the ones we want?
    • Information processing is now cheap enough that it’s just another line item to consider when building a physical product.
    • What does the future of programming for the internet of things look like?

    PREVIOUS IoT PODCASTS:
    Podcast: How IBM uses chaos theory, data and the internet of things to fix traffic

    Electric Imp aims to make the Internet of Things devilishly simple

    IoT podcast: When devices can talk, will they conspire against you?

    Internet of things Podcast – Almond+’s nutty idea: Making sensor connectivity a snap

    Podcast: Why the internet of things is cool and how Mobiplug is helping make it happen

    OTHER GIGAOM PODCASTS:

    Call in podcast: T-Mobile iPhone and the best Android keyboard

    Podcast: How Indie Game stayed “indie” and became a hit

    Call in podcast: T-Mobile iPhone and the best Android keyboard

    Samsung Galaxy S 4 blasts off, RIP Google Reader

    Call-In: Galaxy S 4 predictions, Chromebook Pixel cloud storage

    Podcast: Facebook’s feedin’; Lean In’s meanin’; and everyone’s Hadoop-in

    Call in podcast: Galaxy S 4 predictions and Chromebook Pixel cloud storage

    Related research and analysis from GigaOM Pro:
    Subscriber content. Sign up for a free trial.

  • Rich investors betting on emerging equities

    By Philip Baillie

    Emerging equities may have significantly underperformed their richer peers so far this year (they are about 4 percent in the red compared with gains of more than 6 percent for their MSCI’s index of developed stocks) , but almost a third of high net-worth individuals are betting on a rebound in coming months.

    A survey of more than 1,000 high net-worth investors by J.P. Morgan Private Bank reveals that 28 percent of respondents expect emerging market equities to perform best in the next 12 months, outstripping the 24 per cent that bet their money on U.S. stocks.

    That gels with the findings of recent Reuters polls where a majority of the 450 analysts surveyed said they expect emerging equities to end 2013 with double-digit returns.

    (Note a caveat on the survey – the responses were collated before recent unsettling events in Cyprus – which could have some knock-on effects on emerging markets, especially given the banking exposure to countries such as Slovenia, Luxembourg, Malta and Russia).

    However, regardless of the growing list of risks, 60 percent of the investors pick equities as their top performing asset class for the next 12 months –  more evidence that the so-called Great Rotation — the offloading of bond holdings in favour of equities — remains a theme despite some growth and political risks.

    This from Cesar Perez, Chief Investment Strategist for J.P. Morgan Private Bank in EMEA:

    For the first time in four years we are not underweight in our global equities allocation…..Similar to respondents, we believe there is considerable value in global equity markets. In the current environment, we have tilted our equity allocations towards the U.S. and emerging markets, increasing exposure to Asian equities in early 2013.

    Despite the tilt towards equities, almost half the  respondents cited global growth as their biggest investment concern. Politics (23 percent) geopolitical unrest (15 percent) and monetary policy mistakes (11 percent) also emerged as acute risk themes. A mere 4 percent worried about inflation.

    Nevertheless,  14 per cent of those surveyed believe the supposedly riskier European periphery will perform better than the European core which garnered the votes of just 10 percent.  Interestingly, Japan, the best performing equity market so far in 2013 with gains of almost 20 percent, was least favoured at  just 6 per cent.

    The J.P. Morgan Private Bank (assets of $878 billion) survey was conducted throughout January and February. See below for a graphic detailing the survey’s findings.

    Equities to outperform over the next 12 months.
  • Build Retina-compatible websites with Xara Web Designer 9 Premium

    Established UK developer Xara has released Xara Web Designer 9 and Xara Web Designer Premium 9, the latest builds of its popular web design package for Windows. Version 9 automatically supports the creation of HiDPi/Retina-compatible websites (Premium only), updates support for HTML5 and CSS3 standards and adds a dedicated 64-bit build for 64-bit systems with more than 4GB RAM installed.

    Improved HTML5 and CSS3 compatibility has a number of benefits for Xara developers, most notably more efficient and faster loading websites. This is due to the fact many page elements that were previously converted into images can now be rendered natively in HTML5. These include rectangles — simple, rounded and skewed, box shadows, text with drop shadows and various page backgrounds.

    Another side-benefit of this improvement is that HTML5-rendered elements are fully scalable and resolution independent, making them automatically compatible with higher-resolution Retina and HiDPi displays. Other page elements not natively supported, such as feathered objects, are still exported as images.

    Web Designer 9 Premium also includes other tools to improve compatibility with Retina/HiDPi screens, such as automatically creating high-res photos and web graphics for “smart” web pages that display the correct resolution according to the browser being used.

    Xara Web Designer 9 also includes improved font embedding, with the Premium build supporting the use of Google fonts, a growing free and open-source collection numbering over 600, for websites.

    Also added to version 9 are improved re-coloring of clipart and vector-based artwork, extended support for automatically positioning and resizing objects when changes are made, easier Web presentation creation and drag-and-drop Navbar replacement support.

    In addition, 20 new website themes and a number of new widgets have also been added to Web Designer 9.

    Xara Web Designer 9.0.0, Xara Web Designer Premium 9.0.0 and Xara Web Designer Premium 9.0.0 (64-bit) are all available as trial downloads for PCs running Windows XP or later. Web Designer 9 is a cut-down entry level version aimed at beginners and retails for $49.99; Web Designer Premium 9 has a MSRP of $89.99 and is aimed at experienced and professional web developers looking for additional web authoring and publishing tools, as well as more sophisticated graphics tools and additional galleries.

  • Why President Kagame Runs Rwanda Like a Business

    In Western business circles, Rwandan President Paul Kagame is widely regarded as a hero. The leader of the rebel army that put a halt to the massacre of the country’s Tutsi minority by its Hutu majority in 1994, Kagame has been the country’s president since 2000 (and was the vice president and de facto leader before then). He has presided over an economic and social rebirth, with Rwanda making dramatic gains in health and development indicators (watching its recent progress on Gapminder is a remarkable sight). And he has assembled a high-powered Western fan club consisting of, among others, Howard Schultz, Bill Gates, and Tony Blair.

    In other circles, Kagame is not so popular. Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch both accuse him of heavy-handedly stifling political dissent. A United Nations report held him responsible for killings by a rebel group in the neighboring Democratic Republic of the Congo. Britain and Belgium have cut back on aid. In a lengthy Newsweek article in January, former New York Times correspondent Howard French depicted Kagame as an out-of-control tyrant.

    The best attempt I’ve seen at sorting out these opposed narratives was an article published last fall by Time‘s Alex Perry that weighs the scales at least modestly in Kagame’s favor. So when Harvard Business School Professor Michael Porter invited HBR last month to attend a class where Kagame was the guest speaker, and talk to him and Kagame afterwards, I was curious but also a little worried about being enlisted as a Kagame salesman.

    Porter is a member in good standing of the business-community Kagame fan club, and has just finished a new version of his case study (an earlier one is available here) on Rwanda’s economic transformation. It describes the country’s successful efforts to build what Porter long ago dubbed “clusters,” concentrations of industry and expertise that enable it to build competitive advantage. So far, Rwanda’s three big clusters are coffee, tea, and tourism, but Porter is convinced there are more to come.

    The case study doesn’t hide the fact that Kagame has many critics, but it doesn’t dwell on political issues. Curiously, though, Kagame’s Q&A with Porter’s students ended up dwelling only on political issues. This was mostly Kagame’s fault — he was only asked two questions, one about the Congo and one about what will happen when his current (and, according to Rwanda’s constitution, last) presidential term ends in 2017, and gave such long, rambling, combative answers to both that there was no time for anything else. Kagame’s staff said I could quote anything he said in class, but it was just too much; to get a flavor of what it sounded like, see Alex Perry’s epic Q&A with Kagame from last year.

    After witnessing that, I tried a different approach in my interview, mostly staying away from politics. The edited results are below:

    Clearly you’ve been very interested in getting outside input from the business community. And yet you bristle at getting it from the multilateral community.

    President Paul Kagame: If you want to learn anything about a country, I think you need to ask the one who wants to make investment in that country. The one who is thinking about the risks involved. They’re thinking about the return. If somebody comes to your country and says, “You know, this is a place to invest,” actually that is a good place. You see?

    But if you send someone and say, “Go on, look and find for me something that is at fault,” in any place in this world somebody will come up with piles and piles to things to report about.

    These human rights groups, they come with that kind of mindset. They’re critical. They even start being critical on issues that the people where they have gone don’t find a problem with.

    That’s the difference between these two worlds. Therefore, we always want to ally ourselves with these ones [gestures at Porter] because that’s where the real life is. That’s where the people living in my country are going to find something to make a difference for their lives. When somebody’s coming to invest in Rwanda and finds it ripe for investment, it’s a good place. No matter what else you say about it.

    This, for me, is the focus. People started asking in 2005, “Oh, President, are you going to leave when your term is up?” Then after that they say the same question. And I say, “What does it matter to you? You’re diverting me from the real issues of the day.”

    [To Porter] How did you hook up with this guy? How did this partnership evolve?

    Michael Porter: We met through Michael Fairbanks, who was at Monitor originally and then founded his own firm. It was more than a decade ago, probably closer to 15 years ago. The country was at a very interesting place on a very interesting track. So I’ve had the opportunity to be involved in the journey.

    There’s a zillion countries that say they’re the next Silicon whatever, and then there’s lots of countries that do really basic resource exploitation. Rwanda seems to have picked interesting places in between, especially with coffee and figuring out that coffee washing was really important.

    Was that something that came bottom up? Was that advice from people like Professor Porter? How did you focus on a strategy like that when so many countries struggle to focus?

    Kagame: It is a combination of factors. We have seen in our country that good ideas and different initiatives, well, they come from where they come from. Sometimes they may be picked up by the leaders from the people on the ground.

    For example, coffee. Rwanda used to grow coffee many years ago, and because they were getting nothing out of it they gave up on it. And we said, “You know what? We used to be good at coffee. Now the coffee has kind of disappeared, but we have an idea of how it can work for you.”

    You start in one area. Then success leads to another, you know? It keeps going like that.

    Porter: The principle that Rwanda illustrates so well is that building and diversifying an economy has to start with what you have. In these cases Rwanda had eroded assets, but there was a foundation and a proof point, a market test that these areas could be successful and they could be competitive.

    Then the discussion was really about, “How do we move forward? How do we upgrade? How do we make things more sophisticated? What are the bottlenecks? What are the constraints?”

    In the initial three areas of coffee, tea, and tourism, that effort has advanced quite far now. Rwanda is winning international awards and marketing globally, and tourism is booming.

    The next areas of growth partly are ones that are connected to the first ones. I think it was very clear that Rwanda has to develop its logistics and its physical infrastructure. IT [information technology] was an area where I think the president and his team understood that this was not only good for citizens in general, and good to enable government and healthcare and education, but it also provided an area where Rwanda could build economic activity. There was no other place in the region that really had taken that space.

    My biggest effort in Rwanda really has been on private sector development and organization and upgrading. Ultimately that’s what makes a country successful or unsuccessful. Government can’t do it. You have to have a vibrant private sector. It has to be competitive. It has to create good jobs. It has to be profitable.

    Kagame: Right. And what people like Professor Porter brought to this situation is that critical thinking, that understanding of these global issues and how they interconnect. And for us it is also the readiness to actually test and implement. You start with one thing, it gives good results, and it becomes an incentive to keep trying.

    So what do you want to be next big thing after coffee, tea, and tourism? Or are you going to wait and see how it develops?

    Kagame: We are continuing with that and concentrating on the progress we’re making. But we’ve also discovered mining in Rwanda. We have more resources than we knew we had. So that’s an area that brings in money. And the services industry has been critical. In fact, it is among the leaders contributing to our GDP growth, with huge potential.

    All of these need powering. We need energy. So we are doing everything 24 hours a day thinking about how to increase our energy capacity.

    Of course, building human capacity is critical. We keep sending our people to institutions of higher learning in the sciences, engineering, and management. It’s the focus because we want our people to understand how the new world works.

    Porter: I think the IT area and financial services have now risen to the point that they represent a genuine opportunity. Broadband access is really quite unique for a country at this stage of development. And IT is now starting to interface with healthcare and education, and is powering financial services.

    Here’s a country where a critical part of the strategy was bringing the citizens together and giving them a sense that they are part of the solution, part of a nation, that they are Rwandans, not members of an ethnic group. Given the history, I think task number one was nation building and reconciliation.

    Kagame: Sometimes direct and simple conversations make a difference. I go to these rural areas and meet people and ask them, “How many of you own small businesses? Or have shops?” Many of them put up their hands, and I ask, “When somebody walks into your shop and is looking for soap or sugar or whatever, do you first ask them whether they are Catholics or Hutus or Tutsis? What does it matter to you? You want a customer, and that’s all you want.”

    People grasp it very quickly. They start valuing each other. They say, “Oh, I need him for what I don’t have and he needs me for what he doesn’t have.” That’s creating an awareness in society like never before: Yes, we need each other. We are more similar than different. It helps the society to move forward.

    And it’s your sense that business and economic activity do that?

    Kagame: I would rank it number one. The rest will follow. At the end of the day we’re just human beings. You want food and you want it for your family. Plus, you really need dignity, to be able to do something on your own and benefit from it. And there’s nothing that does that better than being able to do business.

    Porter: Or have a good job. Or make your farm more productive. These basic truths have become more understood in Rwanda. I give the president and his team a lot of credit for creating that atmosphere.

    I also think that Rwanda is unique, in my experience, in government being able to actually get things done. In most countries, things don’t get done. Roads don’t get built on time. Schools don’t get established. Teachers don’t get trained. Vocational training doesn’t work. And I think Rwanda, partly out of scarcity of resources and partly out of good leadership, has been able to actually implement and execute.

    The government is very disciplined, very focused on plans. Very focused on accountability. There’s an annual kind of national retreat of all the leaders in the country who really think about where we are, where we’ve been, where we need to go.

    It sounds like it’s run like a corporation.

    Porter: It’s really run much more rationally than most governments. Again, I think that’s partly possible because of the history.

    Kagame: Yes. It’s like you’re thrown in a swimming pool and you are trying to learn how to swim on the spot and get yourself out of trouble.

    Again, it’s an issue of incentivizing the people to act in a certain way. Even by using some of the simple conversations I was talking about. For example, when aid has been suspended or cut, you have to explain what has happened, and how and why it has happened.

    Then you also challenge them, saying, “But for how long are we really going to depend on handouts? When someone has decided to take it away, what happens to you? It is better to start focusing on what we can do for ourselves so we don’t always find ourselves stranded.”
    And you know, you see people lighting up. That is the moment when you bring in ideas, initiatives, some of the things that can work on the ground. They just grab it so quickly.

    We used to have people who would be fed by World Food Program and so on. That’s the situation we inherited. We said, “No, we need to feed ourselves. We can feed ourselves. This is how to do it because one day the World Food Program won’t show up.” In just three years from that time, we have had surpluses all the time.

    Porter: There’s some just marvelous data now in terms of just how much progress has been made, in education and healthcare and FDI and all kinds of areas. It seemed impossible a decade ago, but it’s happening and it’s reinforcing itself.

    And it’s all because of a certain pragmatic, forward-looking, we-have-to-figure-this-out mindset. That philosophy, that mindset really does have to come from the top but I think it’s going to sustain itself.

    Kagame: Right. Leadership, combined with the sense people have of how they link up with the leadership. Working together for a common goal that is theirs.

    Porter: It’s a very rich story about management and leadership and strategy and communication. And I think this is not a politics story. At the core is the private sector of economy — self-sufficiency, running a business well. It’s fascinating to see that play itself out.

    Photo by Jimmy Ushkurnis

  • Morning Advantage: Will Hadoop Smarts Make Sears Rich?

    Among the select few to address the 6,000 faithful with tales from the leading edge of data analytics at this June’s Hadoop conference will be Netflix, Yahoo — and Sears. For three years, AdAge reports, Sears has been using Hadoop to get a handle on the 100 million customers in its databases. And apparently the 130-year-old retailer has become so adept that it’s stopped giving away advice over the phone and started selling data management services under the B2B brand MetaScale.

    MetaScale’s profile is so high among the Hadoop community that Sears now declines to give out the names of the people who work there since a couple of them were poached by competitors. But with a $1.7 billion drop in revenue leading to losses of $930 million (after 2011’s $1.1 billion revenue drop resulted in a $3.1 billion loss), it’s hard not to wonder when those data-analytic smarts will turn into business riches.

    GAIN WITHOUT PAIN

    Should Your Team Have a Good Fight? (Occupational Digest)

    Do teams benefit from conflict? Clever research from Bret Bradley and a trio of colleagues at Pepperdine and the Universities of Oklahoma and Iowa suggests the answer is “it depends.” That is, it depends on how emotionally stable and how open to new experience team members are. The researchers correlated the personalities of undergraduate business students working in 117 teams on a 13-week group project with the quality of the output each team produced. They found, as one might expect, that the teams with the most mature and open-minded members used conflict most productively. But teams with the least stable and least open-minded students who displayed the least amount of conflict were equally effective.

    I’LL SETTLE FOR THE PARKING SPACE

    Self-Driving Cars Are Further Away Than You’d Think (Technology Review)

    Drive up to the Audi demonstration garage in Ingolstadt, Germany, get out of the car, and watch as it drives into the facility and finds its own space. Then, tap your smartphone and be amazed as the car smoothly drives itself back to you at the entrance. So cool. But don’t expect to see those cars driving themselves down the road anytime soon, says Audi engineer Annie Lien. “People are surprised when I tell them that you’re not going to get a car that drives you from A to B, or door to door, in the next 10 years.” As dramatic as these proofs of concept are, they are a long way from viable businesses. For that, she says, the technologies need to become far cheaper, more compact, more intuitive, easier to use, more secure — and far more reliable.

    BONUS BITS:

    Contrarian Corner

    How Chapter 11 Saved the Economy (HBS Working Knowledge)

    Mexico Makes It (Foreign Affairs)

    The Pleasures and Perils of the Open-Plan Office (BBC NEWS)

  • Malwarebytes Secure Backup saves to the cloud

    Malwarebytes has unveiled its new Secure Backup product, an online service created in conjunction with SOS Online Backup, which automatically scans your files before they’re uploaded to the cloud. This ensures that, if you’re ever hit by a virus, you’ll know you can restore a backup without any danger of reinfection. And if you want to share a file with others, then, again, you can all be confident that it’s clean.

    The current Secure Backup download is a beta offering 5GB of online storage, which will expire after 14 days. If you like the idea and decide to upgrade, though, there are 100GB ($59.95 per year), 200GB ($119.95) or 500GB ($299.95) packages available.

    The backup client is simple and easy to use. It automatically scans for documents, pictures, music or videos on your system, and can upload those in a click or two. But if you need more control, there’s also an option to select whatever individual files and folders you’d like to protect.

    Backups may then be scheduled to run at intervals of anything from an hour to a month, with an option to receive email reports whenever a backup job ends.

    A Secure Backup console provides some useful configuration settings, including include and exclude settings. (No option to limit bandwidth use, though, which we always like to see in online backup tools.)

    And there’s also a web portal which allows you to access and restore your files from anywhere, as well as share particular files or folders with others.

    How useful might this service be? In an ideal world your PC would be set up to detect malware as soon as it arrived, not just before you’re despatching it elsewhere.

    In practice, though, it’s not uncommon common for people to reinfect their systems via backups, so having this second layer of protection certainly isn’t a bad thing.

    And if you regularly share files with others, then using Secure Backup should reassure everyone that their downloads are clean.

    We’ll need to run more intensive tests to see how Malwarebytes Secure Backup performs as a backup tool, then, but in principle this could be a useful service. If you’d like to try it for yourself then a 14-day trial version is available now, but keep in mind that it is still flagged as a beta: don’t rely on it as your sole backup program just yet.

    Photo Credit: Sergey150770/Shutterstock

  • Gartner: Tablet Shipments To Grow 69.8% YoY To 197M Units In 2013, As PCs/Laptops Decline 7.3% To 315M Units

    SurfaceProRight

    After IDC’s global device forecast last month, Gartner has published its latest report with smart devices projections for smartphones, tablets, ultramobiles and PCs from 2012 to 2017. The numbers make more grim reading for Microsoft — the company with the most to lose as old empire of the PC continues its slow decline, trumped by the price, simplicity and convenience of Android and iOS-powered mobile computing devices.

    “You need to own consumers in terms of mobile and tablet in order to remain relevant in this market,” said Gartner analyst Carolina Milanesi. Gone are the days when Windows is the “default” option for the majority of consumers, thanks to alternatives being too technical (Linux) or too expensive (Macs), she said. “Consumers have options and consumers are choosing and Microsoft can not take that for granted that they’ll be the one to be chosen.”

    Gartner is projecting a 7.3% decline in the traditional desktop and laptop computer category this year, although ultramobile devices (portables running a full desktop OS such as Microsoft’s Surface Pro tablet, pictured above) are expected to offset the decline slightly — so the collective drop for these two categories is projected to be 3.5%.

    But the real engine of growth is of course tablets, with worldwide shipments forecast to total 197 million units in 2013: a 69.8% increase on 2012 shipments of 116 million units. By 2017, Gartner expects tablets to be outshipping desktop computers and ultramobiles combined, although it does not make a specific prediction for the tipping point year for tablets. (IDC said last month that it expects tablet shipments to outstrip PCs this year, and portable PCs next year.)

    Over its forecast period Gartner also projects steady growth for smartphones. Overall, the total smart devices market is projected to grow 9% this year, to reach 2.4 billion units.

    On the breakdown of OSes, Microsoft’s loss and Google’s and Apple’s gain is clear: Android consolidates its dominance this year, pulling further away from Windows, while iOS/MacOS narrows the gap with its old computing foe. By 2017 Gartner projects a huge lead for Android, with approaching 1.5 billion device shipments (powered by Android’s dominance in the smartphone space). And while Windows (in both its desktop and phone flavours) is still forecast to be ranked second, iOS/MacOS is not far behind, with 570.9 million vs 504.1 million respectively.

    “If you look at the OS numbers and you look at Microsoft vs Apple vs Android, you see from a sales perspective, Microsoft is still pretty much relying on their PC core… [and not] expanding their numbers. They’re defending by shifting some of the losses that are coming from the PC onto the tablet and ultramobile but they’re not conquering,” Milanesi told TechCrunch. ”With mobility and with the shift from PCs to tablets and smartphones there are going to be implications that go beyond just the hardware side that will really impact OS and applications like Office for example.”

    “The role that Apple is going to play in the computing device — when you’re thinking about computing devices all the way from the smartphone to the PC — is going to be much bigger,” she added.

    The low price of tablets is a key factor driving their adoption, says Milanesi, but it’s not just price that’s powering the category.  Smartphones are acting as halo devices to drive tablet adoption, thanks to users’ existing investments in apps and familiarity with the lighter weight OSes. Touch interfaces and cloud computing are also playing a role, along with the integration of Wi-Fi. While consumers in emerging markets are coming to computing from the phone, not the desktop PC — making tablets a “more natural upgrade path”, rather than the PC, she said.

    “Another misconception is you need a PC in order to be productive and that productivity is measured as far as you need a PC to do Excel work. Well there are an awful lot of people out there who are very productive without ever touching Excel,” added Milanesi. ”The change that touch and tablets are bringing are here. They’re not going to go away. So you better enable that transition so that people can take full advantage of it vs continue to fight it.”

    Windows Phone not BlackBerry in 3rd

    Gartner’s current forecast for 2017 pegs Microsoft’s Windows Phone OS in third place in the smartphone OS rankings behind Android and iOS — with RIM/BlackBerry languishing far behind. BlackBerry shipments will continue to decline throughout the forecast period, according to Gartner, despite its OS reboot with the QNX-based BlackBerry 10 and the launch of the first BB10 device, the Z10. “RIM is even more limited than Microsoft,” said Milanesi. “They have a limited reach as far as where that OS goes as far as devices… We see consumers are more and more looking for an OS that goes across the board.

    “Gone are the days that you have one product can make a company. One product can break a company but one product is no longer enough to make a company. The ecosystem the brand has is becoming much more important from a consumer choice perspective.”

    From that perspective, Microsoft is in a stronger position than BlackBerry, having pushed Windows 8 into the touchscreen era with its Windows Phone-style tile-based UI, while BlackBerry’s own tablet effort has had to take a back seat while it rebooted its mobile platform.

    “Windows Phone is going to be the third largest OS on the phone side after Android and iOS, not too distant from iOS,” Milanesi predicted, although she also noted that the gap between second and third place is a small one so Microsoft’s mobile OS could push iOS into third place.

    She also noted that Gartner’s device projection does not take into account a lower end iPhone, should Apple choose to launch such a product — which could shift the goal-posts again and generate more mass market momentum for the iPhone.

    Should Facebook or Amazon make a phone?

    Asked whether in the current smart mobile devices market it makes sense for Facebook or Amazon to launch their own smartphone, Milanesi gave a qualified “no”.

    In the case of Facebook (which is thought to be holding an Android-focused phone-related event today), she said it makes sense for the company to “enable Facebook in the best possible way” on smartphones — ergo it may therefore make sense for it to build a deep software integration that lives on a phone to deliver the desired experience. But she added: “I don’t think from a brand perspective that people will want to get a Facebook phone because of the Facebook brand. But people will want to have a deeper integration of Facebook on their phone.

    “Facebook want users and they want engagement — and that’s not just coming from a dedicated phone, that come from a much better application and integration of their application in the hardware.”

    For Amazon, which has been rumoured to be looking at building a phone, she said the case is slightly different since the focus for the ecommerce giant is not about driving engagement and gathering user data so much as  ”selling — selling content, selling merchandise, getting consumers onto their website”.

    “I think you do that much more on a tablet than you do on a phone,” she added. “The only way I see a phone making sense is if Amazon continues to fork from Android… where it would make sense to have a phone and a tablet [to sell consumers a connected device ecosystem] — for the same applications and so forth.”

    Building a phone is also less straightforward than building a tablet, noted Milanesi, since carriers enter the mix and complicate the value chain.

  • Slow and steady wins the solar race

    This article originally appeared on GigaOM Pro, GigaOM’s premium subscription research service.

    The Solar Energies Industries Association (SEIA) recently released final solar installation figures for 2012. From all the bad news surrounding bankruptcies among solar manufacturers and tariffs with China, one might have expected the worst. But the figures were, in fact, quite solid and suggestive of a sustainable trend of growth, both in residential and utility solar PV.

    In fact, the U.S. as a share of global deployments of solar PV actually took a much larger share, to just under 12 percent, up from around 3 percent in 2010. 3313 megawatts came online in the U.S. in 2012, a 76 percent increase over 2011 with GTM Research predicting that we’ll see continued growth up to 4300 megawatts this year.

    First Solar Agua Caliente Plant

    Solar remains very regional in the U.S. California, Nevada, New Jersey and Arizona accounted for 2356 megawatts or 71 percent of all the solar power installed last year. Part of that is how much sun those areas get but in places like New Jersey, it has much more to do with incentives.

    The entire industry remains somewhat subsidy dependent. The investment tax credit goes from 30 percent to 10 percent in 2017, which will impact companies like SolarCity, which will have to address their cost of capital.

    Though SolarCity said during its recent investor presentation that in its last financing round it lowered its cost of financing solar contracts from 8 percent to 3.45 percent. Historically the company has paid 8 to 12 percent for financing, even with the investment tax credit. Cost of capital is critical to the whole solar installation business, particularly for companies like SolarCity and Sungevity which are building their businesses around zero down lease programs for residential solar. It’s unclear if this news from SolarCity is a positive sign that financiers are assigning less risk to solar, which could take pressure off installers.

    Residential rooftop aside, the big win in 2012 was actually on the utility side. Utility scale installations grew 134 percent last year and account for more than half of installed solar. It will be difficult to sustain that level of growth, partially because some very large solar projects in the hundreds of megawatt scale will finally come online and satisfy renewable mandates.

    Uni-Solar 4_1_GM_Zaragoza

    But if install prices keep coming down, look for utilities to consider additional solar installations. The installed price crept down to $2.27/Watt for utility installation in the fourth quarter and 5.04/Watt on the residential side. Those are record lows. Still, prices must come down even further.

    Non-hardware costs like permitting and marketing remain a real problem for U.S. solar installers. German companies pay just 7 cents per watt for customer acquisition and customer design costs, ten times what U.S. companies. It costs less than half to install a solar system in Germany.

    In September the Department of Energy issued a competition for the SunShot Prize, which would give $10 million to a team that “that repeatedly demonstrates that non-hardware costs, or price to plug in, can be as low as $1 per watt (W) for small-scale photovoltaic (PV) systems on American homes and businesses.” The DOE makes it clear that while hardware costs have declined as much as 75 percent in the last four years, soft costs seem unmovable.

    solarpaneleast2

    So despite the carnage among U.S. manufacturers, the Solyndra hangover, and the failures of Chinese manufacturers, the U.S. installation environment remains promising. U.S. tariffs appear not to have had a significant impact on solar deployment.

    The key, as always for solar, is to just get through the next 6-8 year march toward grid parity by continuing to show that solar can be safely and reliably integrated on the grid. Yes, cheap natural gas remains a looming concern that could bring retail energy prices down, which are solar’s key competitor.

    But even if natural gas stays this cheap (which I don’t believe it will), I don’t believe that utilities will necessarily lower prices for customers. That’s particularly true in the many regulated markets in the U.S. Rather, solar install costs just need to keep moving down and becoming more competitive, as do financing costs. Both of these reductions seem possible. In the end this is the most hopeful aspect of solar—that it keeps getting cheaper.

    Related research and analysis from GigaOM Pro:
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  • Live blog: Facebook’s new Home on Android

    After years of rumors about a Facebook phone, the company is going to be addressing mobile in a big way Thursday morning at its headquarters in Menlo Park, Calif., with plans to discuss “our new Home on Android,” according to invitations sent out last week. The event starts at 10am PT, and we’ll have live coverage here.

    Eliza will be down in Menlo Park with Om Malik, while Kevin Tofel weighs in from the East Coast on the developments of the morning. For a preview of what to expect, check out Kevin’s piece from earlier this week, which examines what the HTC-branded Facebook experience phone might look like and how it might affect the mobile market.

    Related research and analysis from GigaOM Pro:
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  • Top ten ways humanity is being murdered in the name of ‘evidence-based science’ (#7 Chemotherapy)

    Many modern-day chemotherapy chemicals are derivatives of mustard gas chemical weapons used in World War I. The Nazis got their hands on the technology, and through chemical / pharma companies such as Bayer (whose co-director was convicted of crimes against humanity…
  • Top ten ways humanity is being murdered in the name of ‘evidence-based science’ (#9 Cosmetics)

    Non-organic cosmetics and personal care products are loaded with “scientifically-formulated” chemical ingredients that cause cancer, liver damage, kidney damage, neurological disorders and even skin diseases. A typical “skin lotion” or cosmetic base is made with a…
  • Top ten ways humanity is being murdered in the name of ‘evidence-based science’ (#4 Pharmaceuticals)

    Drug companies are not in the business of health. They are in the business of marketing disease then offering their patented, overpriced chemical medications as a “treatment” for disease. But their treatments never cure the disease. They only “manage” it, leading…
  • Globalists are leading us into nuclear war with North Korea

    In an interview with ABC News April 2, Gen. James Thurman, the top U.S. commander in South Korea, said the current tense situation on the peninsula is the worst it’s been since he assumed command of the 28,500 U.S. forces there two years ago. Describing the state…