Jul
22

Lightning struck a man and indirectly injured 7 other people over the weekend. Here's what happens to your body when it gets fried.

On Sunday, as beach-goers in Florida were enjoying a warm afternoon, a thunderstorm rolled in.

A bolt of lightning struck the sand on Clearwater Beach around 12:42 in the afternoon.

A man in his 40s, whose identity has not been released, took a direct hit. Seven other people nearby were thrown from their feet and injured.

"It was this big strike. This dude, he got struck by lightning and he fell," witness Kenijah Everson told ABC affiliate WFTS Tampa Bay.

The man went into cardiac arrest. Bystanders performed CPR and dragged him and the other victims off the beach. The man was rushed to a nearby hospital and is currently in critical condition. One of the injured survivors was also treated for burns, WFTS reported.

According to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), the odds of getting hit by lightning in a given year is 1 in 700,000. About 10% of victims die; lightning killed almost 3,696 Americans between 1959 and 2003.

Most survivors of a lightning strike, however, experience long-term effects, including severe burns, brain damage, deafness, and memory loss. Here's what happens if you get hit by lightning.

Lightning strikes sear clothing, scar skin, and deafen ears

A lot can happen in the three-thousandths of a second it takes for a lightning bolt to course through your body.

As the lightning strikes then exits your body, your hair and clothing might singe or catch fire, and possibly even disintegrate.

Read More: The most terrifying part about getting struck by lightning is what happens to you afterwards

If you happen to be wearing metal objects, like a necklace, those items can channel the electric current and sear your skin with third-degree burns.

Lightning that exits the body through the feet can literally knock your shoes off. ( According to the National Weather Service, the explosive force of lightning can cause blunt trauma resulting in fractures or soft-tissue injuries.)

It's also not uncommon for the blast to rupture the eardrums, possibly leading to hearing loss.

What's more, blood vessels burst due to the electric discharge, and the heat can create a scarring pattern called a Lichtenberg figure on the skin (though it's rare). These scars branch out across one's body like the limbs of a tree, tracing the path the electricity took as it traveled.

A Lichtenberg figure. Wojtek Plonka/Shutterstock

Lightning carries between 1 to 10 billion joules of energy — enough to power a 100-watt bulb for at least three months. When that amount of electricity enters your body, it short-circuits the small electrical signals that keep your heart, lungs, and nervous system running.

That disruption in your heart's electrical rhythm can result in cardiac arrest— one of the leading causes of death in lightning strike victims. The shock can also cause seizures or make it difficult to breathe. If the electric current enters your skull, it can cook your brain, resulting in brain damage or coma.

A lightning strike can cause temporary or permanent paralysis as well. In the wake of a strike, some survivors undergo personality changes, mood swings, and memory loss.

Denver's 5280 magazine interviewed multiple lightning strike survivors in 2013; one of those survivors, Betsy Smith, was temporarily paralyzed after she was hit by lightning on a rock ledge in Wyoming.

"I was convinced my body had become soup inside my clothes," Smith told 5280. She was immobile for 45 minutes after the strike, and her left arm was severely burned. One of Smith's fingers was burned so severely that the flesh died, and the finger had to be amputated.

Five times hotter than the surface of the sun

Lightning forms as the result of particles of rain and ice bumping together inside a cloud.

This can cause an excess of negative charge to collect at the bottom of the cloud. The charge can be so powerful that it repels electrons (negatively charged particles) on the ground below.

The ground consequently becomes positively charged, and an intense attraction builds between the negative cloud and the positive ground. This attraction entices the negatively charged electrons at the bottom of the cloud to branch toward the Earth's surface. That negative stream is met by a stream of positively-charged particles flying skyward.

Lightning strikes Fatih Mosque over the Istanbul skyline during a thunderstorm on May 7, 2017 in Istanbul, Turkey. Chris McGrath/Getty Images

When that happens, the opposing streams of particles exchange energy, which manifests as the bright lightning strikes we see.

Lightning strikes can be up to 5 miles long from end to end, and they can heat the surrounding air to a temperature of nearly 50,000 degrees Fahrenheit (27,700 degrees Celsius) — around five times hotter than the surface of the sun.

How to avoid lightning strikes

According to John Jensenius, a lightning-safety specialist with NOAA, the best way to stay safe during a thunderstorm is to shelter inside a car or enclosed building. If that's not an option, you should find another way to avoid getting caught out in the open, Jensenius previously told Business Insider.

Avoid standing under trees, and stay away from wet and metal objects, Jensenius added. Even wet sand can effectively conduct the electrical current from a lightning strike.

Getty Images/Ethan Miller

Jensenius added that it's important to wait 30 minutes after the last rumble of thunder before leaving your place of shelter, since ground strikes can happen even when the skies have cleared and the center of a thunderstorm is 10 miles (16 kilometers) away.

Original author: Aylin Woodward

Continue reading
  22 Hits
Jul
22

Apple is reportedly in talks to buy Intel's smartphone-modem chip business for $1 billion (AAPL, INTC)

Apple is in talks to buy Intel's smartphone-modem chip business, The Wall Street Journal reported on Monday.

The iPhone maker is looking to acquire Intel's patent portfolio in a deal valued at $1 billion, the report said, citing unnamed sources. A deal could be reached in the next week, the report said.

Intel stunned the tech world in April when it announced that it was getting out of the 5G smartphone-modem business. "It has become apparent that there is no clear path to profitability and positive returns," Intel CEO Bob Swan said in a statement when the move was announced.

For Apple, buying Intel's smartphone business would give it greater control over a key component used in its devices, especially if and when it begins manufacturing 5G-compatible iPhone models.

The two companies had discussed a deal in the past, but the talks are said to have fallen apart when Apple signed a separate deal with Qualcomm, for a six-year license agreement and a multiyear chipset-supply agreement, The Wall Street Journal reported. The companies also agreed to drop all litigation against one another.

Intel declined to comment. Apple was not immediately available for comment.

Got a tip about Apple, Intel or another tech company? Contact this reporter via email at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it., message him on Twitter@benpimentel. You can also contact Business Insider securely via SecureDrop.

Original author: Benjamin Pimentel

Continue reading
  29 Hits
Jul
22

Nintendo slammed with new lawsuit that claims the company knowingly sold Switch controllers that were broken (NTDOY)

If you own a Nintendo Switch, or know of someone who has one, there's a good chance you've heard of "Joy-Con drift."

Nintendo's quirky detachable controller for the Switch, the Joy-Con, seems to be vulnerable to an issue where it senses input even when there isn't any. This leads to an experience called "drift," where your character on the screen may move even when you're not touching the joystick.

People have complained about Joy-Con drift dating back as far as 2017, the same year the Switch launched. But Nintendo has been silent on the issue.

While Nintendo says that it's aware of the issue, a new class-action lawsuit could bring it into the spotlight.

On Friday, national law firm Chimicles Schwartz Kriner & Donaldson-Smith (CSK&D) filed a class-action lawsuit against Nintendo and the "Joy-Con drift" issue, calling it a "defect." CSK&D is a firm that specializes in federal and state class-action lawsuits.

The firm alleges that Nintendo had "knowledge of its manufacturing defect," but "never disclosed this material defect to consumers" who continue to pay out of pocket whenever the issue manifests. The lawsuit alleges that Nintendo "fails to disclose the defect and routinely refuses to repair the joysticks without charge when the defect manifests."

(Keep in mind, Joy-Con are not cheap: They cost $80 for a single set, or $50 for an individual controller.)

Switch owners in the lawsuit want Nintendo to "recover their out-of-pocket expenses related to repairs and/or replacement" of their Joy-Con," and for the company to extend their warranty to cover the drifting issues.

The firm notes that many Switch owners have complained publicly about the Joy-Con drift issue. "Indeed, the internet is replete with examples of message boards and other websites where consumers have complained of the exact same Joy-Con defect," the lawsuit states. "Many consumers report experiencing drift on multiple Joy-Con controllers, including replacement controllers they purchased separately from their Switches."

The lawsuit includes over a dozen examples of Switch owners complaining about the drift issue on message boards and forums like Reddit— wondering how "drift" is caused, and how it can be fixed. At least one Business Insider employee has reported encountering a similar issue with several of their Joy-Con controllers. Many of those same owners mention that they had to buy multiple Joy-Con replacements, and even those units suffered from the same issue.

Nintendo had "nothing to announce on this topic" of the lawsuit, but the company sent the following statement with regards to Joy-Con issues to Business Insider:

"At Nintendo, we take great pride in creating quality products and we are continuously making improvements to them. We are aware of recent reports that some Joy-Con controllers are not responding correctly. We want our consumers to have fun with Nintendo Switch, and if anything falls short of this goal we always encourage them to visit http://support.nintendo.com so we can help."

If your Switch is experiencing Joy-Con drift, you can head over to Nintendo's website to let their support staff help you out — or you could try your hand at fixing the issue yourself. Our friends over at iFixit made a guide for trouble-shooting your controller issues. There are also plenty of videos that offer suggestions for "drifting" Joy-Con: This video, embedded below, has over 550,000 views, suggesting this isn't an isolated issue.

You can read the full lawsuit right here, and if you're experiencing Joy-Con drift yourself and want to add your name to the class-action suit, you can sign up here.

Original author: Dave Smith

Continue reading
  23 Hits
Jul
22

A Wall Street analyst found that Microsoft's all-important cloud business just crossed a major milestone, and it could mean great things for investors (MSFT, AMZN, GOOG, IBM)

Microsoft's cloud business is getting stronger, which a Wall Street analyst expects to lead to better profit margins.

CFRA analyst John Freeman upgraded Microsoft to buy from hold citing the tech behemoth's "faster growing cloud businesses," which he projects to have better profit margins than its more traditional software products.

"As revenue from these faster-growing cloud businesses begin swamping non-cloud revenue, margins will continue to improve," Freeman told clients in a note.

Microsoft posted results last week that highlighted a strengthening cloud business. In fact, the company said its Intelligent Cloud segment, which houses the Microsoft Azure cloud platform, recorded more revenue than the other two businesses, which are responsible for selling major Microsoft products like Office and Windows. That's the first time this has happened since those three business units were incepted in 2015.

After emerging as a tech powerhouse mainly by selling software for PCs used by consumers and businesses, Microsoft recently pivoted to the enterprise cloud market. Last week's report showed that transition was clearly paying off.

In Freeman's analysis, Microsoft's report also suggested that its cloud businesses — including Azure, Office 365, LinkedIn, Bing, GitHub, and Xbox Live — are bringing in as much revenue as its more tradtional lines of business. That's a key milestone for the company amid its cloud transformation.

Freeman said the company, for the first time, "generated as much revenue from running software in its own data centers...as it did from software licenses and upgrades, hardware and professional services."

Microsoft doesn't break out revenue figures for all of those lines of business. For instance, while Microsoft said that Azure revenue was up 64% from the same period of 2018, it doesn't give specific dollar amounts. That makes CFRA's analysis especially noteworthy

Microsoft, whose valuation now tops $1 trillion making it the most valuable company inthe world, recently said its revenue for for fiscal 2019 rose 12%. It reported a gross margin of 69% — a figure that seems set to improve, by CFRA's analysis, as the company continues its march to the cloud.

Freeman boosted his price target to $177 from $130 "based on increasing cloud migration success and greater realization of the operational leverage inherent in its cloud businesses."

Microsoft shares have jumped more than 35% this year and closed trading on Monday at $138.43.

The Redmond, Washington-based company's dominant position in enterprise was reaffirmed Monday when analyst firm Gartner named Microsoft, together with Amazon and Google, among the three leaders in the infrastructure as a service market, a key arena in cloud computing.

Amazon had the edge in the $25 billion public cloud market, with 46% market share, according to IDC's 2017 data. Microsoft was second with 11%, followed by IBM with 5.6%, Alibaba Group with 4.5% and Google with 3.3%.

The competition between Microsoft and Amazon recently escalated after they became the final contenders for the Pentagon's $10 billion contract to build the Joint Enterprise Defense Infrastructure, or JEDI, which is expected to be the biggest public cloud project ever. The Defense Department was expected to announce the winner next month, but President Trump's statement that he wanted more information on the contract process could delay the project.

Got a tip about Microsoft or another tech company? Contact this reporter via email at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it., message him on Twitter@benpimentel. You can also contact Business Insider securely via SecureDrop.

Original author: Benjamin Pimentel

Continue reading
  21 Hits
Nov
13

AI tool offers cure for scattered medical data

Greg Bohlen knew early on that Beyond Meat could be big.

When he first met with the company in 2011 — two years after Ethan Brown founded it — Beyond Meat was little more than an idea and some university-developed technology for manufacturing simulated animal muscle. But the company touched on two of the big themes that make Bohlen excited when it comes to potential investments — transparency and efficiency.

Beyond Meat's process for making artificial meat was far more resource and energy efficient than the way cows or even chickens create muscle. And while consumers generally don't want to see what happens on a kill floor, they'd find nothing to offend them if they saw Beyond Meat's manufacturing process.

"I thought they'd change the world," said Bohlen, a managing general partner at Union Grove Venture Partners, which invested in Beyond Meat in its series B funding round in 2012. "And they are, for the better."

Bohlen's optimism is understandable. After all, he's on Beyond Meat's board, and he owns a 1% stake in the company. But he's not the only one bullish on the meat alternative product maker these days.

Beyond Meat's stock has soared

On its first day of trading in May, Beyond Meat's stock nearly tripled its $25 initial public offering price. Fewer than seven weeks later, it was trading at more than $200 a share. Although it's fallen off since then, it spiked again on Monday, leaving the shares up nearly 700% since the company's IPO.

Read this: Beyond Meat is up more than 500% since going public — and new data suggests the company's sales are living up to the hype

Now a director at Beyond Meat, Greg Bohlen placed an early bet on the company and CEO Brown. Greg Bohlen That's given Beyond Meat a market capitalization of almost $12 billion. That figure means that public investors are ignoring the company's nearly $31 million in losses over the last year and valuing the alternative meat maker at 103 times its revenues over the same period — or 57 times its expected sales this year. Whichever way you look it, that's a heady valuation — and one that implies investors expect it to post super-charged growth for years to come.

The challenge Beyond Meat will face in meeting those expectations has spurred skeptics to start speaking out. Of the seven financial analysts who had ratings on its stock earlier this month, none considered it a buy and one, Erlan Abdikarimov, of Kazakhstan-based Freedom Finance, already had a sell rating. Wall Street analysts rate few stocks as "sells," and are typically even more reluctant to put such a label on new issues.

The rise in Beyond Meat's stock price "was fueled by very bold expectations, the likelihood of which is not obvious," Abdikarimov said in an email.

In June, JPMorgan, one of the lead underwriters of Beyond Meat's IPO and the only firm that rated the stock a "buy," downgraded the fake-meat maker to a "neutral" rating. The downgrade was purely due to valuation because the stock's rally meant it was trading well above its analysts' price target, JPMorgan said.

A Beyond Meat representative declined to comment, saying that the company was in a quiet period.

The meatless meat industry has plenty of potential

Whether or not Wall Street has gotten ahead of itself, Beyond Meat clearly has big potential. In the United States alone, consumers bought $78 billion worth of raw meat in 2018, according to market research firm Euromonitor. Other researchers have estimated that total global meat industry sales - including purchases by restaurants, schools, and other institutions — are in the trillions of dollars each year. Even if only a small portion of meat purchasers started buying Beyond Meat's burgers and other products instead, the company could see billions of dollars in sales.

Beyond Meat's most well-known product is its meatless burger. Drew Angerer/Getty Images There's reason to think that's more than just a pipe dream. Last year, US consumers bought $1.4 billion worth of meat substitute goods at retail, according to Euromonitor, mostly in the form of established products, such as tofu burgers and the like. Worldwide, such products were even more popular, garnering nearly $19 billion in retail sales.

That's still a small portion of the overall meat market, but the new generation of meat substitutes such as those from Beyond Meat and competitors such as Impossible Foods could help such products attract a much larger audience. Compared with their earlier predecessors, Beyond Burgers and Impossible Burgers do a much better job of simulating the taste, texture, and eating experience of meat.

The burgers, which, in Beyond's case, are made from ingredients including peas, mung beans, rice, and beets, bleed and brown like real ground beef. The latest Beyond Burgers are also designed to simulate the marbling found in real meat; instead of coming from bits of animal fat, the white, savory spaces are made from coconut oil and cocoa butter.

In addition to offering products that taste more like the real thing, the new purveyors of meat alternatives have also started to gain wide distribution for their products. Consumers can find Beyond's burgers, sausages, and taco meat in Whole Foods, Kroger, and Safeway grocery stores. They can buy alternative meat burgers from Beyond or Impossible at chains including Red Robin, Burger King, TGI Fridays, and Carl's Jr., as well as at many smaller, local restaurants. Few of these outlets ever offered a tofu burger or anything like it.

Such factors are "making it easier for people to jump into these things," said Dewey Warner, a food-industry analyst at Euromonitor. "It's easier to bring people into the fold," he continued, "when you have more attractive, better tasting items."

Beyond Meat is following the path of plant-based milks

Beyond Meat is also likely to benefit from the trend of people limiting their intake of meat and other animal products, Warner said. For health or environmental reasons, a growing number of consumers have cut back on their meat consumption, even if they haven't become full-on vegans or vegetarians, he said.

The milk and dairy industry could offer a preview of what's to come, he said. Milk consumption in the US has been declining for years, in part due to health and environmental reasons, according to data from the US Department of Agriculture. Meanwhile, sales of plant-based alternative milks, such as those made from soy, rice, and oats, have been booming and now represent more than 10% of the sales of traditional dairy milk, according to figures from Grand View Research and Dairy Farmers of America.

Sales of plant-based milks have "become, definitely, a significant part of the market," Warner said. The big question, he continued, "is whether and when plant-based meat substitutes might achieve a similar status."

Sales of almond and other plant-based milks have become a sizeable portion of the milk market — and started to hamper sales of traditional dairy milk. AP Beyond Meat's early results suggest that could happen sooner than many people realize. The company's sales more than doubled in 2017 from 2016 and grew even faster last year, jumping by a whopping 170% to $88 million.

Company officials are projecting its sales will again more than double this year, rising to more than $210 million. Beyond Meat was well on its way to achieving those results in the first quarter, when its sales more than tripled from the same period a year earlier to $40 million. Helping boost its sales, the company not only revamped its burger this year, but broadened its lineup in 2017 to include simulated sausages. It's also benefited from Brown's insistence that grocery stores sell its products alongside real meat.

"Ethan's stubborn drive to make sure the Beyond Burger was sold in the meat section of US supermarkets turned out to be transformative for the business," said James Joaquin, a managing director of Obvious Ventures, in an email.

Like Bohlen, Obvious saw Beyond Meat's potential early on. Through their Obvious Group company, Twitter founders Ev Williams and Biz Stone, invested in the startup in 2012. Williams' subsequently launched Obvious Ventures made further investments in Beyond Meat.

What prompted Williams and Stone's initial investment was the belief that factory farming of animals was unsustainable and that, as a result, people would reduce their consumption of meat, Joaquin said.

That thesis "still holds true today," he said. "The founding team's vision perfectly aligned with our ... thesis: fund startups that combine profit and purpose to reimagine huge categories."

JPMorgan estimates that Beyond Meat's revenue could reach $5 billion in 15 years, with plant-based meat alternatives from Beyond Meat and other companies capturing a 10% share of the overall meat market.

The company faces a big challenge and increased competition

Still, for all the potential of the alternative meat industry and its business in particular, Beyond Meat faces an enormous challenge in meeting Wall Street's sky-high expectations. And it's not at all clear that it will be able to do it.

One of Beyond's primary rivals is Impossible Foods, whose Impossible Burger is now served at Burger King and other chain restaurants. Michael Thomas/Getty Images While some consumers, particularly in more liberal, urban markets, have been cutting back on their meat and dairy consumption, the company could find a less receptive audience in other, more conservative parts of the country, said Euromonitor's Warner. In rural or less affluent areas, many people see nothing wrong with eating beef or chicken and may be turned off by the idea of eating something that's artificial, he said.

"They're just not sold on it yet," he said.

Another turn off for some consumers could be the price. In the supermarket, Beyond's burgers cost more than— sometimes even twice as much as — regular ground beef patties.

Selection, too, could limit sales. For now, Beyond only offers patties, taco meat, packages of ground beef substitute, and its sausages. It used to offer simulated chicken strips, but doesn't sell them any more. Consumers also won't be able to find anything simulating a ribeye steak or stew meat, much less pork or lamb alternatives.

What's more, Beyond Meat already faces significant and growing competition. Impossible Foods has raised $777 million, including a $300 financing round in May. Its burgers are on the menu at Burger King, the company plans to start offering its products in grocery stores later this year.

Food giant Nestlé announced last month that it will offer a plant-based burger starting this fall. Days later, Tyson Foods, another industry behemoth, announced it will start offering meatless chicken nuggets this summer and this fall will introduce burgers that include both meat and non-meat ingredients.

Beyond Meat's stock fell following both announcements, indicating that even bullish investors recognize that such developments could limit its prospects.

Those kinds of considerations are what led to Abdikarimov's sell rating.

"The market ... underestimates the potential competition in the synthetic meat segment from large players," he said. It also, he continued, "overestimates the scale of penetration of synthetic meat consumption in society."

For his part, Bohlen thinks such concerns are overblown. The meat market is so large — and the potential market for alternative meat products likewise — that there's more than enough room for multiple players to participate and do well, he said. And Brown and his team at Beyond Meat have shown that they are determined to keep improving their company and product, he said.

To him, the Beyond Meat's stock price simply reflects its huge potential.

"I think people, for maybe the first time in public markets history, saw a company that was both deeply convicted and a market where the world was crying for change," Bohlen said. "And it delivered that change in a way that continuously surprises."

Got a tip about Beyond Meat or another startup? Contact this reporter via email at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it., message him on Twitter @troywolv, or send him a secure message through Signal at 415.515.5594. You can also contact Business Insider securely via SecureDrop.

Original author: Troy Wolverton

Continue reading
  35 Hits
Jul
22

Marvel's big movie and TV reveal this weekend was only a taste of its plan to dominate for years to come

The Marvel Cinematic Universe will dominate pop culture and the box office long after "Avengers: Endgame"— and even after its dynamic next wave of titles.

Marvel Studios revealed its movie and TV show slate for the next two years at San Diego Comic-Con on Saturday, which it called "Phase Four." It included anticipated sequels such as "Thor: Love and Thunder," Disney Plus TV series starring fan-favorite characters like Tom Hiddleston's "Loki," and the unexpected introduction of actor Mahershala Ali to the MCU as the vampire hunter Blade.

READ MORE: 'Avengers: Endgame' is expected to pass 'Avatar' as the biggest movie of all time at the global box office

But Marvel still has plenty of surprises up its sleeve, and the MCU's future beyond Phase Four could be even bigger than what it revealed Saturday. Marvel Studios has three release dates already set for 2022, which weren't part of Saturday's Comic-Con panel: February 18, May 6, and July 29.

"Everything Marvel does is so well thought out, planned to the nth degree, and strategically complex, and the Comic-Con announcements are no exception," the Comscore senior media analyst Paul Dergarabedian told Business Insider. "Patience comes to mind when you think of Marvel. Marvel's strategies are thought out in terms of decades, not years."

James Gunn is directing "Guardians 3" once he finishes Warner Bros. and DC's "The Suicide Squad," which comes to theaters in 2021. Gunn's first two "Guardians" movies made a combined $1.6 billion worldwide. Ryan Coogler is returning to direct a sequel to "Black Panther," which earned $1.3 billion worldwide last year.

Marvel Studios president Kevin Feige acknowledged at Comic-Con that a "Captain Marvel" sequel will happen, which is no surprise given that the movie also grossed over $1 billion.

Feige told Collider that Ali's "Blade" is not part of Phase Four, so it will arrive after 2021.

READ MORE: The Marvel Cinematic Universe will enter an uncertain era after 'Avengers: Endgame,' but experts see a path for it to dominate another decade of pop culture

And then there's the X-Men and Fantastic Four, which Disney owns the film rights to after the Fox merger. Feige also acknowledged at Comic-Con that they would be in the MCU's future.

"Whatever we do will be quite different than what's been done before," Feige said of the X-Men.

"I'm extremely excited about those characters, and about bringing Marvel's 'first family' [Fantastic Four] up to the platform and level that they deserve," he told Variety. When asked by Variety whether he's anywhere near to revealing story and casting details, Feige said "no," further signaling that Marvel Studios isn't in any rush to reboot the property. The same could likely be said for the X-Men.

"I think there's a strong argument to be made that the longer the wait, the more anticipation there will be for it," the Boxoffice.com chief analyst Shawn Robbins told Business Insider in April. "It gives these other Fox versions time to settle."

Fans have plenty to look forward to in the franchise's future, and it could continue its unparalleled success for years to come.

"When it comes to Marvel, their style of revealing less and delivering more is a great one, no mater how tough it is on the true fans for whom every piece of information is like a nugget of gold," Dergarabedian said.

Original author: Travis Clark

Continue reading
  24 Hits
Jul
22

Robinhood, the no-fee stock trading app, just announced a giant-size $323 million round of funding, making it worth over $7 billion

The no-fee stock trading app Robinhood announced on Monday that it has raised a $323 million Series E round, moving the startup's valuation to $7.6 billion.

Before this round, Robinhood had been valued at $5.6 billion, after a $363 million raise in May 2018.

The mega-round — which confirms a May report by The Information that the fintech startup was securing more funding — was led by DST, with participation from Ribbit Capital, NEA, Sequoia and Thrive Capital.

Robinhoood may also be planning to raise another round soon, according to The Information, which would potentially balloon the Palo Alto-based startup's valuation to $10 billion.

Robinhood's user numbers reached 6 million by the end of 2018. However, its growth, and its booming valuation, has also introduced new challenges.

Read more: The inside story of how Robinhood, a $6 billion investing app for millennials, blew a huge launch so badly that Congress got involved

Notably, last December, the company was forced to walk back the launch of its high-yield checking and savings account within a day of its initial anouncement. As Business Insider earlier reported, the botched launch resulted from Robinhood never contacting the proper authorities to ensure the accounts would indeed be insured — a decision multiple sources told us was a deliberate one.

Original author: Nick Bastone

Continue reading
  34 Hits
Jul
22

Marvel's 'Shang-Chi' movie could be another huge win for Disney at the Chinese box office, and shows the MCU's focus on diversity

The Marvel Cinematic Universe has no problem dominating the box office across the globe, and it's Disney's most valuable property in a rapidly growing theatrical market: China.

"As the second biggest movie market in the world, China represents a land of opportunity," the Comscore senior media analyst Paul Dergarabedian told Business Insider.

"Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings" was one of the projects announced for the next two years at Marvel Studios' San Diego Comic-Con panel on Saturday. Simu Liu, a Canadian actor born in China, will portray the title character, who is known in the comics as the "master of king-fu" and is the first Asian superhero to headline a Marvel movie.

READ MORE: Marvel will continue to dominate with its next wave of movies and TV shows, but 'Phase 5' could be even bigger

Marvel is already huge in China, where "Avengers: Endgame" grossed more in a week than all of Disney's "Star Wars" movies since 2015's "The Force Awakens" did combined. "Spider-Man: Far From Home" has earned $192 million there.

"Shang-Chi" could further reflect the franchise's popularity in the region, which is projected to surpass the US as the world's box-office leader by 2022, according to a November report by Ampere Analysis.

"As part of Marvel's strategy, 'Shang-Chi' is a perfect reflection of the studio's diversity-embracing world view," Dergarabedian said. "Given the massive success of their films in this all-important movie market, this is a really smart move."

Marvel Studios president Kevin Feige has said that diversity will be a priority in the MCU's future. "Black Panther," which featured a predominantly black cast, made $1.3 billion worldwide. "Captain Marvel," the franchise's first solo movie starring a female character, also grossed over $1 billion.

"You need new challenges and perspectives," Matthew Ball, a venture capitalist and former Amazon Studios executive who contributes to the media-analysis website Redef, told Business Insider in April. "Their embrace of different storytelling and characters will help attract more talent. When you're putting out 30 movies, you never want it to feel like it's become a unit or a cog."

"Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings" comes to theaters February 12, 2021 in the US (a China release date hasn't yet been announced).

Original author: Travis Clark

Continue reading
  42 Hits
Jul
22

How to fix a frozen iPhone in 3 simple ways

If your iPhone has a frozen screen - in other words, it does not respond when you touch it - all hope is not lost. A frozen iPhone can often be easily fixed.

Check out the products mentioned in this article:

iPhone Xs (From $729 at Apple)

How to fix a frozen iPhone

Of course, it's always possible that there is a serious problem with your iPhone, so if these troubleshooting steps don't work, the next step might be to contact Apple support.

Charge your iPhone

It's possible that charging your phone for a short time can revive it. For the best results, plug your phone directly into a power adapter - don't charge it wirelessly or plug it into a computer's USB port. Let it charge for at least 30 minutes and then try to use it again.

Charging your frozen iPhone can sometimes solve the problem. Dave Johnson/Business Insider

Restart or force-restart your iPhone

If your iPhone still isn't responsive, try to restart your phone by pressing the appropriate button presses for your iPhone model. If that has no effect, then you can try to force-restart your phone.

For complete details on how to restart and force-restart an iPhone, see the article, " How to restart and force-restart any iPhone model."

Try to restart or force-restart an unresponsive iPhone. Dave Johnson/Business Insider

Both the restart and force-restart will not erase any apps or data, so this is safe to do even without a recent backup.

Troubleshoot your iPhone if it freezes while restarting

If your iPhone successfully restarts but can't get past the Apple logo, then you should connect your iPhone to a computer with iTunes installed and try some additional troubleshooting steps.

1. Start iTunes on the computer.

2. Put your iPhone in recovery mode. The procedure for doing this depends upon which model iPhone you own:

If you have an iPhone 8 or later, press and hold the Power button and one of the volume buttons until you see the option to turn off your iPhone. Drag the slider to turn it off. While holding the Power button on the iPhone, connect your iPhone to your computer with a USB connection cable. Keep holding the Power button until you see the recovery mode screen.

Hold the correct keys for your particular iPhone model to put it in recovery mode. Dave Johnson/Business Insider

If you have an iPhone 7 or iPhone 7 Plus, press and hold the Power button until you see the option to turn off your iPhone. Drag the slider to turn it off. While holding the Volume Down button on the iPhone, connect the iPhone to your computer with a USB connection cable. Keep holding the Volume Down button until you see the recovery mode screen. If you have an iPhone 6s or older, press and hold the Power button until you see the option to turn off your iPhone. Drag the slider to turn off your phone. While holding the Home button, connect your phone to your computer with a USB connection cable. Keep holding the Home button until you see the recovery mode screen.

3. When you see the option to restore or update your iPhone on your computer, click "Update." iTunes will update the phone without deleting your apps and data.

iTunes can try to fix your iPhone by updating the operating system, fixing potentially corrupted files in the process. Dave Johnson/Business Insider

Contact Apple support

If you still have had no luck reviving your frozen iPhone, you should contact Apple support.

Original author: Dave Johnson

Continue reading
  41 Hits
Oct
12

The Expanse

Starbucks has a new deal with a tech startup that previously operated restaurants with zero human interaction.

On Monday, Starbucks announced it is taking an equity stake in restaurant tech company Brightloom. Starbucks has granted Brightloom a license for elements of the coffee giant's software in exchange for an equity stake in the startup — which was called Eatsa until it announced its rebranding on Monday — and a seat on its board of directors.

"It really is about the opportunity to change an entire industry. ... Any restaurant brand now realizes that for them to be in the game, it's no longer a 'nice to have it' — they have to have a robust digital platform," Brightloom CEO Adam Brotman told Business Insider.

Brightloom's initial work with Starbucks will focus on providing software for the company's license partners around the world.

Digital has been a major sales driver and focus at Starbucks over the last decade. However, international locations still lack the capabilities of company-owned stores in the US. Currently, fewer than half of the more than 80 countries that Starbucks operates in have access to the chain's mobile app. Only eight countries allow customers to order and pay via app.

Two international franchisees, Alsea and Alshaya, are part of Brightloom's most recent $30 million Series B funding round. The round, also announced on Monday, was led by Tao Capital Partners and Valor Equity Partners.

In March, Starbucks announced a $100 million investment in Valor Siren Ventures (VSV), a new fund managed by Valor Equity Partners and focused on food and retail startups. At the time, Starbucks said that it would also explore "direct commercial arrangements" with startups that VSV invests in.

Brightloom, then Eatsa, was founded in 2015. At the time, the company operated a chain of restaurants where customers did not have to interact with any employees. Eatsa functioned essentially like a vending machine or a high-tech automat, with customers ordering via kiosk and meals appearing in cubbies without the need for employee interaction.

Customers ordering via kiosk at Eatsa. Katie Canales/Business Insider

At its peak, there were Eatsa locations in San Francisco, New York City, and Washington, DC. In 2018, the company closed the final two Eatsa locations to focus on restaurant technology and software.

Read more: We visited a restaurant that's powered by machines instead of people — here's what it's like

Brotman, who previously served as a Starbucks executive from 2009 to 2018, joined the company in April after being approached by Jon Shulkin, the executive chairman of Brightloom, and Starbucks CEO Kevin Johnson.

"They confided to me that they were exploring a relationship to do something really interesting and historic around taking the Starbucks digital flywheel technology and combining it with what Brightloom has, creating the world's first end-to-end digital flywheel platform. ... It was an opportunity I couldn't pass up," Brotman said.

While Brightloom's immediate focus will be on Starbucks franchise partners, the company plans to offer services to all types of restaurants.

Original author: Kate Taylor

Continue reading
  32 Hits
Jul
22

Thought Leaders in Cloud Computing: Feyzi Fatehi, CEO of Corent Technologies (Part 1) - Sramana Mitra

Feyzi has built technology that enables legacy applications to become SaaS-enabled seamlessly and rapidly. Excellent thought leadership. Sramana Mitra: Let’s start by introducing our audience to...

___

Original author: Sramana Mitra

Continue reading
  31 Hits
Jul
22

IBM Counts on Red Hat for Cloud Growth - Sramana Mitra

Earlier this week, IBM (NYSE: IBM) announced its second quarter results that saw improvement in its Cloud metrics. But the increase in Cloud revenues could not offset the decline in its legacy...

___

Original author: MitraSramana

Continue reading
  25 Hits
Jul
22

Thought Leaders in Healthcare IT: HealthGrid CEO and Serial Digital Health Entrepreneur Raj Toleti (Part 3) - Sramana Mitra

Sramana Mitra: You are no longer going to integrate with Epic and the others? You’re just going to focus on Allscripts? Raj Toleti: No. 80% of my customers before Allscripts acquired us were...

___

Original author: Sramana Mitra

Continue reading
  21 Hits
Jul
21

Catching Up On Readings: RPA Software 2019 - Sramana Mitra

This report from Gartner says that Robotic process automation (RPA) software revenue grew 63.1% in 2018 to $846 million, making it the fastest-growing segment of the global enterprise software...

___

Original author: jyotsna popuri

Continue reading
  73 Hits
Jul
21

Thought Leaders in Healthcare IT: HealthGrid CEO and Serial Digital Health Entrepreneur Raj Toleti (Part 2) - Sramana Mitra

Sramana Mitra: To achieve what you’re talking about, you must have had to interact with some of the existing systems. I live in Menlo Park, California. The two medical systems that our family...

___

Original author: Sramana Mitra

Continue reading
  68 Hits
Jul
21

Netflix's biggest challenges in the US and internationally are bubbling to the surface (NFLX)

The threats facing Netflix are bubbling to the surface after a disappointing earnings report on Wednesday.

Netflix fell short of expectations for subscriber growth globally, and lost subscribers in the US for the first time in eight years. The company also lost $16 billion in market value, bring its market value to around $140 billion at the close of trading on Friday, as some investors fled following the weak report.

It's too early to say whether Netflix's bad quarter was a minor setback during a normally difficult time of the year, or a sign of a more persistent trend. But the report did shed light on the biggest challenges that lie ahead for the streaming-TV giant.

Netflix is bracing itself for a tidal wave of new competition in the US, including services like Disney Plus and HBO Max, which eventually plan to roll out around the world as well. The increasingly competitive landscape may make it harder for Netflix to continue raising prices the way it has.

Read more about the threats to Netflix's pricing power: Netflix could be forced to rethink its pricing strategy as new competitors like Disney Plus and HBO Max launch

As Netflix approaches a plateau in the US, it'll continue looking overseas to make up that subscriber growth. The company announced on Wednesday that it will be rolling out a cheaper, mobile-only plan in India during the third quarter, following months of tests there.

See how Netflix is doing in pivotal international markets now: Exclusive data predicted Netflix's weakness in key markets before its huge subscriber miss, and could hold clues about future growth

Down the line, Netflix may have to consider other sources of revenue besides subscriber fees. For now, the company made it abundantly clear that it has no plans to get into the advertising business.

Read more about how Netflix views advertising: Netflix calls speculation that it's moving into selling advertising 'false'

Netflix is relying on its original movies and shows, like "Stranger Things," to draw in new subscribers. With more competition for viewers' attention, the streaming company is ramping up partnerships with brands like Coca-Cola and Nike to build buzz for some of its biggest shows outside of its platform.

Check out Netflix's explanation of how it thinks about brand deals: Netflix doesn't want to 'get distracted' by trying to make money directly from deals with brands like Coca-Cola and Nike

Partnerships, in general, will be pivotal to Netflix's continue growth around the world. Investors have seen deals with pay-TV providers like Comcast and AT&T in the US, and wireless and internet operators overseas as a strong sign that Netflix can grow beyond its core subscriber base.

Read more on how Netflix is growing through partnerships: How Netflix is using companies like Comcast and T-Mobile to drive its next phase of growth

Original author: Ashley Rodriguez

Continue reading
  103 Hits
Jul
21

'Avengers: Endgame' is expected to pass 'Avatar' as the biggest movie of all time at the global box office

"Avengers: Endgame" is expected to surpass James Cameron's "Avatar" this weekend and snag the record for the biggest global box-office gross of all time, Marvel Studios president Kevin Feige announced on Saturday at San Diego Comic-Con.

"Avatar" held the record for a decade with $2.79 billion, and it seemed out of "Endgame's" reach before Disney rereleased the movie last month. "Endgame" was only $500,000 behind "Avatar" as of Friday, and will top it by the end of the weekend, according to The Hollywood Reporter.

Read more: 'The Lion King' is on its way to beating a box-office record held by the 'Harry Potter' finale

"Of course, even with the passage of a decade, the impact of James Cameron's Avatar remains as powerful as ever, and the astonishing achievements of both of these films are ongoing proof of the power of movies to move people and bring them together in a shared experience," Walt Disney Studios cochairman Alan Horn said in a statement (via THR). "The talented filmmakers behind these worlds have much more in store, and we look forward to the future of both the Marvel Cinematic Universe and Pandora."

Disney, which owns Marvel Studios, also owns the "Avatar" franchise after this year's Disney-Fox merger. The studio will release four sequels in December 2021, 2023, 2025, 2027.

"Endgame" broke plenty of records on its way to the top, including the biggest domestic box-office opening of all time with $357 million in April. But "Star Wars: The Force Awakens" remains the highest-grossing movie of all time domestically (before adjusting for inflation) with $936 million compared to "Endgame's" $853 million.

Original author: Travis Clark

Continue reading
  119 Hits
Jul
20

Amazon's revival of the hit sci-fi series 'The Expanse' will debut in December

Amazon revealed the release date for its revival of the sci-fi series "The Expanse" on Saturday, and it released the first clip.

"The Expanse" will return December 13 for its fourth season exclusively on Amazon Prime Video where the first three seasons are already available to watch. It's based on the sci-fi book series by James S.A. Corey. Season four is expected to focus on the fourth book in the series, "Cibola Burn."

Read more: 6 fan-favorite TV shows that were canceled then saved by another network — and some that are still waiting

The show's original network Syfy canceled the show last May, but it was quickly picked up that same month by Amazon for season four.

Reports at the time indicated that ratings factored into its cancellation, as Syfy only owned first-run linear rights to the show in the US, according to Deadline and The Wrap. That put extra pressure on the show to perform well as it aired live in its original time slot.

Showrunner Naren Shankar told IGN in an interview published Wednesday that streaming offers the show more freedom.

"We're no longer bound by the archaic content, language, and runtime restrictions you're constantly forced to deal with on broadcast and basic cable," Shankar said. "The shows on Amazon Prime speak for themselves: this is a platform that values complex, layered storytelling, and we're thrilled to be on it — it's the perfect home for 'The Expanse.'"

"The Expanse" is critically acclaimed, with a 90% critic score on Rotten Tomatoes. For season three, Indiewire wrote that it's "undeniably confident about the story it's telling, and more importantly the kind of stories it wants to tell."

The first clip from season four is below:

Original author: Travis Clark

Continue reading
  89 Hits
Jul
20

Uber and Lyft drivers reveal the biggest differences they've noticed between the 2 ride-hailing giants (UBER, LYFT)

Uber and Lyft do basically the same thing.

Sure, one is pink and the other is black; one is global while the other is focused only on the US and Canada; and one has plans for flying taxis while the other doesn't. But when it comes to getting from point-A to point-B, there's not much difference.

That's good for drivers, a massive fraction of which drive for both Uber and Lyft (and even for other smaller companies in markets large enough to have competitors like Via).

Most of the time, the experience on the competing apps is roughly the same. But after hundreds if not thousands of rides, drivers start to notice the little differences. In many cases, these vary from market to market.

Business Insider spoke to 10 drivers about their experiences. Here's what they see as the biggest differences between the two largest ride-hailing companies:

Original author: Graham Rapier

Continue reading
  41 Hits
Jul
20

Quentin Tarantino's 'Once Upon a Time… in Hollywood' has added an end credit scene since its premiere

Since Quentin Tarantino world premiered his latest movie, "Once Upon a Time… in Hollywood," at the Cannes Film Festival in May, many have wondered whether the auteur would mess around with the movie in the weeks before its theatrical release by Sony on July 26.

According to the studio's chairman, Tom Rothman, he did.

"There's an end credit sequence now," Rotham revealed to Business Insider. "That wasn't in Cannes. So stick around after the credits. And there's one tiny section added, a visual effects sequence that wasn't finished in time for Cannes. So the run time is maybe a minute or something longer. But it basically is the same movie that was at Cannes."

Business Insider has seen the movie, but we're not going to spoil it for you. A more detailed post on the two things Rotham is describing will come after the movie opens.

The last time Quentin Tarantino put a scene after the end credits of one of his movies was 2012's "Django Unchained." The Weinstein Company But what's fascinating to point out here about Rothman's insight is that Tarantino has added an end credit scene. It's not something the Oscar winner has done often. The last time was for 2012's "Django Unchained," where a quick line is delivered by one of the slaves Django frees earlier in the movie. Previous to that, flashes of actress screen tests and bloopers appear throughout the end credits of the 2007 standalone release of "Death Proof" (not the segment in "Grindhouse").

Read more: All the details of Quentin Tarantino's new movie, which stars Brad Pitt, Leonardo DiCaprio, and Margot Robbie

For a movie like "Once Upon a Time... in Hollywood," which stars Leonardo DiCaprio, Brad Pitt, and Margot Robbie, the end credit scene is a nice touch. The tone it has is perfect for a movie that is darkly comedic and celebrates a time long forgotten.

See for yourself when the movie opens on July 26.

Original author: Jason Guerrasio

Continue reading
  42 Hits