Feb
19

Apple's plans to launch a new iPad Pro model early this year could be delayed thanks to the coronavirus, according to one report (AAPL)

Apple's business is taking a larger hit from the coronavirus outbreak than it originally expected, with the company announcing Monday that it would miss its revenue expectations for the second quarter.

In disappointing news for consumers, the company's goal of launching a new iPad Pro early this year could also be delayed, according to a report from Bloomberg.

Apple had planned to roll out updated models of its iPad Pro tablet in the first half of 2020, complete with 3-D cameras, as well as a low-cost iPhone (reportedly to be priced around $400), which could be released in March. While the iPhone launch appears to be on track, the iPad Pro plans could be pushed back due to the virus, according to Bloomberg.

Apple's supply chain, which is largely concentrated in China, has been significantly impacted as factories in the country have been forced to close. The company said in its press release Monday that "worldwide iPhone supply will be temporarily constrained" as a result. Apple has also had to close stores across the country in an effort to help contain the virus, which the company said has contributed to decreased demand for Apple products within China.

Apple did not immediately respond to Business Insider's request for comment for this story.

Original author: Tyler Sonnemaker

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Feb
18

The best 4K Blu-ray players

To play the best-quality movies on a 4K TV, you need a 4K Blu-ray player that supports 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray discs.4K Blu-ray players are also capable of high dynamic range (HDR) technology for enhanced contrast and colors.The Sony UBP-X700 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray player balances price and performance better than any other player on the market, making it the best fit for most buyers.

Streaming services might offer the most convenient way to watch movies at home, but if you want the very best video and audio quality, there's still no real substitute for a disc format. Yes, you do actually have to get up from the couch to pop in a movie, but the performance benefits of discs are clear — especially when watching 4K Ultra HD Blu-rays.

4K Ultra HD Blu-ray is the latest and greatest disc format for movies and TV shows. Without internet bandwidth limitations and buffer times to worry about, 4K Blu-ray allows studios to present content with less compression than streaming services. Less compression means you'll get more accurate images with more detail, along with lossless sound for a greater range of frequencies.

For instance, you might sometimes notice your videos becoming blocky or fuzzy when streaming movies on Netflix. If you watch the same video on a 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray disc, those issues will be virtually eliminated. This is because videos on a disc can be encoded with more data and presented at higher and more consistent bitrates. In other words, the video never needs to buffer and it will always look consistently good. 

Expanding upon the previous Blu-ray format, 4K Ultra HD Blu-rays can hold up to 100 GB of information, allowing them to store movies and TV shows in 4K resolution. 4K offers four-times the number of total pixels compared to the Full HD resolution previously used on standard Blu-rays. This enables 4K Blu-ray movies to offer more detail than ever. 

In addition to including more pixels, 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray discs also add support for high dynamic range (HDR). This process allows for a wider range of colors, contrast, and brightness compared to standard Blu-rays. You'll need a compatible 4K HDR TV to take advantage of this feature, but the improvements can be dramatic.  

When it comes to audio, 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray supports lossless Dolby Atmos and DTS:X. If you have the right audio gear, this means you'll get to hear movies soundtracks bit for bit as they were meant to be heard with surround effects in all directions — even from above. 

Of course, to watch 4K Ultra HD Blu-rays you'll need a 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray player. 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray players are also backward compatible with regular Blu-rays and DVDs, so even if your 4K disc collection is just getting started, you'll still be able to watch all of your old discs, too. Most players include advanced upscaling capabilities as well. This feature can make lower-quality videos, like Full HD (1080p), look better on 4K TVs.  

When shopping for a 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray player, there are a few key factors you should pay especially close attention to:

HDR support: Though all 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray discs and players support the standard HDR10 format, only specific models add support for more advanced HDR formats, like Dolby Vision and HDR10+. If you have a TV that's compatible with Dolby Vision or HDR10+, and you want the very best picture performance, it's worth seeking out a player that can output those formats.Advanced video options: Since all 4K Blu-ray players can simply pass the data contained on a 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray disc directly to a TV, default image quality is nearly identical on all models. With that said, certain players include advanced enhancement features, like chroma upsampling and specialized tone mapping, that can help improve 4K HDR contrast and gradient performance. Most buyers will be fine simply letting their TV handle all the work, but enthusiasts might prefer the enhancements a high-end player can provide.Audio capabilities: When it comes to general home theater playback, all 4K Ultra HD Blu-rays include support for outputting Dolby Atmos and DTS:X audio over HDMI. Some players also include a digital optical connection for transmitting audio if you can't use HDMI. On top of that, certain models offer added support for more advanced audio processing and features, including high resolution music playback, multi-channel analog outputs, and support for SACD and DVD-Audio discs.Smart features and connectivity: Ethernet and Wi-Fi are common on many players for keeping your device current via firmware updates. Bluetooth connectivity is also featured on certain models for connecting to separate devices, like wireless Bluetooth headphones.

Though app selection on most Blu-ray players is rather limited, certain models include access to streaming services, like Netflix and Amazon Prime Video. More expensive models even offer compatibility with voice assistants. This feature may be redundant if you already own a smart TV or streaming box (Roku, Apple TV, etc.), but it's convenient if you don't like to switch between devices in order to access Netflix.

There are several worthwhile 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray player models available from companies like Sony, LG, and Panasonic. Some gaming consoles even include 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray disc drives as well.

I've been covering the consumer electronics industry for seven years, and during that time I've demoed and reviewed numerous media devices and Blu-ray players. Through hands-on testing and expert reviews, we've picked the best 4K Blu-ray players you can buy for a variety of needs and budget levels.

Updated on 02/18/2020: Added LG UBK90. Updated copy for the Sony UBP-X700, Panasonic DP-UB820, and Xbox One X. Updated buying advice and formatting. Jacob Roach contributed to this guide.

Original author: Steven Cohen

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Feb
18

3 red flags Uber whistleblower Susan Fowler said she noticed early on

Former Uber employee and whistleblower Susan Fowler says in her new book that she noticed a handful of red flags early on in her time at Uber.After her interview process was delayed, Fowler says she was told that the wait was due to the company's "crazy" trip to Vegas. She also says that while interviewers told her that "twenty-five percent!" of Uber's engineering teams were female, "the only women I could recall seeing during my visit were the recruiting coordinator and the janitor." Fowler also recalls a team-building exercise to choose the "most interesting person" in the group of new hires — but when the finalists for the exercise were on a stage, the judge, a software engineering director, immediately dismissed all the women.Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

Susan Fowler, a former Uber employee who spoke out in 2017 about sexual harassment at the company, writes in her new book, "Whistleblower: My Journey to Silicon Valley and Fight for Justice at Uber," that she noticed a series of red flags after starting at Uber. 

Fowler's post in 2017 led to increased scrutiny and awareness of the workplace culture at Uber, and ultimately contributed to the ousting of the company's cofounder and former CEO, Travis Kalanick. 

Fowler's book is available now, and you can read an excerpt provided to Business Insider here. 

Here are some of the red flags Fowler said she noticed early on at Uber:

Original author: Bryan Pietsch

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Jul
09

Cloud security platform Netskope boosts valuation to $7.5B following $300M raise

Over the weekend, YouTuber Jake Paul launched an online platform designed to teach "young adults" practical skills outside of a typical education and how to monetize their creative pursuits.The launch event for the $20-a-month platform, called the Financial Freedom Movement, featured cannons shooting $1 dollar bills into the crowd and a meet-and-greet with Paul, who was reportedly "casually double-fisting different flavors of White Claw."However, the new platform draws similarities to a project Paul attempted two years ago, Edfluence, which has since went defunct.Edfluence was a series of educational courses designed to teach people how to become social media famous. It cost users $64 to take advantage of all its perks, and teased a chance to become a part of "Team 1000," an offshoot of Paul's Team 10 creator squad.Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

Controversial creator Jake Paul is turning to his young fanbase to help launch an online course on how to be social media famous for the second time in two years.

Paul, 23, has launched the Financial Freedom Movement, an online platform offering an education from Paul and other influencers on how to monetize their creative interests. For $20 a month, Paul tells young adults they can be "financially free from the 'societal cookie cutter life' 9-5 jobs we are all told to have."

With more than 20 million YouTube subscribers, Paul has garnered millions of fans and attracted notorious fame over his eight-year online career. Paul's "Financial Freedom Movement" is undeniably targeted at his younger fanbase, and its website even includes a template for a letter for parents whose kids want funds to "invest" in Paul's course.

The launch of Paul's new platform was celebrated with a wild event over the weekend hosted at a California outdoor paintball arena, Variety reports. The event included Paul and his friends reportedly shooting $1 dollar bills out of money guns into the crowd of teens, as well as the YouTuber double-fisting White Claw hard seltzers. Attendees at the event were invited to create picket signs and "rally" alongside Paul against college debt.

"I'm sick of our education system and how it's teaching kids 0 real life skills for them to secure there (sic) on future," Paul wrote on Twitter the day of the launch. "I'm creating a movement for everyone who wants to take life into their own hands and learn real life skills from actual professionals."

It's unclear how extensive the series of education videos are, although the website teases videos from influencers and "top millionaire instructors," many who appear on YouTube doing entrepreneurship seminars and motivational speeches. The website also says users get "weekly coaching calls" with Paul, and teases a "top prize" of flying out to film a vlog with Paul and his creator squad.

Paul never completed high school; he dropped out before his senior year to move out to Los Angeles with his older brother, Logan Paul, to pursue a career that was just taking off on now-defunct app Vine. However, this isn't the first time that the younger Paul brother has tried to capitalize on his stunted education to sell instructional courses to fans.

It's only been two years since Paul launched Edfluence, a series of videos teaching fans "how to be social media famous." Paul promised to teach users "things that have taken me years to master" for just $7 — then an additional $57 to actually unlock all 74 videos in the course. The $64 fee also gave users entry into "Team 1000," seemingly an offshoot of Paul's collab group of creators called Team 10.

It's unclear whether Paul's "Financial Freedom Movement" will garner any more success than Edfluence, whose website no longer exists.

Just two months into 2020, Paul has already had an eventful year. Following in the highly publicized steps of his older brother Logan, Paul took on YouTube gamer AnEnsonGib in a boxing match in January and was handed the victory midway through the first round. Days before the new year, Paul and YouTuber Tana Mongeau announced they were "taking a break" after a nine-month whirlwind relationship and a $500,000 Las Vegas wedding.

Paul is also no stranger to controversy. He's been accused of turning his Los Angeles neighborhood into a "living hell", and he was fired from a leading role in a Disney channel show. The collective of creators he runs, Team 10, is a constant source of drama from former members who leave with stories to tell.

"The Paul family is sort of notorious," Paul told Business Insider earlier this year. "Everyone wants to see the big bad wolves fall."

Original author: Paige Leskin

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Feb
18

42 movies you can watch on Netflix from Hollywood's hottest indie studio, A24

Indie studio A24 has quickly become one of the hottest film studios around with Oscar-winning films like "Moonlight" and "Room," and horror and sci-fi favorites like "The Witch" and "Ex Machina."

All of those movies are available to stream on Netflix.

The studio's output wasn't always top notch. Founded in 2012, A24 released plenty of critical duds when it first started out. But in recent years, it's made a name for itself as the indie studio. Not all of its success stories are on Netflix. Some, like "Hereditary" and "Eighth Grade," can be found at Amazon Prime Video.

But Netflix has more than 40 A24 movies to choose from and there's more on the way. "Uncut Gems" will debut on the service in May.

The studio isn't just licensing its movies out to streamers. It signed a multiyear deal with Apple last year to produce original films (though it's not an exclusive agreement).

We rounded up A24's movies that are on Netflix and ranked them by their Rotten Tomatoes critic scores. In the case of ties, we broke them with audience scores.

Carrie Wittmer contributed to a previous version of this post.

Here is a list of all 42 A24 movies you can watch on Netflix, ranked:

Original author: Travis Clark

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Aug
03

Google Maps is no longer #flatearth

Reuters Apple shares sank in Tuesday trading after the company warned quarterly revenue would fall below initial estimates, but analysts aren't fazed.Most research firms remain bullish toward the tech giant, praising its diversification of revenue streams, surging Services business, and upcoming 5G iPhone lineup.Revenue lost during the second quarter will likely materialize in the second half of 2020 as consumers boost spending activity post-outbreak, analysts wrote.Here's what four analysts had to say about the revenue update, coronavirus concerns, and long-term moves for Apple shares. Watch Apple trade live here.

Analysts are still optimistic toward Apple shares despite the tech giant warning its quarterly revenue will fall below initial forecasts.

The iPhone maker announced Monday its fiscal second-quarter revenue will miss guidance on coronavirus concerns. The outbreak has "temporarily constrained" iPhone supply around the world and weakened demand in China, according to the Monday release. Apple's estimate was already "wider-than-usual" by its own account, but Monday's update marks a major escalation of its exposure to coronavirus fallout.

The company's stock sank as much as 3.2% in Tuesday's trading session, though it is still up 9.4% year-to-date. While the revenue adjustment lowered hopes for Apple's second-quarter report, most analysts expect revenue to rebound in the second half of 2020 and for shares to continue their bull run through the year.

Here's what four analysts had to say about Apple's update, coronavirus concerns, and how investors should view the stock.

JPMorgan: 'Look past these temporary headwinds'

Reuters

Price target: $350

Rating: Overweight

The virus' drag on Chinese demand and global supply will drive "much lower" second-quarter volumes and even spill into the third quarter of 2020, but the company's long-term outlook hasn't changed yet, JPMorgan analysts wrote Monday.

Apple's biggest boost to iPhone sales will arrive in the fall with its 5G-capable lineup. Virus-related risks will likely fade by then, and steady Services revenue can offset some losses, according to the team of analysts.

Shareholders should monitor for additional updates, as the outbreak is still mired in uncertainty, the bank wrote. However, bullish investors can comfortably hold shares until signs of worsening fallout.

"We expect most long-term investors in Apple shares to look past these temporary headwinds, with both products and services continuing to demonstrate strong underlying consumer demand," the team led by Samik Chatterjee wrote.

Wedbush: 'More of a timing issue'

Getty

Price target: $400

Rating: Outperform

Apple's announcement prompted a "knee jerk reaction" during Tuesday's trading session, Wedbush analysts Dan Ives and Strecker Backe said. Yet the downward adjustment didn't faze the firm's outlook on Apple shares, with the two analysts expecting sales to rebound once the virus is contained.

"We believe this is a more of a timing issue rather than an extended supply/demand issue for iPhones globally and does not change our longer term bullish thesis on the name," the team wrote. "While this news is a tough pill to swallow for the bulls, Apple remains a company significantly exposed to this virus issue given the company's massive supply and demand tentacles throughout China."

Wedbush sees the firm potentially bouncing back in the June quarter and riding the "5G super cycle" through the end of the year.

RBC Capital Markets: 'The ultimate impact is still very much unknown'

China Daily via Reuters

Price target: $358

Rating: Outperform

Analysts at RBC Capital Markets compared the Monday announcement to Apple's January 2019 statement, when the company lowered guidance on worse-than-expected demand for iPhones in China. The update saw Apple shares drop the most in six years after a temporary halt to trading, a far more negative reaction to the mild drop in Tuesday's session.

While the 2019 update "was not a (most likely) one-off item driving the lower demand," Monday's statement signals revenue will simply be delayed until the third quarter, analyst Robert Muller wrote. The most important variable is the spread of coronavirus in the near future, as a prolonged pandemic could keep demand in China stifled for quarters to come.

"While we view the situation as temporary and our longer-term outlook is unchanged, the ultimate impact is still very much unknown," the analyst said.

Original author: Ben Winck

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May
22

A first step to automating your business processes

SpaceX is collaborating with Space Adventures to send a small number of private citizens into space as early as 2021, Engadget reported on Tuesday.The company intends to take up to four tourists into orbit on the Dragon spacecraft for five days.SpaceX also recently launched an online booking tool for sending satellites into space starting at $1 million.Customers can schedule flights for packages on the Falcon 9 starting in June.Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

SpaceX is teaming up with Space Adventures, an American space-tourism company, to send a small number of tourists into space as early as 2021, Engadget reported on Tuesday.

There's not much information about how the people will be chosen, and The Verge reported Space Adventures wasn't yet revealing pricing details. A spokesperson for SpaceX wasn't immediately available for comment.

The agreement comes several weeks after SpaceX opened an online booking tool for sending satellites into space on the Falcon 9 rocket, with payload prices starting at $1 million.

SpaceX, founded in 2002 by Elon Musk, manufactures and launches rockets and spacecraft with the goal of lowering the cost of space travel and eventually enabling humans to colonize Mars.

SpaceX's Dragon spacecraft, which can carry up to seven passengers, will bring as many as four tourists into space for up to five days in orbit. The four noncrew members will receive several weeks of training before launch from Cape Canaveral, Florida, Engadget reported.

The Dragon spacecraft hasn't completed a flight with humans aboard, but it's scheduled to carry a crew in a mission in spring. The spacecraft had a successful trip to the International Space Station last year.

Flight tests for the upcoming tourism trip appear to have fixed problems that resulted in an explosion in April and demonstrated that the passenger capsule could release and land in the Atlantic during launch in case of malfunction.

But space tourism isn't the only frontier SpaceX is pioneering. The Falcon 9 launch service caters to customers who want to send small satellites into space but can't afford a full rocket, which can cost more than $60 million, according to TechCrunch. (Companies can book a payload flight on Falcon 9 by filling out this form.)

Falcon 9 is the first orbital-class reusable rocket, according to the SpaceX website. Rocket reusability is a key factor in reducing costs for access to space.

Falcon 9 made its first flight in 2012 to the International Space Station and completed its most recent launch on January 29.

Original author: Jessica Snouwaert

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Oct
24

Spatial raises $8 million to bring augmented reality to your office life

Elon Musk, the founder of SpaceX, is building a private spaceport at the southern tip of Texas, but the location features a small neighborhood of retiree-age homeowners called Boca Chica Village.SpaceX is using the site to develop its next-generation rocket system, called Starship. In late 2019, the company offered to buy out everyone for what it says are safety reasons.However, a cadre of homeowners say they're prepared to defend their property rights in court, and several of their neighbors may join them if Cameron County, where the site is located, begins an eminent-domain process.Business Insider's new series "Last Town Before Mars" chronicles the future of SpaceX's South Texas launch site at a critical juncture in the rocket company's history.Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

Elon Musk, the billionaire tech entrepreneur, is a sizable chunk of the future of his rocket company, SpaceX — now valued at more than $33 billion — on a remote and beachy strip of land in South Texas that locals call Boca Chica.

There, the company is assembling a sprawling compound of machinery and buildings, where a growing army of workers are working rapidly to develop Starship. If the 39-story stainless-steel rocket ship is realized as Musk has envisioned, it would be the largest and most powerful yet surprisingly least expensive launch system ever created. One day, Starship may even ferry the first people to Mars.

But the site Musk and SpaceX picked comes attached with an increasingly controversial and distinctly human problem: a small neighborhood of retiree-age residents called Boca Chica Village. And despite SpaceX's best and seemingly most urgent efforts, a few homeowners appear resolved not to leave.

In a new Business Insider series titled "Last Town Before Mars," we chronicle the history, essential details, and precarious future of SpaceX's relationship with South Texas at a critical juncture in the company's future.

Business Insider subscribers can read the ongoing series here:

Part 1: SpaceX's most vocal holdouts in South Texas are selling their homes to Elon Musk's rocket company to make way for a Mars spaceport

Part 2: A senior executive at SpaceX is going door-to-door in South Texas to convince people to move out of the rocket company's planned Mars spaceport

Part 3: Elon Musk dreams of building a Mars spaceport in South Texas. A few scrappy homeowners may stand in SpaceX's way.

Do you have a story or inside information to share about the spaceflight industry? Send Dave Mosher an email at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. or send him a Twitter direct message at @davemosher. You may also consider more secure communication options listed here.

WATCH: Why SpaceX is trying to buy out a small Texas village

Original author: Dave Mosher

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May
21

Auto data startup Wejo explores SPAC merger with Virtuoso

Tariq Shaukat, Google Cloud's president of industry products and solutions, is leaving his role amid a reorganization that will see "a small number" of positions eliminated, according to a memo sent to employees last week. You can read the full memo below.Shaukat held a crucial role within Google Cloud in which he helped hone its appeal to larger customers in regulated industries like biotechnology and finance. Though he's leaving Google Cloud, he's exploring opportunities within the larger Google structure, according to people familiar with his thinking.The reorganization was designed to streamline operations and bring the company closer to its customers, the memo said. Google Cloud will help those employees affected by the restructuring find new positions within the company, according to people familiar with the situation.Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

An executive who has been with Google Cloud since 2016 is leaving his role amid a reorganization that will see "a small number" of positions eliminated, according to an internal memo sent on Thursday. You can read the full memo below.

In the memo, Google Cloud Sales President Robert Enslin wrote that Tariq Shaukat, the president of industry products and solutions, was leaving the cloud division entirely. He is, however, exploring new opportunities within Google itself, according to people with knowledge of the situation. Shaukat's departure has not been previously reported.

Shaukat held a critical position within Google Cloud: As the company ramps up its efforts to appeal to larger customers and catch up with its rivals Amazon Web Services and Microsoft Azure, CEO Thomas Kurian has prioritized making sure that its cloud platform is suitable for specific industries, such as finance and biotechnology.

Shaukat most recently led a major deal with the IT-services giant Accenture, which chose Google Cloud technology for a key life-sciences platform called Intient. 

The reorganization was first reported on Friday by The Wall Street Journal. The company said it would try to find new roles for affected employees. The move is intended to streamline operations in international markets, the partner ecosystem, and customer engagement, according to people close to the company.

Enslin wrote that these changes were a way for Google Cloud's sales team to get closer to its customers. 

"We recently communicated organizational changes to a handful of teams that will improve how we market, partner, and engage with customers in every industry around the globe," a Google spokesperson said in a statement.

"We made the difficult, but necessary decision to notify a small number of employees that their roles will be eliminated. We're working with our internal mobility teams across the company to help those affected by this change, and hope to find them new roles within the company. We are grateful for everything they have accomplished and their commitment to Google Cloud."

Reorganization at Google Cloud

In the wake of Shaukat's departure, his team will see some changes. Its go-to-market sales teams will report directly to Enslin, at least temporarily, while its product-engineering teams will be rehoused elsewhere at Google Cloud.

The ultimate idea, according to the memo, is to find a replacement for Shaukat to take over the go-to-market side on a more permanent basis. This new leader "will set the vision, mission and strategy for our go-to-market approach for the priority industries we're targeting," Enslin wrote in the memo.

Under Enslin and Google Cloud CEO Thomas Kurian, Google Cloud has been working on tripling its sales force, even as it makes broad changes to its sales and partnership programs to better keep pace with its larger rivals. That has included changing the way salespeople are compensated, as well as bringing partners closer into the fold by inviting them to attend its annual sales-kickoff conference.

Google Cloud has also been hiring a new leadership team, though sources previously told Business Insider that the hiring process was viewed by some employees as "biased" toward veterans of Oracle, where Kurian held a long career before joining Google in January 2019.

When Google reported earnings earlier in February, Google Cloud reported that it generated $8.9 billion in revenue in 2019. That shows considerable growth in the unit under Kurian's watch, but it's still markedly smaller than the cloud revenue posted by Amazon Web Services and Microsoft.

You can read Enslin's full memo below:

A key principle behind how we've organized our sales team is getting closer to our customers so we can help them solve their toughest business challenges and seize their biggest opportunities. As you know, we recently introduced the role of general manager across all of our major product solutions, and last year we shifted more control to our geographical sales regions. Now we're applying this principle to industries, bringing together teams that can best provide our customers with the solutions they need to transform their businesses. 

To keep up our momentum, we're bringing critical capabilities from the Cloud Industry Products & Solutions (IP&S) team into the Cloud Sales organization. I'm excited to welcome solution team members of IP&S teams, who'll be joining our organization on Feb. 14. In the interim, these leaders and teams will report to me but will later transition to align under the new Industry Solutions leader. The new Industry Solutions leader will set the vision, mission and strategy for our go-to-market approach for the priority industries we're targeting, and will be a member of my leadership team.

In addition, earlier today Tariq Shaukat announced he will be leaving Cloud. I've gotten to know Tariq well over the past months, and I'm grateful for everything he and his organization have accomplished, including the strong relationships they've built with customers and partners.

Please join me in welcoming our new team members to our sales organization and in wishing Tariq well!

Do you work at Google Cloud? Got a tip? Contact this reporter via email at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it., Signal at 646.376.6106, Telegram at @rosaliechan, or Twitter DM at @rosaliechan17. (PR pitches by email only, please.) Other types of secure messaging available upon request. You can also contact Business Insider securely via SecureDrop.

Original author: Rosalie Chan

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Feb
18

Kickstarter's historic vote doesn't mean unions are coming back. Here's what the future of labor looks like instead.

Kickstarter on Tuesday became the first tech company to unionize.While the move is historic, unions will continue to decline in the US, labor leaders say. Instead, nonworker unions that represent workers across an entire industry — like farmers and home healthcare workers — are ushering in a new way to organize.Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

Employees of the crowdfunding company Kickstarter voted on Tuesday to unionize. While part-time workers at Google and Instacart have organized in the past, Kickstarter's vote marked the first time white-collar full-time employees formed a union at a major tech company.

After years of union decline, frustrated workers across the country have been ushering in a new labor movement. Last year marked the highest year for labor strikes since the 1980s. Teachers, nurses, and auto workers were among the workers who led walkouts.

Still, just 10.5% of wage workers belong to unions, half the rate it was in 1983, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. 

Kickstarter's vote might be historic, but it doesn't necessarily mean union membership will spread across the tech industry.

Going forward, effective organizing is going to be more about industries or categories.

The future of work won't include unions

Data suggests companies with strong union membership have higher average wages, which has led interest groups and right-wing politicians to make targeted attacks on the practice. The Supreme Court ruled in 2018 that nonunion members could enjoy the same benefits as their organized peers without paying dues, a major blow to public-sector union funding.

Aside from targeted moves to kill unions, there are limits to which workers can qualify for union membership. In the US, individual companies establish their own unions. Kickstarter's union, for instance, represents workers for just the company, instead of tech workers more broadly.

But many laborers for today's tech companies aren't technically employed by the firms. Many "gig-economy" startups use independent contractors — like Uber drivers and Postmates couriers — who don't qualify for union membership under the National Labor Relations Board. Many workers for major tech companies, like Facebook's content moderators and Google's temp workforce, work for separate staffing firms.

Nelson Lichtenstein, a labor historian, said the rise of "fissuring" — or major companies outsourcing their work to contract workers — would impair unions from getting stuff done for all workers.

"A new generation of young and energetic organizers have been hired onto union staffs, but it still remains incredibly difficult to organize new workers or win a decent first contract," Lichtenstein wrote for the left-leaning commentary magazine Dissent in 2019.

The rise of nonunion organizations is already on the way

Unions may no longer work — but that doesn't mean labor organizations are going anywhere. 

Instead of unions, some say workers for different companies should band together for higher pay. Lichtenstein and other labor leaders, such as David Rolf, the founder of the Fight for $15 movement, say organizing across industries rather than within companies will better protect workers. When I saw Rolf speak at the Fulcrum Future of Work conference last year, he emphasized the need to change outdated union models to adapt to the work that has changed for blue- and white-collar Americans.

"There will be no time machine invented that will give us our great-grandfather's unions of the '30s, or our grandfather's unions of the '50s, or our parents' unions of the '70s," he said.

One solution that doesn't need union support: Getting the government to set minimum wages. Wage boards, for instance, are local or state laws that set minimum wages for workers in specific fields, such as janitors and warehouse workers. 

There are already pockets of workers organizing without the union model. Tomato farmers in Florida banded together to pressure McDonald's and Taco Bell to improve working conditions. Home healthcare workers are pressuring governments to pass a "domestic worker bill of rights" to standardize labor conditions for the entire industry.

Organized labor is only getting stronger, but don't look to unions to tell you that.

Original author: Allana Akhtar

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Feb
18

How to watch Hulu + Live TV on an Apple TV device

There are many TV streaming apps available for Apple TV, but with Hulu + Live TV you can watch live TV, stream content from various networks, and watch Hulu originals. 

Hulu + Live TV is $54.99 a month and includes more than 65 channels and 50 hours of cloud storage to record your favorite shows and movies.

While you can download the Hulu app and watch content on a basic Hulu account using Apple TV, to watch Hulu + Live TV you will need to upgrade your account on a computer first, and have a fourth generation Apple TV or later.

If this applies to you, then here's how to sign up for and watch Hulu + Live TV on your Apple TV.

Check out the products mentioned in this article:

Hulu + Live TV (From $54.99 per month on Hulu)

Apple TV 4K (From $179.99 at Best Buy)

MacBook Pro (From $1,299.99 at Best Buy)

Lenovo IdeaPad 130 (From $299.99 at Best Buy)

How to watch Hulu + Live TV on Apple TV

1. If you don't already have Hulu on your Apple TV, download the Hulu app from the App Store.

2. If you need to sign up for Hulu + Live TV, navigate to https://www.hulu.com/live-tv on your PC or Mac computer. 

If you already have a Hulu account, you can choose to upgrade your account by clicking the white "Manage my account" button and add Hulu + Live TV to your add-ons. If you have an account through iTunes, Disney+, or Spotify, you'll have to change your account to be billed directly through Hulu in order to upgrade to Hulu + Live TV.

If you pay for Hulu through a third-party, you may not be able to add the Hulu + Live TV add-on to your subscription. Isabella Paoletto/Business Insider You can sign up for a new account with Hulu + Live TV by clicking "START YOUR FREE TRIAL" and then selecting the Hulu + Live TV plan on the next page and following the prompts.

Click "SELECT" to start the process of signing up for Hulu + Live TV. Ryan Ariano/Business Insider

3. Once you've signed up for Hulu + Live TV, open the Hulu app on your Apple TV and sign in to your account, if needed.

You should see the Hulu + Live TV landing page, if not try closing and reopening the app or logging out and then back in to your account.

The Hulu + Live TV homepage. Ryan Ariano/Business Insider

 

Original author: Ryan Ariano

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  27 Hits
Feb
18

The marketers waging the streaming TV wars, a buzzy agency's plan to fend off consultancies, and State Farm brings back its famous tagline

Hi! Welcome to the Advertising and Media Insider newsletter. I'm Lauren Johnson, a senior advertising reporter filling in for Lucia this week. If you're new to this email, sign up for your own here. Send me tips or feedback at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..

Before we get to the news, my colleague Tanya Dua is looking for nominations for Business Insider's inaugural list of rising stars of brand marketing. Learn more and submit your ideas here.

The streaming TV wars have opened up marketing blitzes from companies like Hulu, Netflix and Disney Plus that are vying for subscriptions and viewers. Tanya and Ashley Rodriguez identified the 11 marketing execs leading the charge to win in streaming video.

They include:

Hulu's Kelly Campbell, who's focused on keeping the service relevant beyond its hit show "The Handmaid's Tale."WarnerMedia's Chris Spadaccini, who's responsible for all of WarnerMedia Entertainment, including the launch of direct-to-consumer service HBO Max.Megan Imbres and Juan Bongiovanni, who are working to explain Quibi, the mobile video streaming service that's due to come out later this year.

Meanwhile, Patrick Coffee reported that buzzy digital agency Work & Co acquired data analytics company Acknowledge to better compete with bigger agencies and consulting companies like Accenture that are making inroads into advertising.

Here are other great stories from advertising and media. (Not a subscriber to BI Prime? Click here to become one.)

A top State Farm exec reveals why it's bringing back the iconic tagline 'like a good neighbor,' and advertising heavily on NBCUniversal's upcoming streaming service
For 45 years, State Farm pitched itself as the "good neighbor" who stands by you when things go wrong — before retiring it in 2016 under its former agency-of-record DDB.

We identified the 54 most powerful people at Netflix. Here's our exclusive chart of its top executives and their roles.
By the end of 2020, Apple, Disney, Comcast, AT&T, and ViacomCBS will each have unveiled new streaming strategies to challenge Netflix and keep up with the viewer shifts it spurred. 

Wall Street is betting AMC is in a downward spiral. Here's the inside story of how the world's biggest movie-theater chain is battling for a comeback.
Many on Wall Street are betting against AMC Entertainment, whose stock has plunged 75% since the start of 2017 and was one of the most-shorted on the Russell 3000 as of late January.

Leaked campaign brief shows the video ideas Cash App pitched to TikTok influencers including 'when you win a bet by doing something dope'
Cash App paid some creators thousands of dollars each, with one influencer marketing agent saying their client received $5,000 for a single post.

'Schitt's Creek' cocreator Dan Levy explains how running the writers' room like an 'open therapy session' created some of the most moving moments on TV
Showrunner, writer, and star Dan Levy, hired writers from different backgrounds, including playwrights, essayists, and sketch-comedy writers.

Prominent YouTube merchandise company Mad Merch is switching its strategy and cutting some influencer clients
Mad Merch has worked with top influencers like James Charles and Liza Koshy to develop branded merchandise like T-shirts and other accessories.

Original author: Lauren Johnson

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  31 Hits
May
22

What’s next: Machine learning at scale through unified modeling 

You can clear your history on Microsoft Edge by heading to your settings.When you clear your browsing history in Microsoft Edge, you can also choose to clear your cookies, cache, and other data.Clearing your history will prevent Microsoft Edge from suggesting websites when you type in your address bar, and will keep others from being able to see your history.Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

Microsoft Edge offers a mode called "InPrivate" that lets you browse the internet without Edge tracking your history. It's great if you want your browsing habits to stay private.

But if you've forgotten to use this mode and want to clear the history that Edge has tracked, you just have to go into your settings.

Here's how to do it on both your PC and Mac.

Check out the products mentioned in this article:

MacBook Pro (From $1,299.99 at Best Buy)

Lenovo IdeaPad (From $299.99 at Best Buy)

How to clear history on Microsoft Edge

1. Open Microsoft Edge on your Mac or PC and type or paste "edge://settings/privacy" (without the quotes) into your address bar. Press Enter or Return to go there.

2. Under the "Clear browsing data" heading, click "Choose what to clear."

Find and click on "Choose what to clear." Ross James/Business Insider

3. Edge will let you choose what data to clear, and the time range to clear it from. Check "Browsing history" and any other box that you'd like, and then "Clear now." If you set your time range as "Forever," it'll clear all your history.

Check all the boxes that apply to you, and choose how much data you want to clear. Ross James/Business Insider

 

Original author: Ross James

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  23 Hits
Jan
30

Mammoth Biosciences aims to be Illumina for the gene editing generation

Amazon

Amazon revolutionized the ereader with the Kindle Oasis' daring design, great page-turn buttons, sharp screen, and giant ebook library.

Amazon's Kindle has dominated the ereader world ever since the first Kindle arrived in 2007. I've always been a fan of paper books, and although I had dabbled in reading ebooks on my phone, I had never owned an ereader. That is, until I saw the first Kindle Oasis and fell head-over-heels in love with it. Now, there's a third Oasis, and it's even better than the first, thanks to a display that has adjustable color temperature.

With the new display, you can limit the amount of blue light that filters through, which can help prevent eyestrain and sleep disruptions if you're reading at night. I love this feature and can really tell the difference when I read at night.

Up until the Kindle Oasis arrived, all ereaders looked the same: small, rubbery, chunky little tablets with E-Ink screens and stores full of ebooks. The Oasis changed all that. Amazon's daring design removes the cheap, rubbery bezels around the screen and leaves you with a slick panel of glass and a sharp, crisp E-Ink screen. The new model is even thinner than the first Oasis, it's waterproof, and it has the adjustable color temperature display.

The asymmetrical design puts two page-turning buttons on the slightly thicker side of the ereader along with the battery. On the opposite side, the bezel is super thin, as is the ereader's body.

The Oasis is incredibly light to hold, and the battery life is impressive. You can go weeks on a single charge. The screen measures 7-inches diagonally, and you can adapt the brightness.

Beyond the design, the Oasis is a great ereader in every other way. Amazon's Kindle ebook library is very robust; its $9.99/month Kindle Unlimited subscription lets you read as many ebooks as you want, and Prime Members can enjoy a selection of free-to-read ebook hits each month. Library books are also very easy to download once you've linked your library card to the Kindle.

You can get either 8GB or 32GB of storage, depending on how big your library is. You can also pair the ereader with Bluetooth headphones to listen to audiobooks with Audible.

Although the Kindle Oasis is ridiculously expensive at $249.99 and up, it will last you many years before you need to replace it.

Reviews across the web are positive, and everyone who has tried it at Business Insider is a fan. Insider Picks writer Brandt Ranj actually bought the Oasis as his first Kindle ever, and he loved it. BI Tech reporter Avery Hartman called it the best ereader you can buy in her review, and we agree.

Note that all Kindles come in two versions: with special offers and without. If you choose the ones with special offers, you will see ads on the lock screen and potentially elsewhere, but you will save money.

Pros: Bright and clear screen, excellent page-turning buttons, super thin and modern design, robust Kindle ebook store, and easy library book access, waterproof, works with Audible

Cons: No EPUB file support, and it's really expensive

Buy a Kindle Unlimited ebook subscription on Amazon for $80.30/12 months

Buy on Amazon for $279.99
Original author: Malarie Gokey and Joe Osborne

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  16 Hits
Feb
16

Facebook is spending $130 million to create a 'Supreme Court' that can overrule Mark Zuckerberg — here's everything we know about it (FB)

In late 2018, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg announced an ambitious plan: to create an independent oversight board that could overrule Facebook's content moderation guidelines, and even Zuckerberg himself.The board is independent from Facebook, but Facebook is funding the board's operations to the tune of $130 million.If users believe their content was removed from the service unfairly or without cause, they can appeal to the independent board directly. If it decides to reverse Facebook's decision, that decision "will be binding," Zuckerberg said, "even if I or anyone at Facebook disagrees with it."Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

With over 2 billion users, Facebook has a major moderation problem on its hands.

Whether you're talking about the platform's use by Russian government-backed trolls in the 2016 US Presidential election, or to spread propaganda during the 2016 Rohingya genocide, or when a shooter livestreamed a mass shooting in New Zealand, Facebook has faced moderation issue after moderation issue across the past few years.

And the company is well aware of the enormity of its problem. "One of the most painful lessons I've learned," CEO Mark Zuckerberg wrote in late 2018, "is that when you connect two billion people, you will see all the beauty and ugliness of humanity." 

As a result, Facebook is establishing an oversight board that it says is outside of Facebook's control, that can ultimately overrule Facebook's own policies on content management. The company has even pledged $130 million to get the board funded and operational, with plans to launch in 2020. 

Here's everything we know so far:

Original author: Ben Gilbert

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  59 Hits
Feb
16

HQ Trivia's ex-host says the company shut down because of a 'lethal cocktail of incompetence, arrogance, short-sightedness & sociopathic delusion'

The beloved ex-host of HQ Trivia tweeted Saturday that the company was shut down due to "incompetence, arrogance, short-sightedness & sociopathic delusion."He also accused the company of leaving its staff "in the lurch after being gaslit and lied to."HQ did not immediately respond to Insider's request for comment.The company's CEO, Rus Yusupov, announced in a company-wide email on Friday that the live gameshow app would shut down, adding that "lead investors are no longer willing to fund the company."Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

The beloved ex-host of the live gameshow app HQ Trivia railed against the company's leadership on Twitter, one day after CEO Rus Yusupov announced the company would shut down.

"HQ didn't die of natural causes. It was poisoned with a lethal cocktail of incompetence, arrogance, short-sightedness & sociopathic delusion," Rogowsky tweeted Saturday. "Saddened to see it finally succumb; sadder still for the good & talented staff abruptly left in the lurch after being gaslit and lied to."

Rogowsky did not elaborate on his complaints with the company or its leadership, nor did he specify how how he believed employees were "lied to."

Insider has reached out to HQ for comment regarding Rogowsky's tweets.

Rogowsky, known to his fans as "Quiz Daddy," left HQ last April to join the sports streaming service DAZN.

HQ Trivia, which attained viral popularity in 2017, attracted millions of users to play each day during live, 15-minute segments.

HQ Trivia

But, as Business Insider's Julie Bort previously reported, the company was soon plagued with missteps and infighting, and began hemorrhaging users by mid-2018.

The company's co-founder Colin Kroll also died in December 2018, and the company struggled to regain its footing afterwards.

On Friday, Yusupov sent a company-wide email telling employees that "lead investors are no longer willing to fund the company," and that HQ would shut down. CNN was first to report the news.

On Saturday, Rogowsky quote-tweeted Yusupov's 2016 advice — "Don't sell your company!" — and quipped "Don't let him run your company!"

—OTT's Scott Rogowsky (@ScottRogowsky) February 15, 2020

 

Yusupov simply responded, "Hugs."

Original author: Michelle Mark

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  61 Hits
May
17

Police in China, Dubai, and Italy are using these surveillance helmets to scan people for COVID-19 fever as they walk past and it may be our future normal

37-year-old independent agency Wieden and Kennedy is famous for its Nike, Facebook, McDonald's, and other ads, and it gets hundreds of applications a week.The agency seeks out people from outside the ad industry, often finding them through nontraditional channels.Executives there said aspiring employees should emphasize their personal passions rather than awards or titles.Click here for more BI Prime stories.

With 1,500-plus employees in Portland, Oregon and 7 other offices around the world, Wieden and Kennedy is not the largest ad agency by revenue or headcount.

But to many in advertising — especially on the creative side — it's seen as the pinnacle of their profession. The independent firm created five ads in this year's Super Bowl. Its campaigns for brands like Honda, Bud Light, Facebook and, most prominently, Nike, have won scores of awards and landed it on lists of top companies where creatives want to work.

For these and other reasons, it's notoriously hard to get a foot in the door.

Business Insider asked current and former executives and applicants how to land a position at the company that co-president and global creative leader Colleen DeCourcy once called "the island of misfit toys."

The agency eschews traditional factors like awards

Global talent director Melanie Myers, who joined the agency in 1996, told Business Insider her team gets hundreds of applications each week for a small and constantly changing number of roles. But all eight offices operate independently, the agency has no central jobs hub, and many positions aren't listed publicly at all.

The agency sometimes announces job openings on Instagram via @wktalent or the individual offices' accounts, and job seekers are encouraged to contact those offices directly.

Still, Myers said most of Wieden's employees did not get jobs through unsolicited applications. According to Myers and executive creative director Karl Lieberman, who co-leads the New York office and has a say in the hires of department heads and creative directors, having no agency experience and showing even open disdain for advertising can be a plus as long as a candidate has the creative talent and passion needed in a demanding, ever-changing environment.

Lieberman said traditional factors like awards or titles aren't deciding factors in hiring because awards are subjective and Wieden leadership doesn't always agree with them.

"The emails I get with people listing all their awards make me want to kill myself," he said.

Insisting on a certain title is another big red flag for Lieberman. He said the agency has a flat structure to minimize bureaucracy. He cited the recent hire of former BBH chief creative officer Gerard Caputo as a creative director, saying this title change did not amount to a demotion.

One of the often-cited mantras at Wieden, as multiple people told Business Insider, is "leave your ego at the door."

The other is that this agency is the place "where people go to do the best work of their lives."

Wieden finds people in unconventional ways

Wieden and Kennedy first tries to fill open positions internally. To recruit, it uses a variety of methods. Key points:

It seeks out people from outside advertising: Six of Wieden's offices use The Kennedys, a program that recruits current or recent grad students with no advertising experience and pays them to work with Wieden's creative teams for several months. Myers said about half of the Amsterdam's current creative staff came through that program.It looks for people from a variety of backgrounds: The agency's efforts to find people from outside the ad world have led to it hiring a lawyer, trade journalist, political speechwriter, waitress in Sao Paulo, Brazil, and "Portlandia" co-creator Carrie Brownstein, who worked on the Starbucks account for six months in 2006 while her band Sleater-Kinney was on hiatus.Recruiters are always looking for new talent: Wieden and Kennedy recruiters look for less-obvious candidates by following people's careers and encouraging other employees to send them stuff they love from the internet and beyond.It uses former employees to recruit: Lawrence Teherani-Ami, a 28-year veteran who leads the media strategy team in Portland, said independent recruiters who work with the agency are often former longtime staffers who know what Wieden and Kennedy is looking for.Internship programs: Teherani-Ami said the agency brings in several interns each year from programs including MPMS (Most Promising Multicultural Students) and MAIP (Multicultural Advertising Intern Program), which are trade industry efforts aimed at attracting minority students to advertising. Teherani-Ami, who comes from an Iranian-American family, is a MAIP graduate himself.College recruiting: Wieden and Kennedy also recruits students from colleges around the country, including Dan Wieden's alma mater, the University of Oregon, as well as nearby Portland State University.
Agency co-founders David Kennedy (L) and Dan Wieden (R). Getty Images

Recruiters review each application personally

Myers encouraged aspiring Wieden employees to apply using different methods, adding that her team gets applications via LinkedIn, Facebook, and Instagram as well as regular email but doesn't usually hire people in this way.

Recruiters review each application, and Myers said the process would never be automated, even though that means the response time can be slower than at other agencies. Two creatives and one account executive known to Business Insider who spoke on condition of anonymity in the interest of protecting their career prospects said recruiters took as long as nine months to respond to them, with one adding that he "applied many times over the years" but never got hired.

Myers said she understands why the wait can be frustrating but warned applicants not to repeatedly call or email, no matter what may have worked at other agencies. She said many applicants eager to get responses do not seem to appreciate the volume of material that her team has to process each day.

Wieden and Kennedy wants people with passion, side projects, and are skeptical about advertising

Successful applicants will demonstrate their uniqueness as creative people — not advertising professionals — current and former employees said.

Myers said former executive creative director Jeff Kling, who was also a mentor to Lieberman, turned in a three-ring binder filled with ads for fictional products that were hand-drawn with a Sharpie marker. Another employee submitted a silk scarf that included a link to her own website printed in a custom typeface. 

Copywriter Chase Zreet created a video cover letter consisting of a three-minute rap tribute to Sprite that three employees shared with the New York team before Zreet submitted it himself.

Lieberman went to extremes. After nearly four years' worth of interviews, he got an inside source when a friend scored a job at Wieden and Kennedy Portland, and soon afterward Lierberman learned of several openings on the Nike basketball account. To show his dedication to the game, he printed out posts that he'd written for a basketball blog and mailed them to the Portland office along with his latest portfolio.

While a lot of applicants try similar stunts, Wieden's official talent account said they should be compelling enough to get recruiters' attention and prepare them to make a practical demonstration of the applicant's skills.

 

Myers emphasized that she's less interested in such presentations than in the sincerity of applicants' side projects and passions, asking: "What languages do you speak? Do you play instruments? Do you paint? Do you have the biggest vinyl collection on the West Coast?"

"Somebody who's awesome at Twitter can be just as helpful as someone who can write a 30-second TV spot," Lieberman added, noting so much of the agency's work isn't focused on TV commercials.

Myers told Business Insider that no one should hang all their hopes on a job at Wieden and Kennedy, because it won't be right for everyone. But the most important suggestion for those who keep trying may be to forget everything they thought they knew about advertising.

Original author: Patrick Coffee

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  60 Hits
Aug
03

Billion Dollar Unicorns: Is Stripe Ready to List? - Sramana Mitra

Insurance giant State Farm is bringing back its iconic tagline "Like a Good Neighbor, State Farm is There."State Farm stopped using the campaign in 2016 under its former agency-of-record DDB but brought it back under its new agency The Marketing Arm.State Farm said its research found the old tagline had high trust, recognition and favorability across people of all ages.State Farm said it's also spending more ad dollars on streaming platforms, including NBCUniversal's forthcoming Peacock, where it's a launch sponsor.Click here for more BI Prime stories.

For 45 years, State Farm pitched itself as the "good neighbor" who stands by you when things go wrong — before retiring it in 2016 under its former agency-of-record DDB.

Now, in an about-face, the Bloomington, Illinois-based company and the country's largest insurance provider is launching a new brand campaign that brings back the tagline "Like a Good Neighbor, State Farm is There" as well as the spokesperson character "Jake from State Farm."

State Farm reintroduced Jake played by actor Kevin Mimms in a 30-second pre-game teaser on Super Bowl Sunday and is launching a new marketing push during the NBA All-Star Weekend. This marks a shift from the "Here to Help Life Go Right," tagline that it launched in 2016, which polled poorly.

The strategy shift follows State Farm shifting its creative work to Omnicom's The Marketing Arm from its longtime agency DDB, also part of Omnicom. This is The Marketing Arm's first piece of work for State Farm.

'"We want to make our advertising work as hard as possible for us in this hyper-competitive category," Patty Morris, State Farm's assistant VP of marketing and brand, told Business Insider. "The data and research pointed us toward some of the familiar assets, which caused us to go back to the drawing board and rethink our strategy."

The tagline was brought back after months of consumer research

DDB created the "Like a Good Neighbor" ads under its predecessor Needham, Harper & Steers and it blew up in the 1970s, thanks to a jingle written by pop star Barry Manilow.

State Farm did almost six months of consumer research that showed the old tagline had high trust, recognition and favorability across age groups, Morris said. Ninety percent of respondents recognized the tagline and associated it with State Farm.

While the new marketing push will have familiar elements, State Farm tried to make sure it's up to date.

For example, the forthcoming spot "Not the One" will show Jake comforting a contestant who was just cut from a reality TV dating show, quipping that unlike the bachelorette in question, like a good neighbor, State Farm is there. The company will also continue its creative work with NBA player Chris Paul and adapt the jingle to develop a sonic logo, Morris said.

State Farm is diversifying its ad spend, and streaming is getting more important 

Advertisers like State Farm have moved away from the traditional agency-of-record model in recent years where they hire one agency to handle their advertising business and are increasingly working with multiple agencies on a short-term basis.

State Farm is also using new channels in its advertising like over-the-top streaming platforms, which make up 20% of ad spend, with the rest about equally divided between linear TV and digital, Morris said. Among other things, it's a launch sponsor for Peacock, NBCUniversal's upcoming streaming service, which guarantees it exclusivity in the insurance category for 18 months.

"It's not just about our advertising and messaging, but also understanding media consumption and making sure we're approaching that in a modern way," Morris said. "Peacock allows us to really test out different ad formats and interactivity with branded content and think about reinventing and defining the ad experience in a streaming environment."

Original author: Tanya Dua

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  76 Hits
Jan
31

You need a minimum viable company, not a minimum viable product

The official Twitter accounts for the Olympics and Barcelona FC were hacked on Saturday. OurMine, the group responsible for several prominent Twitter hacks beginning in 2016 claimed responsibility. In addition to gaining some level of access to the account, the group sent a tweet that claimed a popular soccer player would be returning to the Barcelona team based on private messages it read.Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

The official Twitter accounts for the Olympics and FC Barcelona were hacked Saturday by the same group responsible for years of other prominent Twitter account hacks. 

A Twitter spokesperson confirmed to Business Insider that both the Olympics and FC Barcelona accounts were hacked by a group called OurMine and through a "third-party platform." 

"As soon as we were made aware of the issue, we locked the compromised accounts and are working closely with our partners to restore them," the spokesperson said. 

"The IOC can confirm that it is investigating a potential breach into some of its social accounts," a spokesperson for the International Olympic Committee said in a statement. 

FC Barcelona also confirmed the hack in a tweet Saturday. 

—FC Barcelona (@FCBarcelona) February 15, 2020

"FC Barcelona will conduct a cybersecurity audit and will review all protocols and links with third party tools, in order to avoid such incidents and to guarantee the best service to our members and fans," it said.

In tweets that were posted and quickly deleted, OurMine claimed credits for the Saturday hacks.  

"Hi, we are OurMine," the since-deleted tweet from the Olympics Twitter account read. "Everything is hackable."

The tweet then linked to an email address and the group's website, urging users to contact the group to "improve your accounts security." 

The FC Barcelona account hack was a bit more nefarious in that it claimed in another since-deleted tweet to have read private messages indicating that a popular former player — Neymar da Silva Santos Jr. — was heading back to the team. 

"Well, we read some private messages and it looks like Neymar will back here," the tweet read.

While the tweets were quickly removed from both accounts, they were captured via screenshot and posted by other users to Twitter.

—UTFR ?? (@ManUtd_HQ) February 15, 2020

UK-based Sports Bible noted that there have been rumors that Neymar, who currently plays for France's Paris Saint-Germain F.C., could return to FC Barcelona where he played from 2013-2017. 

It was the second time that OurMine has claimed responsibility for a Twitter hack on the Spanish soccer team. On February 7, OurMine claimed responsibility for a hack on the Twitter account for Facebook. 

In an email to Business Insider, OurMine confirmed it was behind the cyberattacks against both FC Barcelona and the Olympics. The group, which it said consisted of 5 people, told Business Insider it chooses its targets at random. It confirmed it used a third-party app to access the accounts. 

"We accessed it by security issues on FC Barcelona and Olympics employees, which allowed us to access the third-party app," the group told Business Insider. 

A Wired profile of the group indicated the group surfaced around 2016. That year it hacked people like Mark Zuckerberg, Google CEO Sundar Pichai, Spotify founder Daniel Ek, Amazon CTO Werner Vogels, and actor Channing Tatum, according to the profile.

The group claimed it is a "white hat" group that exists to help show security vulnerabilities, and not for sinister reasons. OurMine told Wired that it does not change the passwords of the accounts it hacks, claiming that it does not have bad intentions, though it does offer services it alleges can reveal digital vulnerabilities. 

The hacking group, which is based in Saudi Arabia, according to NBC News, has also been responsible for recent hacks to Twitter accounts belonging to the National Football League and several of its teams. As NBC News noted, the group said it stopped hacking in 2017 "due to some issues," but acknowledged it had returned. 

A Business Insider request for comment from FC Barcelona was not returned. 

Read more: 

A cancelled conference and supply chain issues: How the coronavirus outbreak is affecting Facebook's business

Here's how 44 insiders at powerful banks, buzzy startups, and big investors are thinking about financial innovation — and why the term 'fintech' may be on its last legs

Private equity's data-hiring push; The top M&A bankers, ranked; Tradeweb's next move

I just spent a day using Samsung's new foldable flip phone — here are the best and worst things about it so far

 

Original author: Connor Perrett

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  51 Hits
Aug
03

Insurance app Lemonade looks set to drop lawsuit against Germany’s Wefox

A new coronavirus spreading across the globe has led to temperature screenings at airports, Chinese cities, and businesses.The thermometer guns used in these screenings are "notoriously not accurate and reliable," since many screeners hold them at the wrong distance or use them in the wrong environments, experts told The New York Times.Demand for thermometer guns has spiked since the coronavirus outbreak began, leaving some manufacturers struggling to keep up.Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

As officials struggle to contain a new coronavirus spreading across the globe, travelers worldwide are undergoing unreliable temperature screenings, experts say.

The new coronavirus, first discovered in Wuhan, China in December, has infected nearly 67,000 people and killed more than 1,500, mostly within China. (For the latest case total and death toll, see Business Insider's live updates.) 

Airports, Chinese cities, and even Apple stores have instituted temperature checks to identify potential patients and prevent the virus's spread. To do this, many governments and businesses rely on thermometer guns — devices that use infrared sensors to measure a person's surface temperature without touching their skin.

"These devices are notoriously not accurate and reliable," Dr. James Lawler, a medical expert at the University of Nebraska's Global Center for Health Security, told The New York Times. "Some of it is quite frankly for show."

That means that many coronavirus cases could go undetected through these temperature screenings.

To account for this possibility, the US has instituted a mandatory quarantine of up to two weeks for anyone who's been to China's Hubei province within the prior 14 days. But China now relies on daily temperature checks as it struggles to contain the virus. 

Why thermometer guns are often unreliable

Most people wielding thermometer guns hold them too far from or too close to the subject, yielding temperature measurements that are either too hot or too cold, according to experts who spoke with The New York Times.

Two different coronavirus temperature screenings using thermometer guns take measurements from different distances using different procedures. Vincent Thian/AP Photo; Hannah McKay/Reuters

Lawler said that thermometer guns had suggested he was dying of hypothermia as he traveled through West Africa during the 2014-2016 Ebola outbreak.

"My temperature was often 35 degrees Celsius or lower, which starts to become incompatible with life," Lawler said. "So I'm not sure those were accurate."

According to industrial supply company Grainger, the correct distance to hold a handheld infrared thermometer depends on the size of the target.

What's more, environments like a dusty road or a hot car can affect the infrared temperature measurement.

Even if used correctly, thermometers won't catch everyone who could spread the new virus. Studies show that infected people can go up to 14 days without showing symptoms, and some preliminary research suggests that period could last as long as 24 days. It's still unclear if infected people without symptoms can spread the virus to others.

Some patients have experienced nausea, vomiting, or diarrhea before they develop a fever. They could still be infectious at that stage. If someone has taken a fever-suppressing medication, they could show normal temperatures.

The World Health Organization (WHO) acknowledges that some infected people will pass temperature screenings, but still maintains that the checks reduce the "risk of importation of the disease." According to the WHO, most of the cases that traveled outside China were detected through screening as they entered another country.

On the flip side, a high temperature does not necessarily indicate illness. Temperature screenings can flag people who aren't infected.

"They could have been exercising, they could be taking certain drugs," Jim Seffrin, an infrared devices expert at the Infraspection Institute in New Jersey, told The New York Times. "A person who's been trying to catch a flight in an airport for which they are late — they may have run down a concourse."

Demand for thermometer guns has spiked since the outbreak began

Health Officials in hazmat suits check body temperatures of passengers arriving from the city of Wuhan at the Beijing airport on January 22, 2020. Emily Wang/AP Photo

The other frontlines defense that characterizes so many photos of life during the outbreak — face masks — is also unlikely to prevent the spread of the virus. Still, face mask sales have spiked since the outbreak began, and manufacturers are struggling to keep up with demand. Some thermometer gun manufacturers report a similar predicament.

"It's the most overwhelming thing I've had to deal with in my life," Gary Strahan, the CEO of infrared thermometer technology company Infrared Cameras, told The New York Times. "We've got people coming to us directly, saying: 'Can you supply 1,000 cameras? Can you supply 2,000 cameras?'"

Strahan added that he had been working 4 a.m. to 10 p.m. daily to keep up with new orders. Mo Yingchun, a general manager at thermometer gun manufacturer Alicn Medical in Shenzhen, China, said that prices have spiked to three to five times their usual level. Mo said that China's quarantine efforts have cut off many of the manufacturer's employees, preventing factories from operating at full capacity.

"Even the governments are fighting for the products among themselves," Mo said. "Local governments want to guarantee their own needs first."

Even he agreed that the infrared thermometers are not always reliable. Mo added that his company's devices are typically used to check infants' temperatures indoors.

"The thermometer guns are used only for quick screening and are not as accurate as traditional thermometers," Mo said. "It was a small industry, and if it weren't for the outbreak, it will not be put in the spotlight."

Original author: Morgan McFall-Johnsen

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