May
09

The top 9 shows on Netflix and other streaming services this week

Every week, Parrot Analytics provides Business Insider with a list of the nine most in-demand original TV shows on streaming services in the US.This week includes "The Midnight Gospel," a surprise animated hit from Netflix. Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

Netflix's new animated series, "The Midnight Gospel," is a surprise hit and gaining in audience demand while the one-time sensation, "Tiger King," dramatically dipped to the point where it's not among this week's most in-demand streaming originals. 

Every week, Parrot Analytics provides Business Insider with a list of the nine most in-demand TV shows on streaming services in the US.

The data is based on "demand expressions," Parrot Analytics' globally standardized TV-demand measurement unit. Audience demand reflects the desire, engagement, and viewership weighted by importance, so a stream or a download is a higher expression of demand than a "like" or a comment on social media, for instance.

Disney Plus' final season of "Star Wars: The Clone Wars" dramatically surged in demand this week after the series finale debuted on May 4, otherwise known as "Star Wars" Day.

But last week's newcomers, Apple TV Plus' "Defending Jacob" and Hulu's "Little Fires Everywhere," disappeared this week. 

Below are this week's nine most popular original shows on Netflix and other streaming services:

Original author: Travis Clark

Continue reading
  29 Hits
Dec
19

The Wing gets $75M from Sequoia, Airbnb

Millions of people have quickly had to adapt to working from home during the pandemic, leading some to scramble to look presentable over video chats with colleagues.One strategy workers have used is the purchase of a ring light, a product that can be used in your video set-up to to improve lighting of your face on-camera.Right lights have already been popular buys for influencers, vloggers, and TikTok creators who adopt various tools to produce professional-quality videos uploaded online.Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

The ring light is beloved by YouTubers and aspiring TikTok creators for casting a flattering, even glow across anyone's face. Now, ring lights are seeing widespread interest among people tuning into Zoom work calls from their poorly lit homes during the pandemic.

Video conferencing software has exponentially grown in use in recent months, and employees now find themselves in situations online creators have been dealing with for years: Looking their best in front of the camera while in the comfort of their own homes.

Lockdown orders have coincided with a recent surge of interest in ring lights, especially in the U.S. where work-from-home rolled out to non-essential employees starting in early March. Twitter users have been sharing with followers their recent ring light purchases for classes, work meetings, and happy hours taking place over Zoom and FaceTime.

Ring light set-ups provide the benefits of a professional photo studio without the cost, casting your face in a shadow-free, flattering hue while you're in front of the camera. Ring lights on Amazon go for between $60 and $150, depending on how powerful of a light or complicated of a set-up you want. Many of these ring-lights come with tripods and pieces to hold your phone or camera.

Although newly work-from-home employees may just be discovering ring lights for the first time, they've long been a trick for creators whose bedrooms have doubled as their studios. While ring lights have been especially vital for makeup tutorials and beauty vloggers, they've since become commonplace to set-ups for young people starting out on YouTube and TikTok. Now, they're just one of the products with appearance-adjusting features catered to influencers, such as specific camera models that come with skin-smoothing filters.

As dates for returning to the office continue to get pushed back at some companies, sales will likely continue to rise for ring lights. However, it's probably on the more expensive side of simple tips and tricks to implement to look for presentable on your video calls. For those that don't want to splash out cash for a ring light, Zoom has a little-known filter on its platform that users can apply to give their faces a softer look and minimize imperfections. The "touch up my appearance" can be turned on directly within the Zoom app (you can find the steps for activating it on Business Insider).

Original author: Paige Leskin

Continue reading
  28 Hits
Jan
01

Welcome to 2019

 

 

Welcome to Wall Street Insider, where we take you behind the scenes of the finance team's biggest scoops and deep dives from the past week. 

If you aren't yet a subscriber to Wall Street Insider, you can sign up here.

For certain corners of Wall Street, dealmaking is happening faster than ever. While M&A activity has plunged, bankers primed to help companies navigate the financial fallout, especially restructuring and debt-raising specialists, have been crushed with demand.

Alex Morrell took a look at how top bankers — known for putting in long hours curating a white-glove experience for clients — are finding they can still provide service from afar. It turns out, when you take away the time spent at airports and restaurants, and when Zoom calls can be arranged in minutes, things can move at lightning speed. 

Read the full story here: 

Meanwhile, it's been a tale of two approaches to job cuts in recent days. On Tuesday, Airbnb CEO and cofounder Brian Chesky emailed staff about sweeping layoffs that were impacting 1,900 people, highlighting where the company will focus in the future and what exit packages employees should expect. You can read the full email here. 

Over at WeWork, things have been rolling out gradually. Meghan Morris and Dakin Campbell wrote about a leaked WeWork document that revealed a huge reorg under way for people who manage its buildings. Here's how the new structure works — and the complex process for staff to save their jobs. Alex Nicoll and Meghan also reported that Flatiron School has slashed at least 100 jobs, building on their scoop last week that WeWork started making cuts in several key departments, with IT alone losing some 200 jobs. 

Keep reading for a preview of changes in store for Bloomberg terminals, a rundown of Blackstone's giant commercial real estate business, and a look at how PIMCO stocked up with $5.5 billion for private-credit strategies since the beginning of the year.

Have a safe and healthy weekend, 

Meredith 

Inside Blackstone's massive CRE business

Blackstone

Blackstone is the largest commercial real-estate investor in the world, with $160 billion in investor capital. Alex Nicoll chatted with Blackstone real estate's three heads of acquisition, and its head of debt origination, to learn more about their business. 

They spoke about some of their most interesting deals, and why Blackstone's global scale and thematic investing style is a huge advantage. 

Read the full story here: 

A Facebook office deal is a key test 

The Facebook office in New York in 2011. Eduardo Munoz/Reuters

The coronavirus crisis has thrown into question whether tenants will ever occupy office space the same way again as companies and workforces around the world grow accustomed to remote work.

Facebook has been in negotiations for months to lease over 700,000 square feet at the Farley Building on Manhattan's West Side. The rapid expansion of tech in recent years has propelled the city's office market, and Dan Geiger spoke with real-estate execs who laid out why Facebook's deal is a key barometer. 

Read the full story here:

Coming soon to a terminal near you

Margin Call

As remote work becomes a long-term reality, a technology staple of Wall Street is in store for a makeover. Mark Flatman, global head of core terminal at Bloomberg, told Dan DeFrancesco that the financial technology giant is considering ways to revamp its ubiquitous terminal.

One particular area of focus for Flatman and his team has been screen space, as many customers aren't working with the typical four-screen display. Another area that has gotten increased attention is mobile, where usage has jumped. 

Read the full story here: 

A new pile of cash for private credit

Crystal Cox/Business Insider

Industry observers expect a surge in interest in specialized credit shops that have proven to be winners in distressed situations. And Bradley Saacks revealed how PIMCO has tapped into that demand, with sources saying that the fixed-income giant has raised $5.5 billion in private-credit strategies since the beginning of the year.

PIMCO's nearly $4 billion Tactical Opportunities fund lost roughly 15% in March, but was able to avoid forced selling, sources tell Business Insider, and even added to positions in the month. That fund alone has raised $250 million — and is just one of several private-credit funds that PIMCO has raised money for.

Read the full story here: 

A tax break for big companies with heavy debt

The U.S. Capitol is seen from the Russell Senate Office Building on Capitol Hill. AP Photo/Patrick Semansky As Michael Rapoport writes, a tax break for debt-ladened companies, part of the CARES Act enacted in March, cuts their tax bills by allowing them to deduct more of the interest they pay on their debt. 

But some tax experts are concerned that the tax break is too indiscriminate: In addition to helping troubled companies, they say, boosting tax deductions on interest payments is going to give a lift to companies that aren't being hurt by the pandemic, or whose problems have nothing to do with the coronavirus. 

Read the full story here:

On the move

Dakin Campbell reported that Goldman Sachs has hired the distressed-situations and bankruptcy expert Kurt Hoffman as a managing director in a business that handles one-off loans for clients. The move comes just as industries battered by the economic shutdown are in need of emergency financing. 

Investing and hedge funds

Careers

Real estate 

Fintech and e-commerce

 

Original author: Meredith Mazzilli

Continue reading
  25 Hits
Jan
02

1Mby1M Virtual Accelerator Investor Forum: With Krishna Srinivasan of LiveOak Venture Partners (Part 1) - Sramana Mitra

Oracle's bid to become a bigger player in the cloud has become more aggressive in the COVID-19 crisis, highlighted by a new partnership with Zoom.The tech giant is up against stronger rivals led by Amazon, Microsoft and Google, but the need for more cloud capacity sparked by the sudden pivot to remote work has created opportunities for the Silicon Valley behemoth.Here are the 10 Oracle executives who are playing key roles in CEO Safra Catz and founder Larry Ellison bold cloud offensive.Click here for more BI Prime stories.

Oracle has been through some jarring changes in the last seven months. 

The tech giant lost a well-regarded and experienced co-CEO when Mark Hurd died in October after taking leave for health reasons, leaving Safra Catz as the solo CEO. Now, like other major tech companies, Oracle is grappling with the impact of the coronavirus crisis.

But Oracle has been through tough times in its 43-year history. In fact, the Silicon Valley giant has been known to seize opportunities during rough spots. It's already seen some success during this crisis, too: Oracle just scored a big win when videoconferencing company Zoom — suddenly facing a surge in demand — chose to expand on Oracle Cloud, instead of other platforms like top cloud provider Amazon. Oracle is generally considered a smaller player in the cloud wars, behind giants Amazon, Microsoft, Google, and Alibaba.

Yes, Oracle still has a long way to go to match its rivals' reach, but its strategy of expanding its capacity by building more data centers seems to be paying off, IDC President Crawford Del Prete told Business Insider.

That increased capacity and Oracle's "world class" applications are key in the cloud words, Del Prete said: "Oracle is one of the few companies able to deliver both at scale in order to compete."

While Catz and founder, executive chairman, and chief technology officer Larry Ellison the lead company, they're also relying on key top executives, including cloud veterans from rival Amazon, to advance Oracle's cloud strategy. 

Nearly all are white men, something Oracle has criticized for in the past: Over 30 members of Congress slammed the company late last year about the lack of diversity in its leadership team and on its board.

Meet the 10 top executives playing important roles in Oracle's cloud offensive:

Original author: Benjamin Pimentel

Continue reading
  24 Hits
Jan
07

For SoftBank, no majority stake in WeWork as it scales down talks from a new $16 billion investment to $2 billion

Facebook is taking a harder line on misinformation related to coronavirus than it has on other health topics in the past.This decision may increase the pressure on the company to act more decisively against other forms of harmful falsehoods that spread on its social networks.Facebook is banning events that promote flouting lockdown protests, and is removing the conspiracy theory video "Plandemic."But false claims that vaccines are dangerous still proliferate on Facebook — even though they contribute to the deaths of children.

Amid the pandemic, Facebook is taking a harder line on misinformation than it has in the past. That decision may come back to haunt it.

As coronavirus has wreaked havoc across the globe, forcing lockdowns and disrupting economies, false information and hoaxes have spread like wildfire on social media. Miracle cures, intentional disinformation about government policies, and wild claims that Bill Gates orchestrated the entire health crisis abound.

In the past, Facebook has been heavily criticised for failing to take action to stop its platform being used to facilitate the spread of misinformation. To be sure, coronavirus falsehoods are still easily found on Facebook — but the company has taken more decisive action than in previous years:

But Facebook's actions to combat COVID-19 misinformation may backfire — in the sense that it has the potential to dramatically increase pressure on the company to take stronger action against other forms of misinformation.

The company has long struggled with how to handle fake news and hoaxes; historically, its approach is not to delete them, but to try to artificially stifle their reach via algorithmic tweaks. Despite this, pseudoscience, anti-government conspiracy theories, and other falsehoods still abound on the social network.

Facebook has now demonstrated that it is willing to take more decisive action on misinformation, when the stakes are high enough. Its critics may subsequently ask why it is so reticent to combat the issue when it causes harm in other areas — particularly around other medical misinformation.

LoadingSomething is loading.

One expected defence for Facebook? That it is focused on taking down content that causes "imminent harm," and while COVID-19 misinformation falls into that category, lots of other sorts of falsehoods don't.

However, using "imminence" as the barometer of acceptability is dubious: Vaccine denialism directly results in the deaths of babies and children. That this harm isn't "imminent" doesn't make it any less dangerous — but, for now, such material is freely posted on Facebook.

Far-right conspiracy theories like Pizzagate, and more recent, Qanon, have also spread on Facebook — stoking baseless fears of shadowy cabals secretly controlling the government. These theories don't intrinsically incite harm, but have been linked to multiple acts of violence, from a Pizzagate believer firing his weapon in a pizza parlour to the Qanon-linked killing of a Gambino crime boss. (Earlier this week, Facebook did take down some popular QAnon pages — but for breaking its rules on fake profiles, rather than disinformation.)

And Facebook is still full of groups rallying against 5G technology, making evidence-free claims about its health effects (and now, sometimes linking it to coronavirus in a messy web). These posts exist on a continuum, with believers at the extreme end attempting to burn down radio towers and assault technicians; Facebook does take down such incitements to violence, but the more general fearmongering that can act as a gateway to more extreme action remains.

This week, Facebook announced the first 20 members of its Oversight Board — a "Supreme Court"-style entity that will review reports from users make rulings as to what objectionable content is and isn't allowed on Facebook and Instagram, with — in theory — the power to overrule the company. It remains to be seen whether its decisions may affect the company's approach for misinformation, and it still needs to appoint the rest of its members and get up and running.

For now, limits remain in place as to what Facebook will countenance in its fight against coronavirus-specific misinformation.

CEO Mark Zuckerberg said the company would immediately take down posts advertising dangerous false cures to COVID-19, like drinking bleach. It is "obviously going to create imminent harm," he said in March. "That is just in a completely different class of content than the back-and-forth accusations a candidate might make in an election."

But in April, President Donald Trump suggested that people might try injecting a "disinfectant" as a cure, which both has the potential to be extremely harmful, and will not cure coronavirus.

Facebook is not taking down video of his comments.

Do you work at Facebook? Contact Business Insider reporter Rob Price via encrypted messaging app Signal (+1 650-636-6268), encrypted email (This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.), standard email (This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.), Telegram/Wickr/WeChat (robaeprice), or Twitter DM (@robaeprice). We can keep sources anonymous. Use a non-work device to reach out. PR pitches by standard email only, please.

Original author: Rob Price

Continue reading
  24 Hits
Jan
07

Bootstrapping to Exit - Sramana Mitra

Tesla's vehicles are and always have been crammed with great ideas.These range from touchscreen interfaces to innovative battery designs to staggering acceleration.I've driven or experienced every vehicle Tesla has ever sold or intends to sell in the future.Here are all my favorite features, ranked.Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

In about two decades, Tesla has done what everyone in the auto industry thought was impossible: create an all-electric brand that could sell hundreds of thousands of vehicles.

Tesla could have done that in a boring or modest way, developing  the equivalent of an electric VW Beetle.

Instead, Tesla made fantastically compelling cars that are fast, look amazing, and are packed with features.

Here's a rundown of all my favorites, ranked from bottom to top:

Original author: Matthew DeBord

Continue reading
  26 Hits
Jan
07

Daily Crunch: Nvidia breaks with tradition at CES 2019

Dockworkers in Belgium are wearing bracelets to enforce social distancing.The bracelets were already used to detect if someone fell into the water, but now they will sound an alarm if workers get to close to each other.Manufacturers say there is no privacy issue and the bracelets don't track workers' locations, despite concerns.Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

Quarantine and social distancing are going high-tech as countries and companies embrace wearables. In Antwerp, Belgium, dockworkers are instructed to wear bracelets that enforce social distancing rules while they work.

Europe, where more than 100,000 people have died from COVID-19, is slowly starting to reopen in some places. Stay at home orders are expiring in many countries, while nonessential travel has stopped across the EU, and countries look towards the summer to anticipate what kind of travel might be possible. 

People are beginning to go back to work, which in some sectors means inevitable close contact, especially in many essential jobs. Social distancing bracelets in Belgium are one idea bing tested to see what the future of work might look like after coronavirus.

Here's how it works. 

Original author: Mary Meisenzahl

Continue reading
  20 Hits
Jan
07

414th 1Mby1M Entrepreneurship Podcast With George Spencer, Seyen Capital - Sramana Mitra

The coronavirus crisis has proved that companies can remain productive over Zoom. Remote work will become more common than ever, which will mean fewer people head to the office. Office designs will change to be centered around collaborative work, and there could be a revival of the suburban office. To read more stories on the future of the office, click here.

Coronavirus has changed the office forever.

The dense, urban, open-floor plan office has been the defining feature of offices over the last 20 years, with tightly packed flexible-office and coworking locations from companies like WeWork the biggest exemplars of the trend. A recent report by JLL found that up to 70% of all office spaces in the first quarter of 2020 were mostly or partially open floor offices. 

These sorts of offices are nightmares for the transmission of a virus that feeds on density, and they may end up as artifacts of the pre-pandemic start of the 21st century. Remote work, rumored to be waiting in the wings to kill the traditional office since the invention of the fax machine, has finally had its day. 

CEOs, like James Gorman at Morgan Stanley and Jes Staley at Barclays, have questioned the need for their pre-virus office square footage. They've had success running their businesses totally remotely, so why not save a couple of bucks on one of their biggest costs.

But the office won't die altogether. Instead, as the workplace has countless times before, it will evolve.

National Archives The evolution will begin with the short-term solutions that will make offices safe before a coronavirus vaccine. These changes will act like a bridge to the future of the workplace: some of these short-term changes will stick and some will eventually look as quaint as this photo of a masked-typist clacking away on a typewriter during the Spanish Influenza epidemic. 

The long-term evolution of the office will be decided in the coming months and years, as companies rethink their business plans to be flexible and resilient to retain productivity in a crisis.

While the loss of life and psychological pain of the pandemic, and the economic crisis following in its wake, are staggering, businesses are seeing it as an opportunity to make foundational changes to how and where they operate.

The choices that companies make now will decide what the office looks like in five years.  

Read more: The coronavirus is a 'nuclear bomb' for companies like WeWork. 10 real-estate insiders lay out the future of flex-office, and how employers are preparing now.

Remote work is here to stay

Simon Dawson/REUTERS; Samantha Lee/Business Insider

We're in the midst of the largest work-from-home experiment ever, which will likely be the beginning of a "paradigm shift" towards remote work. Executives and workers alike have seen first hand that business operations can continue online. 

A recent Colliers survey found that 4 in 5 employees hope to work remotely at least once a week after the coronavirus crisis ends. A Gartner survey this March found that 74% of 317 CFOs, half of which oversee the financials of companies with revenue above $1 billion, plan on shifting some employees to permanent remote work. 

Some organizations have already changed their remote work guidelines: Zillow's 5,000 employees will be able to work remotely at their discretion through the end of the year. Others, like Refinitiv, Tradeweb, Nationwide, and the aforementioned Barclays and Morgan Stanley, are signaling that their guidelines will also change. 

"We used to joke about meetings that could have been emails, but now we'll wonder why we can't just do them in our pajamas with our pets on video conference," Nancy Dubuc, Vice Media Group CEO, told Business Insider. "There's a balance of course because some work is actually more productive and better done in person, but it will never need to be 5 days a week, all day every day again."

Vice cofounder Shane Smith with Vice CEO Nancy Dubuc. Craig Barritt/Getty Images for VICE Media

When these companies begin to shift their business models to accommodate remote work, the office will change. They may cut back on individual workspaces and increase investment in collaborative spaces, turning the office into a cultural and training hub.

"This (more remote work) means adapting some of the office structure to help this way of working succeed, with even more video facilities and more flexible group spaces for brainstorming sessions," Luke Ellis, CEO of investment manager Man Group, told Business Insider. 

Most leaders aren't considering going fully remote. Instead, they're going to use office space differently, and could potentially even cut back on space. PR giant BCW Global's CEO Donna Imperato is considering taking less office space as more employees work remotely, for example.

"I'm not sure we'll go back to office seating," she said. "We won't need as much real estate because more people will start working from home. That's a cost saving, and they become more productive." 

Read more: The CEO of the third-biggest PR firm BCW lays out how the company will outperform its peers in a tough year

Arnold Levin, director of strategy for the southwest at leading architecture and design firm Gensler, told Business Insider about one health insurance client that had been looking to cut down on their 500,000 square foot office portfolio before the pandemic. Levin produced a plan that utilized desk-hoteling to cut the footprint down to 320,000 square feet, and presented it over a video chat in the midst of the lockdown. 

The CEO told Levin that their workforce had been so effective at working remotely that they actually would prefer to cut back on an all individual workspace in their offices. They're now planning to operate in one 80,000 square foot office building, using it for training, large meetings, and to entertain clients. 

Gensler

Read more: What to expect when you're back in the office: 7 real-estate experts break down what the transition will look like, and why the workplace may never be the same

Why remote work won't kill the office completely

If every company were to shrink their footprint as drastically as Levin's client, the commercial office market would crumble. This is unlikely to happen for a couple of reasons. For one, if less people came into the office, but offices became less dense to make social distancing possible, companies might still need just as much office space. 

"We, like everyone else, have dreams of reducing our real estate footprint," MSCI CEO Henry Fernandez told Business Insider. However, that dream is constrained by the realities of social distancing.

Samantha Lee/Business Insider

"The flipside of that is whatever real estate you occupy, you will consume a lot more of it because we have to social distance," Fernandez said.

A whitepaper by Michael Colacino, president at office space company SquareFoot, walks through the reasons why he thinks that the reduction in office space likely won't approach the roughly 25% decrease that's estimated by some experts.

Executives, already most likely to work remotely before the pandemic, would have to give up their dedicated office space, which is usually much larger than a typical employees. Other employees would have to turn to hot-desks (desks that are on a first-come-first-serve basis) and shared workspaces instead of offices or assigned desks.

Hot-desking would lead to an almost-unsolvable coordination problem: how do you make repeatable schedules that prevent the office from getting too crowded while also making sure that the correct people are in the office for any in-person activities, like trainings or meetings? Hot-desking also requires a large amount of cleaning to prevent spread of the coronavirus.

Without workers going remote full-time, the office space won't be able to shrink much. Colacino's model predicts that space demand will shrink about 5%. Given the long length of leases and the high costs associated with breaking a lease or finding a subletter, this shrinkage will happen over a horizon of years, blunting the impact.

Read more: Major tenants are delaying big leases in as they re-think their office space needs for the post-coronavirus world

How do we make offices safe?

Before the advent of a coronavirus vaccine, the near-term return to the office will require lots of operational and technological changes to prevent spread of the virus. The psychological effects of the crisis, and the reality that global catastrophic events are likely to become more common as a result of climate change, means that these changes won't disappear once the virus becomes a distant memory.

"What is going to be the long-term imprint psychologically on any of us?" Levin from Gensler said. "We wake up in the morning, we hear about the virus and we hear about the death tolls. We go to bed, we hear about the death tolls."  

Offices may not feel safe even after a vaccine, and it will be up to companies to make employees feel safe. After 9/11, office buildings in major cities began to add turnstiles and security desks to prevent potential terrorist attacks, and surveillance increased in pretty much every public space. This sacrifice of privacy for security will happen in the office after coronavirus.

Surveillance in a pre-coronavirus office largely meant the watchful eye of a manager trying to see who is scrolling Instagram at their desk or watching a daytime baseball game in the corner of their computer monitor.

REUTERS/Jorge Silva

After coronavirus, surveillance will include everything from temperature checks at a building entrance to the mandatory installation of contract-tracing applications on an employee's smartphone, all of which are allowed under legal guidance offered by the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission and the Center for Disease Control, according to a Goodwin Procter legal analysis. 

In China, 80% of Class A office buildings are requiring temperature checks at the entrance to the building to prevent the spread of the virus, according to a JLL report. 

Artificial intelligence company Landing AI has developed demo software that uses video to flag inadequate social distancing in the workplace in real time. AI-enabled video surveillance and utilization monitoring sensors are likely to become much more common.  

The limiting factor for a lot of these changes is their cost, magnified by the economic tightening underway right now.  

"(The costs) add insult to injury within the environment we're operating in," Andrew Sucoff, chair of Goodwin Procter's Boston real estate practice.

Read more: Mandatory temperature-taking is largely seen as a critical way to return workers to offices. But some big NYC landlords are worried about its effectiveness.

The return of the suburban office

Some businesses are considering alternating desks or erecting temporary barriers in the short-term. In the long-term, companies are considering everything from erecting walled, private offices to moving to suburban office spaces. 

A forthcoming report by Dr. Victor Calanog, head of commercial real estate economics for Moody's Analytics REIS traces the last time the suburban office came into, and out of vogue.

In the 1980s, with crime at approaching record highs and federal and state aid to city budgets shrinking, there was a professional-class exodus from the city to the suburbs. Corporations followed suit on a slightly delayed time scale, given the length of typical office leases: from 1989 to 1997, suburban market inventory expanded 1.7 times faster than inventory in cities's central business districts. 

An employee walks to Bridgewater Associates' Westport headquarters. Bridgewater Associates

By 1997, suburban office vacancies were 1.8% lower than central business district vacancies, and by 1998, the Building Owners and Managers Association said that the suburban office will be the top real estate investment of the next five to ten years. 

That did not come to pass. City budgets increased, crime fell, and professional workers began to move back to the city. Simultaneously, internet technology and increasing office density lowered demand for office space. The city became the ideal location for office space once again. 

This cycle may repeat itself, with the pandemic replacing crime and budgetary constraints. After 9/11, Morgan Stanley moved employees to offices in Westchester County, New York a suburb outside Manhattan. Before the total coronavirus lockdown, Morgan Stanley moved traders back to the same office again. 

Why is this time different?

The death of the office has been foretold for a while now, but hasn't come to pass.  Dr. Calanog told Business Insider that people have been theorizing the death of the office since the arrivals of the fax machine and the internet.

Levin, from Gensler, told Business Insider that consultants thought the Great Recession would be the catalyst for the future of the office, where "everyone will be like Google." 

Monkey Business Images/Shutterstock

The mood at the time is best summed up by a Rahm Emmanuel catchphrase from 2009, by way of Macchiavelli and a pit stop with Naomi Klein: "Never let a crisis go to waste."

"People had short-lived memories," Levin said. "Some changed, but a vast majority went back to cramming as many people into a space as possible." 

This time is different, says Dr. Calanog, because of the international scope of the change and the duration of the shock, which still has no obvious end date. 

Levin said that, instead of focusing on tactical changes or the ideal model for the future office, he's asking clients deep questions about their goals and principles and the threats to their current business model. 

"The best thing is to avoid clever trends and quick fixes, and have organizations face this new reality," Levin said. 

Levin said the organizations that are using this time to realign their business model to be more adaptable will be the most successful going forward. Any changes they make to their office and workplace should flow from that realignment.

"I think organizations are going to see more of a connection with a need to change their business models and how the workplace connects to that for the first time."

LoadingSomething is loading.
Original author: Alex Nicoll

Continue reading
  39 Hits
Aug
07

eBay Changes India Strategy - Sramana Mitra

Dating apps like Tinder, Bumble, and Hinge have reported increased use amid the coronavirus pandemic, while touting virtual dating alternatives for users instead of meeting up in person.Swaths of users are still encouraging matches to break quarantine to have sex and go on dates, despite social distancing guidelines and fines to comply with them.An illustrator on Instagram has been collecting screenshots of these situations, and told Business Insider that users will brand themselves as "badasses," dispute the effectiveness of isolating, and lash out in anger and hurl abusive language when they're rejected.Spokespeople for Grindr, Tinder and Bumble told Business Insider they've informed users to adhere to social-distancing guidelines, but did not respond to inquiries about actions they're taking against users in places where violating lockdown orders can be against the law.Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

As millions remain confined to their homes to prevent the spread of coronavirus, the desire for human contact and connection has risen dramatically and led some to search for ways to break those social distancing rules.

Popular dating apps — including Tinder, Bumble, and Hinge — have reported significant increases during the outbreak of swiping activity, matches between users, and messages exchanged. It's also led to the introduction of a breed of users who are interested in shirking lockdown orders, and are encouraging their matches to join them in doing the same.

Dating app users have shared stories across social media, and recently with Mashable, about messages they've received from matches who ask them to come over or want to hook up. Artist Samantha Rothenberg, who uses the handle @violetclair on Instagram, has been collecting these screenshots from followers, and told Business Insider she's received close to a thousand of such stories.

"Because of how common it is, I can honestly say that anyone who is on a dating app right now has dealt with this," Rothenberg told Business Insider. "People are horny, and a lot of people are putting that ahead of the risk and the danger."

For dating platforms whose end goal is inherently to bring its millions of users together in real life, the coronavirus outbreak has put them in a curious predicament. Dating apps are forced to balance a desire to keep people on their platform for the sake of business, with a moral responsibility to discourage users to engage in behavior with potential life-or-death implications.

Since the start of the outbreak, apps have rolled out in-app virtual dating options and touted ways users can go on virtual dates. However, the prevalence of users who are trying to meet up in person, as documented by Rothenberg and screenshots across social media, raise questions about whether these dating platforms are doing enough to stymie such behavior in the time of coronavirus.

Screenshots sent to @violetclair from users on dating apps during the pandemic. Samantha Rosenberg

Rothenberg has long collected screenshots of users' horror stories from dating app interactions, which she often will depict in illustrations she posts to her Instagram account. But ever since the pandemic led states to instill lockdown orders starting in March, nearly all of the screenshots she's received have had to do with coronavirus.

These lockdown-violating users fall into a few general categories, according to Rothenberg. There's the users who try to paint themselves as "badasses" for breaking the rules, though Rothenberg says they're more like "a--holes." There are the matches who propose meeting up and, after getting rejected, reverse course to say they're were joking or "testing" you, she says. You'll also encounter the anti-quarantine user, whose reasoning is based on claims about herd immunity and the ineffectiveness of social distancing measures.

The last group is made up of users who react to "no" with anger and verbal abuse, Rothenberg told Business Insider. Women told Mashable recently about encounters with men on dating apps who badgered and harassed them after they turned down in-person meetings, going to the point of gaslighting.

These types of users are what led Rothenberg to launch a petition on Change.org to hold dating apps responsible for enforcing social distancing guidelines during the pandemic. She's also been active about calling out dating apps in her Instagram Stories she posts with screenshots she receives.

"People are angry, they tell me, 'can you believe this, this is disgusting, this is wrong,'" Rothenberg said. "Because I have this platform, I feel I have a bit of a responsibility to put these [stories] out in the open and share, and bring some light into what's going on out there to people who may not know."

In late March, platforms sent out various messages and alerts to their users that Rothenberg documented on Instagram. A message to Bumble users from CEO Whitney Wolfe Herd said: "Please don't meet your Bumble matches IRL for now." Hinge users were told to "stay safe and keep connected."

LoadingSomething is loading.

Tinder, arguably the most well-know dating app, also discouraged users to meet up in a platform-wide message sent March 26.

"We know there's a lot to stay to each other as we all do our best to stay healthy and prevent the spread of the coronavirus," the message from Tinder said. "We hope to be a place for connecting during this challenging time, but it's important to stress that now is not the time to meet IRL with your match."

Samantha Rothenberg

As companies across industries adjust business to stay afloat, dating apps have transitioned to emphasize alternatives to in-person meetups. Although online dating success has long been measured by the amount of conversations that turn to real-life connections, platforms are forced to rethink their strategy as users continue turning to them en masse. A poll conducted by Hinge found that 70% of its users said they were open to going on dates on Zoom, FaceTime, and other video platforms.

Some dating brands have introduced new features amid the pandemic. Hinge launched "Date from Home" in April, where users can indicate to a match they're ready to move their conversation off-app. Plenty of Fish started rolling out a livestreaming feature in March to users in the U.S. to allow matches to go on short virtual dates. Tinder, relatively late to the game, announced this week it was launching a video chat feature by the end of June.

A spokesperson for Match Group — the parent company on Tinder, Hinge, Plenty of Fish, and other dating platforms — told Business Insider that it made updates to its products "to help users better navigate stay-from-home policies and date digitally via phone or video."

Other apps that already enabled video chat and voice call, like The League and Bumble, are pushing these features to their users more than ever. 

But while users on these dating apps are swiping and messaging at new highs, the transition to virtual-only hasn't been as seamless for those on Grindr, the most popular dating app for gay men. Steve, a 26-year-old living in Washington, D.C., told Business Insider that activity on Grindr is "completely dead." He said he doesn't check the app nearly as often any more, but messages he does get on the app are largely from people who say they want to meet up despite the quarantine.

Grindr, like other apps, has attempted to pivot to virtual dating: The platform recently introduced Circles, where groups of up to 20 users can join chats centered around certain topics and interests. However, Steve said he's seen these groups largely dissolve into "all d--k pics."

"I dont think Grindr has the ability to rebrand itself honestly at this point for something other than hookups," Steve said. "They tried to take the opportunity to rebrand itself as something else, and it just right away became sexual."

A Grindr spokesperson told Business Insider it had sent in-app notifications to all users asking them to "refrain from in-person meetings right now."Nonetheless, an app-wide message sent to users — and shared by users on Twitter — made no mention of asking users to social distance. 

For users across these dating apps who encourage the violating of social distancing guidelines, it's unclear how much responsibility platforms have to keep their users' indoors. In some states under lockdown, authorities have doled out fines and even arrested residents found failing to follow at-home guidelines.

Grindr, Bumble and Match Group — the parent company of Tinder, Hinge, Plenty of Fish and others — told Business Insider in statements they have encouraged users to adhere to coronavirus guidelines from the World Health Organization and the Center for Disease Control.

None of the companies responded to Business Insider's requests for comment about whether asking to violate social-distancing guidelines on the platforms is a breach of policy or would garner any ban or suspension on a user.

Original author: Paige Leskin

Continue reading
  24 Hits
Apr
04

Wall Street's new disaster playbook; top restructuring lawyers

Startups are facing what could become the worst economic downturn in several decades, and VCs are begging them to take drastic measures to improve their chances of making it through. 

Most Americans who lived through the 2008 financial crisis will know that a savings stockpile or rainy day fund can mean the difference between surviving and thriving during tough times, but as recent studies have shown, many tech startups and VC firms don't have a similar first-hand experience; many have only known boom times and are now venturing into uncharted waters.

One thing VCs agree on is that startups need to quickly rein in growth plans — ideally as soon as yesterday — and start scrutinizing expenses. Anything nonessential should be cut or suspended indefinitely, headcount should be reduced, and pricey office leases eliminated if possible, all with the goal of extending a startup's "runway."

In Silicon Valley, runway refers to how much cash a startup has on hand to put against its operating expenses. If, for example, a startup has roughly $100,000 in monthly operating expenses and has $1 million in the bank, they are looking at a 10-month runway, assuming revenue stays roughly flat.

In the days before the coronavirus pandemic, a startup's runway dictated when it had to start looking for additional funding. Instead of cutting expenses, the popular solution was to simply put more VC money in the bank. This helped high flying startups like Uber and Airbnb expand at a breakneck pace — VC dollars kept pouring in and the companies remained unprofitable as they chased growth at all costs.

But now, VCs are saying that's no longer an option. Founders Fund general partner Keith Rabois said on a podcast recently that profitability is now being rewarded much more than high-growth. 

For startups that aren't profitable, that means hunkering down and ensuring there are enough reserves to last through the crisis.

So how long does the runway need to be? 

Many VCs that Business Insider has spoken to are advising their startups to have at least 18 months of runway. But some VCs say startups should have upwards of 3 years' of expenses saved up. 

The length of time can vary depending on the startup, one investor told Business Insider, pointing to the startup's age and industry as important factors. An early-stage company with a handful of employees and low-overhead costs might easily stretch a $500,000 seed check, whereas a growth-stage biotech startup with hundreds of employees, expensive hardware, and pricey office space might struggle to make tens of millions of dollars in funding make it through 12 months. Those that can't cut costs will be forced to fundraise with poor terms and risk the dreaded downround. 

"You can always easily dial back up the aggressiveness and risk profile if we get more optimistic visibility, but if you don't take action right away — to preserve capital, cut your burn rate, have fundamentally attractive unit economics, edit the product to make more sense in the new world order — if you don't do those right away, the opportunity to do those things and survive is probably lost forever," Rabois said in the April Talkshow broadcast.

Rabois is in the camp of pessimists, generally speaking, who think the economic downturn will not only drag on through 2020, but could eventually turn into an economic depression the likes of which could rival the Great Depression of the 1930s. He said that his VC peers are starting to rein in the freewheeling deal-making that has defined the last two decades of the Silicon Valley startup ecosystem, and are now treading cautiously. It's time that startups do the same, he said.

Original author: Megan Hernbroth

Continue reading
  32 Hits
Apr
05

R&D Roundup: Ultrasound/AI medical imaging, assistive exoskeletons and neural weather modeling

Colombian delivery app Rappi is testing pilot robot deliveries in Colombia.Rappi operates in several Latin American countries, and last year SoftBank invested one billion dollars into the startup.Deliveries are made using Kiwibot, a delivery robot from a Colombian owned company in California.Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

Colombian delivery app Rappi is yet another company turning to robots to reduce reliance on human workers during the coronavirus pandemic. 

In addition to Colombia, Rappi operates in Mexico, Peru, Chile, Uruguay, Argentina, and Brazil. Last spring, SoftBank invested $1 billion — one-fifth of its Innovation Fund for Latin America — in the startup. It was founded in 2015, and other investors include Sequoia Capital, Andreesen Horowitz, and Y Combinator.

Colombia is currently under a lockdown set to end in May, though it may be extended again. Earlier this month, Bloomberg reported on the lack of coronavirus testing throughout Latin America, making it difficult to assess how widespread the virus is in the region.

Like in other countries, the Colombian delivery app is using robots to complete orders at a time when people are at risk of catching the virus from interacting with others. So far, the robots are part of a pilot in Medellin, with potential to expand.

Here's what it looks like. 

Original author: Mary Meisenzahl

Continue reading
  22 Hits
May
09

These 19 enterprise tech companies are still hiring during the coronavirus crisis — including AWS, Slack, Box, and Okta

Business Insider surveyed enterprise technology companies to determine who's still hiring amid the coronavirus pandemic.Companies like Amazon Web Services, Slack, Okta, Box, and Zoom are actively hiring, while others like Microsoft, Google, and SAP have slowed hiring to prioritize recruiting in key areas.Below is a list of 19 enterprise tech companies that are hiring, and the types of roles they are trying to fill.Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

As companies across industries slow or stop hiring amid the public health and economic crisis caused by the coronavirus, Business Insider surveyed enterprise technology companies to find out who is still hiring, and the types of roles they're trying to fill.

The results include companies actively hiring — such as Amazon Web Services, Slack, Okta, Box, and Zoom — while others like Microsoft, Google, and SAP have slowed hiring to prioritize recruiting in key areas.

Responses come directly from companies, but be aware that hiring alone may not paint a complete picture of what's going on at each one. VMware, for example, told Business Insider that it's hiring, particularly in a few key areas related to its cloud business — but also told employees in an internal memo that it was freezing all salaries.

Oracle, Nvidia, and Palo Alto Networks declined to comment on whether they are still hiring. Workday, Adobe, IBM, Cisco, Stripe, Qualcomm and HP did not reply to requests for more information.

Here are 19 enterprise companies still hiring in some form amid the pandemic, and what they're looking for:

Original author: Ashley Stewart and Rosalie Chan

Continue reading
  27 Hits
May
08

Fintech startup Phos locked in $1 million in investment just as a state of emergency was declared. Here's the pitch deck it used to win over VCs.

UK fintech startup Phos has revealed how it locked in more than $1 million in investment in Bulgaria – just as a state of emergency was declared. CEO Brad Hyett was forced to catch one of the last planes out of Sofia as he rushed to get home to his family in London. We got an exclusive look at the pitch deck Phos used to bring investors on board. Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

The CEO of Phos, a UK fintech startup that turns Android phones into payment terminals, managed to pin down $1 million in venture capital in Bulgaria – just as a state of emergency was declared. 

Founded in 2018, Phos has offices in London and Bulgaria, and was backed by New Vision 3, an early-stage venture capital firm, alongside a string of unnamed angel investors. 

The company's software offers a new method of payment acceptance via smartphones, turning any Android device into a payments terminal, and eliminating the need for additional hardware and cutting related costs.

Speaking to Business Insider, cofounder Ivo Gueorguiev described how the firm's CEO Brad Hyett was forced to catch the last flight out of Sofia to get back to his family in London – just as Bulgaria set course for a nationwide lockdown. 

"We signed the documents on the day the state of emergency was announced," Gueorguiev said.

"Clearly, these were challenging circumstances, but our investors were fully supportive. And we managed to close this on time, as expected, despite everything going on in the world."

The firm, which has raised almost $3 million in fundraising to date, said it would use the new investments to make new hires and expand its services' capabilities. 

We got an exclusive look at the pitch deck it used to bring investors on board: 

Original author: Martin Coulter

Continue reading
  33 Hits
May
08

How speculation around COVID-19 immunity passports sparked an arms race among digital ID startups

As the COVID-19 pandemic keeps dozens of nations suspended in lockdown, immunity passports have been mooted as one way of bringing the crisis under control. The basic idea of an immunity passport is to link an individual's identity with their COVID-19 test status, potentially allowing those who have recovered from the virus to return to normal life.The WHO has warned about a lack of scientific evidence for COVID-19 immunity, saying those who wrongly believe themselves to be immune could get reinfected or transmit the disease further. But ID startups have spotted an opportunity, holding talks with national governments, raising the possibility of cross-border collaboration, or offering their own 'code of conduct' for handling health certificates ethically.Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

Prior the pandemic, the idea of issuing citizens with "immunity passports" to prove to authorities, employers and loved ones they weren't infected with a deadly disease would have sounded unhinged.

But as COVID-19 swept across the planet – so far infecting almost 4 million people and killing around 250,000 – governments everywhere have been forced to battle an invisible enemy, enforcing unprecedented curbs on civil liberties while reassessing the role of technology and their citizens' right to privacy. 

Among the tech solutions on the table are contact-tracing apps, which have been trialed with mixed results. These have highlighted a power struggle between governments and Big Tech, as Apple and Google put forward the building blocks of their own apps with strict privacy stipulations.

Another option being considered by some is nationwide rollouts of immunity passports.

The basic idea is to link a person's identity with their COVID-19 test status, potentially allowing people who have recovered from the virus to return to work and normal life.

Most solutions rely on some combination of facial recognition, ID documents like passports or driving licences, and the distribution of unique QR codes.

With all three elements in place, ID firms such as Yoti, Onfido and IDnow – all of which have held talks with the UK government – say their software will allow users to reliably provide their COVID-19 test results on the spot. 

But depending on who you're talking to, these passports are either a magic bullet with the potential to end lockdowns everywhere, or a naive fantasy. 

Last month, the World Health Organization warned there was "not enough evidence" to show they could be useful, in large part because there isn't enough evidence to show those who have recovered from the virus become immune.

If an individual needed to prove their health status – to the police or anyone else – that information would need to be unalterably linked to their identity.

COVID-19 could create a new market for ID startups

Hancock confirmed the UK government was 'looking into' immunity passports Pippa Fowles/10 Downing Street/Handout via REUTERS

The global ID verification market was already set to be worth close to $13 billion by 2024, but calls for immunity passports or similar solutions around the world could boost that figure. 

Edgar Whitley, a professor at the London School of Economics, told Business Insider there could be "significant demand" for such solutions in the future. 

"Although there is no useful science behind immunity as of yet," he said. "I suspect that if, or when, it works, there would be significant demand and the likely result will be that there will be multiple providers offering their services." 

In the UK, health secretary Matt Hancock fired the starting pistol in the race for ID solutions in early April, when he confirmed officials were "looking at" immunity passports as one route out of lockdown in a government press briefing. 

Two weeks later, Business Insider revealed London-based ID firm Yoti and German competitor IDnow had been invited to discuss the practicalities of such a scheme. 

The idea of immunity is still controversial

Yoti released its alternative to so-called immunity passports Yoti
LoadingSomething is loading.

Following talks with government insiders, however, Yoti CEO Robin Tombs reiterated the need for caution around the word "immunity."

"Scientists are still trying to figure out exactly how 'immune' a person is once they've recovered from this disease," he said.

"Our discussions with the goverment focused more on being able to tell when an individual had most recently been tested, for example, if you had negative results confirmed a day or two ago, rather than proving you're absolutely immune." 

Yoti subsequently confirmed it had signed a preliminary agreement to provide its new solution to the Colombian soccer league, as part of an initiative to let players take part in matches behind closed doors. 

The firm went on to publish its designs for an alternative to immunity passports, a digital wallet allowing people to carry recent COVID-19 test results in their pocket, which could be presented before entering an office or boarding a flight. 

After consulting with a range of experts and academics, the firm also published a draft "global code of practice" for businesses offering to tie ID verification to test results. 

"Anyone who's had Yellow Fever immunity documentation will know it's a mandatory requirement for travel to certain countries," said Tombs. "It was clear to us that knowing an individual's health status would be important."

He added: "Whilst governments are engaged, they have many issues to deal with.

"Many businesses and sports leagues, and we believe many among the general public, are thinking about how to stay safe once lockdown restrictions are lifted and people start to return to work." 

Immunity passports could be useful one day

Onfido

Despite the lack of deep research done on COVID-19 immunity, highlighted by the WHO, the NHS, and Yoti, some companies have insisted their solutions will prove indispensable down the line. 

Husayn Kassai, CEO of ID startup Onfido, recently revealed he had been involved in talks with both the US and UK governments about the prospect of rolling out immunity passports. Speaking to Business Insider, Kassai insisted they would have a part to play in long-term exit strategies. 

"Of course, I realize we have yet to establish how long someone can be immune to the disease for," Kassai said. But when a deeper understanding of COVID-19 immunity is eventually established, he added, the value of an immunity passport "would increase ... not decrease".

"Having this system in place would mean us being able to react very quickly … So if the requirements change, we can immediately revoke a user's status, and ensure they know they need to be tested again," he said.

For Roger Tyrzyk, UK manager of Germany's IDnow, which has also held talks with the British government, it was clear a rise in demand for identity verification would come when Hancock signaled as much at his press conference.

"We knew then that something was coming over the horizon," he said. "But our approach has always been to focus on how we can help the government now, and if there is any revenue to be made later, think about that then."

He added: "I think some companies have tried to say 'This is how it should be done', but it's important to remember we're not health experts or scientists. We verify people's IDs and that's what we should focus on."

IDnow is set to publish its own set of proposals for immunity passports, submitted to the UK Science and Technology Committee, within the next two weeks.

But while the future of immunity passports remains clouded, with no clear indication of who will be asked to create them, there are signs of a more collaborative than combative effort. 

Tyrzyk confirmed the firm had held talks with iDenfy and another two ID startups, which he declined to name, about how they might collaborate on a shared system across borders.

Meanwhile, Tombs confirmed to Business Insider that Yoti had entered talks with "a small number" of ID startups to discuss making their solutions compatible with one another. 

"We're always open to working with the right strategic partners." 

Original author: Martin Coulter

Continue reading
  34 Hits
May
08

How to share a Dropbox folder in 3 different ways

If you share a Dropbox folder, your recipients can download and use any files stored in that folder. You can share a folder from a browser, your PC desktop, or the Dropbox mobile app. You can share a folder through email or by sharing a generated link to the folder.Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories

Dropbox solves many common problems related to file sharing. For example, if you have a folder full of files that you need to make available to other people, now you can send a single link, and your recipients will have easy access. You can even add additional files to the folder, and they'll be able to download the files as needed. 

Sharing a Dropbox file, whether you're doing it from your browser, computer, or the mobile app, is a pretty similar process. Those sharing from their computers should know how to find their Dropbox folder first. 

Here's how to share a folder on Dropbox. 

Check out the products mentioned in this article:

iPhone 11 (From $699.99 at Apple)

Samsung Galaxy S10 (From $859.99 at Walmart)

Apple Macbook Pro (From $1,299.00 at Apple)

Lenovo IdeaPad 130 (From $469.99 at Walmart)

How to share a Dropbox folder from a web browser

1. Open Dropbox in a browser and log in. 

2. Click "Files" in the navigation pane on the left side of the window. 

You can find the link on the left-hand side of the Dropbox dashboard. Abbey White/Business Insider

3. Find the folder you want to share and move the mouse over it. When the Share button appears, click it. 

You can connect other apps to Dropbox to share your folders there. Abbey White/Business Insider

4. If you want to share the folder with specific people, you can add their email addresses to the To: line and then click "Share." 

The link to the folder will be automatically emailed to entered recipients. Abbey White/Business Insider

5. You can also share the link yourself by clicking "Create link" and then "Copy link." You can now paste the link anywhere, such as in email and text messages. 

How to share a Dropbox folder from a folder on your PC

1. Open your Dropbox folders in your user folder. 

2. Find the folder you want to share, and then right-click the folder. 

The Dropbox folder will appear in a different place depending on the system you use. Abbey White/Business Insider

3. Choose "Share…" from the drop-down menu.

Right-click any Dropbox folder on your PC to share it. Abbey White/Business Insider

4. A dialog box similar to the one that appears when you click "Share" in a browser will appear. Enter email addresses here, or create and copy a link. 

How to share a Dropbox folder using a mobile device

1. Open the Dropbox app. 

Your complete list of Dropbox files and folders can be viewed on this page. Abbey White/Business Insider

2. Tap "Files" at the bottom of the screen.

3. Find the folder you want to share and tap the three dots under the folder.

Each folder in the Dropbox folder will feature this button underneath. Abbey White/Business Insider

4. In the pop-up menu, choose "Share."

Tap "Share." Abbey White/Business Insider

5. Add email addresses, or, if you prefer, tap "Create a link" and then tap "Copy Link." 

 

Original author: Dave Johnson

Continue reading
  59 Hits
Apr
03

479th Roundtable Recording on April 2, 2020: With Darshana Zaveri, Catalyst Health Ventures - Sramana Mitra

To delete a LastPass account, you'll need your email and the master password you created to log in to your Vault and confirm the account deletion.You can delete a LastPass account without a master password by going to https://lastpass.com/delete_account.php and deleting your account through an emailed link. When you decide to delete your LastPass account, your account data will be permanently and irreversibly erased. Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories. 

LastPass is a free online service that manages your multitude of passwords through encryption. It's a useful service if you have multiple accounts and find it difficult to remember or securely store your various account logins. But it's a service that's increasingly being offered by web browsers themselves, making LastPass for some obsolete. 

If you're ready to delete your LastPass account, you can do it right from your computer, but the process will differ slightly depending on whether you know your master password, or if you've forgotten it. Either way, all that's required is the email and, if you have it, the master password you used to register your account.

Here's how to delete your LastPass account with and without your master password.

Check out the products mentioned in this article:

Apple Macbook Pro (From $1,299.00 at Apple)

Lenovo IdeaPad 130 (From $469.99 at Walmart)

How to delete your LastPass account with a master password

1. Go to LastPass.com in your preferred web browser.

2. Click the "Log In" button in the top right corner of your tab screen and enter your credentials.

3. Once redirected to your My LastPass Vault, select the dropdown menu next to your email in the upper right.

Click the dropdown menu below your email. Emma Witman/Business Insider

4. Select "Account Settings" from the dropdown. 

5. In the pop-up window that appears, scroll to the "Account Information" section and select "My Account."

Click "My Account." Emma Witman/Business Insider

6. Find the "Existing User" row and click the "Delete Account" button to the right of it. 

Click "Delete Account." Emma Witman/Business Insider

7. A new window will open, granting you the option to "Delete" or "Reset." Click Delete.

Click "Delete." Emma Witman/Business Insider

8. Select "Yes" when a dialog box asks if you know your LastPass master password. 

9. Enter your master password again before selecting "Delete." 

Consider exporting your LastPass data before deleting since it will be irretrievable once deleted. Emma Witman/Business Insider

10. Click "Yes" when asked to confirm the deletion.

How to delete your LastPass account without your master password

1. Go to lastpass.com/delete_account.php in a web browser on your computer.

2. Select the red and white "Delete" button. 

3. Click "No" when a dialog box appears asking if you know your LastPass master password. 

If you have your master password you can select "Yes" when this window appears. Abbey White/Business Insider

4. Type in your email address and hit "Send Email."

Click "Delete." Emma Witman/Business Insider

5. Go to your email inbox and find the message from LastPass titled "Confirm your request to delete your LastPass account." 

6. In the message, select the link to "permanently delete my LastPass account now."

7. After being redirected to a "Delete Your Account" page, click the "Delete" button at the bottom and confirm your deletion. 

You have the option to export your data before deleting, which the service advises. Emma Witman/Business Insider

 

Original author: Emma Witman

Continue reading
  37 Hits
Apr
03

OctoML raises $15M to make optimizing ML models easier

To Bcc someone in Outlook on your computer, you may need to enable the Bcc field in your "Options" menu.You can Bcc in the Outlook mobile app just by tapping the "Cc/Bcc" option.Bcc stands for "blind carbon copy," and is a way to secretly include recipients in an email. Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

The Bcc option in Outlook, also known as "blind carbon copy," lets you send an email to people without them knowing who's on the Bcc list.

Bcc is a standard feature of nearly every email service. However, to use it in Outlook, you might need to enable it.

Here's how to use Bcc in Outlook on your Mac, PC, iPhone, or Android device.

Check out the products mentioned in this article:

iPhone 11 (From $699.99 at Apple)

Samsung Galaxy S10 (From $859.99 at Walmart)

Apple Macbook Pro (From $1,299.00 at Apple)

Lenovo IdeaPad 130 (From $469.99 at Walmart)

How to Bcc in Outlook on the desktop

1. Open Outlook on your Mac or PC. Open a new, blank email.

2. By default, Microsoft doesn't display the Bcc field, because it's not commonly used. To turn it on, click "Options" at the top of the email window, and then click "Bcc."

The Bcc field is generally turned off by default, so you need to enable it in "Options." Dave Johnson/Business Insider

3. Now write and address the email in the usual way. In the Bcc field, enter any recipients you want to hide from everyone else. When you send the email, the Bcc line will be hidden.

How to Bcc in Outlook on your mobile device

1. Open a new, blank email in the Outlook app on your iPhone or Android device.

2. When the "New Message" window appears, Outlook combines the Cc and Bcc lines to save space. Tap "Cc/Bcc." The fields should automatically expand. 

If you're using the Outlook mobile app, the Bcc field is hiding in plain sight. Dave Johnson/Business Insider

3. Now create and address the email in the usual way. In the Bcc field, enter any recipients you want to hide from everyone else. When you send the email, the Bcc line will be hidden.

 

Original author: Dave Johnson

Continue reading
  25 Hits
Apr
03

Bustle Digital Group lays off staff of The Outline as part of broader cuts

The easiest way to turn off Waze is to simply close the app.You can also turn off Waze navigation by tapping the app's "Stop" button, which is hidden in a small menu.You should turn off Waze navigation when you're not using it, as it can be a drain on your battery and mobile data.Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

Waze is one of the most trusted navigation apps out there right now, and it's not hard to understand why. Aside from giving accurate direction, Waze also alerts you to traffic conditions, stopped cars, potholes, and even speed traps along your route.

However, to keep up with all these updates, Waze uses a lot of battery life. If you're not charging your phone while using the app, it can use up all your power quicker than you might think.

If your phone is running out of battery, or if Waze is simply distracting you, you're going to want to turn it off. Here's how to turn off Waze, whether you're using the app on your iPhone or Android device.

Check out the products mentioned in this article:

iPhone 11 (From $699.99 at Apple)

Samsung Galaxy S10 (From $859.99 at Walmart)

How to turn off Waze

There are two ways to turn off Waze.

The first can be done within the app. If you don't want Waze to give you directions anymore, but don't want to close the app:

1. Tap the small blue arrow at the very bottom of the screen.

This arrow will be in the bottom-center of the screen. Steven John/Business Insider

2. A menu will open. Tap "Stop" in the bottom-left.

Select the "Stop" option. William Antonelli/Business Insider

Navigation will be cancelled, and Waze will stop giving directions. If you want to resume navigating to the same destination, hit "Search" at the bottom-left corner of the app; your most recent destination will be in the list that appears.

Even after stopping Waze like this, the app will still likely be tracking your location. To stop this as well, close the app. 

To close apps on an iPhone:

If your iPhone has a physical home button, double-tap this button to open the app switcher. Swipe up on Waze's window to close it.If your iPhone has no button, swipe up slowly from the bottom of the screen until the app switcher appears. Swipe up on Waze's window to close it.
Waze also consumes a lot of internet data. William Antonelli/Business Insider

To close apps on an Android:

If your Android device has a button that looks like two overlapping rectangles, press it to open the All Apps view, then swipe Waze off the screen.If your Android has no physical buttons, slowly swipe up from the bottom of the screen to open the All Apps menu. Swipe Waze off this screen to close it.If you're using a Samsung Galaxy device, press the "Recent Apps" option, which is to the left of the Home button. Swipe Waze off the screen when it appears.

 

Original author: Steven John

Continue reading
  25 Hits
Apr
03

April 9 – 480th 1Mby1M Mentoring Roundtable for Entrepreneurs - Sramana Mitra

You can change your Gboard theme using a custom image from your phone's gallery or a preset provided by the keyboard. Both iPhone and Android users can change their Gboard theme to a different photo or color. To change your Gboard on an Android, you will need to access your System settings. iPhone users can customize their virtual keyboard by going straight to the app and tapping the "Theme" option.Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

There are tons of advantages to using Google's keyboard app, Gboard, rather than your phone's default: You can use Google search within the keyboard, and it can automatically translate your sentences. Another cool capability is customization. 

Unlike other keyboards, Gboard allows you to change its theme, meaning you can set a picture or color scheme as the keyboard's background. This might help you read it better or is just a fun way to be expressive whenever you type. Either way, it's easy to set up, whether you have an iPhone or an Android.

Here's how to change your Gboard theme. 

Check out the products mentioned in this article:

iPhone 11 (From $699.99 at Apple)

Samsung Galaxy S10 (From $859.99 at Walmart)

Google Pixel 4 (From $799.99 at Best Buy)

How to change your Gboard theme on an iPhone

1. Open the Gboard app.

2. Tap Themes.

You can find this option on the Gboard app's home screen. Melanie Weir/Business Insider

3. If you want a custom image to serve as your Gboard theme, select Custom.

The custom theme option will always be at the top of the Gboard Theme page. Abbey White/Business Insider

4. When your phone's photo library appears, select a photo. 

Select an image from your Moments, Recently Added, or another album currently available in your iPhone gallery. Abbey White/Business Insider  

5. If you want to use a preset theme, tap the image within the Landscape or Gradient sliders to choose it. 

Tap "Show All" to the right of each theme label to see more options. Abbey White/Business Insider

6. For Custom themes, crop the image before tapping Choose. 

This will tell Gboard what part of the image you want to appear as your keyboard theme. Abbey White/Business Insider

7. Adjust your Custom Gboard theme settings

If you've selected a preset, you'll want to hit the pencil icon in the lower right corner of the image to make changes to the theme opacity, text color, borders, Glide typing, and more. Abbey White/Business Insider

8. Tap Done when you're finished customizing your theme. 

How to change your Gboard theme on Android

1. Open your phone's Settings app.

2. Scroll and tap System when you find it.  

Accessibility, Account, and Security settings can also be set on this page. Melanie Weir/Business Insider

3. In the System menu, tap Languages & Input.

You can also find menus for your phone's Date & Time and Backup settings here. Melanie Weir/Business Insider

4. Tap Virtual Keyboard.

This will let you access your voice typing and Gboard controls. Melanie Weir/Business Insider

5. In the Virtual Keyboards menu, tap Gboard.

Gboard should be the first option on the menu list. Melanie Weir/Business Insider

6. In the Gboard settings menu, tap theme.

Control your Gboard's Languages, Text Correction, and Search from this menu. Melanie Weir/Business Insider

7. Select a theme that you like from the listed presets or upload a Custom image. 

When uploading a Custom image, the process is similar to the iPhone. Melanie Weir/Business Insider

8. Preview your new theme, then tap Apply.

Gboard will let you see what your new theme looks like before you set it. Melanie Weir/Business Insider
Original author: Melanie Weir

Continue reading
  19 Hits
Apr
03

The pendulum will swing away from founder-friendly venture raises

You can't get Audible on a Google Home device natively, but there are two workarounds for playing titles from the audiobook app on your smart speaker.You can get Audible on your Google Home speaker by pairing it with your phone through Bluetooth or casting your Audible app from your Android phone. Make sure all your devices are on the same network when you are pairing your mobile device to your Google Home speaker.Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

Audible brings you the latest titles and popular podcasts, ensuring you have hands-free access to your favorite stories and storytellers while you work out, run errands, or put the kids to bed. While Audible lets you listen on your laptop or phone, you can also connect it with Google's smart speaker and home assistant. 

Because the Amazon-owned Audible doesn't have an app for Google Home, you'll need to either pair your Audible app with the speaker using Bluetooth, or, if you have an Android phone, you can cast your audiobooks through the Google Home app. 

Before you do either, make sure your Google Home speaker and smartphone are connected to the same network. You'll also want to make sure the "Microphone" permission on your Android phone is turned on in your Google Play app. You can do this by opening the app, opening the "Permissions" menu and toggling the "Microphone" option on. 

Here are two ways you can listen to Audible on your Google Home device.

Check out the products mentioned in this article:

iPhone 11 (From $699.99 at Apple)

Samsung Galaxy S10 (From $859.99 at Walmart)

Apple Macbook Pro (From $1,299.00 at Apple)

Lenovo IdeaPad 130 (From $469.99 at Walmart)

Google Home (From $29.99 at Best Buy)

How to get Audible on a Google Home using Bluetooth pairing 

1. Open the Google Home app on your mobile device.

2. From the home screen, select the device you want to listen on. 

 

Select your device. Melanie Weir/Business Insider

3. Tap the Settings icon.

Tap Settings. Melanie Weir/Business Insider

4. Scroll down and tap "Paired Bluetooth Devices."

Tap "Paired Bluetooth devices." Melanie Weir/Business Insider

5. Tap "Enable Pairing Mode" to turn on Bluetooth connectivity for your device.

Tap "Enable Pairing Mode." Melanie Weir/Business Insider

6. Open your phone's Settings app.

7. Tap Bluetooth.

Open the Bluetooth menu. Abbey White/Business Insider

8. Toggle Bluetooth on.

Tap Bluetooth to enable it. Abbey White/Business Insider

9. Select your Google Home Device from the list of My Devices and wait for your speaker to make a dinging sound confirming that it's paired. 

Select your device. Melanie Weir/Business Insider

How to cast Audible to your Google Home speaker from your Android device

1. Open the Google Home app. 

2. Tap the device you want to cast your screen to.

3. Select "Cast my screen."

You can find this button in the bottom left of the app screen. Abbey White/Business Insider

4. Open the Audible app.

5. Tap the app Menu button.

The Menu is represented by a "hamburger" of verticle lines in the top right of the app. Abbey White/Business Insider

6. Select Library.

Your Library holds your entire history of Audible audiobook purchases. Abbey White/Business Insider

7. Choose one of your titles and tap it to begin casting the audiobook to your Google Home device. 

8. When you're done listening, go back to the Google Home app and press Stop Mirroring.

This will stop your Android from casting to your Google Home speaker. Abbey White/Business Insider

 

Original author: Melanie Weir

Continue reading
  33 Hits